Just curious as to how many people actually have received theirs. I checked our account today, and nothing. I know the ss 00-22 were supposed to be sent first, and ours is 18. Kind of dissappointed ...
I lost my job a few weeks ago but since have found a way to make £300- £400 on horse racing each week so obvously I wanna keep doing this I'm just worried now I'm going to get a big tax ...
I'm referring to people who have never married yet they keep having kids ! Seems unfair to me that a single responsible person hardly has any deductions yet parents who have never been married ...
I live in Nevada and have not filed my taxes in a few years how far do i have to go back when i finally do get around to filing? I lost all my tax info due to unforseen cercumstances (Ex-boyfriend ...
Additional Details I'm going to Jamaica next week for a week for my 40th birthday so I think I'll save my rebate for a trip to Aruba next year for my 41st birthday!...
i am faced with the most awful dilemma I have not worked for the past 18months as I have been looking after my child. Financially this has been tough and now we are at our limit with loans and credit ...
£190.00 plus VAT at17.5%. All you do is multiply 190 by 17.5, which is £33.25p and add them together = £223.25p
ChocLover
£223.25
VAT is 17.5%
oyuzim
depends, if it is lower rate then it is not 17.5%. If you are invoicing from non UK and non EU it is outside scope.... if you are exempt building owner you cannot recover the VAT or press the VAT. VAT in French is TVA EU VAT is rather more complex. etc etc.
shortbreadtin
You've had the answer tons of times already - VAT= 17.5%
General Devious
£223.25
ice maiden
£190 add 17.5% of 190= £217.90
luscious_linz
It's £223.25
dooleys18
190 times 17.5%
33.25
190+33.25=233.25
David P
Most of the above answers assume that you are buying from the UK and that the VAT is charged at the standard rate of 17.5%.
There are two other rates in the UK, a lower rate of 5% applied to domestic heating fuel and a zero rate.
If is possible, if you buy, as a consumer, from a supplier in another european country to pay a different rate of VAT, even though the price is quoted in pounds.