Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
Just submitted it all, let's see how long it takes
I didn't because I'm confused by the paragraph:
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their
Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
So I guess it's better (or not?) to wait for an e-mail.
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
Just submitted it all, let's see how long it takes
I didn't because I'm confused by the paragraph:
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their
Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
So I guess it's better (or not?) to wait for an e-mail.
[…]
So I guess it's better (or not?) to wait for an e-mail.
IMHO, it’s not important: there’s thousands of stores in EU, and, at most, only
a couple hundreds¹ will read the forum and even fewer will “jump the gun” by
answering before they get the e-mail.
Also, why post in the forum if sellers needed to wait for the e-mail?
Lastly, Han shot first.
———
¹ Last post about such changes got ca. 1200 reads… but, IIRC, it has several
links in other threads, so I think crawlers (Google…) increased the count.
Also, why post in the forum if sellers needed to wait for the e-mail?
Because if you don't receive any e-mail you KNOW you've got to read the
forum.
Erm... I think?
Seems you are the only one with that problem that we know of, maybe Uday is able
to solve it as you spoke the other day! Else the meme above would be the reality
I sent my data now because knowing that most people, even getting the email in
waves, will just do it near the end date, and the Help Desk could take quite
sometime to solve everything...
———
*¹ Last post also was linked from an email, so that might have skewed the data.
[…]
I sent my data now because knowing that most people, even getting the email in
waves, will just do it near the end date, and the Help Desk could take quite
sometime to solve everything...
No no no! You should have said:
“I’m courageously volunteering to test that dangerous new kind of Red Tape,”
and/or
“I’m doing it first so I can talk about it knowingly afterward and thus guide
my fellow sellers in that endeavour.”
Kids these days, no sense of panache!
———
That being said, I miss the time when TV news showed images of people literally
throwing, from their cars, haphazardly tied bundles of papers toward the Revenue
mailbox, at 23h59 on the last day for declaration.
Progress….
[…]
I sent my data now because knowing that most people, even getting the email in
waves, will just do it near the end date, and the Help Desk could take quite
sometime to solve everything...
No no no! You should have said:
“I’m courageously volunteering to test that dangerous new kind of Red Tape,”
and/or
“I’m doing it first so I can talk about it knowingly afterward and thus guide
my fellow sellers in that endeavour.”
Kids these days, no sense of panache!
I did actually thought also what you wrote, I even already got a message about
helping with DAC7
PD:
Everyone check the FAQ, the timeline is short...
8. What happens if I don’t submit this information on time?
We encourage sellers to submit all required information within the time frame
for their respective countries. The reason behind multiple deadlines is to spread
out the NSV queue and to keep review times at the standard 2-week window.
The deadline for all EU sellers to update their information is November 30, 2024.
Members who fail to do this on time will have their stores closed and seller
privileges suspended for 6 months as required by the DAC7 regulations. If they
provide the required information within this time period, their seller privileges
and stores will be reinstated only after the initial 6 months are over.
———
That being said, I miss the time when TV news showed images of people literally
throwing, from their cars, haphazardly tied bundles of papers toward the Revenue
mailbox, at 23h59 on the last day for declaration.
Progress….
[…]
I sent my data now because knowing that most people, even getting the email in
waves, will just do it near the end date, and the Help Desk could take quite
sometime to solve everything...
No no no! You should have said:
“I’m courageously volunteering to test that dangerous new kind of Red Tape,”
and/or
“I’m doing it first so I can talk about it knowingly afterward and thus guide
my fellow sellers in that endeavour.”
Kids these days, no sense of panache!
I did actually thought also what you wrote, I even already got a message about
helping with DAC7
PD:
Everyone check the FAQ, the timeline is short...
8. What happens if I don’t submit this information on time?
We encourage sellers to submit all required information within the time frame
for their respective countries. The reason behind multiple deadlines is to spread
out the NSV queue and to keep review times at the standard 2-week window.
The deadline for all EU sellers to update their information is November 30, 2024.
Members who fail to do this on time will have their stores closed and seller
privileges suspended for 6 months as required by the DAC7 regulations. If they
provide the required information within this time period, their seller privileges
and stores will be reinstated only after the initial 6 months are over.
———
That being said, I miss the time when TV news showed images of people literally
throwing, from their cars, haphazardly tied bundles of papers toward the Revenue
mailbox, at 23h59 on the last day for declaration.
Progress….
cant wait for the dozens of posts whining why their store is closed when the
deadline actually hits.
