Reverse charge VAT clampdown: compliance essentials for UK project teams
Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

First reported on The Construction Index
30 Second Briefing
HMRC is intensifying enforcement of the VAT domestic reverse charge (DRC) in construction, moving from “light‑touch” to active enquiries, assessments and penalties where reverse charge accounting, CIS classification or invoicing are wrong. The DRC applies where both parties are UK VAT‑ and CIS‑registered, the work falls within CIS “construction operations”, and the customer has not declared end‑user or intermediary status, with mixed‑supply treatment governed by a 5% threshold. Contractors and subcontractors now need watertight written end‑user declarations, DRC‑capable invoicing systems, and cash‑flow planning that reflects loss of the VAT working‑capital buffer.
Technical Brief
- Contractors receiving DRC invoices must self‑account for both output and input VAT on the same VAT return.
- CIS scope drives DRC applicability: alteration, repair, extension, demolition and installation works, including associated materials, are in‑scope.
- Zero‑rated supplies, such as qualifying new‑build housing, fall outside DRC even where CIS applies.
- Supplies between connected landlords/tenants or group companies can be excluded from DRC if formal intra‑group notifications are correctly documented.
Our Take
HMRC’s tighter stance on the domestic reverse charge lands as nearly 10,000 UK construction firms are already in ‘critical’ financial distress, according to Begbies Traynor’s Q4 2025 Red Flag Alert, so misapplying the 5% mixed‑supply exception could tip marginal contractors over the edge.
In our Policy coverage, HMRC appears frequently in pieces tied to enforcement and compliance rather than new reliefs, signalling that UK contractors working under CIS should treat VAT process risk as a board‑level issue alongside safety and project delivery.
For UK project owners, stricter application of the reverse charge since its 2021 introduction effectively shifts VAT cash‑flow risk down the supply chain, which may require revisiting contract terms and payment schedules to avoid disputes with smaller subcontractors.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.


