HMRC is set to argue that the amount it is due to pay private members’ golf clubs back in overpaid VAT, which is thought to be millions of pounds, should be reduced by at least half, following the commissioning of a report that Golf Club Management has been given exclusive access to.
In 2013 the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruled that VAT on green fees at private members’ golf clubs had been incorrectly applied for several years. This meant that scores of ‘not for profit’ clubs were able to claim the VAT back on green fees – believed to be worth several thousands of pounds to many of the venues involved.
After several months of legal wrangling and delays, a tribunal judge for the First Tier Tribunal Tax Chamber allowed HMRC to employ an American sports’ tax expert, Professor Stefan Szymanski, to study four golf clubs to see whether a process called unjust enrichment occurred. If it had, HMRC could feasibly not make the payments, but several tax advisers said the process had not taken place and the whole exercise was simply a ‘delaying tactic’.
Professor Szymanski studied four golf clubs, The Glen, The Wilmslow, The Berkshire and Bridport and West Dorset. The report states: ‘The evidence suggests a pass-through rate [when the tax is passed from the golf club to the customer] of at least 50% … Therefore the commissioners will submit that the appellants would be unjustly enriched to the extent that they are repaid more than 50% of the VAT charged on the green fees.’
“At The Berkshire around 67 percent of VAT on green fees would have been passed on to consumers,” said Professor Szymanski. “It’s at least 50 percent at Bridport and West Dorset, and approximately 50 percent at both The Wilmslow and The Glen.
“It is extremely unlikely that there was zero pass-through in any of the four cases.”
A golf club manager said that HMRC would use this argument to call for a reduced payment to golf clubs at a tax tribunal hearing at the Royal Court of Justice on January 22, 2015.
“HMRC are opening the bidding at the 50 percent mark,” he said.
He added that KPMG, which is representing many of the golf clubs looking to receive the rebate, will not take this latest development “lying down”.


Leave a Reply to Golf Treasurer Cancel reply