Change description : 2026-06-08 11:23:00: Added information about a temporary reduced rate of VAT which applies to certain supplies of children’s meals from 25 June 2026 to 1 September 2026. Removed information about temporary reduced rate of VAT that applied from 15 July 2020 and 31 March 2022. [Guidance and regulation]
This notice explains when food can be zero-rated.Allreferencesinthisnoticeto‘temporarilyreducedrate’or‘temporaryreducedrate’aretosuppliesmadebetween15July2020and31March2022.
1.2 Who should read this notice
You should read this notice if you’re a food:
producer
manufacturer
wholesaler
retailer
1.3 Law
Section 30 of the VAT Act 1994 states that supplies of goods and services specified in schedule 8 to the Act are zero-rated.
You must always standard rate food supplied in the course of catering (subjecttotherulesonthetemporary5%reducedratethatappliedbetween15July2020and30September2021andthetemporary12.5%reducedratethatappliedfrom1October2021to31March2022)including hot take-away food.
Most food of a kind used for human consumption (read paragraph 2.3 of this guidance) is zero-rated. There are, however, some exceptions as follows:
You must always standard rate
But you can zero rate
Ice cream, similar products, and mixes for making them — read paragraph 3.5 of this guidance
Frozen yoghurt that’s designed to be thawed before being eaten
Confectionery, apart from cakes and some biscuits — read paragraph 3.6 of this guidance
Drained cherries and candied peel
Alcoholic beverages — read paragraph 3.7 of this guidance
—
Other beverages, and preparations for making them — read paragraph 3.7 of this guidance
Milk and milk drinks, tea, maté, herbal tea, coffee and cocoa, preparations of yeast, meat and egg
Potato crisps, roasted or salted nuts and some other savoury snack products — read paragraph 3.8 of this guidance
—
Products for home brewing and wine making — read paragraph 3.7 of this guidance
—
How these criteria apply to general and specialised food products is explained in sections 3 and 4 of this guidance.
2.3 The meaning of ‘food of a kind used for human consumption’
A product is ‘food of a kind used for human consumption’ if:
the average person, knowing what it is and how it’s used, would consider it to be food or drink
it’s fit for human consumption
The term includes products:
eaten as part of a meal, or as a snack
like flour, which, although not eaten by themselves, are recognised food ingredients
The term would not usually include:
medicines and medicated preparations
dietary supplements, food additives and similar products, which, although edible, are not food
Some produce that’s unfit for human consumption, such as waste and contaminated food products (including used cooking oil), may be eligible for zero rating as animal feeding stuffs — read Animals and animal food (VAT Notice 701/15)..
Produce which is unfit for either human or animal consumption (for example, abattoir offal sold for processing into fertiliser) is standard-rated.
2.4 Food processing services
If you apply a treatment or process to another person’s goods so that new zero-rated food products are produced, you can zero rate your services. Further information can be found in Food processing services (VAT Notice 701/40).
3. General food products
This section explains how the criteria for zero rating (explained in paragraph 2.2 of this guidance) apply to general food products supplied for both home consumption and for processing within the food industry.
You can zero rate all supplies of unprocessed foodstuffs such as:
raw meat and fish
vegetables and fruit
cereals, nuts and pulses
culinary herbs
It does not matter whether you supply these unprocessed foodstuffs direct to the public or for use as ingredients in the manufacture of processed foods, provided they’re fit for human consumption.
