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OpenAccountants/Skills/EU Reverse Charge for B2B Services (Article 196, VAT Directive)

EU Reverse Charge for B2B Services (Article 196, VAT Directive)

A cross-border B2B service transaction occurs between EU member states and the question is whether the reverse charge mechanism under Article 196 of the VAT Directive applies.

GLOBALTax year 2025· Last reviewed Apr 13, 2026

Key facts — GLOBAL, 2025

FieldValue
JurisdictionEU (all 27 member states)
Primary LegislationCouncil Directive 2006/112/EC, Articles 44, 45, 56, 196
Supporting LegislationCouncil Implementing Regulation (EU) No 282/2011; Regulation (EU) No 904/2010 (admin cooperation / VIES)
ScopeB2B services between EU member states where place of supply shifts to the customer's country
ContributorOpenAccountants
Validation DateApril 2026
Skill Version1.0
Confidence CoverageTier 1: standard B2B service reverse charge, ESL reporting, supplier zero-rating. Tier 2: Art 45 exceptions (land, events, transport), mixed B2B/B2C supplies. Tier 3: complex group structures, PE-based place of supply, triangulation.
Cross-referencesmalta-vat-return.md, germany-vat-return.md, france-vat-return.md, italy-vat-return.md, uk-vat-return.md, slovakia-vat-return.md, eu-vat-directive.md

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About

Use this skill whenever a cross-border B2B service transaction occurs between EU member states and the question is whether the reverse charge mechanism under Article 196 of the VAT Directive applies. Trigger on phrases like "reverse charge", "B2B services EU", "intra-community services", "Article 196", "EC Sales List", "self-assess VAT", "cross-border VAT EU", or any request involving the VAT treatment of services supplied between businesses in different EU countries. This skill contains the complete decision logic for determining when reverse charge applies, how the supplier and customer each report it, the EC Sales List obligations, and the country-specific box mappings that link back to each country's VAT return skill. ALWAYS read this skill before classifying any intra-EU B2B service transaction.

GLOBALTax year 2025

Full guide

EU Reverse Charge for B2B Services (Article 196, VAT Directive)


Skill Metadata

FieldValue
JurisdictionEU (all 27 member states)
Primary LegislationCouncil Directive 2006/112/EC, Articles 44, 45, 56, 196
Supporting LegislationCouncil Implementing Regulation (EU) No 282/2011; Regulation (EU) No 904/2010 (admin cooperation / VIES)
ScopeB2B services between EU member states where place of supply shifts to the customer's country
ContributorOpenAccountants
Validation DateApril 2026
Skill Version1.0
Confidence CoverageTier 1: standard B2B service reverse charge, ESL reporting, supplier zero-rating. Tier 2: Art 45 exceptions (land, events, transport), mixed B2B/B2C supplies. Tier 3: complex group structures, PE-based place of supply, triangulation.
Cross-referencesmalta-vat-return.md, germany-vat-return.md, france-vat-return.md, italy-vat-return.md, uk-vat-return.md, slovakia-vat-return.md, eu-vat-directive.md

Confidence Tier Definitions

Every rule in this skill is tagged with a confidence tier:

  • [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 before filing.
  • [T3] Tier 3 -- Out of Scope / Escalate. Skill does not cover this. Do not guess. Escalate to a qualified accountant and document the gap.

Step 0: Pre-Check Questions [T1]

Before applying this skill, you MUST know:

  1. Is the supplier VAT-registered in an EU member state? If no, this skill does not apply (see non-eu-export-services.md or consider non-Union OSS).
  2. Is the customer VAT-registered in a DIFFERENT EU member state? If same country, this is a domestic transaction -- use the relevant country skill.
  3. Is the customer a business (B2B)? Confirmed by a valid VAT identification number verifiable via VIES. If the customer is a private individual (B2C), reverse charge does NOT apply -- the supplier charges their own country's VAT (or uses OSS; see eu-oss-digital.md).
  4. What is the nature of the service? Needed to check Art 44/45 exceptions.

If items 1-3 are unknown, STOP. Do not classify the transaction.


Step 1: Decision Tree -- Does Reverse Charge Apply? [T1]

Legislation: VAT Directive Art 44 (general B2B rule), Art 45 (general B2C rule), Art 46-59 (specific exceptions), Art 196 (reverse charge obligation).

Decision Tree Table

StepQuestionIf YESIf NO
1Is the customer a taxable person (business) acting as such? Verify via VIES.Go to Step 2STOP. B2C rules apply. Supplier charges own VAT rate or uses OSS. Reverse charge does NOT apply.
2Is the supplier established in a different EU member state from the customer?Go to Step 3STOP. Domestic supply. Use country-specific skill.
3Is the service related to immovable property (land, buildings)? Art 47.STOP. Place of supply = where property is located. No reverse charge. Supplier may need to register in that country. [T2]Go to Step 4
4Is the service admission to a cultural, artistic, sporting, scientific, educational, or entertainment event? Art 53.STOP. Place of supply = where event takes place. No reverse charge. [T2]Go to Step 5
5Is the service short-term hire of a means of transport (<=30 days, <=90 days for vessels)? Art 56(1).STOP. Place of supply = where vehicle put at disposal. No reverse charge. [T2]Go to Step 6
6Is the service restaurant/catering on board transport (ship, plane, train) within EU? Art 57.STOP. Place of supply = point of departure. No reverse charge. [T2]Go to Step 7
7Is the service passenger transport? Art 48.STOP. Place of supply = where transport takes place proportionally. No reverse charge. [T2]Go to Step 8
8Reverse charge applies. Place of supply = customer's country under Art 44. Customer self-assesses VAT under Art 196. Supplier invoices without VAT.----

Summary of Art 44/45 Exceptions (Services NOT Subject to Standard B2B Reverse Charge) [T2]

ExceptionArticlePlace of Supply
Immovable property servicesArt 47Location of property
Passenger transportArt 48Where transport takes place
Goods transport (B2C only)Art 49Where transport takes place
Cultural/sporting/educational event admissionArt 53Where event takes place
Restaurant and cateringArt 55Where physically carried out
Short-term hire of transportArt 56(1)Where put at disposal
Restaurant/catering on board transportArt 57Point of departure

If the service falls into any exception above, flag as [T2] and determine place of supply under the specific article. Do not apply reverse charge.


Step 2: How the Supplier Treats It [T1]

When reverse charge applies under Art 196:

  1. Invoice without VAT. The supplier's invoice must show EUR 0.00 VAT.
  2. Include the notation: "Reverse charge -- Article 196 of Council Directive 2006/112/EC" or equivalent national wording.
  3. Include both VAT numbers: Supplier's own VAT number AND customer's VAT number (verified via VIES).
  4. Report on EC Sales List (ESL). The supply of services must be reported on the EC Sales List (also called "Recapitulative Statement") for the relevant period. Report the customer's VAT number and the total value of services supplied.
  5. Report on the VAT return. The supply appears as a zero-rated / out-of-scope B2B EU sale. The specific box depends on the supplier's country:

Supplier-Side Country Box Mappings [T1]

Supplier CountryVAT Return Box for EU B2B ServicesESL Filing
Malta (MT)Box 1 (EU supplies)Quarterly ESL to CFR
Germany (DE)Kennziffer 21 (steuerfrei innergemeinschaftliche Leistungen)Zusammenfassende Meldung (ZM), monthly or quarterly
France (FR)Line A2 / Cadre A (services intracommunautaires)Etat récapitulatif (DES), monthly
Italy (IT)VE30 field 3 (servizi intracomunitari) / EsterometroElenchi Intrastat servizi, monthly or quarterly
Slovakia (SK)Row 15 (services Art 15(10) of Slovak VAT Act)Quarterly ESL (Súhrnný výkaz)
UKN/A -- UK left the EU on 31 January 2020. Reverse charge between UK and EU does NOT apply under Art 196. See non-eu-export-services.md.N/A

For countries not listed above, refer to the country-specific VAT return skill or escalate [T2].


Step 3: How the Customer Treats It [T1]

When the customer receives an intra-EU B2B service subject to reverse charge:

  1. Self-assess output VAT at the customer's domestic standard rate on the net value of the service.
  2. Simultaneously claim input VAT (same amount, same return) if the service is used for taxable supplies and is not in a blocked category.
  3. Net effect = zero for a fully taxable business. But both sides MUST appear on the VAT return.
  4. Report on Intrastat / acquisition section of the VAT return if required by the member state.