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
Do you need these details of every UBO, or is one UBO enough? I just filled it
out, but there wasn't any option I was aware of to add UBOs.
UBOs, what do you mean?
Unidentified Benificial Object
Since our store has two owners, it seems pretty random for Bricklink to want
to know every detail about the one but at the same time not have a clue who the
other is. I don't know what these DAC rules say specifically, but I would
assume they need to collect info of all of the owners. Other organizations have
asked us for info on either both or none.
Do you need these details of every UBO, or is one UBO enough? I just filled it
out, but there wasn't any option I was aware of to add UBOs.
UBOs, what do you mean?
Unidentified Benificial Object
Since our store has two owners, it seems pretty random for Bricklink to want
to know every detail about the one but at the same time not have a clue who the
other is. I don't know what these DAC rules say specifically, but I would
assume they need to collect info of all of the owners. Other organizations have
asked us for info on either both or none.
As far as I think, the DAC7 is only to collect information so the EU can check
against other TAX entities, it doesn't matter for the EU who is the owner
of a business just who represents it in a website, so that the TAX authorities
can contact someone if needed more detailed info.
Do you need these details of every UBO, or is one UBO enough? I just filled it
out, but there wasn't any option I was aware of to add UBOs.
UBOs, what do you mean?
Unidentified Benificial Object
Since our store has two owners, it seems pretty random for Bricklink to want
to know every detail about the one but at the same time not have a clue who the
other is. I don't know what these DAC rules say specifically, but I would
assume they need to collect info of all of the owners. Other organizations have
asked us for info on either both or none.
As far as I think, the DAC7 is only to collect information so the EU can check
against other TAX entities, it doesn't matter for the EU who is the owner
of a business just who represents it in a website, so that the TAX authorities
can contact someone if needed more detailed info.
Could be. Well, as long as they are not passing on our business income information
to the tax authorities representing it as if it is my income, then
that's fine.
[…]
Yes, but Teup is in Netherlands, maybe it's pronounced differently there...
But Teup is educated: he even knows a bit of French!
First time I heard them talking about 'LEGO' I was really surprised!
Like they swallowed a cat?
Haha, something like that I don't think anyone who is not Dutch could
ever accept the way we pronounce LEGO.. my foreign girlfriend sure can't
And then Dutch people can't agree amongst themselves whether it's "de
Lego" or "het Lego"...
Should my VAT ID be added while I’m in VAT exempt status domestically? (My VAT
ID was used for only applying for OSS ID)
Hi
Isn't this a bit contradictive?
'VAT exempt status' has rules also (probably different once that I have).
if you stay under thresholds OSS registration is not required. And when you do
use the OSS your exempt status could be no longer applicable.
So can't answer your question because it confuses me. In my logic you can
use the exempt status up to 10000eur revenue for sales to other european buyers.
So also no vat added. If you go above the 10k you Will have to submit to OSS
, but then you must charge VAT which is not possible in an exempt scheme.....
(Imho). Correct me if I'm wrong.
Isn't this a bit contradictive?
'VAT exempt status' has rules also (probably different once that I have).
if you stay under thresholds OSS registration is not required. And when you do
use the OSS your exempt status could be no longer applicable.
So can't answer your question because it confuses me. In my logic you can
use the exempt status up to 10000eur revenue for sales to other european buyers.
So also no vat added. If you go above the 10k you Will have to submit to OSS
, but then you must charge VAT which is not possible in an exempt scheme.....
(Imho). Correct me if I'm wrong.
It varies country by country. In Austria, you can stay VAT exempt (below net
€35k domestic revenue) while charging EU VAT (above €10k EU revenue) which is
my case.
Isn't this a bit contradictive?
'VAT exempt status' has rules also (probably different once that I have).
if you stay under thresholds OSS registration is not required. And when you do
use the OSS your exempt status could be no longer applicable.
So can't answer your question because it confuses me. In my logic you can
use the exempt status up to 10000eur revenue for sales to other european buyers.
So also no vat added. If you go above the 10k you Will have to submit to OSS
, but then you must charge VAT which is not possible in an exempt scheme.....
(Imho). Correct me if I'm wrong.
It varies country by country. In Austria, you can stay VAT exempt (below net
€35k domestic revenue) while charging EU VAT (above €10k EU revenue) which is
my case.
