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Morrison's charging VAT

agentsquirrel_2
Posts: 20 Forumite
hi, went to morrison's yesterday to do some grocery shopping, now i know you pay VAT on hot food but when i checked the till reciept at home i found that my bill was £52.90 subtotal, +VAT @6.94 bringing my shopping to £59.84. when did this start, i had no hot food as i said, nothing apart from basic grocery shopping. just wondered if all the big supermarkets are doing this. if this is the case then the prices arent right are they. its a puzzlement to be honest. anyone else checked their till reciept and found they'd been charged VAT. :mad:
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£6.94 is the VAT on around £39.65 if it helps narrow things down.0
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Why do you care if you're charged VAT? All the prices on the shelves are the price you pay...0
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As a side thought, you say their prices aren't right, but i'd bet they are.
Say you buy:
-Loaf of bread for £1
-Bag of maltesers for £1
You'll pay £2, but your receipt will show £1.85 plus VAT. This is because VAT is chargeable on the maltesers (a luxury good) but not on the bread.
So if we break it down further:
Bread before VAT = £1
Bread after VAT = £1 (VAT of £0.00 charged)
Maltesers before VAT = £0.85
Maltesers after VAT = £1 (VAT of £0.15 charged, that's 17.5% of 85p)
So the pre-VAT price is £1.85, and it shows on the receipt as "you pay £1.85 plus VAT, so you pay £2.00"... but you were expecting to pay £2.00 anyway because on the shelf, each item said it was £1.0 -
agentsquirrel wrote: »anyone else checked their till reciept and found they'd been charged VAT. :mad:
They have to charge VAT on VATable goods, it's the law!
Many items will be classed as confectionary which will all have VAT on.
Heres a list of other items which have VAT in Supermarkets:- Ice cream, similar products, and mixes for making them
- Confectionery, apart from cakes and some biscuits, alcoholic beverages, other beverages, and preparations for making them
- Potato crisps, roasted or salted nuts and some other savoury snack products
- Products for home brewing and wine making
- Ornamental vegetables
- Juice and juice concentrates
- Nuts if shelled and either roasted or salted
- Mixes for ice-cream and similar frozen products
- Ice creams, sorbets, frozen yoghurt (designed to be eaten as such) or ice lollies
- Linseed oil and essential oils
- Cereal, muesli and similar bars with honey or other added sweetening matter
- Shortbread partly or wholly chocolate-covered
- All wholly or partly coated biscuits including biscuits decorated in a pattern with chocolate or some similar product
- Chocolate shortbread
- Gingerbread men decorated with chocolate unless this amounts to no more than a couple of dots for eyes
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agentsquirrel wrote: »hi, went to morrison's yesterday to do some grocery shopping, now i know you pay VAT on hot food but when i checked the till reciept at home i found that my bill was £52.90 subtotal, +VAT @6.94 bringing my shopping to £59.84. when did this start, i had no hot food as i said, nothing apart from basic grocery shopping. just wondered if all the big supermarkets are doing this. if this is the case then the prices arent right are they. its a puzzlement to be honest. anyone else checked their till reciept and found they'd been charged VAT. :mad:
Chocoate covered biscuits are VATable, whereas chocolate covered cakes are not, hence a jaffa cake is vat free, but a chocolate digestive is vatable.
iirc smoothies and fruit juice are vatable.
more details available here: http://customs.hmrc.gov.uk/channelsPortalWebApp/channelsPortalWebApp.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=pageLibrary_PublicNoticesAndInfoSheets&propertyType=document&columns=1&id=HMCE_CL_000118#P67_41240 -
the receipt will show a break down but it is a backwards calculation
you pick up a chocolate bar that say costs £1.00
it will scan and show on receipt as £1.00 but you receipt will show a break down of the priceBaby Milk Action is a non-profit organisation which aims to save lives and to end the avoidable suffering caused by inappropriate infant feeding.0 -
Tim is quite right (:eek:
). Nothing has changed except perhaps Morrison's till receipts. Blame the government, not the supermarkets.
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gunsandbanjos wrote: »lol, what the heck is an ornamental vegetable:rotfl:
There is the ornamental cabbage :- http://uktv.co.uk/gardens/item/aid/18 , which, I suppose, is classed as a house-plant and not something you would normally eat.What part of "A whop bop-a-lu a whop bam boo" don't you understand?0
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