Customer-Side Country Box Mappings [T1]

Customer CountryAcquisition Box (Net)Output VAT BoxInput VAT BoxNet Effect
Malta (MT)Box 9a (EU services)Box 3 / Box 6Box 13aZero (if fully taxable)
Germany (DE)KZ 46 (sonst. Leistungen eines im anderen EU-Land ansässigen Unternehmers)KZ 46 feeds outputKZ 67 (Vorsteuer)Zero (if fully taxable)
France (FR)Line 2B (acquisitions intracommunautaires de prestations de services)Line 08/09Line 20Zero (if fully taxable)
Italy (IT)VF24 / Esterometro (acquisti intracomunitari servizi)VJ3 (output)VF24 (input)Zero (if fully taxable)
Slovakia (SK)Row 11/12 (nadobudnutie z EU)Row 11/12 outputRow 20 inputZero (if fully taxable)

Step 4: EC Sales List (ESL) Requirements [T1]

Legislation: Regulation (EU) No 904/2010; VAT Directive Art 262-263.

  1. Who must file: Any VAT-registered business that supplies services to a business in another EU member state where reverse charge applies under Art 196.
  2. What to report: Customer's VAT identification number + total value of services for the period.
  3. Frequency: Varies by member state. Typically quarterly, but some require monthly (e.g., France monthly DES for services).
  4. Deadline: Varies. Typically by the 20th-25th of the month following the reporting period.
  5. Penalty for non-filing: Varies by member state. Can range from EUR 50 to EUR 5,000+ per missed filing.

Critical Rule [T1]

Failure to file the ESL does NOT change the VAT treatment. The reverse charge still applies. But non-filing triggers penalties and may cause the customer's tax authority to query the acquisition.


Step 5: VIES Validation [T1]

Before applying reverse charge, the supplier MUST verify the customer's VAT number via the VIES (VAT Information Exchange System) database: https://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/vies/

  • If VIES confirms the number is valid: proceed with reverse charge.
  • If VIES shows the number is invalid: DO NOT apply reverse charge. Charge domestic VAT. Advise the customer to resolve their VAT registration.
  • If VIES is temporarily unavailable: document the attempt. Retry. If consistently unavailable, apply reverse charge but retain evidence of the check attempt.

Step 6: Worked Examples

Example 1 -- Standard consulting, MT supplier to DE customer [T1]

Facts: Maltese VAT-registered consultant invoices a German company (valid DE VAT number) EUR 5,000 for management consulting. Analysis: B2B, general service (Art 44 applies), no exceptions. Reverse charge applies. Supplier (MT): Invoice EUR 5,000, 0% VAT, notation "Reverse charge Art 196". Report in Box 1. Report on ESL. Customer (DE): Self-assess 19% output VAT = EUR 950 (KZ 46). Claim EUR 950 input VAT (KZ 67). Net = zero.

Example 2 -- Software development, DE supplier to FR customer [T1]

Facts: German freelance developer invoices a French company (valid FR VAT number) EUR 10,000 for custom software development. Analysis: B2B, general service under Art 44, no exceptions. Reverse charge applies. Supplier (DE): Invoice EUR 10,000, 0% VAT. Report in KZ 21. File ZM (ESL). Customer (FR): Self-assess 20% output VAT = EUR 2,000 (Line 08/09). Claim EUR 2,000 input VAT (Line 20). Net = zero.

Example 3 -- Legal services, IT supplier to MT customer [T1]

Facts: Italian law firm invoices a Maltese company (valid MT VAT number) EUR 3,000 for legal advice on a contract. Analysis: B2B, general service under Art 44. Legal services are not in Art 45 exceptions. Reverse charge applies. Supplier (IT): Invoice EUR 3,000, 0% VAT, "inversione contabile Art 196". Report in VE30 field 3. File Intrastat. Customer (MT): Box 9a = EUR 3,000. Box 6 = EUR 540 (18%). Box 13a = EUR 540. Net = zero.

