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Why VAT Is Not Your Money and Never Was

VAT may pass through your bank account, but in a Dutch business it should be treated as a tax liability first and available cash only never.
  • All Blogs
  • VAT
  • Why VAT Is Not Your Money and Never Was
  • May 6, 2026 by
    Linda Pavan

    XTROVERSO AI

    • VAT is not company revenue but a tax liability that passes through your accounts; treat it as reserved, not available cash.
    • Separate VAT from sales revenue immediately when invoicing so the VAT element appears as a liability from issuance.
    • Example: Invoice €10,000 excl. VAT → €12,100 total; €2,100 is VAT (not turnover). With €600 deductible input VAT, net VAT payable = €1,500.
    • Always check your VAT position before spending: sales VAT, deductible input VAT, invoice quality, private/mixed use, different rates, foreign/reverse-charge rules, and customer non-payment.
    • Keep bookkeeping current (process invoices/receipts at least monthly) so VAT amounts aren’t a surprise.
    • Verify input VAT is deductible: correct VAT invoice, goods/services supplied, and use for taxable activities. Dutch VAT invoices must meet specific formal requirements.
    • Pay VAT on time and earmark funds (separate account) to avoid payment-default penalties (including a 3% penalty framework).
    • Correct under-declared VAT promptly: since 1 Jan 2025, make corrections within 8 weeks of discovery to meet the correction framework.
    • Understand special regimes (e.g., Kleine Ondernemersregeling): they change pricing, deductibility, and administrative consequences—don’t assume cash-flow benefits without review.
    • Bottom line: keep VAT visible in the ledger, review routinely (weekly for active businesses), and adopt disciplined processes to protect cash flow and compliance.

    VAT creates an illusion in your account. Money arrives, balances rise, and decisions follow as if the full sum is business funds.

    It doesn't.

    VAT is a tax amount moving through your administration and your bank account before settlement with the Belastingdienst. You calculate VAT on your sales, record the VAT charged to customers, and deduct eligible input VAT on business purchases. The difference gets paid to the tax authority or refunded to you.

    The operational problem is simple. Founders often treat VAT as cash, while the tax system treats it as a liability.

    With that context, let's focus on tangible steps you can take to manage VAT without disrupting your cash flow.

    Separate VAT from revenue immediately

    When invoicing with 21% VAT, the amount received feels like income, but true revenue excludes VAT.

    Example: Invoice €10,000 excluding VAT; total €12,100. €2,100 is VAT collected, not additional turnover. With a €600 deductible input VAT, your net VAT payable is €1,500.

    Don't review only total bank income. Separate each sales invoice into revenue excluding VAT and VAT charged. The VAT element should be visible as a liability from the moment the invoice is issued.

    This separation prevents using VAT cash as working capital, protecting you from shortfalls at the VAT deadline.

    Track your VAT position before spending freely.

    A bank balance shows current funds, not tax liabilities. A business can have money but still face underfunding due to VAT and other obligations.

    Before you spend, check your current VAT position. At minimum, review:

    • VAT is charged on sales invoices issued in the current VAT period
    • VAT on purchase invoices you plan to deduct
    • Whether the purchase invoices meet VAT invoice requirements
    • Whether the goods or services were supplied to the business
    • Whether any costs relate to exempt, private, mixed, or non-deductible use
    • Whether different VAT rates have been correctly separated in the administration
    • Whether foreign transactions, reverse charge situations, or EU transactions require separate treatment
    • Whether customer non-payment creates a cash-flow issue before the VAT deadline
    • Whether owner withdrawals or dividend planning wrongly assume VAT cash is available

    In active businesses, set a routine to review your VAT position at least weekly, not just before the VAT deadline.

    Keep your bookkeeping current.

    If you process invoices and transactions late, you lose track of VAT. The amount becomes a surprise instead of a planned obligation.

    The Belastingdienst requires the VAT administration to show both VAT charged to customers and VAT charged by suppliers. Without the current administration, the calculation becomes reactive and fragile.

    Late bookkeeping turns a tax liability into an invisible cash-flow risk.