In Belgium the domestique revenue is 25k, there is no limit on the export (outside
Europe) and there is now the 10k revenue sales to European countries. In my case
it's not possible to invoice without VAT to Belgian customers and with VAT
for european countries. If I would apply for OSS then I will loose the exemption.
I would also have to make VAT declarations.... I don't want to do this extra
administration
From January 1, 2025, the small business regulation will apply to all European
countries with a turnover of up to 100.000 euros
video on YouTube
NEW: Changes for small businesses | Annual Tax Act 2024
For OSS there is also a difference between B2B and B2C
In Administrative, rankster writes:
In Administrative, Krekeltje62 writes:
Isn't this a bit contradictive?
'VAT exempt status' has rules also (probably different once that I have).
if you stay under thresholds OSS registration is not required. And when you do
use the OSS your exempt status could be no longer applicable.
So can't answer your question because it confuses me. In my logic you can
use the exempt status up to 10000eur revenue for sales to other european buyers.
So also no vat added. If you go above the 10k you Will have to submit to OSS
, but then you must charge VAT which is not possible in an exempt scheme.....
(Imho). Correct me if I'm wrong.
It varies country by country. In Austria, you can stay VAT exempt (below net
€35k domestic revenue) while charging EU VAT (above €10k EU revenue) which is
my case.
NEU: Änderungen für Kleinunternehmer | Jahressteuergesetz 2024
In Administrative, buildingfactory writes:
From January 1, 2025, the small business regulation will apply to all European
countries with a turnover of up to 100.000 euros
video on YouTube
NEW: Changes for small businesses | Annual Tax Act 2024
For OSS there is also a difference between B2B and B2C
In Administrative, rankster writes:
In Administrative, Krekeltje62 writes:
Isn't this a bit contradictive?
'VAT exempt status' has rules also (probably different once that I have).
if you stay under thresholds OSS registration is not required. And when you do
use the OSS your exempt status could be no longer applicable.
So can't answer your question because it confuses me. In my logic you can
use the exempt status up to 10000eur revenue for sales to other european buyers.
So also no vat added. If you go above the 10k you Will have to submit to OSS
, but then you must charge VAT which is not possible in an exempt scheme.....
(Imho). Correct me if I'm wrong.
It varies country by country. In Austria, you can stay VAT exempt (below net
€35k domestic revenue) while charging EU VAT (above €10k EU revenue) which is
my case.
From January 1, 2025, the small business regulation will apply to all European
countries with a turnover of up to 100.000 euros
video on YouTube
NEW: Changes for small businesses | Annual Tax Act 2024
For OSS there is also a difference between B2B and B2C
In Administrative, rankster writes:
In Administrative, Krekeltje62 writes:
Isn't this a bit contradictive?
'VAT exempt status' has rules also (probably different once that I have).
if you stay under thresholds OSS registration is not required. And when you do
use the OSS your exempt status could be no longer applicable.
So can't answer your question because it confuses me. In my logic you can
use the exempt status up to 10000eur revenue for sales to other european buyers.
So also no vat added. If you go above the 10k you Will have to submit to OSS
, but then you must charge VAT which is not possible in an exempt scheme.....
(Imho). Correct me if I'm wrong.
It varies country by country. In Austria, you can stay VAT exempt (below net
€35k domestic revenue) while charging EU VAT (above €10k EU revenue) which is
my case.
Nothing of this information on Belgian MYfin , rules are still unchanged. Keeping
it below 25k local revenue and 10k european revenue keeps everything in the exemption
scheme. Further more If you sell B2C to prevent intra comm. issues, but it does
not really matter because in the exemption scheme you are not obligated to follow
VAT rules, so no declarations.
Watching the YouTube movies does not help.
From January 1, 2025, the small business regulation will apply to all European
countries with a turnover of up to 100.000 euros
video on YouTube
NEW: Changes for small businesses | Annual Tax Act 2024
For OSS there is also a difference between B2B and B2C
In Administrative, rankster writes:
In Administrative, Krekeltje62 writes:
Isn't this a bit contradictive?
'VAT exempt status' has rules also (probably different once that I have).
if you stay under thresholds OSS registration is not required. And when you do
use the OSS your exempt status could be no longer applicable.
So can't answer your question because it confuses me. In my logic you can
use the exempt status up to 10000eur revenue for sales to other european buyers.
So also no vat added. If you go above the 10k you Will have to submit to OSS
, but then you must charge VAT which is not possible in an exempt scheme.....
(Imho). Correct me if I'm wrong.
