I'm not sure if things will change that much for individual drivers, although I'm not really that sure about how it all works, but it's certainly not a simple case of a straightforward business with VAT on ouputs and VAT in inputs, and the difference is paid to HMRC (which is where the phrase 'value added' comes from - very roughly speaking, it's an additional tax on profit).
But, as pointed out in the TaxiPoint article, it might not be a case of the VAT being calculated on every single fare:
Quote:
Crucially it is likely that private hire operators will qualify to apply VAT on their margin from each trip rather than on the full fare. The latter would have significant implications for the entire industry and its passengers.
Uber would claim they have been following HMRC’s own guidance (VAT Order 1987) to apply VAT on the margin of a trip. Other operators including Bolt and FreeNow have been doing the same, as stated on their invoices.
The 'margin' effectively being Uber's commission rate. To that extent I'm not sure how precisely it all changes. I mean, the likes of Delta's 'margin' on the fare is settle, effectively. On which they already charge VAT, presumably
So it may be the difference between fixed and percentage based fees paid by drivers to circuits. Fixed fees, obviously, being primarily the traditional trade, while the percentage based fees are effectively the norm with the app-only providers.
So if the likes of Delta had to pay VAT based more on a fare-based model, that would mean a shedload more admin, presumably, but how it would actually translate into hard numbers I'm not sure.
I mean, did Uber's fares really increase by 20% following the London ruling?