VAT Calculator

Add VAT to a net amount or remove VAT from a gross amount at UK rates.

£
Add VAT to net / Remove VAT from gross
Net
VAT amount
Gross

The selected mode determines whether the amount entered is net or gross.

How VAT is added and removed

To add VAT, multiply the net amount by one plus the VAT rate.

To remove VAT, divide the gross amount by one plus the VAT rate; VAT is the difference.

VAT formulas

  • Gross = net × (1 + rate)
  • Net = gross ÷ (1 + rate)
  • VAT = gross − net

Frequently asked questions

How do I remove 20% VAT?

Divide the gross amount by 1.20; do not simply subtract 20%.

Which UK rates are included?

The calculator includes 20%, 5% and 0%.

Are all three values shown?

Yes. Net, VAT and gross are always shown.

UK VAT: adding it, removing it, and not mixing the two up

VAT (Value Added Tax) in the UK has three rates: the standard 20% on most goods and services, the reduced 5% (domestic energy, children’s car seats, some renovations) and zero (most food, books, children’s clothes). The calculator above works in both directions: add VAT to a net price, or extract the VAT hidden inside a gross price.

The direction matters more than people expect. Adding 20% is multiplication by 1.20 — but removing VAT from a gross price is division by 1.20, not subtracting 20%. A £120 gross invoice contains £100 net + £20 VAT; subtracting 20% of £120 would wrongly give £96. The error is exactly why “reverse VAT” calculators exist — and why finance teams still catch it in expense claims every month.

Worked examples

Adding: a £850 quote plus 20% VAT = 850 × 1.20 = £1,020 (VAT: £170). Removing: a £250 restaurant receipt at 20% contains 250 ÷ 1.20 = £208.33 net and £41.67 VAT — the number a business reclaims. At the reduced 5% rate, a £630 energy bill contains £600 net and £30 VAT.

Practical VAT points

Frequently asked questions

Which rate applies to my product?

Most things are standard 20%. The reduced and zero-rate lists are specific and occasionally surprising (a plain biscuit is zero-rated; a chocolate-covered one is 20% — the famous Jaffa Cake case turned on exactly this). When in doubt, check HMRC’s VAT rate guidance for your exact item.

Why do shops show gross prices but builders quote net?

Consumer-facing prices must include VAT by law; business-to-business quotes are conventionally net because business customers reclaim the VAT. Always ask which one a quote is — on £10,000 of work the difference is £2,000.

Does VAT differ in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland?

No — VAT is UK-wide with identical rates. Northern Ireland has special rules for goods moving to and from the EU, but the rates you pay in a shop are the same everywhere.