In summary:
Food item
Rate of VAT
Notes
Meat and poultry, for example, beef, lamb, pork, chicken and so on
Zero rate
Butchered or complete carcass
Exotic meat, for example, horse, ostrich, crocodile, kangaroo, and so on
Zero rate
Butchered or complete carcass
Live animals
Zero rate
If of a species generally used for human consumption
If raw and unprocessed for human consumption. Also roasted or salted nuts in their shells, however supplied bulk or retail — read Animals and animal food (VAT Notice 701/15)
Nuts if shelled and either roasted or salted
Standard rate
—
3.2 Ingredients and additives used in home cooking and baking
As a general principle, you can zero rate a product sold for use as an ingredient in home cooking or baking if it:
has some measurable nutritional content
is used solely or predominantly, in the particular form in which it’s supplied, in the manufacture of food
is not one of the excepted items — read paragraph 2.2 of this guidance
In summary:
Food item
Rate of VAT
Notes
Prepared cake, sauce, soup and other mixes
Zero rate
For making up in the home kitchen
Mixes for ice-cream and similar frozen products
Standard rate
Read paragraph 3.5 of this guidance
Vegetable oils, maize (corn), rapeseed, groundnut (arachis), olive (including olive oil BP), almond (but not bitter almond oil), sesame seed, sunflower seed, palm kernel, walnut, soya and blends of these
Zero rate
Even if they’re used as massage or cosmetic oils, provided they’re of a type and grade suitable for culinary purposes, and they do not contain any substance, such as perfume, that would make them unsuitable for culinary use
Provided they are edible. This does not apply to starch for stiffening shirt collars, or ‘photographic’ gelatine
Salt for culinary use
Zero rate
Including fine salt, dendritic salt, and, in retail packs (12.5kg or less) - rock and sea salt
Non-culinary salt
Standard rate
Including compacted salt (pellets and tablets), granular salt, rock salt (other than retail packs), soiled salt, salt for dishwashers and salt of any type for non-food use
Sweeteners
Zero rate
Including natural products like honey and sugar, and artificial products like saccharin, aspartame and sorbitol
Flavourings and flavour enhancers
Zero rate
Including natural essences such as peppermint and vanilla, culinary rosewater and synthetic flavourings
Flavouring mixes
Zero rate
Including dusting powders, blended seasonings and marinating mixes, whether natural or synthetic
Monosodium glutamate
Standard rate
Not a food product in its own right
Other food additives such as baking powder, cream of tartar, rennet, lactase and pectin for culinary use
Zero rate
—
Non-food additives such as bicarbonate of soda, saltpetre and other single chemicals for use in brining or other processing of meats or fish
Standard rate
—
Bicarbonate of soda
Zero rate
When sold in small tubs that are held out for sale as a baking ingredient
3.3 Processed foods
If you supply processed or prepared foodstuffs you need to check that they’re not standard-rated — read paragraph 2.2 of this guidance. You may also have to decide whether your supplies are in the course of catering and therefore standard-rated — read paragraph 2.1 of this guidance.
In summary:
Food item
Rate of VAT
Notes
Canned and frozen food other than ice cream and similar frozen products
Zero rate
These have the same liability of the unprocessed product, such as peas or fish
Ice creams, sorbets, frozen yoghurt (designed to be eaten as such) or ice lollies
Standard rate
Read paragraph 3.5 of this guidance
Chilled or frozen ready meals, convenience foods, and so on
Zero rate
For further preparation, such as reheating at home
Cold sandwiches
Zero rate
Zero-rated as prepared food unless a supply made in the course of catering when standard-rated (ortemporarilyreducedrated)— read paragraph 2.1 of this guidance
3.4 Bakery products
Although most traditional bakery products, such as bread, biscuits and cakes, are zero-rated, some confectionery is standard-rated including:
biscuits wholly or partly covered in chocolate (or some product similar in taste and appearance)
any item of sweetened prepared food, other than cakes and non-chocolate biscuits, which is normally eaten with the fingers
Read paragraph 3.6 of this guidance for more information.
