i must be missing something. Surely if you go VAT registered and charge £20 for a house you would need to add 20% so making the total price £24, but you only get to keep the £20 for yourself (although you still pay income tax and NI)
Or as in your example a £15 house surely becomes £18 with VAT added.
Not everybody spends a lot on items which you can reclaim VAT on each year, and that involves even more paperwork. I claim a mileage allowance for my vehicle, as opposed to a percentage of fuel receipts and maintenance costs.
Yes, but you can still claim the VAT element of the fuel.
http://www.tmtaccounting.co.uk/blog/can-i-reclaim-vat-paying-45p-mileage-allowanceYes the rate is 20%, but after you've deducted the input vat from the output vat, you're really only handing over to HMRC about 12%. So, if you wanted to keep everything exactly the same, you'd only need to increase your prices by that 12%.
So you work out the VAT on the fuel, the poles, the resin, the fairy liquid, cleaner planner, the workwear etc etc and it comes to about 8% of your turnover. Therefore, since you can claim that back, you only need to increase your price by 12% in order to be in the same position as you were before vat registration.
Similarly, you could simply go onto the 12% flat rate scheme, where you don't claim anything back, you just pay 12% of your turnover, and so (obviously) you only need to increase your prices by 12%.