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Understanding Fiscal Representatives

  • A fiscal representative is a locally appointed agent (often accountants, lawyers, or tax consultants) jointly liable for VAT of non-EU businesses. Many EU countries, plus Norway and Switzerland, require them for VAT registration and compliance.

  • Two types exist: general and limited. General representatives cover VAT on sales, acquisitions, and imports, assuming joint liability. Limited representatives handle imports, intra-EU acquisitions, or zero-rated goods, often allowing businesses to use the representative’s VAT number instead.

  • Fiscal representatives ensure compliance by managing VAT registrations, invoices, returns, Intrastat, and EC Sales Lists. They also maintain records, handle duties and penalties, and may help acquire EORI numbers, acting as VAT proxies for foreign businesses.

  • Contracts with fiscal representatives usually include strict conditions: bank guarantees or deposits, penalties for missed deadlines, detailed record-keeping, and long terms. Non-compliance risks fines, rejected VAT applications, lost refunds, and harm to business relationships across Europe.

  • Requirements vary by country: some mandate fiscal representation (e.g., France, Italy, Spain, Poland), while others exempt certain nations. Switzerland revised its rules in 2025, allowing direct VAT registration if compliance and communication guarantees are met.

  • Benefits include penalty avoidance, smoother VAT refund processes, improved cash flow via import VAT simplifications, reverse charge applications, and easier dealings with local authorities. Import One Stop Shop (IOSS) instead requires intermediaries, limited to VAT reporting under IOSS.

Source: simplyvat.com



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