Examples of bakery products and their VAT liability:
Zero-rated
Standard-rated
Bread and bread products such as rolls, baps and pitta bread
The same products supplied as part of a hot take-away meal,meal(subjecttothetemporaryreducedrate),such as a hot hamburger in a bun, or a hot kebab in a pitta or to ‘eat in’ — read Catering, takeaway food (VAT Notice 709/1)
Cakes including sponges, fruit cakes, meringues, commemorative cakes such as a wedding, anniversary or birthday cakes
Cereal bars, muesli and similar sweet tasting bars
Marshmallow teacakes — with a crumb biscuit or cake base topped with a dome of marshmallow coated in either chocolate, sugar strands or coconut
Scottish snowballs — a dome of marshmallow coated with chocolate or coconut, aerated and boiled (not baked), they have a short shelf life and harden rapidly when removed from the packet
Other types of snowballs such as Swedish snowballs with a longer shelf life
‘Crunch cakes’ corn flakes or any other breakfast cereal products coated in chocolate or carob and pressed into brittle flat cakes
Florentines
Caramel or ‘millionaire’s’ shortcake consisting of a base of shortbread topped with a layer of caramel and (usually) chocolate or carob
Shortbread biscuits partly or wholly chocolate-covered
Lebkuchen
Coconut ice
3.4.1 Cake decorations
If you sell inedible cake decorations with a cake, such as silvered horseshoes or bride and groom figures with wedding cakes, you do not have to treat your supply as a mixed supply and account for VAT on the decoration unless it’s clearly a separate item in its own right. For example, a toy supplied as decoration to a child’s birthday cake which is clearly intended to be kept and played with after the cake has been eaten. However you may still be able to treat the supply of the cake and the toy as a single supply if the linked goods conditions are met — read paragraph 6.1 of this guidance.
Examples of commonly found products used as cake decorations:
Zero-rated
Standard-rated
Chocolate couverture, chips, leaves, scrolls and so on (designed specifically as cake decorations)
Chocolate buttons (except packets of mini-chocolate buttons sold for use in baking)baking
Jelly shapes, sugar flowers, leaves and items designed specifically as cake decorations
Chocolate flakes (except when they are supplied within the bakery and ice cream industries, when they may be zero-rated if sold in packs of one gross or more, clearly labelled ‘for use as cake decorations only: not for retail sale’)
Hundreds and thousands, vermicelli and sugar strands
Any other items which are sold in the same form as confectionery
Royal icing
—
Toasted coconut and toasted almonds held out specifically for baking use
—
Cherries used in baking (often described as ‘glacé’)
—
Edible cake decorations whether sold as part of a cake or sold separately unless they fall within the exceptions relating to confectionery (read paragraph 3.6 of this guidance) or roasted nuts (read paragraph 3.8 of this guidance)
Inedible cake decorations sold on their own
3.4.2 Biscuits
Biscuits covered or partly covered in chocolate or some other products similar in taste and appearance to chocolate are standard-rated.
Examples to help determine whether a product is zero or standard-rated:
Zero-rated
Standard-rated
Chocolate chip biscuits where the chips are either included in the dough or pressed into the surface before baking
All wholly or partly coated biscuits including biscuits decorated in a pattern with chocolate or some similar product
Bourbon and other biscuits where the chocolate or similar product forms a sandwich layer between 2 biscuit halves and is not continued onto the outer surface
Chocolate covered shortbread
Jaffa cakes
Gingerbread men decorated with chocolate unless this amounts to no more than a couple of dots for eyes
Biscuits coated with caramel or some other product that do not resemble chocolate in taste and appearance
Ice cream wafers partly covered in chocolate such as ‘chocolate oysters’
3.4.3 Hot food
Many bakery products, particularly bread, pies, pasties and other savouries, are baked on the retail premises, and are sold whilst still hot. The borderline between ‘freshly baked’ and ‘hot take-away’ food can be a difficult one, and if you sell any hot food you’re advised to read Catering, takeaway food (VAT Notice 709/1) which sets out the distinction in more detail. If you’re still in any doubt contact the VAT: general enquiries helpline.
3.5 Ice cream and similar frozen products
You must standard rate your supplies of any product designed to be eaten while frozen.
Products which are supplied frozen, but have to be cooked before they can be eaten, or which have to be thawed completely before eating, are zero-rated.
Examples to help determine whether a product is zero or standard-rated:
Zero-rated
Standard-rated
Baked Alaska
Ice cream and ice lollies
Cream gateaux
Ice cream gateaux and cakes, including arctic rolls
Mousse
Water ices, sorbets and granitas
Frozen yoghurt which needs to be thawed completely before it can be eaten and which has been frozen purely for storage or distribution
Frozen yoghurt
Desserts which are equally suitable for consumption frozen or defrosted (unless primarily designed for eating frozen and made substantially of ice cream or similar products)
Powders and mixes for making ice creams and similar frozen products, including incomplete mixes and emulsions used by the trade and fruit syrups sold in plastic tubes for home freezing as ice lollies
Wafers and cones (unless wholly or partly covered in chocolate or a similar product)
Wafers and cones sold with ice cream or similar products
Toppings, sauces and syrups unless sold with ice cream or similar products
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3.6 Confectionery
Standard-rated confectionery includes chocolates, sweets and candies, chocolate biscuits and any other ‘items of sweetened prepared food which is normally eaten with the fingers.’ It also includes items that are inherently sweet, for example, certain fruit and cereal bar products.
