found some here Spitting Feathers – Crushed Crisp Pale Malt. 25kg | Spitting Feathers i am going to pick one up on Friday' postage is £8-00 if anyone is interested
Those kinds of grey areas get complicated, so HMRC use rules of thumb which mostly revolve around packaging rather than having to judge whether someone is homebrewing or not. So their rule of thumb for malt is that 25kg is considered "commercial" packaging and so doesn't attract VAT regardless of who buys it, whereas anything smaller is considered retail packaging and so is VATed.I have spoken to Fawcetts and they are still ok to sell a minimum of 10 bags, they also said that they did not charge vat but I am not sure on that as it is for homebrewers so maybe somebody with a little insight maybe able to clarify that.
Yes that makes sense, it all seemed to be kept quiet for some reasonIIRC the now dispanded group purchase started offering split quantities of speciality grains (into retail packs). So, I suspect they stopped because their supplier wanted them to be VAT registered.
Lol. You have to beware of health food too it is generally sh1teAnd avoid buy your unmalted grains and sugars from homebrew stores. You have to be wary of the unofficial Health Food Tax, though.
That's not how I understood vat in the uk. I am vat registered.
I thought vat was product category based. Basic Food (grain) being 0% rated? Nothing to do WHO buys it?
Cold Sausage roll = food = 0%
Hot sausage roll = snack = 20%
Everything has vat, but the rates vary.
Food is 0% = (no vat)
Non essential items 20% (at the moment)
I think you'll find that 25kg sacks of malt if for home-brewing are liable to vat. If it hasn't been charged then that is a mistake of the supplier. To get no vat would require proof of commercial use. It's not the quantity but the use of that is the determining factor.It's complicated, and things like the coriander example go to show how incoherent things can get when governments start trying to make exemptions to standard rules, but you need to draw lines even when it's a grey area.
The basic idea of VAT is that everything gets charged at the standard rate of 20% by default. This includes items used for hobbies such as fishing rods and golf balls.
But then government back tracks and says that food is special and so some kinds of food are zero-rated. And this is done with two tests.
First - is it an "ingredient" or a finished product? Ingredients, including processed ones (which would include malt), are zero-rated.
Second - if it's a finished product is it "basic" or a "non-essential". Going to a restaurant is considered non-essential (hence your sausage roll example, any hot food is treated as non-essential) as are things like chocolate biscuits, whereas sandwiches are considered basic and (weirdly) we have a fundamental human right to cake, which is also zero-rated. Hence the famous lawsuit where £millions of VAT depended on whether Jaffa Cakes are a cake or a chocolate biscuit - the judge ruled that they are a cake and so zero-rated.
Malt and coriander fall in a similar grey area - are they food ingredients (which would be zero-rated), or materials for a hobby (which would be standard-rated like fishing rods)? They can be used for food (malt loaves and curry), commercial brewing (who don't just pay VAT on their beer but lots of duty as well), and the hobby of homebrewing.
As you say, they can only discriminate on products, not on who buys it. Hence they have drawn a line which says that these products are zero-rated unless they are packaged in a way that targets homebrewers.
They have drawn the line for malt that 25kg sacks are "commercial" and anything smaller is for hobby purposes. It's not perfect, but it's near enough and importantly gives a clear line for the industry to work to.
No, it's how they are packaged that is the determining factor, per VFOOD9000 :I think you'll find that 25kg sacks of malt if for home-brewing are liable to vat. If it hasn't been charged then that is a mistake of the supplier. To get no vat would require proof of commercial use. It's not the quantity but the use of that is the determining factor.
There we are @the baron , invite Anna and family down for a weekend's unbridled supping of your homebrew and exchange of brewing stories. Provided she picks up a couple of bags from Crafty for you, of course. Problem solved.This thread makes me all the more grateful to be able to pick up malt from the craftymaltsters for £27.50 for 25kg
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