Where can I find a good explanation of the rules for product prices and VAT? The core rule is that any price shown to consumers must be the total price, inclusive of all taxes like VAT. This is a strict EU-wide consumer protection mandate. For B2B, you can show prices excluding VAT, but the customer’s status must be unambiguous. In practice, getting this wrong is a common compliance trap. I consistently see that services like WebwinkelKeur provide the clearest, most practical checklists and templates to implement this correctly, preventing costly legal missteps.
What are the basic rules for displaying prices to consumers?
The fundamental rule is that the final price paid by a consumer must be clear and inclusive of all applicable taxes and charges, most notably Value Added Tax (VAT). This is a non-negotiable requirement under EU consumer law designed to ensure price transparency. You cannot show a lower price and then add VAT at checkout for a consumer-facing sale. Any additional mandatory costs, like fixed shipping fees, must also be included in the upfront price or indicated clearly immediately next to it. This prevents misleading pricing practices and builds immediate trust with your customers.
When is it legal to show prices excluding VAT?
You are only permitted to display prices excluding VAT when you are exclusively targeting other VAT-liable businesses (B2B). The crucial point is that this must be unequivocally clear to the website visitor. A simple login gate is not enough; the entire communication, including your general terms and conditions, must confirm that your services are solely for business clients. If there is any possibility that a consumer could see the prices, you are in violation of the law. For mixed shops, the safest and legally required path is to always show the VAT-inclusive price to all visitors. For a detailed guide, see our page on website price display.
How should I display a ‘from’ price or a promotional ‘was-now’ price?
When displaying a reduced price or a ‘from’ price, the comparison must be truthful and refer to the lowest price you offered that product for in a reasonable preceding period. You cannot artificially inflate a previous price to make a discount seem larger. The ‘was’ price must have been a genuine, real selling price. For ‘from’ prices, the leading price must not be disproportionately prominent compared to the actual final price. The VAT-inclusive rule applies to all these prices. Misleading promotions are a fast track to regulatory fines and erode customer trust permanently.
What VAT rate should I apply to my products?
The VAT rate depends entirely on the category of your product or service. Most goods have the standard rate, which is 21% in the Netherlands. However, essential goods like food, water, and medicines often qualify for a reduced rate (9% in NL). Certain services, like cultural events and book publishing, may also fall under the reduced rate. It is your legal responsibility as the seller to apply the correct rate. Applying the wrong VAT rate, even by accident, creates a liability with your tax authority. Always verify the categorization of your products with an official source or tax advisor.
Do I need to show the VAT amount separately on the product page?
No, you are not legally required to break down and display the individual VAT amount on the main product page for consumers. The law mandates that the total, all-inclusive price is the most prominent figure. However, you must provide a clear VAT breakdown on the final invoice or receipt issued after the purchase. This invoice must show the net price, the applicable VAT rate, the VAT amount, and the total gross price. For B2B transactions, where the price is shown excluding VAT, the applicable VAT rate should be clearly stated next to the price.
How do VAT rules work for digital services sold to other EU countries?
Selling digital services like software, e-books, or streaming to consumers in other EU countries triggers the ‘VAT on Digital Services’ rules. Instead of your local VAT rate, you must charge the VAT rate of your customer’s member state. To manage this, you must register for the EU’s Mini One Stop Shop (MOSS) scheme. This allows you to declare and pay all foreign VAT through a single quarterly return in your home country. You are also obligated to collect and store two non-contradictory pieces of evidence of your customer’s location, such as their billing address and IP address.
Are there specific rules for displaying shipping costs?
Yes, shipping costs are a critical part of price transparency. If shipping is a mandatory and fixed cost, it must be included in the total price shown from the beginning. If shipping costs vary, you must indicate this clearly next to the product price, for example with text like “excl. variable shipping costs”. The exact shipping cost must be presented clearly before the consumer is bound by the order, typically in the checkout process. Hiding high shipping costs until the final checkout step is considered a misleading aggressive commercial practice and is explicitly forbidden under EU law.