It varies country by country. In Austria, you can stay VAT exempt (below net
€35k domestic revenue) while charging EU VAT (above €10k EU revenue) which is
my case.
Nothing of this information on Belgian MYfin , rules are still unchanged. Keeping
it below 25k local revenue and 10k european revenue keeps everything in the exemption
scheme. Further more If you sell B2C to prevent intra comm. issues, but it does
not really matter because in the exemption scheme you are not obligated to follow
VAT rules, so no declarations.
Watching the YouTube movies does not help.
Googled and found that I just have to inform the VAT administration that I want
the European threshold for 100k to use the exemption on European sales (which
I believe was always there) and that I must mail them every 3 months with the
revenue within Europe. This system will not last very long... Don't think
they have the resources to follow up. And mail? Anyone can send a mail on my
behalf..... I assume they are going tot use the Interval system for this.....
It's july ... Nothing official for now.
From January 1, 2025, cross-border small business taxation will be implemented
in the European internal market, according to which German entrepreneurs in other
EU member states can, under certain conditions, participate in the small business
taxation applicable there.
New for EU small business
What will change for small business owners in 2025?
With the currently known draft of an annual tax law for 2024, the small business
regulation is to be expanded from 2025. In particular, the sales limits of 22,000
euros (previous year) and 50,000 euros (current calendar year) are to be raised
to 25,000 euros and 100,000 euros.
In Administrative, rankster writes:
In Administrative, buildingfactory writes:
From January 1, 2025, the small business regulation will apply to all European
countries with a turnover of up to 100.000 euros
video on YouTube
NEW: Changes for small businesses | Annual Tax Act 2024
For OSS there is also a difference between B2B and B2C
Do you have any source please, other than YT videos?
From January 1, 2025, cross-border small business taxation will be implemented
in the European internal market, according to which German entrepreneurs in other
EU member states can, under certain conditions, participate in the small business
taxation applicable there.
New for EU small business
What will change for small business owners in 2025?
With the currently known draft of an annual tax law for 2024, the small business
regulation is to be expanded from 2025. In particular, the sales limits of 22,000
euros (previous year) and 50,000 euros (current calendar year) are to be raised
to 25,000 euros and 100,000 euros.
These are domestic tresholds for German small business owners, right?
We have different tresholds in Austria but I’ll keep an eye out for this topic,
thanks for sharing.
As part of the largest sales tax reform in the last 25 years, the European Commission
wants to set this threshold uniformly across the EU in the next few years. For
most Member States, this involves a significant increase in the threshold. For
Great Britain, however, hardly anything changes.
According to the current planning status, the small business regulation should
apply to self-employed people whose previous year's sales meet the following
criteria:
No more than 85,000 euros turnover in a member state and
no more than 100,000 euros in sales throughout the EU.
In Administrative, rankster writes:
In Administrative, buildingfactory writes:
by google and google translate
New for EU small business
From January 1, 2025, cross-border small business taxation will be implemented
in the European internal market, according to which German entrepreneurs in other
EU member states can, under certain conditions, participate in the small business
taxation applicable there.
New for EU small business
What will change for small business owners in 2025?
With the currently known draft of an annual tax law for 2024, the small business
regulation is to be expanded from 2025. In particular, the sales limits of 22,000
euros (previous year) and 50,000 euros (current calendar year) are to be raised
to 25,000 euros and 100,000 euros.
These are domestic tresholds for German small business owners, right?
We have different tresholds in Austria but I’ll keep an eye out for this topic,
thanks for sharing.
As part of the largest sales tax reform in the last 25 years, the European Commission
wants to set this threshold uniformly across the EU in the next few years. For
most Member States, this involves a significant increase in the threshold. For
Great Britain, however, hardly anything changes.
Where is that taken from? As Great Britain is not in the EU, so should be irrelevant
when it comes to the EU wanting to implement uniformity across the EU.
As part of the largest sales tax reform in the last 25 years, the European Commission
wants to set this threshold uniformly across the EU in the next few years. For
most Member States, this involves a significant increase in the threshold. For
Great Britain, however, hardly anything changes.
It would be great if you could give sources (links) to your quotes. Even if
they are not in English.
Where is that taken from? As Great Britain is not in the EU, so should be irrelevant
when it comes to the EU wanting to implement uniformity across the EU.
Well, some rules would change for non-EU businesses doing business in
EU. Emphasis on ‘would’: AFAIU, it’s still fuzzy and that will (as always…)
be deployed in steps, which will (as always again…) be delayed because no one
is ever ready.
