Revenue Note for Guidance
This section defines intra-Community acquisitions (ICAs) of goods. These are movable goods supplied from one Member State to another, which are transported to the second Member State. In general, both the supplier and the customer must either be VAT-registered, carrying out exempt activities, or flat-rate farmers. These conditions do not apply to ICAs of new means of transport.
(1)(a) An ICA of goods is defined in subsection (1)(a) as the acquisition of movable goods, apart from new means of transport, supplied by a person in one Member State (provided that that person is, or ought to be, registered for VAT, or carries out an exempt activity or is a flat-rate farmer) to a person in another Member State (subject to the same provisos as above) and those goods have been transported from one Member State to another.
(1)(b) The concept of ICA of goods is extended in subsection (1)(b) to cover the acquisition of a new means of transport supplied by a person in a Member State to a person in another Member State and sent from one Member State to another Member State. ‘New means of transport’ is defined in section 2(1).
Example: ICAs from other Member States are accounted for under the system of “postponed accounting” as follows:
(Note that there are 2 statistical boxes on the trader’s VAT return (“VAT 3”) covering intra-Community transactions.)
(2) Goods that have been subject to tax under the margin scheme or the special scheme for auctioneers in one Member State and dispatched to another Member State are not treated as ICAs in the Member State of arrival.
(3) Subsection (3) sets out a number of deemed provisions for the purposes of the definition of intra-Community goods (this section) and the place of supply of intra-Community goods (section 32), as follows:
(4) There is a special rule in subsection (4) for goods that are consigned from outside the Community to non-taxable entities in the State, in situations where the goods are imported through another Member State (MS) (and hence subject to VAT in that MS). In such cases, the subsequent arrival of the goods in the State is treated as an ICA.
The purpose of this provision is to prevent non-taxable entities from selecting a low-rate Member State as the place in which they are to be taxed when importing goods into the Community. The rule in subsection (4) ensures that an ICA arises in Ireland. If the trader’s ICAs exceed the threshold (currently €41,000) Irish VAT will be charged on the acquisition of the goods. The import VAT paid in the other Member State is refundable in that Member State – see also notes on section 54 - provision exists in that section for repayment of VAT charged on the importation of goods into the State which are consigned to other Member States in the reverse of the circumstances outlined here.
Relevant Date: Finance Act 2019