---
oa_review_kit: v1
guide_slug: non-eu-export-services
guide_version: non-eu-export-services@2026-04-13T17:52:10.022Z
archetype: vat_gst
---

# Review kit: Non EU Export Services

Thank you for reviewing this Guide. This kit is one file with three parts: how
to use it, an interview prompt for your AI, and the Guide itself.

## How to use this kit (3 steps, about 15 minutes)

1. Open the AI you already use (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, anything that reads
   markdown) and paste in everything from "INTERVIEW PROMPT" below, including
   the Guide at the end.
2. Your AI interviews you like a colleague, one question at a time. Just talk:
   war stories, walk-throughs, the mistakes you catch. No writing required.
3. Your AI writes your answers up as a single markdown file. Hand it back at
   openaccountants.com/skills/non-eu-export-services/handback (also linked from the Guide
   page: "Hand back your file"). What you added is published under your name
   and credential.

If your AI cannot produce the exact output format, hand back whatever you have:
a revised Guide file, a worksheet, or plain notes. We take those too, and a
person reviews them by hand. The format below is the one we can apply straight
away.

---

# INTERVIEW PROMPT (paste from here down into your AI)

You are interviewing a practising accountant about how they actually do the
work covered by the attached Guide ("Non EU Export Services", slug `non-eu-export-services`).
Interview them like a colleague doing a handover. Do not lecture. Ask ONE
question at a time and wait for the answer. Chase war stories and specifics:
what kind of client, which portal step, how big the penalty was.

The rates, thresholds, and citations are our job; we refresh those from primary
sources. Capture ONLY what is NOT derivable from law:

- order of operations, and what a wrong order corrupts
- what to ask a client before computing anything
- what to assume when a fact is unknown, and how it gets flagged
- the most-missed traps, with penalty size and who falls in
- how the portal or filing channel actually behaves
- what has to reconcile before anyone signs
- when to refuse the work and hand it to a human specialist

If the accountant corrects a rate, threshold, or deadline in the Guide along
the way, record it in the FACT CORRECTIONS table, but do not steer the
interview toward numbers.

## Questions to work through

Ask these in order, one at a time. Skip any the accountant has already covered;
follow up where a story has specifics worth pinning down. Each question is
tagged with the method slot(s) it feeds.

1. [sequence] Walk me through the last VAT return you prepared, start to finish. What did you open first, and why that order?
2. [intake_questions] [evidence] A new client hands you nothing but a bank statement. What do you do before you'll classify a single line?
3. [pattern_library] Which bank-statement line gets misclassified most often in your experience? What does it look like and where should it actually go?
4. [scope_gate] Tell me about a client you refused or referred out. What about their VAT situation made you stop?
5. [trap] When you review a return someone else drafted, what mistake do you catch most often?
6. [conservative_default] When you can't tell if a sale is domestic or cross-border, what do you assume, and how do you mark it?
7. [cross_check] Before you sign, what has to reconcile with what, and how close is close enough?
8. [filing_mechanics] Walk me through filing on the actual portal. What surprises first-timers: the order of forms, what locks, what you can't undo?
9. [judgment_rule] Ever had a client on a simplified scheme where the "simplification" made things worse? How do you decide who belongs on it?
10. [trap] What's the real penalty story you tell clients, the one that actually happened?
11. [evidence] Which claims will you draft from a bank statement but never file without the underlying paper?
12. [unsettled_law] Anything in VAT right now you deliberately won't finalise because the rules are moving?

## Method slots (for tagging the write-up)

- `scope_gate` (Scope gate and refusals): when to stop and send the client to a human
- `sequence` (Order of operations): what order to do things in, and what a wrong order corrupts
- `intake_questions` (Client intake questions): what to ask a client before computing
- `evidence` (Documents and evidence): which documents to insist on, and what is draft-grade vs file-grade
- `judgment_rule` (Judgment rules): how a practitioner actually picks when the law allows two routes
- `conservative_default` (Conservative defaults): what to assume when a fact is unknowable at draft time
- `trap` (Traps and most-missed items): the mistakes everyone makes, what they cost, and who falls in
- `filing_mechanics` (Portal and filing mechanics): how submission actually works: channel, order, what locks
- `cross_check` (Cross-checks before signing): what has to reconcile with what before delivery, and how close is close enough
- `pattern_library` (Pattern library): how messy real-world data (bank lines, payout platforms) maps to tax categories
- `edge_case` (Edge-case playbook): the client situations that change the method, not just the numbers
- `unsettled_law` (Unsettled-law flags): what not to finalise right now, and why
- `handback_protocol` (Hand-back protocol): what the finished working paper contains and who reviews it

## Output format: oa-handback v1

When the interview is done, write the answers up as ONE markdown file in
exactly this shape. Fill in the reviewer's real name, credential, and email
(ask for them at the end if they have not come up). Every method block gets a
`### [method:<slot>]` heading where `<slot>` is one of the 13 slot ids
above. Keep `guide_slug` and `guide_version` exactly as given. Omit any
section the interview produced nothing for, but keep the headings that remain
exactly as shown. The `fact_key` column may be left blank when unknown.

```markdown
---
oa_handback: v1
guide_slug: non-eu-export-services
guide_version: non-eu-export-services@2026-04-13T17:52:10.022Z
reviewer_name: <full name>
reviewer_credential: <credential>        # free text: CPA, EA, ACCA, Steuerberater...
reviewer_email: <email>
verdict: <approve | corrections | unable>
---

## METHOD

### [method:filing_mechanics] <short title for this block>
<prose: the method block, written in second person, imperative>

### [method:intake_questions] <short title for this block>
- <question 1>
- ...

## FACT CORRECTIONS
| fact_key | current | correct | source |
|---|---|---|---|
| <fact key if known, else blank> | <value in the Guide> | <correct value> | <cite> |

## FLAGS
- [unsettled] <what not to finalise, and why>
- [refer] <situations to escalate to a human>

## NOTES
<anything that did not fit a method slot or a fact correction>
```

If for any reason you cannot produce this exact format, output the accountant's
corrections and methods as clear plain notes instead. The hand-back page
accepts plain notes and revised Guide files too; this format is an
optimization, never a gate.

---

# THE GUIDE UNDER REVIEW

<!-- guide: non-eu-export-services · version: non-eu-export-services@2026-04-13T17:52:10.022Z -->

---
name: non-eu-export-services
description: Use this skill whenever a freelancer or small business sells services to a client located outside their own VAT/GST jurisdiction and needs to determine the correct indirect tax treatment. Trigger on phrases like "export of services", "services to overseas client", "zero-rated services", "out of scope", "no VAT on export", "GST-free export", "outside the scope of VAT", "services to US client", "services to non-EU client", "Division 38", "Fifth Schedule", or any request about the VAT/GST treatment of services supplied to foreign clients. This skill covers the rules for EU sellers exporting services outside the EU, UK sellers to non-UK clients, Australian sellers (GST-free exports under Division 38), Indian sellers (zero-rated export of services), and Singaporean sellers (zero-rated under the Fifth Schedule). ALWAYS read this skill before advising on the indirect tax treatment of service exports.
jurisdiction: GLOBAL
domain: vat-gst
tax_year: 2025
---

# non-eu-export-services

## Export of Services -- VAT/GST Treatment for Services Sold Outside the Seller's Jurisdiction

## Skill Metadata

**Skill Metadata**

| Field | Value |
| --- | --- |
| Jurisdiction | Multi-jurisdiction (EU, UK, Australia, India, Singapore, and general principles) |
| Primary Legislation | EU: VAT Directive Art 44, 59; UK: VATA 1994 s7, s8, Sch 4A; AU: GST Act 1999 Div 38; IN: IGST Act 2017 s2(6); SG: GST Act s21(3), Fifth Schedule |
| Scope | Services (not goods) supplied by a seller in one jurisdiction to a client in a different jurisdiction, where the service is consumed outside the seller's country |
| Contributor | OpenAccountants |
| Validation Date | April 2026 |
| Skill Version | 1.0 |
| Confidence Coverage | Tier 1: standard B2B service exports (consulting, IT, professional services). Tier 2: land-related services, events, transport, mixed supplies. Tier 3: complex multi-party arrangements, services with unclear place of consumption. |
| Cross-references | `eu-reverse-charge.md`, `eu-oss-digital.md`, `permanent-establishment-risk.md`, country-specific VAT return skills |