    Process your invoices and receipts at least once a month. If your VAT period is monthly or quarterly, you need to see the VAT position before the filing deadline, not after.

    Verify input VAT is deductible.

    Input VAT is deductible only under certain conditions. The goods or services must be used for VAT-taxed turnover. The business must have a VAT invoice meeting the requirements. The goods or services must have been supplied.

    You must prove the right to deduct VAT. Weak or incomplete invoices hinder deductibility and audit readiness.

    Dutch VAT invoices must include:

    • Supplier and customer names and addresses
    • VAT identification number
    • Invoice date
    • Invoice number
    • Description of goods or services
    • Delivery date where relevant
    • Amount excluding VAT
    • Applicable VAT rate
    • VAT amount

    If a supplier’s invoice lacks the required info, VAT deduction isn’t possible. Check invoice quality before assuming VAT is recoverable.

    Pay VAT on time

    VAT returns are filed monthly, quarterly, or annually. After filing, pay the VAT amount shown; you don’t wait for a separate assessment.

    Late or insufficient VAT payment has consequences. The Belastingdienst imposes a payment-default penalty for late, non-payment, or underpayment of VAT. The published penalty framework includes a 3% payment-default penalty, subject to minimum and maximum amounts, depending on the situation.

    Before the payment deadline, transfer VAT cash to a separate account or earmark it to prevent it from being used for other purposes.

    If you treat VAT as available working capital, you convert a tax liability into an informal loan from the future. The problem arises when the VAT return comes due, and the available cash no longer covers the amount payable.

    Book a free VAT review with XTROVERSO today to safeguard your cash flow and stay VAT‑compliant.

    Contact us


    Correct errors within eight weeks

    If a VAT return is incorrect or incomplete, the Belastingdienst refers to correction through the VAT supplementary return process. Since 1 January 2025, if too little VAT has been declared, the correction must be made within 8 weeks of discovering the error to remain within the stated correction framework.

    Set a process to review VAT returns within a week of filing. If you find an error, submit a correction immediately to stay within legal requirements.

    Understand special regimes before using them.

    Some businesses use the Kleine Ondernemersregeling (Small Business Scheme). Under this regime, a business doesn't charge VAT to customers and doesn't deduct VAT on business costs and investments, subject to the conditions and consequences of the regime.

    This isn’t a cash-flow tactic. It’s a change in VAT status with real administrative and commercial consequences.

    If you use a special regimen, make sure you understand:

    * Whether you qualify

    * What happens to the VAT you received

    * How it affects your pricing

    * Whether it creates a competitive disadvantage with VAT-registered competitors

    * What happens if you exceed the turnover threshold

    Special regimes change the logic. Don’t assume better cash flow without reviewing all impacts.

    Bottom line

    VAT passes through your company but doesn't belong to it like revenue or profit.

    Keep this distinction clear before acting. Most small businesses get into VAT trouble because bank accounts feel more factual than ledgers.

    But the bank account shows possession. The ledger must show an obligation.

    Treat VAT as a reserved amount until the VAT position is calculated, reviewed, corrected where needed, and paid on time.

    Adopt these best practices now. Take ownership of your VAT process to safeguard your business.

    The data, sourcing, and analysis behind this article were conducted by Linda Pavan. AI was not used to identify sources, build the factual basis, or produce the analytical judgment contained here. AI was used only as a drafting aid. The final English text was personally reviewed, edited, and approved by the author before publication. Any translated versions are AI-generated from the original English text.

    Official sources used

    • Belastingdienst — Btw: overview of VAT return, payment, VAT calculation, administration, and corrections.
    • Belastingdienst — How input VAT deduction works and how VAT charged to customers and suppliers is recorded.
    • Belastingdienst — VAT administration requirements and retention obligation.
    • Belastingdienst — VAT return and payment rules.
    • Belastingdienst — Invoice system for calculating VAT.
    • Belastingdienst — Conditions for deducting input VAT.
    • Belastingdienst — VAT invoice requirements.
    • Belastingdienst — VAT payment-default penalties and correction rules.
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    # BOOKKEEPING LEDGER Linda Pavan
    Linda Pavan May 6, 2026
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