In this new scheme, there’ll be 2 thresholds:
— The old, up to €85,000 threshold for domestic (for all EU countries).
— A new €100,000 for “cross-border.”
If you choose the second, you get an “EX” VAT number but you still don’t charge
VAT, and there’ll be (not yet defined AFAICT) a mechanism similar to OSS to declare
& check your EU sales.
The OSS scheme is still valid.
In a way, IIUC, that “EX” thing will allow to sell up to (€100,000 minus local
threshold; so €15,000 in France, €100,000 in wherever-the-local-is-€0) in EU/non-domestic
without charging VAT, bypassing the €10,000 of OSS in every country 🙃
As part of the largest sales tax reform in the last 25 years, the European Commission
wants to set this threshold uniformly across the EU in the next few years. For
most Member States, this involves a significant increase in the threshold. For
Great Britain, however, hardly anything changes.
It would be great if you could give sources (links) to your quotes. Even if
they are not in English.
Where is that taken from? As Great Britain is not in the EU, so should be irrelevant
when it comes to the EU wanting to implement uniformity across the EU.
Well, some rules would change for non-EU businesses doing business in
EU. Emphasis on ‘would’: AFAIU, it’s still fuzzy and that will (as always…)
be deployed in steps, which will (as always again…) be delayed because no one
is ever ready.
In this new scheme, there’ll be 2 thresholds:
— The old, up to €85,000 threshold for domestic (for all EU countries).
Each country can still decide their threshold up to 85k.
— A new €100,000 for “cross-border.”
*And sales to each other country can't be bigger that own country's domestic
threshold.
If you choose the second, you get an “EX” VAT number but you still don’t charge
VAT, and there’ll be (not yet defined AFAICT) a mechanism similar to OSS to declare
& check your EU sales.
The OSS scheme is still valid.
In a way, IIUC, that “EX” thing will allow to sell up to (€100,000 minus local
threshold; so €15,000 in France, €100,000 in wherever-the-local-is-€0) in EU/non-domestic
without charging VAT, bypassing the €10,000 of OSS in every country 🙃
— The old, up to €85,000 threshold for domestic (for all EU countries).
Each country can still decide their threshold up to 85k.
Yes, thanks. That’s what I meant by “up to” but I see it can be understood as
“sales up to” and not “threshold up to”
Also there was my remark below that there could be countries with a €0 threshold,
making the total amount of EU sales ten times higher than with OSS.
— A new €100,000 for “cross-border.”
*And sales to each other country can't be bigger that own country's domestic
threshold.
Oops, I had a paragraph about that and more but I cut it all because it was too
long. Also, at one point, those who are affected should at least read the links
This simplification is making it complicated… surprise!
As part of the largest sales tax reform in the last 25 years, the European Commission
wants to set this threshold uniformly across the EU in the next few years. For
most Member States, this involves a significant increase in the threshold. For
Great Britain, however, hardly anything changes.
According to the current planning status, the small business regulation should
apply to self-employed people whose previous year's sales meet the following
criteria:
No more than 85,000 euros turnover in a member state and
no more than 100,000 euros in sales throughout the EU.
So they lowered the treshold to €10K few years ago but next year they will increase
it to €100K. Nice job…
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
H, i have three questions:
-where are you store the information that we provide? Because you are an American
based company, in the us? Or are you store the information within the EU? I really
don't want to the very private information on a country outside the EU. Especially
this because it only apply to EU residents.
-why do you need my photo? You can' t check if my name is matched with my
photo, so why need my photo?
-is a TIN number required in The Netherlands? I followed the link for more information,
but you link to an external website and i still do not know what a TIN number
is?
H, i have three questions:
-where are you store the information that we provide? Because you are an American
based company, in the us? Or are you store the information within the EU? I really
don't want to the very private information on a country outside the EU. Especially
this because it only apply to EU residents.
-why do you need my photo? You can' t check if my name is matched with my
photo, so why need my photo?
-is a TIN number required in The Netherlands? I followed the link for more information,
but you link to an external website and i still do not know what a TIN number
is?
It doesn't concern private sellers cheating with national and european laws
- don't worry!
H, i have three questions:
-where are you store the information that we provide? Because you are an American
based company, in the us? Or are you store the information within the EU? I really
don't want to the very private information on a country outside the EU. Especially
this because it only apply to EU residents.
-why do you need my photo? You can' t check if my name is matched with my
photo, so why need my photo?