## Confidence Tier Definitions

- **[T1] Tier 1 -- Deterministic** — Apply exactly as written. No reviewer judgement required.
- **[T2] Tier 2 -- Reviewer Judgement Required** — Flag the issue and present options. A qualified accountant must confirm.
- **[T3] Tier 3 -- Out of Scope / Escalate** — Do not guess. Escalate to a qualified professional.

## Step 0: Pre-Check Questions [T1]

1. **Where is the seller established / registered for VAT or GST?** Determines which country's rules govern the supply.
2. **Where is the client located?** Must be outside the seller's VAT/GST jurisdiction.
3. **Is the client a business (B2B) or a consumer (B2C)?** Affects the place of supply rule in many jurisdictions.
4. **What is the nature of the service?** Check for exceptions (land, events, transport).
5. **Where is the service physically performed or consumed?** Some exceptions depend on this.

**If items 1-3 are unknown, STOP.**

## Step 1: General Principle [T1]

- **General principle for services to non-jurisdiction clients** — Services supplied to a client outside the seller's jurisdiction are typically: Zero-rated (VAT/GST at 0%, but the seller retains the right to recover input VAT/GST on related costs), or Out of scope (not within the charge to VAT/GST at all; input recovery depends on the jurisdiction). The effect for the seller is the same in practice: no VAT/GST is charged on the invoice to the foreign client. BUT there are important exceptions where the service is taxed where it is performed or where the property is located, regardless of the client's location. See Step 7.

## Step 2: EU Seller to Non-EU Client [T1]

**Legislation:** VAT Directive Art 44 (B2B general rule), Art 59 (B2C specific services), Art 45 (B2C general rule).

### B2B: Seller (any EU country) to Non-EU Business Client [T1]

**B2B: Seller (any EU country) to Non-EU Business Client [T1]**

| Rule | Detail |
| --- | --- |
| Place of supply | Client's country (Art 44) -- outside the EU |
| VAT charged | None (outside the scope of EU VAT) |
| Invoice notation | "Outside the scope of VAT -- services supplied to a customer outside the EU" or equivalent |
| Input VAT recovery | Seller retains FULL right to recover input VAT on costs related to these out-of-scope supplies (they are not exempt supplies) |
| Reporting | Report on the VAT return in the out-of-scope / non-EU sales box (e.g., Malta Box 2, Germany KZ 45, France Line E1) |
| ESL / Intrastat | NOT required (not an intra-EU supply) |

### B2C: Seller (any EU country) to Non-EU Private Consumer [T2]

**B2C: Seller (any EU country) to Non-EU Private Consumer [T2]**

| Service Type | Place of Supply | VAT Charged |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Consulting, IT, legal, accounting, engineering, advertising, data processing, information supply | Client's country (Art 59) | None -- outside scope |
| Telecoms, broadcasting, ESS | Client's country (Art 58) | None -- outside scope (but may trigger registration in client's country if it has its own rules) |
| Land-related services | Where property is located (Art 47) | If property is in EU: EU VAT applies regardless of client location [T2] |
| Event admission | Where event takes place (Art 53) | If event is in EU: EU VAT applies |
| Restaurant/catering | Where performed (Art 55) | If performed in EU: EU VAT applies |
| Passenger transport | Where transport occurs (Art 48) | If in EU: EU VAT applies proportionally |
| All other services (e.g., personal services) | Seller's country (Art 45) | Seller's domestic VAT rate applies -- EVEN if client is outside EU [T2] |

- **Critical distinction for B2C listed services** — For B2C, only certain "listed services" under Art 59 shift the place of supply to the consumer's country. Other services remain taxable in the seller's country even if the consumer is abroad. This catches out many freelancers.  _(Art 59)_

### Country-Specific Box Mappings (EU Sellers) [T1]

**Country-Specific Box Mappings (EU Sellers) [T1]**

| Seller Country | VAT Return Box for Non-EU Services | Notes |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Malta (MT) | Box 2 | Non-EU supplies |
| Germany (DE) | KZ 45 (nicht steuerbare sonstige Leistungen) | Out-of-scope services |
| France (FR) | Cadre E / Line E1 | Opérations non imposables |
| Italy (IT) | VE30 field 4 / Esterometro | Operazioni non imponibili |
| Slovakia (SK) | Row 15 (not subject to SK VAT) | Out of scope |

## Step 3: UK Seller to Non-UK Client [T1]

**Legislation:** Value Added Tax Act 1994, s7, s8, Schedule 4A; VAT Place of Supply of Services Order 1992 (as amended post-Brexit).

### B2B: UK Seller to Any Non-UK Business [T1]

**B2B: UK Seller to Any Non-UK Business [T1]**

| Rule | Detail |
| --- | --- |
| Place of supply | Client's country (s7(10) VATA 1994, general B2B rule) |
| VAT charged | None -- outside the scope of UK VAT |
| Invoice notation | "Outside the scope of UK VAT" |
| Input VAT recovery | Full recovery retained on related costs |
| VAT return | Box 6 (total value of sales excluding VAT) -- include the value. Do NOT include in Box 1 (output tax). |

### B2C: UK Seller to Non-UK Consumer [T2]

Similar to EU rules: "listed services" (consulting, IT, legal, etc.) shift to the consumer's country and are outside the scope of UK VAT. Other services (e.g., personal services performed in the UK) remain subject to UK VAT even if the consumer is abroad.

### Post-Brexit Note [T1]

- **Post-Brexit reverse charge treatment** — Since 1 January 2021, the UK is outside the EU VAT system. An EU client of a UK seller does NOT use the reverse charge under Art 196. Instead, the EU client self-assesses under their domestic rules for services received from outside the EU (similar to non-EU acquisition reverse charge).  _(Art 196)_

## Step 4: Australian Seller to Non-Australian Client [T1]

**Legislation:** A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999, Division 38, Subdivision 38-E.

### GST-Free Export of Services (Div 38-190) [T1]

- **GST-free conditions** — A supply of services is GST-free (zero-rated) if: 1. The supply is made to a non-resident who is NOT in Australia when the service is performed, AND 2. The supply is NOT a supply of a right or option to acquire something the supply of which would be connected with Australia, AND 3. The effective use or enjoyment of the supply is NOT in Australia.  _(Div 38-190)_

**Conditions table**

| Condition | Test |
| --- | --- |
| Non-resident recipient | Client's registered address or usual place of business is outside Australia |
| Not in Australia when performed | The client (or their representative) is not physically present in Australia at the time the service is delivered |
| No Australian connection | The service does not relate to real property in Australia, does not involve work physically performed on goods in Australia |

### Reporting [T1]

- **AU reporting rules** — GST-free exports appear in G2 (Export sales) on the BAS (Business Activity Statement). Input tax credits (GST on costs) are FULLY recoverable. No GST is charged on the invoice.

### Common Scenario [T1]

An Australian freelance developer provides software development services to a US company. The developer works from Australia. The client is in the US and the software is used in the US. **Result:** GST-free under Div 38-190. Invoice AUD amount, no GST.

## Step 5: Indian Seller to Non-Indian Client [T1]

**Legislation:** Integrated Goods and Services Tax Act 2017, Section 2(6) (definition of export of services); Section 16 (zero-rating).

### Export of Services -- Conditions [T1]

- **Export of services conditions statement** — A supply of services qualifies as an "export of services" (zero-rated) if ALL of the following are met.  _(IGST Act 2017 s2(6))_

**Conditions table**

| Condition | Requirement |
| --- | --- |
| 1. Supplier location | Supplier is located in India |
| 2. Recipient location | Recipient is located outside India |
| 3. Place of supply | Place of supply is outside India (under the IGST place of supply rules) |
| 4. Payment | Payment is received in convertible foreign exchange or Indian rupees (where permitted by RBI) |
| 5. Not merely an establishment | Supplier and recipient are not merely establishments of the same person |

### Two Options for Zero-Rating [T1]

**Two Options for Zero-Rating [T1]**

| Option | Treatment | LUT/Bond |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Export WITH payment of IGST | Charge IGST at applicable rate, then claim refund from government | No LUT needed |
| Export WITHOUT payment of IGST (under LUT/Bond) | Do not charge IGST; file under Letter of Undertaking (LUT) | LUT filed annually via Form GST RFD-11 |

**Recommended for freelancers:** File LUT annually and export without charging IGST. Avoids the cash flow burden of paying IGST and waiting for refund.

### Reporting [T1]

- **India reporting rules** — Report in GSTR-1 under "Exports" table. Report in GSTR-3B under "Zero-rated supply." Input Tax Credit (ITC) on domestic purchases is FULLY available for refund or adjustment.

### Common Scenario [T1]

An Indian freelance developer provides software development to a US company. Paid in USD. LUT filed. **Result:** Zero-rated. No IGST charged. Full ITC recovery. Report as export in GSTR-1.

## Step 6: Singaporean Seller to Non-Singaporean Client [T1]

**Legislation:** Goods and Services Tax Act (Cap 117A), Section 21(3); GST (International Services) Order; Fifth Schedule.

### Zero-Rating Under the Fifth Schedule [T1]

- **Zero-rating conditions statement** — Services are zero-rated (GST at 0%) if they fall under the categories in the Fifth Schedule and are supplied to an overseas person.  _(Fifth Schedule)_

**Conditions table**

| Condition | Test |
| --- | --- |
| Overseas person | Customer does not have a business or fixed establishment in Singapore; or if they do, the service is not for the Singapore establishment |
| Service type | Must be a prescribed international service under the Fifth Schedule (includes most B2B professional services) |

### Key Fifth Schedule Categories [T1]

**Key Fifth Schedule Categories [T1]**

| Category | Examples |
| --- | --- |
| Para 1 | Services under a contract with an overseas person (catch-all for most B2B services: consulting, IT, accounting, legal, design) |
| Para 2 | Services supplied in connection with goods for export |
| Para 3 | International transport |
| Para 10 | Intellectual property rights |

### Reporting [T1]

- **Singapore reporting rules** — Report in Box 2 of the GST return (zero-rated supplies). Input GST (GST on purchases) is FULLY recoverable. No GST charged on the invoice.

### Common Scenario [T1]

A Singaporean UI/UX designer provides design services to a UK company. **Result:** Zero-rated under Fifth Schedule Para 1. No GST. Full input tax recovery.

## Step 7: When Export Zero-Rating Does NOT Apply [T2]

**Exceptions table**

| Exception | Jurisdictions | Reason |
| --- | --- | --- |
| **Services related to land/immovable property** | EU (Art 47), UK, AU, IN, SG | Place of supply = where property is located. If property is in seller's country, domestic VAT/GST applies. |
| **Event admission / attendance** | EU (Art 53), UK | Place of supply = where event takes place. If event is in seller's country, domestic VAT applies. |
| **Restaurant and catering** | EU (Art 55), UK | Place of supply = where performed. |
| **Passenger transport** | EU (Art 48), UK, AU | Where transport occurs. |
| **Services performed on goods physically in the seller's country** | AU (Div 38-190 fails), SG | If goods are in Australia/Singapore and the service is performed there, may not be GST-free. |
| **Services where effective use and enjoyment is in seller's country** | AU, SG, UK (anti-avoidance) | If the service is effectively used in the seller's country, export relief may be denied. [T2] |
| **B2C "other services" (not listed services)** | EU (Art 45) | Place of supply = seller's country for unlisted B2C services. Domestic VAT applies even if consumer is abroad. |

## Step 8: Country-Specific Worked Examples [T1]

### Example 1 -- Malta IT freelancer to US client (B2B) [T1]

**Facts:** Maltese IT consultant provides remote software development to a US company. Invoices EUR 5,000 monthly.
**Treatment:** Place of supply = US (Art 44, B2B). Outside the scope of Malta VAT. Invoice 0% VAT. Report in Box 2. Full input VAT recovery on Malta costs.