Here are some examples of standard and zero-rated confectionery:
Zero-rated
Standard-rated
Cakes including sponge cakes, pastries, eclairs, meringues, flapjacks, lebkuchen, marshmallow teacakes and Scottish snowballs
Chocolates, bars of chocolate including those containing nuts, fruit, toffee, or any other ingredients, diabetic chocolate, liqueur chocolates and similar sweets
Chocolate spread, liquid chocolate icing, chocolate couverture, and chocolate chips, strands, vermicelli, mini-buttons and items held out for sale solely for culinary use such as chocolate body paint
Sweets, pastilles, gums, lollipops, candy floss, sherbet, chewing gum, bubble gum, Turkish delight, marshmallow, fondants and similar confectionery
Biscuits coated with icing, caramel or some other product different in taste and appearance from chocolate
Compressed fruit bars and other items of prepared dried fruit confectionery that are sweet to the taste
Chocolate cups
Sweetened popcorn
Toffee apples and other apples on a stick covered in chocolate, nuts and so on
Nuts or fruit with a coating, for example of chocolate, yoghurt or sugar
Ginger preserved in syrup, drained ginger or dusted ginger can be zero-rated as long as it’s not held out for sale as confectionery
Crystallised, sugared or chocolate covered ginger
Candied peels, angelica, drained cherries for use in home baking often described as ‘glacé’ cherries and cocktail or maraschino cherries
Drained, glacé or crystallised fruits including Petha, Marrons glacés
Halva (unless coated with chocolate or chocolate substitute or held out for sale as confectionery)
Bars consisting mainly of seeds and sugar or other sweetening matter
Edible cake decorations
Cereal bars, whether or not coated with chocolate, with the exception of bars which qualify as cakes
Sweet tasting dried fruit held out for sale as snacking and home baking
Sweet tasting dried fruit held out for sale as confectionery, snacking
Traditional Indian and Pakistani delicacies such as barfis, halvas, jelabi, laddoos and traditional Japanese delicacies
Slimmers’ meal replacements in biscuit form that are wholly or partly covered in chocolate or something similar in taste and appearance
3.7 Drinks
Although most drinks (other than medicinal drinks) are considered to fall within the general category of ‘food’ for VAT purposes, many drinks are standard-rated as alcoholic or non-alcoholic beverages. For VAT purposes, a beverage is a:
liquid commonly consumed to increase bodily liquid levels, to slake thirst, to fortify or to give pleasure
number of non-alcoholic beverages and related preparations, extracts are, however, specifically allowed zero rating — these are listed in paragraph 3.7.2 of this guidance
3.7.1 Alcoholic beverages
You must standard rate all your supplies of drinks containing alcohol, whether you sell them for consumption on or off your premises. Examples include:
beer, cider and perry (including black beer and shandy)
wine (including made-wine and fermented communion wine)
spirits and liqueurs
This standard rating only applies to beverages containing alcohol. Other food products containing alcohol follow the normal liability rules, for example:
Zero-rated
Standard-rated
Fruit preserved in alcohol
Liqueur chocolates
Alcoholic dessert jellies
Semi-set alcoholic jellies designed to be swallowed as cocktails
Rum babas
—
3.7.2 Non-alcoholic beverages
Some non-alcoholic beverages are zero-rated. Here are some examples:
Zero-rated
Standard-rated
Milk and flavoured milk drinks (including milk shakes)
Flavourings for milk shakes (except preparations and extracts of cocoa or coffee, which are zero-rated)
Tea, maté, herbal teas and similar products, and preparations and extracts of these (but this does not include soft drinks containing tea as only one of several ingredients)
Purgative and laxative ‘teas’, such as senna, and similar medicinal teas
Cocoa and drinking chocolate and other preparations and extracts of cocoa
Mineral, table and spa waters held out for sale as beverages
Coffee and chicory and other roasted coffee substitutes, and preparations and extracts of these (including coffee extracts for flavouring milk shakes)
Alcohol-free beer and wines
Preparations and extracts of meat, yeast, egg or milk
Ginger, glucose, honey, peppermint and barley water drinks
—
Syrups, crystals, powders and flavourings for making any standard-rated drink
—
Carbonated drinks such as lemonade, cola and mixers such as tonic and soda
—
Fruit cordials and squashes
All hot beverages and any drinks, including zero-rated drinks sold for consumption on your premises are standard-rated.standard-rated(ortemporarilyreducedrated).Cold drinks that are zero-rated in their own right, for example milk and are supplied for off-premises consumption can be treated as zero-rated. Read Catering, takeaway food (VAT Notice 709/1) for supplies made in the course of catering.
