A local tradesperson recently did a job for me and quoted a price on the phone in advance. In the phone call, they asked if I’d be paying cash or wanted an invoice and I opted for the latter so as to have a record of the job. However, when the invoice turned up it had an extra 20% added to the quoted price; they’re not VAT-registered, and told me it’s because “an invoice incurs extra charges” when I asked why.
Now we all know how the cash economy works and I’m not trying to be holier-than-thou or moralise; but I’m fed up with the “if you pay me now I’ll send you an invoice” spiel (duh.... ) as there’s obviously no comeback if there’s a problem but no paper trail. In fact, this person’s work was OK and I might want to use them again, but I feel a bit ripped-off all the same. Has anyone else come across this and is it just a fact of life these days?
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Many tradesmen and garages give a quotation ex VAT whether they take cash or not. I don't like it, because the final bill comes as a shock but they're not all tax dodgers.
If they're not VAT registered then the 20% is to cover corporation tax.
No, I'm not claiming that this person is a tax-dodger; when I queried the total, they specifically said they're not VAT registered but that an invoice incurred extra costs. Perhaps John McM's comment answers the point, though corporation tax is 19% this tax year.
Blatantly tax dodging. There's no way an invoice incurs 20% extra charges other than the money not being off the books and having to pay tax on it.
Personally I'd refuse to pay the extra 20% unless they can give a satisfactory explanation and I wouldn't be planning on using someone again who arbitrarily increased their prices like that.
Well, I did also think of paying them the full amount in pennies and hand-delivering the cash, to make the point that they'd have to work for the extra £, but I'm not sure it's a practical proposition!
I guess the issue is what happens if you don't pay it. They're not going to go down the legal route as I suspect they won't want to explain why doing work off the books is so much cheaper.
Completely agree. Luckily we're talking £10s not £100s, and I'm all in favour of avoiding escalation or litigation.
Anyway, I've expressed my frustration and thanks for comments and advice; I'll know better in future. Besides, the trader in question might even keep an eye on this forum (that's a genuine ponder not a barbed comment, by the way - I've no idea at all if they're a member).
Yes, of course that's how it works, but this is really more about communication than anything (not morality). I was quoted £X as the price for the job and only asked if I wanted to pay cash or have an invoice; I agreed that price and then got an invoice for £X + 20%. It's the pitfall of agreeing things by phone, not in writing, and with a possible hidden implication in the conversation. Mind you, if anything, I might have expected a 20% discount from £X for cash!
Still, thanks all for the collective wisdom. Luckily the total's not vast and right now I've got bigger problems to bother about, so I learn from experience, as Hugh says.
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