### Example 2 -- German designer to Japanese client (B2B) [T1]

**Facts:** German graphic designer invoices a Japanese company EUR 3,000 for branding work.
**Treatment:** Place of supply = Japan (Art 44, B2B). Outside the scope of German VAT. Report in KZ 45. No output VAT.

### Example 3 -- UK accountant to Australian client (B2B) [T1]

**Facts:** UK chartered accountant provides tax advisory services to an Australian company. Invoices GBP 10,000.
**Treatment:** Place of supply = Australia (s7(10) VATA 1994). Outside the scope of UK VAT. Include value in Box 6 but not Box 1.

### Example 4 -- Australian developer to Canadian client (B2B) [T1]

**Facts:** Australian freelance developer provides app development to a Canadian company. Invoices AUD 20,000.
**Treatment:** GST-free under Div 38-190. Client is non-resident, not in Australia, service not connected with Australia. Report in G2 on BAS. No GST.

### Example 5 -- Indian developer to UK client (B2B) [T1]

**Facts:** Indian software company provides development services to a UK client. Invoices USD 10,000. LUT filed.
**Treatment:** Export of services under IGST s2(6). All 5 conditions met. Zero-rated (no IGST under LUT). Report in GSTR-1 exports table. Full ITC recovery.

### Example 6 -- Singaporean consultant to German client (B2B) [T1]

**Facts:** Singaporean management consultant provides advisory services to a German company. Invoices SGD 15,000.
**Treatment:** Zero-rated under Fifth Schedule Para 1. Client is overseas person. No GST. Report in Box 2.

### Example 7 -- French architect, property in Switzerland (Exception) [T2]

**Facts:** French architect designs a building to be constructed in Switzerland for a Swiss client. Invoices EUR 20,000.
**Treatment:** Service related to immovable property (Art 47). Place of supply = Switzerland (where property is). Outside the scope of French VAT. BUT: Swiss VAT may apply -- architect may need to register for Swiss VAT. Flag T2.

### Example 8 -- Maltese trainer, in-person event in Malta for US client [T2]

**Facts:** Maltese company organises a 3-day training event in Malta. Attendees are from a US company. Invoices EUR 10,000.
**Treatment:** If classified as event admission (Art 53): place of supply = Malta, charge Maltese VAT 18%. If classified as a bespoke training service (B2B, Art 44): place of supply = US, no Malta VAT. Flag T2 -- classification depends on whether the event is "open to the public" or bespoke.

## PROHIBITIONS

- **1. Never charge domestic VAT/GST without checking place of supply** — NEVER charge domestic VAT/GST on a standard B2B service export without checking the place of supply rule. The default for B2B services is the client's country.
- **2. Never conflate zero-rated and exempt** — NEVER assume that "zero-rated" and "exempt" are the same. Zero-rated / out-of-scope exports preserve input tax recovery. Exempt supplies do NOT.
- **3. Never forget to report export services** — NEVER forget to report export services on the VAT/GST return. Even though no tax is charged, the value must be reported.
- **4. Never assume all B2C services to foreign consumers are out of scope** — NEVER assume all B2C services to foreign consumers are outside the scope. In the EU, only "listed services" (Art 59) shift to the consumer's country. Other B2C services remain taxable in the seller's country.  _(Art 59)_
- **5. Never zero-rate land/property service in seller's country** — NEVER zero-rate a service related to land/property in the seller's country. Place of supply = where the property is located.
- **6. Never advise Indian exporter to skip LUT filing** — NEVER advise an Indian exporter to skip the LUT filing -- without LUT, IGST must be charged and then refunded, creating cash flow problems.
- **7. Never assume Australian GST-free extends to effective use in Australia** — NEVER assume that GST-free status in Australia extends to services where the effective use and enjoyment is in Australia.