Example 4 -- Architectural services for property in France, MT supplier to DE customer [T2]

Facts: Maltese architect invoices a German company EUR 8,000 for designing a building located in France. Analysis: Service related to immovable property (Art 47). Place of supply = France (where the property is). Reverse charge under Art 196 does NOT apply. The Maltese supplier may need to register for VAT in France and charge French VAT at 20%. Flag: T2 -- reviewer must confirm whether French VAT registration is required or whether the customer can self-assess under French domestic reverse charge rules for construction services.

Example 5 -- Conference admission in Spain, FR supplier to NL customer [T2]

Facts: French event organiser sells admission tickets (EUR 500) for a conference in Spain to a Dutch company. Analysis: Admission to an event (Art 53). Place of supply = Spain. Standard reverse charge does NOT apply. Supplier may need to charge Spanish VAT or register in Spain. Flag: T2 -- escalate to determine whether the French organiser must register in Spain.

Example 6 -- Marketing services, NL supplier to SK customer [T1]

Facts: Dutch marketing agency invoices a Slovak company (valid SK VAT number) EUR 15,000 for digital marketing campaign. Analysis: B2B, general service (Art 44), no exceptions. Reverse charge applies. Supplier (NL): Invoice EUR 15,000, 0% VAT. Report on ESL. Report as intracommunautaire dienst on Dutch return. Customer (SK): Row 11/12 = EUR 15,000. Output VAT at 23% = EUR 3,450. Input VAT = EUR 3,450. Net = zero.

Example 7 -- Accounting services, MT supplier to IT customer [T1]

Facts: Maltese CPA invoices an Italian company (valid IT VAT number) EUR 2,000 for bookkeeping services. Analysis: B2B, general service under Art 44. No exceptions. Reverse charge applies. Supplier (MT): Invoice EUR 2,000, 0% VAT. Box 1 = EUR 2,000. Report on ESL. Customer (IT): Self-assess at 22% = EUR 440 output. Claim EUR 440 input. Net = zero.

Example 8 -- Training seminar (in-person), DE supplier to AT customer [T2]

Facts: German training company invoices an Austrian company EUR 4,000 for a 3-day in-person training seminar held in Germany. Analysis: If this is admission to an event (Art 53), place of supply = Germany (where seminar takes place) -- no reverse charge. However, if the seminar is a bespoke training service (not admission to an event open to the public), then Art 44 applies and reverse charge applies. Flag: T2 -- determine whether the training qualifies as "admission to an event" (Art 53) or a bespoke B2B service (Art 44). The ECJ case C-647/17 (Srf konsulterna) clarified that a seminar involving active participation is a service under Art 44, not admission under Art 53.


Step 7: Common Mistakes [T1]

#MistakeCorrect Treatment
1Applying reverse charge to B2C suppliesReverse charge ONLY applies to B2B (Art 196). For B2C, supplier charges own country's VAT or uses OSS.
2Not reporting on the EC Sales ListESL filing is mandatory for all intra-EU B2B services where reverse charge applies. Non-filing triggers penalties.
3Customer forgets to self-assess both output AND input VATBOTH sides must appear on the return. Missing the output side means undeclared VAT liability.
4Not verifying the customer's VAT number via VIESVIES verification is required. Invalid number = no reverse charge = must charge domestic VAT.
5Applying reverse charge to property-related servicesArt 47 exception: place of supply = where property is located. Reverse charge does NOT apply.
6Confusing "zero-rated" with "exempt"Intra-EU B2B services under reverse charge are zero-rated (supplier retains input VAT recovery). They are NOT exempt supplies.
7Applying reverse charge to post-Brexit UK transactionsUK is not an EU member state since 31 January 2020. Art 196 does not apply to UK-EU transactions.
8Customer in a partially exempt business not adjusting input VATIf the customer makes exempt supplies, they cannot fully recover the self-assessed input VAT. Partial exemption rules of the customer's country apply.

PROHIBITIONS

  1. NEVER apply reverse charge to B2C transactions.
  2. NEVER apply reverse charge without verifying the customer's VAT number via VIES.
  3. NEVER skip the EC Sales List filing obligation when reverse charge applies.
  4. NEVER apply reverse charge to services falling under Art 45-59 exceptions without checking the specific place of supply rule.
  5. NEVER apply reverse charge to transactions involving the UK (post-Brexit).
  6. NEVER assume reverse charge nets to zero for partially exempt businesses -- check the customer's input VAT recovery position.
  7. NEVER issue an invoice with domestic VAT when reverse charge applies -- this results in double taxation if the customer also self-assesses.