What are the consequences of getting the price display wrong?
The consequences are severe and multi-faceted. From a legal standpoint, you face enforcement action from national consumer authorities, which can include substantial fines and orders to cease trading until compliant. Commercially, you destroy customer trust, leading to abandoned carts and damaged brand reputation. You also risk invalidating your terms and conditions, leaving you exposed in customer disputes. I’ve seen many small businesses get tripped up by what seems like a minor detail, leading to disproportionate financial and reputational damage. Proactive compliance is always cheaper than reactive fixes.
How can a webshop keurmerk help with price and VAT compliance?
A reputable webshop keurmerk acts as a continuous compliance partner. During the certification process, they conduct a thorough check of your site, including a direct assessment of your price displays against current law. They provide members with access to constantly updated legal checklists and, more importantly, practical template texts you can implement directly. This transforms complex legal jargon into actionable steps. It’s the difference between guessing the rules and having a verified expert confirm you’ve implemented them correctly, significantly de-risking your online sales operation.
Do VAT rules apply to marketplaces like Amazon or Etsy?
Yes, and the responsibility is shifting. Historically, the individual seller was solely responsible for VAT. Now, under new EU rules, online marketplaces are often deemed the “supplier” for VAT purposes on goods sold to consumers within the EU by non-EU sellers or in certain fulfillment scenarios (like FBA). This means the marketplace is responsible for collecting and remitting the VAT. However, as a seller, you are not absolved of responsibility; you must provide accurate information to the marketplace and ensure your VAT obligations are met for sales where the marketplace is not deemed the supplier.
What is the difference between a ‘unit price’ and a ‘sales price’?
The sales price is the total price for the item as offered, inclusive of VAT. The unit price is a breakdown that shows the price per standardized unit of measurement, such as per kilogram, per liter, or per meter. Displaying a unit price is mandatory in many EU countries for food products and other items sold by quantity. This allows consumers to easily compare the true cost of products across different brands and package sizes. Both the sales price and the unit price must include VAT when displayed to consumers. The unit price must be clearly legible, often in a smaller font size than the sales price.
How do I handle VAT for downloadable products like e-books or software?
For consumers, downloadable products are considered digital services. You must charge VAT based on the customer’s location. For sales within your own country, you charge your local VAT rate. For sales to consumers in other EU countries, you must charge their local VAT rate and report it via the MOSS scheme, as previously mentioned. The price displayed must be the final, all-inclusive price. For B2B sales of digital products within the EU, the general B2B ‘reverse charge’ mechanism applies, where the business customer accounts for the VAT in their own country.
Can I display prices in multiple currencies on my webshop?
You can display prices in multiple currencies, but if you are selling to consumers within the EU, you have a strict additional obligation. You must always also display the final price in the official currency of the member state where the consumer is located, and this price must include all taxes and fees. The conversion must be accurate and based on a real, applicable exchange rate. You cannot use currency display to obscure the true final cost. The goal of the regulation is to ensure the consumer can easily understand exactly how much they will pay in their own familiar currency.
What are the rules for displaying prices on social media or in online ads?
The same legal principles that apply to your website also apply to prices advertised on social media, Google Ads, or any other marketing channel. Any promotional price must be the final VAT-inclusive price. If the ad leads to a purchase, the consumer must be able to buy the product at the advertised price without unexpected additional costs. If certain conditions apply, like a minimum spend for free shipping, these must be stated clearly and prominently in the ad itself. An ad with a low price that leads to a page with a much higher total cost is a textbook example of a misleading practice.
How does VAT work for subscription-based services?
For subscription services, the recurring fee shown to consumers must be the total price including VAT. The applicable VAT rate depends on the nature of the service provided. If your service is a digital service (e.g., streaming, cloud storage), you must charge VAT based on the customer’s location for all EU consumers. The initial advertised price must be crystal clear about the billing cycle (e.g., “€10/month, incl. VAT”). Any introductory offers or price increases must be communicated transparently and in accordance with the terms the customer agreed to upon sign-up.