3.7.3 Drinks which are not beverages
There are a number of types of drinks which do not fall within the definition of a beverage. Sports energy and nutrition drinks are specifically standard-rated with effect from 1 October 2012 under the VAT Act 1994 schedule 8, group 1, excepted item 4A. More information about these products can be found in paragraph 4.6.1 of this guidance.
The following drinks (and the mixes and so on for making them) can be zero-rated:
plain soya or rice milk (unflavoured and unsweetened)
coconut milk
meal replacement drinks for slimmers or people made weak or disabled by illness or injury
unfermented fruit juice intended specifically for sacramental purposes (read paragraph 4.7 of this guidance)
Angostura Bitters
3.7.4 Ingredients for home beer and wine making
Products that are canned, bottled, packaged or prepared for use in home wine or beer making are standard-rated. This includes:
retail packs of foods, which are specialised to home wine making, such as dried elderberries or sloes for making country wines
You must also standard rate any general food product that you hold out for sale specifically for home wine making or brewing, such as fresh, dried or canned fruit, fruit juices and concentrates, barley, glucose and plant malt extract. In this context, you hold them out for sale for home brewing and wine making if you:
sell them through a retail outlet that specialises in home brewing and wine making materials
sell them in the home brewing and wine making department or section of a general outlet
label, advertise or otherwise display them as materials for home brewing or wine making, or provide with them or on their packaging any brewing or wine making recipes, or instructions for using them in the making of beer or wine (for example, the amount of sugar required for their fermentation or the type of yeast to be used)
3.8 Savoury snacks
3.8.1 General
The following 3 categories of savoury snack products are standard-rated:
potato snacks and similar products, made from potato or from potato flour or potato starch (although a small amount of potato flour in the recipe of a savoury biscuit would not make that biscuit standard-rated if otherwise it had none of the characteristics of a standard-rated potato product)
snacks made by the swelling of cereals — this applies only to products produced by the puffing of individual kernels or by an extrusion process where air is introduced under pressure into the cereal flour or starch paste during manufacture to produce an expanded, aerated product
roasted and salted nuts
For standard rating to apply the potato and cereal products must also be packaged and ready to eat without any further preparation by the customer. Packaged means to be pre-packed for retail sale in a sealed bag, carton or other container. Roasted or salted nuts are standard-rated even when sold loose.
Savoury snacks not falling within one or other of these 3 categories are zero-rated.
Read paragraph 6.2 of this guidance for advice on mixtures containing both standard and zero-rated constituents, for example, Bombay Mix.
Examples of products and their VAT liability:
Zero-rated
Standard-rated
Savoury snacks consisting of sliced and dried or roasted vegetables other than potatoes for example beetroot, carrot, and so on
Potato crisps, potato sticks, potato puffs, and similar products including those made from a combination of potato starch or flour and cereal flour
Savoury popcorn (but not corn for popping for example ‘microwave’ popcorn)
Prawn crackers made from tapioca
Prawn crackers made from cereals (but not unpackaged prawn crackers, for example, those supplied in unsealed bags as part of a takeaway meal)
Roasted pulses and legumes, for example chick peas and lentils
Rice cakes (but not unflavoured rice cakes intended for consumption with cheese or other toppings)
Roasted or salted nuts supplied while still in their shells (such as ‘monkey nuts’ and pistachios), toasted coconut, toasted almonds and other toasted chopped nuts held out for sale in retail packs specifically for home baking
All other roasted or salted nuts
4. Specialised products
4.1 General
Dietary products designed to meet particular nutritional needs, either as supplements to a normal diet, or as food for specialised groups of people, such as people made weak or disabled by illness or injury and slimmers. These are often sold through specialised health food outlets or chemists’ shops. To determine the liability of these products you must consider whether they fall within the normal and everyday meaning of food (read paragraph 2.3 of this guidance), or are specifically excluded from zero rating.
