Ugh, VAT. Just hearing the term used to make my head spin.
When I first launched my little subscription box service — eco-friendly skincare delivered monthly — I was so focused on packaging, marketing, and growing my email list that I didn’t even think about taxes. Especially not Value Added Tax. That stuff felt like something only accountants should worry about.
Spoiler: I was wrong.
My “Oh No” VAT Moment
A few months in, I got an email from a customer in Germany asking why their invoice didn’t include VAT. I didn’t even know I had to charge VAT for EU customers. Total panic mode. I scrambled through Stripe settings, PayPal invoices, Shopify backends — it was a mess. I eventually figured out I was non-compliant in multiple countries.
Let me just say this, nothing kills your vibe like a letter from a tax authority asking why you’re dodging VAT. Luckily, I got everything straightened out before things escalated, but I learned fast that VAT compliance isn’t optional. Especially if you’re selling digital or physical subscription-based products across borders.
What Makes VAT So Tricky with Subscriptions?
Subscriptions aren’t like one-time purchases. That’s where a lot of folks (like me) get tripped up. The recurring nature of subscriptions means that you’re often dealing with customers in multiple tax jurisdictions, with different rules and rates.
Some stuff I learned the hard way:
Location Matters A LOT
VAT is based on where your customer is, not where you are. If someone in France subscribes to your monthly digital course, boom — you owe French VAT. If you’re confused about where to start, check out this guide on how VAT works for digital products in the EU.
Digital vs Physical Products Are Treated Differently
A monthly box of snacks? That’s a physical good, and different countries may treat that differently. A subscription to a meditation app? That’s a digital service, which often has more strict VAT rules — especially in the EU and UK. I found this article on charging VAT on online courses and coaching super helpful for understanding how services are taxed differently.
Thresholds Exist (But They’re Sneaky)
Some countries only require VAT registration once you hit a certain revenue threshold. But others? They want you registered from the first sale. The EU’s One-Stop Shop (OSS) helps simplify this… but only if you register properly. For more clarity, I’d recommend reading about VAT thresholds and exemptions explained.
What I’d Do Differently (and What You Should Do Now)?
If I could rewind, I’d have done these three things way earlier:
1. Use a Tax Automation Tool
I now use a tool that handles VAT calculations, invoicing, and reporting automatically. I integrated it with my payment platform, and it saved me hours of spreadsheet stress. Bonus: it makes audits less terrifying. If you’re on Payhip or something similar, learn how Payhip automates VAT collection to make life way easier.
2. Register for VAT Where You Sell
For EU sellers, the OSS (One-Stop Shop) simplifies things a lot. You register once and report all EU sales through one portal. But for countries outside that, like the UK, Australia, or Canada? You may need local VAT registrations.
3. Keep Detailed Records
I didn’t think about VAT invoices until I had to retroactively generate dozens of them. Now I keep clear, exportable records of every transaction — customer location, tax rate charged, invoice number — all that boring but essential stuff. If you’re not already doing this, read up on how to issue VAT-compliant invoices to customers.
Lessons Learned from the VAT Battlefield
Dealing with VAT is not fun. But ignoring it is worse. It doesn’t matter if you’re a solo creator selling a $10/mo Canva template subscription or a startup with thousands of subscribers. You have to get compliant.
The good news? There are a ton of tools and platforms now that get how subscription-based businesses work. They automate tax collection, handle currency conversion, and even generate compliant invoices — all while you focus on growing your business.
My biggest advice? Don’t wait until you get that scary email. If you’re offering recurring services across borders, look into VAT now. Get the systems in place, talk to a tax pro, and use tech to make it easier.
Trust me, future you (and your accountant) will thank you.








