op een Engels forum had ik het volgende gelezen (en ik besef wel dat Engeland België niet is, maar hoopte dat het misschien een Europese regel zou zijn) - dit is een quote uit deze discussie hier
http://www.taxationweb.co.uk/forum/vat- ... t7201.html -
"VAT should never be charged twice on a supply. As D. stated the place of supply is the important factor.
If the goods are supplied to the customer whilst they are outside the UK then no UK VAT is due on the sale. However the customer is liable to pay the import VAT and duty when the goods enter the UK (unless they are below the £18 concession).
If the goods are supplied to the customer within the UK then the UK Sole Trader will be responsible for paying the import VAT and Duty as the goods enter the UK (the £18 concession is also available). The UK trader will be able to reclaim the VAT on its VAT return and will charge VAT on the sale to the customer as normal.
The end effect should therefore be the same (unless the £18 concession applies) regardless of the route.
In theory the place of supply is where the goods are at the time that legal title / financial responsibility is transfered. i.e. overseas if the delivery is ex-works or in the UK if it is CIF. However, in practice provided someone pays the VAT and duty upon importation as the "importer of record" HMRC aren't to worried about technicalities like that. "
Nogmaals, ik besef dat dit over Engeland gaat, maar zijn jullie er zeker van dat dit hier ook niet geldt?