Timeline of VAT Rate Changes in Saudi Arabia: From 5% to 15% (2018–2020)

A practical, keyword-rich chronology for corporate taxpayers in Saudi Arabia tracking the shift from 5% VAT (2018) to 15% VAT (2020)—and what it meant for ZATCA compliance, contracts, invoicing, input VAT recovery, and pricing strategy.

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Executive Snapshot

  • 1 January 2018: Saudi Arabia introduces Value Added Tax at 5% on most goods and services.
  • 11 May 2020: Authorities announce an increase to address macroeconomic pressures.
  • 1 July 2020: The standard VAT rate becomes 15%.

Why it matters now: Historical rate changes still affect long-term contracts, warranties, credit notes, and audits. CFOs should retain evidence for how the 5%→15% transition was handled across pricing, invoicing, and tax points.

Key VAT Timeline (2018–2020)

Date Event Impact for Businesses
1 Jan 2018 VAT go-live at 5% Register for VAT; configure ERP; train staff; start issuing tax invoices; manage reverse charge for imported services.
11 May 2020 Rate increase to 15% announced Begin planning for price updates, contract reviews, and transitional accounting for supplies straddling the change date.
1 Jul 2020 New standard rate 15% takes effect Apply 15% to taxable supplies with tax points on/after this date; maintain documentation for split-period/continuous supplies.

Transitional Rules: Supplies Spanning 1 July 2020

ZATCA issued transitional guidance to determine whether 5% or 15% applies when invoices, payments, or deliveries crossed the rate-change date. While specific treatments depended on facts, the common decision drivers were:

  • Tax point mechanics — time of supply (invoice issuance, delivery/performance completion, or receipt of advance/payment).
  • Continuous supplies — services or contracts billed periodically required apportionment across pre- and post-change periods.
  • Advance invoices/retainers — deposits invoiced/paid before 1 July 2020 could carry 5% for the portion supplied before the change; remaining value supplied after the change generally aligned to 15%.
  • Long-term contracts — contracts signed before the announcement date needed review for rate clauses, variation orders, and invoicing cadence.

Control tip: Keep a rate-change mapping by customer/contract that shows tax points, delivery dates, invoice dates, advances, and the logic for applying 5% vs. 15%.

Contracts, Pricing & ERP Actions for the 5%→15% Shift

  1. Update commercial terms: Add a tax-change clause; clarify whether prices are VAT-exclusive and who bears increases.
  2. Revise price lists & catalogs: Ensure customer-facing channels reflect 15% from 1 July 2020.
  3. Configure ERP & e-billing: Map tax codes (5% legacy vs. 15% standard), set correct effective dates, and lock old tax codes to prevent misuse after the change.
  4. Credit/debit notes: If post-change adjustments relate to pre-change supplies, apply the historical rate used on the original tax invoice and reference it.
  5. Vendors & procurement: Confirm supplier capability to issue compliant invoices; clean up blocked input VAT categories (entertainment, passenger vehicles, etc.).

VAT Returns & Documentation During the Change

  • Return periods: Monthly or quarterly depending on turnover; rate changes often created split-rate periods—track outputs at 5% vs. 15%.
  • Input VAT recovery: Claim per the rate on supplier invoices (5% or 15%); ensure invoice validity and business use.
  • Reverse charge (imported services): Apply the rate in force at the tax point; retain contracts, service completion reports, and RCM workings.
  • E-invoicing readiness: While e-invoicing (FATOORA) began later, maintaining clean master data and tax codes eased later Phase-2 integrations.
  • Record retention: Keep all rate-change evidence and reconciliations for at least 10 years.

Illustrative Examples (Training-Style)

Scenario Tax Point Likely Rate Notes
Goods delivered on 28 Jun 2020, invoiced 2 Jul 2020 Delivery (pre-change) 5% Delivery completed before 1 July; invoice references pre-change supply.
Service performed Jul–Aug 2020, advance received 20 Jun 2020 Completion dates post-change 15% on the service value delivered after 1 July Advance may be taxed at 5% if conditions met; final invoice trues up to 15% for post-change delivery.
Monthly maintenance contract April–September 2020 Continuous supply across change Apportion: 5% (Apr–Jun) and 15% (Jul–Sep) Keep schedule showing service periods and invoices by month.

FAQ for Saudi Corporate Taxpayers

Does the 15% rate apply to all supplies?
Most taxable supplies are at 15%, but zero-rated and exempt categories remain per VAT law (e.g., certain exports, specific financial services).

How should we handle post-change credit notes for pre-change invoices?
Use the same VAT rate as the original tax invoice and reference the original document number/date.

What about imported services around July 2020?
Apply the rate in force at the time of supply per reverse charge rules; document service periods and evidence of use.

Disclaimer: This article summarizes the 2018–2020 VAT rate transition for corporate taxpayers in Saudi Arabia. Always confirm treatment against your contracts, tax points, and current ZATCA guidance. This is general information, not tax advice.

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