VAT compliance Key Performance Indicators – what is best practice?

Whether you prepare VAT returns in-house, outsource indirect tax returns to a third party, or use a shared service centre or centre of excellence, how do you assess performance and what success looks like? It is certainly best practice to set Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) in relation to indirect tax compliance. While these can be localised at a country or regional level, it is recommended that KPIs are scalable to have a consistent policy and for benchmarking and ease of comparison, as well as to identify best practice or flag common areas of risk. 

Key performance indicators in relation to tax can help measure the company’s or a specific team’s performance against established goals, which can be set in alignment with broader organisational goals approved by management and the VP/C-Suite level that oversees finance, accounting and tax risk management.  

Examples of KPIs that we see businesses adopting include: 

  • % of VAT returns submitted on time
  • % of VAT payments made on time
  • VAT returns are accurate (using exception reporting to assess this)
  • VAT return numbers reconcile to the General Ledger (GL), with variances explained
  • implement strategies to reduce tax process costs 
  • post VAT to purchase ledger with relevant tax code within 5 days of receiving invoice
  • report all VAT return/GL discrepancies at least 72 hours before submission.

Some of these success metrics are easy to measure and relatively straightforward to quantify e.g.

  • penalties raised by tax authorities
  • interest on late payments or assessed tax
  • date of submission of returns (evidenced by filing receipt).

Other metrics may require more sophisticated data analytics and exception reporting to identify possible discrepancies, errors, and incorrect tax calculations.  Some examples of checks on VAT data that businesses can carry out as part of the VAT or GST return preparation process (for example using an automated VAT return compliance solution like Avalara’s VAT Reporting) include:

  • duplicate supplier invoice number
  • unacceptable exchange rate 
  • invalid customer or supplier VAT registration number
  • output VAT is greater than expected 
  • input VAT is less than expected
  • VAT has been charged in error based on customer location.

As the direction of travel for VAT compliance is clear – it is the digital submission of transactional data in real time to the tax authority (via e-invoicing and e-reporting), the importance of getting the VAT calculation and reporting correct first time becomes even more important. Tax authorities will be able to run their own analytics, exception reporting and even AI and machine learning over complete datasets, not only identifying errors and discrepancies requiring further analysis, investigation or audit, but also gaining insights that can be used across different taxes and areas of risk e.g. customs duty, corporate income tax and transfer pricing. Businesses should act now to future-proof their indirect tax function and consider how technology can automate VAT processes and reduce risk.

Speak to an Avalara VAT expert now to see how we can assist with VAT calculation, VAT reporting and e-invoicing.

Recent posts
Germany to implement mandatory e-invoicing starting January 2025
The final phase of ICS2: An update for businesses selling in the EU
What is U.S. sales tax?

Ecommerce Tax Trends Report 2022

Get a comprehensive look at the latest developments in the ecommerce industry.

Ecommerce Tax Trends Report 2022

Stay up to date

Sign up for our free newsletter and stay up to date with the latest tax news.