-is a TIN number required in The Netherlands? I followed the link for more information,
but you link to an external website and i still do not know what a TIN number
is?
Thanks for the answer.
TIN = BSN
Having over 30 orders a year and more than 2000€ a year makes one a seller. Hobby
sellers and sellers that sell new sets under the margin scheme, well good luck.
H, i have three questions:
-where are you store the information that we provide? Because you are an American
based company, in the us? Or are you store the information within the EU? I really
don't want to the very private information on a country outside the EU. Especially
this because it only apply to EU residents.
-why do you need my photo? You can' t check if my name is matched with my
photo, so why need my photo?
-is a TIN number required in The Netherlands? I followed the link for more information,
but you link to an external website and i still do not know what a TIN number
is?
Thanks for the answer.
TIN = BSN
Having over 30 orders a year and more than 2000€ a year makes one a seller. Hobby
sellers and sellers that sell new sets under the margin scheme, well good luck.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
Isn't the idea that even 'hobby sellers' are reported if they go
above the 30 items/2000 euro threshold and then it is up to them to put in a
claim that they are selling their own stuff? I believe that is the case here
(with £1700 threshold for reporting) and what ebay is doing for UK.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
Isn't the idea that even 'hobby sellers' are reported if they go
above the 30 items/2000 euro threshold and then it is up to them to put in a
claim that they are selling their own stuff? I believe that is the case here
(with £1700 threshold for reporting) and what ebay is doing for UK.
Sure , that's correct, don't think that hobby sellers want this. And
Selling their own stuff just bought in 2024, yeah right , that's a hobby.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
Isn't the idea that even 'hobby sellers' are reported if they go
above the 30 items/2000 euro threshold and then it is up to them to put in a
claim that they are selling their own stuff? I believe that is the case here
(with £1700 threshold for reporting) and what ebay is doing for UK.
Sure , that's correct, don't think that hobby sellers want this. And
Selling their own stuff just bought in 2024, yeah right , that's a hobby.
Indeed, proving when you bought something you own is difficult, unless you keep
every receipt. And if you are keeping receipts for items that you are going to
own and use then it suggests you could be thinking of selling it (although of
course there are other reasons).
Not that date really shows the reason for purchasing something was to use it.
Plenty of people have new condition sets from 5 or 10 years ago or more, yet
they were bought as investments rather than for personal use hence keeping them
sealed.
And then some people buy second hand LEGO to sell and can flip it quickly, yet
it could be from 1970s or 80s so they could claim they owned it as a kid (if
they are old enough) and don't have a receipt. I imagine this is where the
limits come from. I guess they assume that an average person might sell some
of their own stuff once every two weeks or so on average, and this is not likely
to be more than 2000 Euro / £1700 a year in total. Any more than this and they
are likely to be trading.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
Isn't the idea that even 'hobby sellers' are reported if they go
above the 30 items/2000 euro threshold and then it is up to them to put in a
claim that they are selling their own stuff? I believe that is the case here
(with £1700 threshold for reporting) and what ebay is doing for UK.
Sure , that's correct, don't think that hobby sellers want this. And
Selling their own stuff just bought in 2024, yeah right , that's a hobby.
Indeed, proving when you bought something you own is difficult, unless you keep
every receipt. And if you are keeping receipts for items that you are going to
own and use then it suggests you could be thinking of selling it (although of
course there are other reasons).
Not that date really shows the reason for purchasing something was to use it.
Plenty of people have new condition sets from 5 or 10 years ago or more, yet
they were bought as investments rather than for personal use hence keeping them
sealed.
And then some people buy second hand LEGO to sell and can flip it quickly, yet
it could be from 1970s or 80s so they could claim they owned it as a kid (if
they are old enough) and don't have a receipt. I imagine this is where the
limits come from. I guess they assume that an average person might sell some
of their own stuff once every two weeks or so on average, and this is not likely
to be more than 2000 Euro / £1700 a year in total. Any more than this and they
are likely to be trading.
Reported yes, but they don't necessarily need to report it as income if it
was their own property. And yep... that is difficult. But as a private person,
you're not obligated to keep any receipts or administration of these things.
So the burden of proof here is with the authorities.