Edge Cases

EC1 -- Customer has a VAT number but is a non-taxable legal person [T2]

Situation: The customer has a VAT identification number (e.g., for intra-EU goods acquisitions) but is not a taxable person acting as such (e.g., a government body, a holding company with no economic activity). Resolution: Art 44 requires the customer to be a "taxable person acting as such." A non-taxable legal person with a VAT number for goods acquisitions may not qualify. Flag for reviewer. In most cases, if the customer has an active VAT number verified via VIES, reverse charge applies.

EC2 -- Supplier has a fixed establishment in the customer's country [T2]

Situation: A German company supplying services to a French customer also has a fixed establishment (branch) in France. Does the French branch trigger domestic treatment instead of reverse charge? Resolution: If the French fixed establishment is NOT involved in the supply, reverse charge still applies (Art 44 + Implementing Regulation Art 21-22). If the fixed establishment IS involved, the supply is domestic. Flag for reviewer to determine which establishment is making the supply.

EC3 -- Chain of services (intermediary) [T2]

Situation: Company A (MT) supplies a service to Company B (DE), who re-supplies it to Company C (FR). Who applies reverse charge? Resolution: Each link in the chain is treated independently. A→B: reverse charge applies (MT→DE). B→C: reverse charge applies (DE→FR). Each supplier reports on their respective ESL. Flag for reviewer if the intermediary's involvement is unclear.

EC4 -- Services straddling B2B and B2C (mixed customer) [T2]

Situation: A customer is both a business and a private individual (e.g., a sole trader purchasing services partly for business, partly for personal use). Resolution: If the customer provides their VAT number and the service is for their business activity, reverse charge applies. If the purchase is for personal use (even by a VAT-registered person), it is B2C. Flag for reviewer to confirm the business purpose.

EC5 -- Continuous services spanning multiple periods [T1]

Situation: A monthly retainer service (e.g., EUR 2,000/month) is invoiced quarterly at EUR 6,000. Resolution: Reverse charge applies to each tax point. The tax point for continuous services is typically the end of each billing period or the date of payment, whichever is earlier (Art 64 of the VAT Directive). Report in the period in which the tax point falls. ESL reporting follows the same period.


Test Suite

Test 1 -- Standard B2B consulting, MT to DE

Input: Maltese consultant (MT VAT number valid), German customer (DE VAT number valid via VIES), consulting service EUR 5,000. Expected: Supplier: Box 1 = EUR 5,000, 0% VAT, ESL filed. Customer: KZ 46 = EUR 5,000, output VAT 19% = EUR 950, input VAT EUR 950.

Test 2 -- B2C digital service, MT to DE

Input: Maltese company sells to a German private individual (no VAT number) an online course for EUR 200. Expected: Reverse charge does NOT apply. Supplier charges German VAT rate 19% = EUR 38 via OSS (if registered) or registers in Germany. See eu-oss-digital.md.

Test 3 -- Property-related service (Art 47 exception)

Input: French architect invoices a Belgian company EUR 10,000 for designing a building in Belgium. Expected: Reverse charge under Art 196 does NOT apply. Place of supply = Belgium (Art 47). French architect may need to register for Belgian VAT or Belgian domestic reverse charge for construction services may apply. Flag T2.

Test 4 -- Post-Brexit UK supplier to EU customer

Input: UK company invoices a Dutch company EUR 8,000 for IT consulting. UK company is not VAT-registered in any EU state. Expected: Art 196 reverse charge does NOT apply (UK is not EU). The Dutch company may still need to self-assess Dutch VAT under Dutch domestic rules for services received from outside the EU. See non-eu-export-services.md.

Test 5 -- Customer's VAT number is invalid

Input: Italian company invoices a Spanish company EUR 3,000 for design services. Spanish VAT number fails VIES validation. Expected: Reverse charge does NOT apply. Italian supplier must charge Italian VAT at 22% = EUR 660. Invoice total = EUR 3,660. No ESL filing.


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.

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