VAT doesn't have anything to do with Brexit - I think. It's a tax on goods and services and the tax falls due where the "supply" happens. If you buy something in a German store, it is subject to German VAT. If you buy it in the UK, it is subject to UK VAT.
That was the case, because we were in the EU. It used to be the case we would pay German VAT (19% or whatever it is) if we bought from a German store, and a German would pay UK VAT (20% or whatever) if they bought from a UK store.
Now, if we buy it from a German store it is German VAT-free but subject to UK VAT on import. And vice versa.
It's the fact that the VAT on an import from or export to the EU now needs to be accounted for somehow to the buyer's domestic tax authority rather than the seller's tax authority that causes the additional red-tape and bureaucracy.
Last edited: