European Union VAT
What is VAT?
Due to the delivery, as well as delivery time, the freight Varries depending on the product, warehouse,
destination and the shipping method you have chosen.
The shipping costs change very often and it is difficult to have a firm freight.
You can select the shipping costs for each orders, depending on the supplier and delivery option.
However, you can view the specific shipping costs on the product page or on the checkout page.
We can offer you a free shipping service to some countries, and further countries will be covered in the future.
Value added tax is
a general tax that applies, in principle, to all commercial activities involving the production and distribution of goods and the provision of services. However, if the annual turnover of this person is less than a certain limit (the threshold), which differs according to the Member State, the person does not have to charge VAT on their sales.
a consumption tax because it is borne ultimately by the final consumer. It is not a charge on businesses.
charged as a percentage of price, which means that the actual tax burden is visible at each stage in the production and distribution chain.
collected fractionally, via a system of partial payments whereby taxable persons (i.e., VAT-registered businesses) deduct from the VAT they have collected the amount of tax they have paid to other taxable persons on purchases for their business activities. This mechanism ensures that the tax is neutral regardless of how many transactions are involved.
paid to the revenue authorities by the seller of the goods, who is the "taxable person", but it is actually paid by the buyer to the seller as part of the price. It is thus an indirect tax.
Why do all EU countries use VAT?
At the time when the European Community was created, the original six EU countries were using different forms of indirect taxation, most of which were cascade taxes. These were multi-stage taxes which were each levied on the actual value of output at each stage of the productive process, making it impossible to determine the real amount of tax actually included in the final price of a particular product. As a consequence, there was always a risk that EU countries would deliberately or accidentally subsidise their exports by overestimating the taxes refundable on exportation.
It was evident that if there was ever going to be an efficient, single market in Europe, a neutral and transparent turnover tax system was required which ensured tax neutrality and allowed the exact amount of tax to be rebated at the point of export. As explained in VAT on imports and exports, VAT allows for the certainty that exports there are completely and transparently tax-free.
Further information can be found under European Union VAT.