Ľubomíra Murgašová | 19.1.2023 | News
In order to improve payment discipline in Slovakia, the state is proposing new measures that have an impact on both suppliers and customers of goods and services.
Changes applicable for the supplier
• 150 days have elapsed since the receivable for the supply of goods or services became overdue at max of unpaid value, while the receivable:
The aforementioned correction to the tax base may be made by the supplier for unpaid receivables, if 150 days from the due date have elapsed after 31 December 2022.
Subsequently, if customer paid the overdue receivable either fully or partially, the supplier must correct the tax base and remit the VAT accordingly.
The supplier is still obliged to issue a corrective document.
Changes applicable for the customer
The above mentioned change will apply to obligations for the supply of goods or services for which the obligation has not been settled and 100 days have elapsed after 31 December 2022.
Another change for customers is the introduction of the fictional of delivery of a corrective document issued and delivered by the supplier when correcting the tax base of an irrecoverable receivable. If the customer has not received the correction document by the end of the calendar month following the calendar month in which it was sent to him, he shall be deemed to have received it on the last day of that following calendar month. Although the customer does not receive such a document, he shall be obliged to reimburse the VAT deducted if the supplier has claimed a correction of the taxable amount for irrecoverable debts and proves that he has sent the document.
The European Union wishes to introduce greater control over the correct collection of VAT in electronic commerce. For this reason, the EU directive should be implemented in all member states by 1 January 2024.
All payment institutions that do business in Slovakia and mediate cross-border payments for their clients will also have to generate and send selected data to the Financial Directorate of the Slovak Republic on a quarterly basis. Payment institutions will thus report data on selected cross-border payments, the settlement of which they mediate. Data on the recipients, the volume of transactions and the time of their settlement will be reported. Banks and non-bank institutions will report data on the recipient of a cross-border payment to the Financial Directorate of the Slovak Republic if there are more than 25 cross-border payments for the same recipient in one quarter.
The Financial Directorate of the Slovak Republic will then send these data to the central European payment system (so-called CESOP), where they will be evaluated. The conclusions from this evaluation should be accessible to the relevant tax authorities in the Member States.
Taxable persons who carry out exclusively financial, insurance activities or the supply and rental of real estate, to which exemption from VAT is fully applied, no longer have to register for VAT after reaching a turnover after 1 January 2023. Current VAT payers who supply only these exempt services can apply to cancel their VAT registration after the first of January. The mentioned change relieves selected payers from submitting VAT returns and VAT control statements.
If the taxable person that exclusively supplied these VAT exempt activities did not manage to register by 31.12.2022, after 1.1.2023 it no longer has to do so, nor does it have to retroactively file VAT returns for the periods when this change did not apply.
In the event that property was stolen from the VAT payer, which is not a depreciable property with a purchase price of less than 1,700 euros and a useful life of more than a year, and at the same time it is not a stock, he does not have to refund the full deducted VAT. The VAT payer is obliged to refund only the proportional part of the deducted VAT corresponding to the "fictitious" tax residual value, while this asset will be viewed as if it had been depreciated for four years.
The National Council of the Slovak Republic approved a parliamentary bill expanding the range of selected goods and services with a reduced VAT rate of 10% during the period from 1.1.-31.12.2023 for the following services:
This change was adopted by the Parliament in order to boost the tourism in Slovakia and to help establishments overcome the energy crisis and compensate for the losses caused by the pandemic period.
Read more about Changes to the Income Tax Act from 1 January 2023
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