Hi everybody, has anybody managed to get a electric bike and/or battery
vat free because they are disabled ? Daveboy.
vat free because they are disabled ? Daveboy.
HI flecc .Thank you for the fast reply.The reason I ask is on the getcycling website Disabled Adult's Cycles | Buy Bikes Online | Get Cycling Online Cycle Shop. they are asking if you want to fill in aVAT free cannot apply to e-bikes, they don't meet the requirements of the scheme
Only a motor vehicle or a legal mobility chair comply.
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hi old dave would some sellers include 50cycles ???Ahh ... but
Batteries for use by a 'disabled' person can be vat free... some sellers advertise the fact and just require a simple declaration to be filled in on line.
Bikes ... Disabled Adult's Cycles | Buy Bikes Online | Get Cycling Online Cycle Shop
I give up ... lolhi old dave would some sellers include 50cycles ???
I raised the issue of VAT on e-bikes and related stuff like batteries, on the grounds they're environmentally friendly and support the governments policy of reducing Co2 emissions.. I suggested that e-bike's and all related parts should be zero-rated/exempt for VAT or reduced to the lower 5% rate... I also argued that charging VAT and Duty on e-bikes and related stuff is counter-productive in their "greener UK economy" and "greener transport" policies as the cost of e-bikes is still prohibitively expensive for many people...more people on e-bikes = more healthier people = less NHS costs = more productive population...etc.. I wrote to the Department of Transport and HMRC, but they said they have no plans to do this. Maybe we just need to lobby harder and more letters to MPs ;-)Hi everybody, has anybody managed to get a electric bike and/or battery
vat free because they are disabled ? Daveboy.
As you see from both my original post and the last couple, that's not the case Dave, e-bikes are not considered as mobility vehicles and cannot be VAT exempt. Using a kit may open a window for an attempt, since the regulations refer to modified vehicles, though they are referring to motor vehicles which e-bikes are not. I doubt if one would be successful with a kit though, HMRC are very rigid with their interpretation of the rules.In other words, you can claim exemption (it's an EU reg) if you're registered disabled on items which would enable your mobility and an electric bike or parts certainly comes under that.
Yeah I think you would have a hard time convincing them an e-bike or kit falls into the same category as a mobility vehicle..although it could of course.. plenty of people (myself even) cannot walk far with knee or hip problems and yet with an e-bike you can travel miles without pedalling..isn't that a mobility aid then? I expect they assume if you're able to get on and off a bike, move it some distance, and balance on it etc, you must be in a much better state than someone who just sits on one of those mobility vehicles. Or maybe they just haven't caught up with e-bikes yet and don't understand how they useful can be for some disabled or elderly folks!As you see from both my original post and the last couple, that's not the case Dave, e-bikes are not considered as mobility vehicles and cannot be VAT exempt. Using a kit may open a window for an attempt, since the regulations refer to modified vehicles, though they are referring to motor vehicles which e-bikes are not. I doubt if one would be successful with a kit though, HMRC are very rigid with their interpretation of the rules.
Good grief, you expect joined-up thinking from either the government or its minions?I raised the issue of VAT on e-bikes and related stuff like batteries, on the grounds they're environmentally friendly and support the governments policy of reducing Co2 emissions.. I suggested that e-bike's and all related parts should be zero-rated/exempt for VAT or reduced to the lower 5% rate... I also argued that charging VAT and Duty on e-bikes and related stuff is counter-productive in their "greener UK economy" and "greener transport" policies as the cost of e-bikes is still prohibitively expensive for many people...more people on e-bikes = more healthier people = less NHS costs = more productive population...etc.. I wrote to the Department of Transport and HMRC, but they said they have no plans to do this. Maybe we just need to lobby harder and more letters to MPs ;-)
Irish Customs. Things are open to a different interpretation and when I spoke to a Customs employee about it, she said that if I were registered disabled I could fill in the exemption form (and likely get it). I can't be assed looking it all up again (as it took a fair bit of digging around) but it's an EU reg under some ratified Customs agreement.As you see from both my original post and the last couple, that's not the case Dave, e-bikes are not considered as mobility vehicles and cannot be VAT exempt. Using a kit may open a window for an attempt, since the regulations refer to modified vehicles, though they are referring to motor vehicles which e-bikes are not. I doubt if one would be successful with a kit though, HMRC are very rigid with their interpretation of the rules.