What is Vat?
VAT (Value-Added Tax) is indirect tax, based on consumption of goods and services in the economy. Revenue is raised for the government by requiring certain traders or vendors to register and to charge VAT on taxable supplies of goods or services.
The essential characteristics of VAT-type taxation are as follows:
VAT is only charged on taxable supplies made by a vendor. Taxable supplies include supplies for which VAT is charged at either the standard rate or zero rate, but does not include:
Does a supplier have to be registered for VAT in order to do business with government?
No.
You do not need a VAT number to apply for a tender. A supplier has to have a valid tax clearance certificate (for all procurement thresholds above R 30 000.00) which is confirmation to government that the relevant requirements in terms of tax registration, tax returns and tax payments (income tax, VAT, PAYE and SITE) have been complied with.
According to the Standing Bid Document (SBD 2), it is a condition of bid that the taxes of the successful bidder must be in order, or that satisfactory arrangements have been made with South African Revenue Service (SARS) to meet the bidder's tax obligations.
When do you have to register for VAT?
To register for VAT, the person must carry on a business in addition to the following:
If at the time a bid was awarded, a company was not yet registered for VAT but during the course of the project the bidder becomes VAT registered. Can VAT be claimed and therefore added to the bid price after an award was made, bearing in mind that the company's bid price did not include VAT?
No.
A supplier cannot request the VAT portion from Government as the supplier made an offer to Government for a period during which they were not registered as a VAT vendor. Government is not liable for any VAT as the original offer did not include VAT.
The price that was offered cannot be adjusted after the supplier has indicated in the bid that the offer is firm and a just representation of their offer.
The supplier can only start claiming VAT once they have been furnished with a VAT registration certificate (VAT 103), which normally takes 2 weeks to process.
This scenario is also highly unlikely to occur as SARS indicates a period of 2 weeks for VAT registration and will first want a supplier to have earned the income before they register such a supplier for VAT. SARS will not allow a scenario where a supplier tells them that since they have now won a tender to an amount that will elevate their turnover to be within the threshold, SARS can now register them.