Value-added tax (commonly abbreviated VAT) is a consumption tax on supplies of goods and other services that entrepreneurs supply domestically for consideration. It is levied according to the rules of the Value Added Tax Act (UStG) and is remitted by the entrepreneur to the tax office, while the recipient of the service initially pays the tax. For freelancers and small businesses VAT is a pass-through item that you must correctly charge on invoices, record in the accounts and report in the VAT return and the annual tax return.

What does VAT cover and which tax rates apply?

Under §1 UStG most supplies of goods and services in Germany are subject to VAT. There are two standard rates:

Some transactions are VAT-exempt or subject to special rules (e.g. intra-Community supplies, export deliveries, certain financial and insurance services). Relevant sections include §4 UStG (tax-exempt supplies) and §6 UStG (place of other supplies).

Invoicing and input tax deduction

The correct invoice is central to the input tax deduction and the remittance of VAT. Invoices must contain certain mandatory details pursuant to §14 UStG so that your customer can claim input VAT.

Mandatory details on invoices

Small business scheme (§19 UStG)

If your turnover in the previous year did not exceed €22,000 and is expected not to exceed €50,000 in the current year, you can opt for the small business scheme. You then do not show VAT and are not entitled to claim input VAT. Your invoice must include a note, e.g. “According to §19 UStG, no VAT is charged.”

Accounting treatment — practical examples

In daily bookkeeping it is important to remember: VAT is not revenue, input VAT is not an expense. Both items are recorded separately and only the difference is paid to or refunded by the tax office.

Example 1: Sales invoice (service to a customer)

You invoice a service for €1,000.00 net at 19% VAT. Total amount €1,190.00.

Entry Debit Credit
Sales entry Accounts receivable €1,190.00 Revenue €1,000.00 / VAT €190.00

Example 2: Purchase invoice (purchase)

You buy office supplies for €500.00 net at 19% VAT. Invoice €595.00.

Entry Debit Credit
Purchase entry Expense/Office supplies €500.00 / Input VAT €95.00 Accounts payable €595.00

In the VAT advance return you deduct the input VAT paid (€95.00) from the VAT collected (€190.00). Result: VAT payable €95.00 to the tax office.

Special rules and obligations

VAT advance return and annual return

The VAT advance return (ELSTER) must be submitted periodically: monthly, quarterly or annually depending on the amount of VAT payable in the previous year. In general: high liabilities usually require monthly filing, medium liabilities quarterly, and very low liabilities may allow annual filing. The final VAT liability is determined in the annual return.

Reverse-charge and intra-Community supplies

For cross-border services within the EU or certain services the reverse-charge procedure (§13b UStG) applies: the recipient of the service is liable for the VAT. In most cases intra-Community supplies are VAT-exempt if the buyer’s VAT ID is provided and the required filings (recapitulative statement / EC Sales List) are made.

Practical tips for freelancers and small businesses

Correct handling of VAT protects you from additional assessments and fines. If in doubt, consult a tax advisor or chamber, especially for complex cross-border matters or when choosing the small business scheme.

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Glossary Questions
What is value-added tax and who must charge it?

Value-added tax is an indirect tax on supplies of goods and other services that an entrepreneur carries out domestically (UStG). As an entrepreneur within the meaning of the UStG (§2), you must show VAT on your invoices and remit it to the tax office, unless a tax exemption or the small-business regulation applies.

Does the small business regulation apply to me and what does that mean in practice?

If your turnover in the previous year did not exceed EUR 22,000 and is not expected to exceed EUR 50,000 in the current year, you can apply the small business regulation under §19 UStG and do not have to charge VAT on your invoices. However, you thereby also forgo the right to deduct input VAT.

How does the input tax deduction work and who can use it?

Entrepreneurs can deduct the input tax shown on incoming invoices from the VAT payable, provided the invoice meets the requirements of §14 UStG and the supplies or services were obtained for their business (§15 UStG). The input tax deduction is excluded for tax-exempt supplies or if you are a small business owner (Kleinunternehmer).

How and when must I report and pay VAT to the tax office?

You must regularly file VAT advance returns (monthly or quarterly, depending on your tax liability) and an annual VAT return; payments are due when the advance return is filed. The tax office determines the deadlines and reporting periods; for newly established businesses, a monthly advance return is usually required.

Which VAT rates apply in Germany and when do they apply?

The standard rate is 19% and the reduced rate is 7% for certain goods and services, as regulated in §12 UStG. Some supplies are exempt from tax under the UStG, e.g., export deliveries or certain medical services.

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