In brief

In October 2022, UAE Federal Tax Authorities (“FTA) published the UAE Cabinet of Ministers’ Decision No. 99 of 2022 to amend The Executive Regulation of the Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017 on Value Added Tax (“the UAE VAT Executive Regulations”).  For Qualifying Registrants, special rules have been introduced to determine the Emirate against which e-commerce supplies are to be recorded and reported for VAT purposes.

Now the FTA is publishing a “VATP033 VAT Public Clarification (“Clarification”) on the amendments to Emirates’ Reporting – Electronic Commerce Supplies by Qualifying Registrants” related to the aforementioned amendments.

Furthermore, Ministerial Decision No. 26 of 2023 was issued on February 22 2023, to establish criteria and conditions for a supply of goods and services to be considered as an electronic commerce supply via an Electronic Commerce Medium.

Key dates

  • The amended provisions became effective from January 1, 2023.
  • Notification/reporting as per the new rules by qualifying registrants is required from July 1, 2023.
  • The FTA kindly requests registrants who expect to be Qualifying Registrants to inform the FTA by 15 March 2023.

Summary of the Clarification

Qualifying Registrants

Taxable persons supplying goods and services through electronic commerce which exceed AED 100 million over a calendar year are referred to as “Qualifying Registrants”.

Threshold for Qualifying Registrants

From 1 July 2023, Qualifying Registrants, including registrants acting as undisclosed agents, are required to notify the FTA via the first VAT return to be submitted after exceeding the AED 100 million threshold. At notification, the Registrant is required to also confirm the date when the AED 100 million threshold was exceeded.

The first assessment of whether the AED 100 million threshold is exceeded is based on the 2022 calendar year, i.e. 1 January 2022 to 31 December 2022.

If the threshold was not exceeded for the calendar year 2022, the registrant making e-commerce supplies shall regularly conduct an assessment to determine whether the threshold of AED 100 million was exceeded during any subsequent calendar years. The registrant shall notify the FTA through the first return submitted after the threshold was exceeded for any calendar year and confirm the date on which it exceeded the threshold.

Revised Reporting Mechanism for Qualifying Registrants

From 1 July 2023 or the first tax period following the calendar year in which the AED 100 million threshold was exceeded, as the case may be, Qualifying Registrants will be required to separately identify the Emirate in which e-commerce and non-e-commerce standard rated supplies are to be reported, per tax period. This information shall be submitted as an underlying declaration and split between e-commerce and non-e-commerce standard rated supplies.

The amounts declared in each of the relevant Emirate fields under box 1 of the VAT return shall still be the aggregate of e-commerce and non-e- commerce standard rated supplies for each Emirate.

Qualifying Registrants must also maintain relevant supporting documents and information proving the Emirate in which the goods or services were received. The FTA may require these documents and information as part of a tax audit.

Emirates’ allocation factors

The Emirate in which the services are received, shall be determined in accordance with the relevant factors.

As a default factor, the FTA will accept the place of residence, i.e. the residential address of a consumer, or the establishment most closely connected to the service for a business customer, as the location where the services are received, taking precedence over, for example, billing address or IP address.

Awareness (notification to the FTA)

The FTA requests registrants who expect to be Qualifying Registrants to inform the FTA by 15 March 2023, including their registered name and TRN, via Emiratesreporting@tax.gov.ae, of the following:

Whether they are interested in attending an awareness session on this matter; and

Questions that they have on the matter that they would like covered in the session.

E-commerce

The purposes of Emirates’ reporting, the term “e-commerce” is defined as “the process of selling goods or services through electronic means, an electronic platform, a store in social media, or electronic applications in accordance with criteria and conditions determined by the Minister.”

For the purposes of the revised Emirates Reporting, only taxable supplies made through electronic commerce shall be considered.

Electronic Commerce supply made through an Electronic Commerce Medium

Electronic means, an electronic platform, a store in social media, or electronic applications are included under the definition of “Electronic Commerce Medium” whereby this definition further covers a website, portal, gateway, interface, platform, marketplace, API, and similar applications. (incl. stores in the metaverse, smart kiosks, robotic devices).

As per Ministerial Decision No. 26: If all the criteria and conditions, as clarified below, are met, such supplies will be subject to the Emirates’ reporting rules subject to their annual value exceeding the threshold of AED 100 million over a calendar year:

Criteria (a)

The Goods and Services are listed or advertised on the Electronic Commerce Medium

This condition is met if the customer is provided with sufficient information to allow an informed purchase of the goods or services.

Listing or advertising general categories of goods or services on the Electronic Commerce Medium without individually listing or advertising the goods or services falling under such categories or without a price or cost, does not meet with this condition.

Similarly, if the Electronic Commerce Medium only provides for a link to another website where the goods or services are listed or only displays a QR code, this does not meet the condition of goods or services being listed or advertised on the Electronic Commerce Medium.

Criteria (b)

The Goods and Services are ordered through the Electronic Commerce Medium, regardless of whether the payment is made online or not

This condition requires the order to be fully executed, through the use of the Electronic Commerce Medium.

For example, if the customer is required to sign a contract in person (offline) or separately agree to terms and conditions on another electronic medium or via email, for the order to be confirmed, the condition will not be met since the order will not be fully completed through the electronic medium.