I think this is all more of a criminal investigation kind of thing, you know,
the classic 'expensive cars owned by people who shouldn't have expensive
cars' type of investgation. The way I understand it is this DAC7 is only
providing an extra puzzle piece of transparency, the same way the banks are transparent,
to help authorities build hand-picked cases. I really don't expect there'll
be some kind of automated repercussions if a hobby seller sells some stuff on
Bricklink and then doesn't report it (the same way this doesn't happen
when your bank account is receiving money you don't report). And in fact,
since over here at least the tax agency is understaffed, it's really unlikely
that they're going to after a few Lego hobby sellers when they have bigger
fish to fry.
H, i have three questions:
-where are you store the information that we provide? Because you are an American
based company, in the us? Or are you store the information within the EU? I really
don't want to the very private information on a country outside the EU. Especially
this because it only apply to EU residents.
-why do you need my photo? You can' t check if my name is matched with my
photo, so why need my photo?
-is a TIN number required in The Netherlands? I followed the link for more information,
but you link to an external website and i still do not know what a TIN number
is?
Thanks for the answer.
TIN = BSN
Having over 30 orders a year and more than 2000€ a year makes one a seller. Hobby
sellers and sellers that sell new sets under the margin scheme, well good luck.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
Here we go again "
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed".. if that was the case then no problem, but many buy and re-sell,
that's not a hobby , that's business. Bending the rules until you believe
they are true.
And sure that margin scheme sellers are not affected, but Selling new sets under
margin scheme is fraude.
H, i have three questions:
-where are you store the information that we provide? Because you are an American
based company, in the us? Or are you store the information within the EU? I really
don't want to the very private information on a country outside the EU. Especially
this because it only apply to EU residents.
-why do you need my photo? You can' t check if my name is matched with my
photo, so why need my photo?
-is a TIN number required in The Netherlands? I followed the link for more information,
but you link to an external website and i still do not know what a TIN number
is?
Thanks for the answer.
TIN = BSN
Having over 30 orders a year and more than 2000€ a year makes one a seller. Hobby
sellers and sellers that sell new sets under the margin scheme, well good luck.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
Here we go again "
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed".. if that was the case then no problem, but many buy and re-sell,
that's not a hobby , that's business. Bending the rules until you believe
they are true.
And sure that margin scheme sellers are not affected, but Selling new sets under
margin scheme is fraude.
Why is that fraude ? If I buy a new set from a private person, should I then
list it as used, even if it's new & sealed ? I still pay tax from the sale
?
H, i have three questions:
-where are you store the information that we provide? Because you are an American
based company, in the us? Or are you store the information within the EU? I really
don't want to the very private information on a country outside the EU. Especially
this because it only apply to EU residents.
-why do you need my photo? You can' t check if my name is matched with my
photo, so why need my photo?
-is a TIN number required in The Netherlands? I followed the link for more information,
but you link to an external website and i still do not know what a TIN number
is?
Thanks for the answer.
TIN = BSN
Having over 30 orders a year and more than 2000€ a year makes one a seller. Hobby
sellers and sellers that sell new sets under the margin scheme, well good luck.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
Here we go again "
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed".. if that was the case then no problem, but many buy and re-sell,
that's not a hobby , that's business. Bending the rules until you believe
they are true.
And sure that margin scheme sellers are not affected, but Selling new sets under
margin scheme is fraude.
Why is that fraude ? If I buy a new set from a private person, should I then
list it as used, even if it's new & sealed ? I still pay tax from the sale
?
H, i have three questions:
-where are you store the information that we provide? Because you are an American
based company, in the us? Or are you store the information within the EU? I really
don't want to the very private information on a country outside the EU. Especially
this because it only apply to EU residents.
-why do you need my photo? You can' t check if my name is matched with my
photo, so why need my photo?
-is a TIN number required in The Netherlands? I followed the link for more information,
but you link to an external website and i still do not know what a TIN number
is?
Thanks for the answer.
TIN = BSN
Having over 30 orders a year and more than 2000€ a year makes one a seller. Hobby
sellers and sellers that sell new sets under the margin scheme, well good luck.
This particular thing won't be a problem for margin scheme sellers. They
are already reporting sales that match the information that Bricklink makes available.
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed. Bricklink simply becomes transparent to the authorities so unless someone
is actively trying to commit fraud they won't be in any trouble.
Here we go again "
Hobby sellers also aren't in trouble, because selling your belongings isn't
taxed".. if that was the case then no problem, but many buy and re-sell,
that's not a hobby , that's business.
We're completely in agreement, I didn't suggest anything else.
Hobby = not making structural, intentional profit
Business = making structural, intentional profit
Will the announced changes as of 1-1-2025 have any impact on these DAC7 implementation?