## Edge Cases

### EC1 -- Service partly performed in seller's country, partly abroad [T2]

**Situation:** An Australian consultant travels to Singapore for 2 weeks to deliver a project, then works from Australia for 4 weeks. Client is a Singaporean company.
**Resolution:** Under Div 38-190, the entire supply may still be GST-free if the recipient (SG company) is not in Australia when the services are performed. The 2 weeks in Singapore strengthen the export position. However, if part of the service benefit is enjoyed in Australia, IRAS/ATO may challenge. Flag for reviewer.

### EC2 -- EU freelancer sells B2C to a US consumer (non-listed service) [T2]

**Situation:** A French yoga instructor provides a private in-person yoga session in Paris to a US tourist. The service is not a "listed service" under Art 59.
**Resolution:** Place of supply = France (Art 45, seller's country, B2C non-listed service). French VAT at 20% applies, even though the client is a US resident. The fact that the client is foreign does NOT make it an export.

### EC3 -- Indian freelancer paid in INR, not foreign exchange [T1]

**Situation:** Indian developer provides services to a Dubai-based client but receives payment in INR.
**Resolution:** Under IGST s2(6), payment must be received in convertible foreign exchange OR in INR where permitted by RBI. If payment in INR is not permitted by RBI for this transaction, the supply does NOT qualify as "export of services" and IGST must be charged. Check RBI guidelines.

### EC4 -- UK seller to EU client post-Brexit [T1]

**Situation:** UK web developer invoices a French company for services post-Brexit.
**Resolution:** The supply is outside the scope of UK VAT (place of supply = France, B2B). The French company must self-assess French VAT under French domestic reverse charge rules for services from outside the EU. The UK developer does NOT charge UK VAT and does NOT use the EU reverse charge mechanism.

### EC5 -- Singaporean seller, client has a Singapore branch [T2]

**Situation:** A Singaporean advertising agency provides services to an overseas parent company, but the parent has a branch office in Singapore.
**Resolution:** Under the Fifth Schedule, the supply is zero-rated only if it is NOT supplied directly in connection with the Singapore branch's activities. If the Singapore branch is the effective recipient or beneficiary, zero-rating may be denied. Flag for reviewer.

## Test Suite

### Test 1 -- Standard B2B, Malta to US

**Input:** Maltese sole trader provides IT consulting to a US company. Invoice EUR 3,000.
**Expected:** Outside the scope of Malta VAT. Box 2 = EUR 3,000. No output VAT. Full input VAT recovery.

### Test 2 -- B2C, French seller to US consumer (Art 59 listed service)

**Input:** French consultant provides remote data processing services to a US individual. Invoice EUR 1,000.
**Expected:** Art 59 listed service. Place of supply = US (consumer's country). Outside scope of French VAT. No VAT charged.

### Test 3 -- Indian export with LUT

**Input:** Indian developer invoices US client USD 5,000. LUT filed. Payment in USD.
**Expected:** Zero-rated export. No IGST. Report in GSTR-1 exports. Full ITC recovery.

### Test 4 -- Australian GST-free export

**Input:** Australian designer invoices UK company AUD 8,000 for logo design. Client not in Australia.
**Expected:** GST-free under Div 38-190. G2 on BAS. No GST.

### Test 5 -- Exception: property-related service

**Input:** UK surveyor surveys a building located in the UK for a Singaporean buyer. Invoice GBP 5,000.
**Expected:** Service related to land in the UK (Sch 4A, VATA 1994). UK VAT at 20% = GBP 1,000. Total invoice GBP 6,000. NOT an export -- place of supply is UK regardless of client location.

## Disclaimer

This skill and its outputs are provided for informational and computational purposes only and do not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Open Accountants and its contributors accept no liability for any errors, omissions, or outcomes arising from the use of this skill. All outputs must be reviewed and signed off by a qualified professional (such as a CPA, EA, tax attorney, or equivalent licensed practitioner in your jurisdiction) before filing or acting upon.

If you would like a licensed accountant to review your export VAT position, visit [openaccountants.com](https://openaccountants.com) and log in to request a professional review.