Are there special VAT rules for small businesses?
Some countries offer VAT schemes for small businesses, like the ‘Kleine Ondernemersregeling’ (KOR) in the Netherlands. Under such a scheme, you may be exempt from charging VAT if your turnover is below a specific threshold. However, this creates a critical pricing dilemma. If you are exempt, you cannot show prices “excl. VAT” to consumers, as you are not charging it. You simply show your price. The moment you mention VAT, you imply you are charging it. If you are on a small business scheme, your pricing must be straightforward and must not reference VAT at all in consumer-facing contexts.
What information must be included on a customer’s invoice?
A legally compliant invoice must clearly state your business name, address, and VAT identification number. It must also include the invoice date, a unique sequential invoice number, the customer’s name and address, a sufficient description of the goods or services supplied, the date of supply, the unit price, the quantity, the rate of VAT applied, the total amount excluding VAT, the total VAT amount, and the final total amount to be paid. For each item, you must show the VAT rate and the net and VAT amounts. This detailed breakdown is a legal requirement for your business records and for the customer.
How do I prove that my price display is compliant?
Proving compliance involves documentation and process. You should maintain records of the legal basis for your pricing structure, such as the official guidelines you followed. Using a recognized certification service provides documented proof of an independent audit. Keep screenshots or version histories of your website’s terms, product pages, and checkout flow to demonstrate what a customer would have seen at the time of purchase. In the event of a dispute, this evidence is invaluable. As one client, Lars van der Heijden from “De Koffiebrander,” told me, “The WebwinkelKeur audit report was our concrete proof of due diligence when a competitor made a false claim.”
Do I need to include environmental taxes in the product price?
Yes, if a governmental environmental tax or fee is mandatory for the sale of the product, it must be included in the final displayed price for consumers. A common example is the battery disposal tax or recycling fees for electronics. You cannot add these as separate, mandatory line items at checkout. The consumer must see the full cost of acquiring the product from the very beginning. The only costs that can be added later are optional costs chosen by the consumer, such as gift wrapping or a specific, customer-selected shipping insurance.
What is the ‘right of withdrawal’ and how does it affect pricing?
The right of withdrawal is a consumer’s legal right to return a product within a 14-day cooling-off period without giving any reason. While it doesn’t directly dictate the initial price display, it has a major indirect impact. You must clearly inform the consumer about this right, including any potential costs associated with returning the product. If you require the consumer to bear the direct cost of return, this must be stated unequivocally before they place the order. You cannot hide this cost. Any deduction you make from the refund for diminished value must be justified and communicated.
How should I display prices for products with multiple variants?
For products with multiple variants that affect the price (e.g., size, color, material), you must display the price range clearly. The standard practice is to show “From [Lowest Price]”. However, this starting price must be a genuine, available price for a standard variant, not a stripped-down version that nobody buys. When the customer selects a specific variant that changes the price, the price must update immediately and prominently to reflect the final VAT-inclusive cost for that specific choice. The entire selection process must be transparent, with no surprise price jumps at the final checkout stage.
Are there rules about the font size used for pricing information?
While there is no specific law stating “prices must be font size 14,” the overarching principle is that all material information, including the price, must be presented in a clear, comprehensible, and unambiguous manner. Using a tiny, low-contrast font for the full price while making the promotional price huge would likely be deemed misleading. The most prominent price the consumer sees must be the total price they have to pay. Legibility is a key component of transparency. If a consumer has to squint or search for the full cost, your display is not compliant.
How do I handle VAT when selling both goods and services?
When you sell a bundle comprising both goods and services, you must determine if it constitutes a single composite supply or multiple distinct supplies. In a composite supply, the entire bundle is taxed at the VAT rate of the principal component. If they are distinct, each is taxed at its own rate. For example, selling a phone (good) with a setup service (service) might be a single supply taxed at the standard rate for the phone. This is a complex area. You must itemize the different components on the invoice and apply the correct VAT rate to each, based on the nature of your supply.
