Cash accounting (Istversteuerung) (also: taxation according to amounts actually received) is a method of VAT taxation under German law in which VAT only arises when the consideration is actually received. The legal basis includes, among other provisions, Section 20 of the German VAT Act (UStG): entrepreneurs may calculate tax on the basis of amounts received if turnover in the previous calendar year did not exceed a specified threshold. Cash accounting affects the timing of output VAT and input VAT and has direct effects on liquidity and bookkeeping.

Cash accounting provides that VAT for a supply of goods or services only arises when the consideration is actually received by the supplying business. By contrast, accrual accounting (Sollversteuerung) produces tax liability already on performance of the supply or on invoice issuance.

Important: The option to use cash accounting is subject to conditions (statutory turnover threshold). If the threshold is exceeded, accrual accounting generally must be applied. Details are governed by the German VAT Act (UStG), in particular Section 20 UStG.

Practical effects in bookkeeping

For day-to-day bookkeeping, cash accounting mainly shifts the timing when VAT must be reported and paid. This affects the VAT advance return, liquidity planning and the input VAT deduction.

VAT advance return

VAT must be declared in the VAT advance return for the period in which the payment was received. Filing frequencies for advance returns (monthly/quarterly) remain in place regardless of the taxation method and are governed by the general thresholds and rules.

Input VAT deduction

Entrepreneurs using cash accounting can generally claim the input VAT deduction only at the time they pay their supplier. That is: if you pay a supplier invoice later, you can only claim the input VAT at that later point in time. This particularly affects liquidity in the case of investments.

Advantages and disadvantages with practical examples

The decision to use cash accounting depends strongly on the individual business model. Below are practical advantages and disadvantages and examples:

Example 1 – Advantage (liquidity): You issue an invoice on 20.12.2025 for net EUR 1,000 plus 19% VAT (EUR 190). The customer pays only on 15.01.2026. Under cash accounting the VAT only arises in January 2026; payment of the EUR 190 to the tax office therefore occurs later than under accrual accounting.

Example 2 – Disadvantage (investment): You purchase a machine in December but only pay in January. Under cash accounting you can claim the input VAT only in January; under accrual accounting the input VAT could possibly be claimed already in December.

Implementation in practice and concrete journal entries

For practical bookkeeping observe the following steps:

  1. Check whether you meet the requirements to use cash accounting (note: turnover threshold in the previous year).
  2. Inform the tax office if necessary that you wish to apply cash accounting or indicate the setting in your VAT advance return/Elster filing.
  3. Configure your accounting software for cash-based VAT posting (due-date-based VAT posting).
  4. Perform regular reconciliations of open items at year-end to correctly reflect carryovers into the next period.

Typical journal entries (simplified presentation):

Feature Cash accounting Accrual accounting
Timing of VAT On receipt of payment On performance/invoice issuance
Input VAT deduction usually on payment on receipt of invoice/performance
Liquidity effect positive when payments are delayed negative, because taxes become due earlier

Conclusion: For many freelancers and small businesses, cash accounting can be a sensible option to improve liquidity and reduce risks from bad debts. Check the requirements under Section 20 UStG and discuss the decision with your tax advisor to correctly manage effects on input VAT, investments and VAT advance returns.

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Glossary Questions
What does "Istversteuerung" mean?

With Istversteuerung (cash accounting), VAT becomes due only when payment is received and not already when the invoice is issued; the legal basis can be found in Section 20 of the German VAT Act (UStG).

Who can use the cash accounting method?

You can use the cash accounting method if your total turnover in the previous calendar year did not exceed EUR 600,000; it typically applies to freelancers and small traders who are not required to keep accounts (see §20 UStG).

Does the cash accounting method (Istversteuerung) also apply to small businesses?

The small‑business scheme under §19 of the German VAT Act generally relieves you from showing and remitting VAT, so the cash accounting method is usually not relevant in this case; if you opt out of the small‑business scheme, you can switch to cash accounting provided you meet the requirements.

When must VAT be remitted on advance payments or partial payments?

For advance payments and partial payments, VAT becomes due upon receipt of each individual payment; you must therefore declare and remit the tax immediately when the payment is received.

How do I apply for or switch to cash accounting?

Notify the tax authorities informally that you wish to use cash accounting (e.g., in the questionnaire for tax registration or by letter to the tax office); the arrangement remains in effect as long as the statutory requirements, such as the turnover threshold, are met.

History
Publication date:
11/14/2025
Modification date:
11/15/2025
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