4.2 Food supplements
Dietary supplements of a kind not normally purchased and used as food are standard-rated. This includes:
vitamin and mineral supplements of all kinds
royal jelly products (but not regular food products such as honey which simply have royal jelly added to them)
tablets, pills and capsules containing, for example, wheatgerm, iron, calcium, fibre, yeast, garlic, ginseng, pollen, propolis, seaweed, evening primrose, guarana or other similar herbal preparations, and powders of these other than garlic and yeast
charcoal biscuits
cod liver oil and other fish oils held out for sale as dietary supplements
elixirs and tonics, including mixtures of cider vinegar and honey sold as a dietary supplement
malt extract with cod liver oil (but the supply of plain malt extract with or without added vitamins, is zero-rated unless it is held out for sale for home-brewing and so on)
4.3 Foods for people made weak or disabled by illness or injury
These products are often supplied in liquid form or as a powder meant to be made up into a liquid. They include parenteral products, (products given intravenously). Provided the product is designed to meet nutritional needs, and not provide treatment for any medical condition, they can be zero-rated, subject to the normal rules and exceptions. Foods in liquid form, intended to build patients up, are zero-rated as food since they fall outside the definition of a beverage.
4.4 Diabetic and hypoallergenic products
You can also zero rate specialised food products designed specifically for diabetics or allergy sufferers, such as sugar-free preserves or gluten-free flour and cakes. However, products such as sugar-free confectionery or gluten-free chocolate biscuits, are standard-rated in the same way as their mainstream equivalents.
4.5 Slimmers’ foods
Low calorie foods designed for slimmers are treated in the same way as their mainstream food equivalents. Slimmers’ meal replacement products (including drinks) are always zero-rated except for meal replacements in the form of confectionery such as chocolate or carob-coated biscuits or sweetened cereal or compressed fruit bars.
Appetite suppressants are not food, and must be standard-rated, whether supplied in pill, powder or other form. However, you can zero rate a genuine slimmers’ food product that contains an appetite suppressant, for example soups containing cellulose, provided that product is still obviously food and is meant to take the place of a ‘normal’ food equivalent in the slimmer’s daily food intake.
4.6 Sports products
There are a wide variety of these products available including drinks, tablets, and bars. The VAT liability of these is as follows:
4.6.1 Sports energy and sports nutrition drinks
From 1 October 2012 sports drinks that are advertised or marketed as products designed to enhance physical performance, accelerate recovery after exercise or build bulk, and other similar drinks, including (in either case) syrups, concentrates, essences, powders, crystals or other products for the preparation of such drinks are standard-rated. This includes sports nutrition drinks that contain milk or milk extracts such as whey.
4.6.2 Tablets
These are standard-rated, with the exception of glucose, dextrose and Horlicks® tablets, which are zero-rated.
4.6.3 Cereal and fruit bars
Standard-rated items include compressed fruit bars, consisting mainly of fruit and nuts, and also sweet tasting cereal bars, whether or not coated with chocolate, with the exception of bars which qualify as cakes — read paragraph 3.6 of this guidance.
Standard rating applies to any product falling within the general definition of confectionery even when that product is intended to meet the special nutritional needs of athletes.
4.6.4 Creatine
Items made up wholly or mainly of creatine are standard-rated.