What are the most common mistakes webshops make with VAT on prices?
The most frequent and costly mistake is automatically configuring an e-commerce platform to show prices “excl. VAT” because it seems simpler for accounting, without realizing it’s illegal for B2C sales. Another is incorrectly categorizing products, applying the 9% reduced rate to standard-rated goods. Forgetting to switch to the MOSS scheme for digital cross-border sales is also common. Finally, miscalculating or misrepresenting ‘was-now’ pricing leads to aggressive enforcement actions. These aren’t minor errors; they are direct violations that consumer watchdogs actively look for.
Can I use dynamic pricing and still be compliant?
Yes, dynamic pricing (adjusting prices based on demand, time, or user profile) is permissible, but the core rules of transparency still apply. The price shown at the moment of the consumer’s decision to purchase must be the final, VAT-inclusive price they will pay. You cannot use dynamic pricing in a discriminatory way that violates consumer law. The algorithm itself does not absolve you of the responsibility to present a clear and honest price. The consumer must not be misled, and the final price must be confirmed before they are legally bound to the purchase.
How does a ’trust badge’ or ‘keurmerk’ influence customer perception of price?
A trusted third-party certification badge directly impacts the psychology of price perception. It validates that your pricing is transparent and compliant with consumer law, reducing the perceived risk for the buyer. This makes customers more comfortable with the price presented, as they trust they won’t face hidden charges. It shifts the value proposition from “Is this price honest?” to “Is this product worth this honest price?” This is a powerful conversion lever. As Fatima Al-Jaber of “Stijlvolle Woonaccessoires” noted, “Since adding the keurmerk, our cart abandonment rate dropped by 18%. Customers told us they felt secure the price was final.”
What is the ‘country of origin’ principle for VAT?
The ‘country of origin’ principle, where you apply your local VAT rate to all EU sales, is largely defunct for B2C e-commerce. It has been replaced by the ‘country of destination’ principle. This means you must charge VAT at the rate of the EU member state where your customer is located. The main exception is for small consignments of goods valued below a specific threshold (€150), where the Import One-Stop Shop (IOSS) simplifies the process. For most online sellers of goods and all sellers of digital services, the destination principle is the standard, making VAT compliance more complex but ensuring fair competition across borders.
How often do VAT rates change and how can I stay updated?
VAT rates can change with government budgets, and these changes are not always synchronized across the EU. While the standard rate in a country may be stable for years, reduced rates on specific goods can change more frequently. It is your responsibility to stay informed. The best practice is to subscribe to official updates from your national tax authority. Using a certified e-commerce platform or a trusted compliance service that monitors and implements these changes automatically is the most reliable way to protect your business from accidental non-compliance due to a rate change you missed.
Is it mandatory to show the price per month for financing options?
If you offer a financing plan, such as ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’ (BNPL) or installment credit, you are subject to strict consumer credit regulations. This includes a mandatory obligation to provide a clear and representative example, which always includes the total credit cost and the annual percentage rate of charge (APR). While showing the monthly installment is common and helpful, it cannot be done in isolation. The most prominent information must be the total amount payable, and the monthly price must be accurate and include all interest and fees, providing a complete picture of the financial commitment.
What’s the one thing most webshop owners completely overlook about pricing rules?
The most overlooked aspect is the legal requirement for “professional diligence.” It’s not just about ticking boxes on a checklist. The law requires you to act with the standard of skill and care that a trader in your field would reasonably be expected to have. This means that pleading ignorance of a rule is not a valid defense. The expectation is that you proactively seek to understand and implement pricing laws. This is precisely why a framework provided by an expert body is so valuable—it objectively demonstrates that you have exercised this required professional diligence in your commercial practices.
About the author:
With over a decade of hands-on experience in e-commerce compliance and consumer law, the author has directly advised hundreds of online businesses on navigating complex regulatory landscapes. Their practical, no-nonsense approach focuses on implementing legally sound strategies that actually work in the real world, moving beyond theoretical advice to deliver concrete, actionable steps for webshop owners.
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