The manner or form of payment is not a determining factor for meeting this condition. Payment for the electronic commerce supply can be done through online means, separate bank transfer, cash on delivery, or any other commercially acceptable form of payment.

Criteria (c)

In the case of a supply of Goods, the Goods are delivered to a location specified by the customer, whereby this location is not owned by the supplier nor operated by that supplier.

The delivery must be to a location specified by the customer, whereby the location specified by the customer will determine the Emirate in which the supply is received for the purposes of Revised Reporting Mechanism.

When the location is specified by the customer, this shall be considered to determine the Emirate in which the supply is received. This takes precedence over, for example place of residence or billing address of the customer, if these are different from the delivery location specified.

This condition will not be met where the customer specifies any location owned or operated by the supplier as the delivery address. For example, if the customer elects to collect the goods from any of the supplier’s locations (e.g. stores or warehouses), such supply will not be regarded as a supply through e-commerce and should be disregarded when assessing whether the supplier is a Qualifying Registrant.

Criteria (d)

In the case of a supply of Services, the Services are provided, or the right to receive the Services is granted to the customer with minimal or no human intervention.

This condition covers a supply of services provided through the electronic medium on which the services are advertised or listed and through which the order was made. The condition also covers the granting of the right to receive services.

The services or the granting of the right to receive the services must be provided with minimal or no human intervention.

For example, where a training is provided by a human lecturer through live-stream, such service shall be disregarded in assessing whether a supplier is a Qualifying Registrant. However, if the training consists of the automatic broadcasting of a pre-recorded training course with an automated assessment, the condition will be met and, hence, this service should be considered in assessing whether the supplier is a Qualifying Registrant.

Another example is where the granting of the right to receive services is provided through the intervention of a chatbox, operated by a human being in a call centre. In this case, the condition is not met.

Where an Electronic Commerce Medium automatically grants the right to receive meal delivery services, this condition will be met, even though the delivery services are performed by human drivers.

But if the customer merely checks the list of goods or services on the Electronic Commerce Medium and then calls or otherwise contacts the supplier who delivers the goods, the service of the transport is not considered to have been received through the Electronic Commerce Medium nor has the right to receive it, been granted through the Electronic Commerce Medium.

Undisclosed agent arrangements

If the e-Commerce Medium does not disclose the name of the supplier of the relevant goods or services, it shall be regarded as an undisclosed agent.

In such cases, the supplier shall be regarded as supplying the goods or services to the e-Commerce Medium, and the e-Commerce Medium shall be regarded as supplying the same goods or services to the customer.

In such an arrangement, the operator of the e-Commerce Medium shall be responsible for accounting for VAT on the supply to the customer if the e-Commerce Medium is a taxable person, unless the supply is out of scope or exempt from VAT. Therefore, the operator of the e-Commerce Medium, and not the supplier, is required to consider the supply to the end customer when determining the value of the taxable supplies made by it through e-commerce.

The supplier is required to consider the supply to the e-Commerce Medium and whether it has UAE VAT implications.

Incidental supplies to the electronic commerce supplies

Activities that support online transactions, such as payment systems, logistics for the delivery of goods and other similar platform services fall within the remit of an electronic commerce supply of goods provided these ancillary services are provided by the same supplier of the goods. The principles of “single composite supply” would apply to such cases.

Revised Record-keeping Mechanism for Qualifying Registrants

Once a registrant has been classified as a Qualifying Registrant and is subject to the related reporting obligations, it will be required to abide by the reporting mechanism clarified above for the following period(s):

  • (18) Eighteen months starting from the first tax period commencing on or after 1 July 2023 for registrants that have exceeded the AED 100 million threshold during the calendar year 2022.
  • Two (2) years starting from the first tax period of the calendar year commencing after the date on which the registrant has exceeded AED 100 million threshold for any year after 2022.

For example, if the e-commerce supplier exceeded the threshold for the first time in October 2023, the relevant reporting obligations start for the first tax period starting in the calendar year 2024 and will apply for a period of 2 years. In this case, if the Qualifying Registrant’s first tax period in 2024 starts on 1 February 2024, then the obligation to report as per the above clarified mechanism in relation to e-Commerce supplies will apply until the tax period ending 31 January 2026.

At the end of the 18 months or 2 years, as the case may be, the Qualifying Registrant shall re-assess whether it exceeded the threshold for the calendar year that just ended, and notify the FTA accordingly through its tax return if it needs to continue applying the special reporting mechanism in relation to e-commerce supplies.

For example, where the Qualifying Registrant still exceeded the threshold in the calendar year 2025, the Qualifying Registrant shall inform the FTA again in the return submitted for the first tax period starting in the calendar year 2026. The qualifying registrant will then continue to apply the reporting mechanism as clarified in this Public Clarification for a further two years.

KPMG has a team of experienced tax specialists that can help you assess your current tax position, advise on the appropriate tax treatment, prepare clarification requests, or represent you in front of the FTA as registered tax agents.

We are happy to discuss your specific circumstances with you and determine the way forward should you have any questions or concerns in this regard. Please get in touch with your usual KPMG contact or any of the tax professionals below.

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