4.7 Food and drink for religious and sacramental use
The existence of religious laws requiring certain foods to be prepared in particular ways (for example, kosher or halal) does not affect the liability of the final product, which is judged according to the normal VAT rules. However, the following liabilities have been agreed in respect of some specialised food products, which have exclusively sacramental use:
communion wafers used in the celebration of the Christian Communion, Mass or Eucharist are zero-rated
unfermented communion wine is also zero-rated (but fermented communion wine is standard-rated)
unfermented grape juice for use at the Jewish seder or kiddush is zero-rated provided it is marked prominently in English ‘for sacramental use only’
5. Products used in commercial food manufacture
5.1 Introduction
Many substances used in the preparation of commercially produced foodstuffs would not be used in the domestic kitchen and are not immediately recognisable to the average person as ‘food’. In general products:
included for their nutritional content are food
that are included for other than strictly nutritional reasons are not food and are standard-rated
5.2 Ingredients
Most ingredients used in commercial food production are the same as those used in home cooking and baking, therefore the rules (explained in paragraph 3.23.2of of this guidance) will apply.
In addition, natural or synthetic flavourings are zero-rated even if they have no measurable nutritional content provided they’re essential to the making of that particular food, and they meet the 2nd and 3rd conditions given in paragraph 3.2 of this guidance. Edible sausage skins are also zero-rated.
5.3 Additives
Many additives are included in foodstuffs for commercial rather than nutritional reasons, for example, to prolong shelf life or improve appearance. While they may be both necessary and desirable on commercial grounds (and in the case of preservatives, even on health grounds) they are standard-rated if they do not meet the conditions outlined in paragraph 3.2 of this guidance.
The following classes of commercial additives are standard-rated:
preservatives including unflavoured wet and dry brine mixes and cures for curing or salting meats
anti-oxidants including vitamins A and E
vitamin supplements (including those required by law to fortify flour before it can be put on the market)
stabilisers and thickening agents (including agar, carageenan, guar gum, gum arabic, gum tragacanth and xanthan gum, but not corn starch)
fillers and bulking agents other than flour and starch
colourants (other than naturally derived colourings which are also food stuffs in their own right, such as caramel, cocoa, saffron and turmeric, and cochineal)
flavour enhancers such as monosodium glutamate (MSG), ribonucleotides and hydrolysed vegetable protein (HVP)
flour improvers and bleaching agents
A few commercial additives that add no nutritional content to the finished product are, however, accepted as zero-rated products because their action makes them essential to the production of a particular foodstuff. These are:
food grade, naturally derived emulsifiers and stabilisers, such as lecithin, specifically tailored or mixed for food purposes (such as in margarine) which are essential to the production of that food and cannot be used for any other purpose
artificial sweeteners
artificial flavourings
6. Mixed supplies: mixtures, promotional linked items and packaging
6.1 Mixed supplies, including linked goods
If you supply standard and zero-rated food items (or zero-rated food items and standard-rated non-food items) together for a single price, this is a mixed supply for VAT purposes. The general rules for the treatment of mixed supplies and the way in which you should account for tax on them is dealt with in VAT guide (VAT Notice 700).
Examples of mixed supplies are:
food hampers
special gift or presentation packs containing linked items (like coffee supplied with a mug, tea with a pack of chocolate biscuits)
linked goods promotions
food supplied in or with re-usable storage containers
Where, however, you supply together a minor standard-rated item with a main zero-rated food item you can treat the supply as a single supply of the main zero-rated item where the standard-rated item:
is not charged at a separate price
costs you no more than 20% of the total cost of the supply
costs you no more than £1 (excluding VAT)
Once these conditions have been met, the linked goods are treated throughout the rest of the distribution chain as a single zero-rated supply.
If you’re not the person who linked the goods — for example, you are a wholesaler or retailer who received them already linked as a package — you may be unsure whether these conditions have been met. In many cases the standard-rated item is so minor that it is obvious, such as where a small plastic spoon is supplied with a yoghurt. In less obvious cases, your supplier’s supporting documentation should tell you whether you can treat the package as a single zero-rated supply or not. If you’re in any doubt, you should check the position with your supplier.
There are also special rules for the treatment of mixtures and assortments and packaging, which are covered in paragraphs 6.2 and 6.3 of this guidance.
6.2 Mixtures and assortments
Mixtures and assortments containing both standard-rated and zero-rated items are mixed supplies for VAT purposes. As a general rule you will therefore need to work out the tax value of each part of the mixture or assortment in order to calculate how much tax is due. You will find more about this in VAT guide (VAT Notice 700).
However, as an exception to the normal rule, certain products containing only small quantities of standard-rated items may be treated as a single zero-rated supply.
The products are:
Assortments of biscuits where the weight of standard-rated chocolate biscuits does not exceed 15% of the net weight of the whole.
Fruit and nut mixes (including Bombay and similar savoury mixes) where the weight of any standard-rated items, such as sweetened fruits, or pieces of chocolate or roasted nuts does not exceed 25% of the net weight of the whole.
Petits fours in assortments containing standard-rated chocolate biscuits or sweets where the net weight of chocolate biscuits, or the combined net weight of chocolate biscuits and sweets, does not exceed 15% of the net weight of the whole or the net weight of sweets where sweets are the only standard-rated item does not exceed 25% of the net weight of the whole.
These concessions apply only to mixtures and assortments supplied in a single pack, not to ‘variety’ selections of individual packs.
It’s unlikely that any mixture or assortment, which does not pass these quantity tests, will meet the cost conditions given in paragraph 6.1 of this guidance. However, if it does (if, for example, the standard-rated components of a fruit and nut mix exceed 25% of the total by weight, but still meet the cost conditions that mix can also be treated as a single zero-rated supply.
6.3 Food packaging
Packaging simply to contain, protect and promote the food it contains, is considered part of the supply of the food inside it, rather than a supply in its own right, and takes the same liability as its contents.
However, if you supply zero-rated foodstuffs in containers, which do more than contain, protect and promote their contents, these containers constitute supplies in their own right. Your supplies are then mixed supplies, and you must account for tax on that part of their price as described in paragraph 6.1 of this guidance.
You must treat the following types of containers as separate supplies in their own right and account for tax on them (subject to the ‘linked goods’ concession in paragraph 6.1 of this guidance):
any container which you specifically advertise or hold out for sale as having value in its own right (for example, by advertising the product as ‘with free storage tin’)
any container with a clear and obviously intended after-use (such as tumblers containing coffee, honey or preserves in ceramic serving bowls)
storage jars obviously intended for use in storing future supplies of the product, or other products
biscuit tins containing built-in hygroscopic crystals
tea caddies (but not simple tins bearing the supplier’s name and details of the weight and variety of the tea they contain, where it’s the supplier’s practice to put out their tea in this way)
ceramic pâté pots and other ceramic containers in the shape of birds, animals and so on, or which are otherwise clearly suitable for future decorative use
hampers and picnic baskets (other than simple cardboard cartons)
Seasonal packaging is frequently more elaborate than that supplied during the rest of the year (for example, Christmas overwraps or decorated tins in place of, or in addition to, a product’s normal paper or plastic packaging). Such packaging is not considered a separate supply unless it falls within one of the categories listed.
Your rights and obligations
Read the HMRC Charter to find out what you can expect from us and what we expect from you.
Added information about a temporary reduced rate of VAT which applies to certain supplies of children's meals from 25 June 2026 to 1 September 2026.
Removed information about temporary reduced rate of VAT that applied from 15 July 2020 and 31 March 2022.
5 August 2022
The temporary reduced rate of 5% that was applied to tourism and hospitality has been corrected to July 2020. The end of the temporary reduced rates has been corrected to 31 March 2022.
1 April 2022
The temporary reduced rate which applied to tourism and hospitality ended on 31 March 2022. From 1 April 2022 the normal VAT rules apply, and VAT should be charged at the standard rate.
5 November 2021
The temporary reduced rate of VAT changed from 5% to 12.5% on 1 October 2021.
25 May 2021
We have added information about government legislating to extend the temporary reduced rate of VAT.
3 December 2020
This notice has been updated to reflect the VAT reduced rate for tourism and hospitality has been extended from 12 January to 31 March 2021.
9 July 2020
The notice has been updated to reflect the changes announced on 8 July 2020 regarding the temporary reduced rate of VAT on certain supplies to hospitality, holiday accommodation, or charge for admission to certain types of attractions.