Does this mean only for 2024 these data is needed to provide and after that (when
one store falls in the category as stated in the pages in the link) no more?
Will the announced changes as of 1-1-2025 have any impact on these DAC7 implementation?
Why would they?
DAC7 is about giving information about your business, whatever your registration
status, while the changes are about VAT-registration thresholds.
At most, what the new “EX” VAT-registration will change is how OSS VAT-registration
is handled.
(And I’m not sure much changes for that either: if you’re above €10,000 in EU,
you just show your EX-VAT-number and BL won’t force you to use OSS. Though I
don’t know if BL will have to check you are over the registration threshold for
each and every country you sell to 🤔 … but, at the moment, they don’t have to
check the domestic threshold, so I guess not.)
Does this mean only for 2024 these data is needed to provide and after that (when
one store falls in the category as stated in the pages in the link) no more?
Will the announced changes as of 1-1-2025 have any impact on these DAC7 implementation?
Why would they?
DAC7 is about giving information about your business, whatever your registration
status, while the changes are about VAT-registration thresholds.
At most, what the new “EX” VAT-registration will change is how OSS VAT-registration
is handled.
(And I’m not sure much changes for that either: if you’re above €10,000 in EU,
you just show your EX-VAT-number and BL won’t force you to use OSS. Though I
don’t know if BL will have to check you are over the registration threshold for
each and every country you sell to 🤔 … but, at the moment, they don’t have to
check the domestic threshold, so I guess not.)
I think they do, we talked about the threshold for Spain sometime ago.
Does this mean only for 2024 these data is needed to provide and after that (when
one store falls in the category as stated in the pages in the link) no more?
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
my store is suspende for further info,
but i dont know why i am suspended ?
i have send a message to the admin email,
could this be anything off this dac7 ?
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
Thank you,
The BrickLink Team
Just a big praise to the BrickLink Team.
I've submitted Seller Verification documentation on July 18th and today July
22nd it was approved, so bravo BrickLink, I'm impressed!
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
Thank you,
The BrickLink Team
Just a big praise to the BrickLink Team.
I've submitted Seller Verification documentation on July 18th and today July
22nd it was approved, so bravo BrickLink, I'm impressed!
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
Thank you,
The BrickLink Team
Just a big praise to the BrickLink Team.
I've submitted Seller Verification documentation on July 18th and today July
22nd it was approved, so bravo BrickLink, I'm impressed!
Make that a double ,-) congrats to the people involved.
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
We're starting the process but two problems/confusions:
In Germany, businesses do not have a TIN. Only persons.
So we cannot give a TIN for the business. What's the solution for this? Usually
in Germany the VAT number is the verification number for businesses.
How to proceed as business entity with the personal information. According to
the overview it's the business-name and no Date of birth. But is then a proof
of identification necessary? Would be the same as under business registration
details.
Or does this for business entities means the information of the CEO?
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
We're starting the process but two problems/confusions:
In Germany, businesses do not have a TIN. Only persons.
So we cannot give a TIN for the business. What's the solution for this? Usually
in Germany the VAT number is the verification number for businesses.
Did you try to fill in with your VAT ID number?
(In my case TIN = VAT ID, but I am a one man company)
How to proceed as business entity with the personal information. According to
the overview it's the business-name and no Date of birth. But is then a proof
of identification necessary? Would be the same as under business registration
details.
Or does this for business entities means the information of the CEO?
That's nice for you, but it doesn't help here.
Germany is not Portugal and most of the large BL stores in Germany are not one-man-company.
Hat Deutschland eine TIN Nummer?
Seit dem 01. Juli 2007 erhält jede Person zur eindeutigen Identifizierung in
Besteuerungsverfahren eine 11-stellige Identifikationsnummer, die sog. TIN. Diese
ändert sich bei Umzug oder Heirat nicht. Die Nummer bleibt der Person lebenslang
zugeordnet.
TIN (Steuer-Identifikationsnummer): TIN steht für Taxpayer Identification Number.
Diese 11stellige Nummer wird jedem Bundesbürger zugewiesen und wird ein Leben
lang behalten. Diese Nummer ist im Programm in den persönlichen Daten des Steuerpflichtigen,
der Ehefrau und der Kinder anzugeben.
That's nice for you, but it doesn't help here.
Germany is not Portugal and most of the large BL stores in Germany are not one-man-company.
Hat Deutschland eine TIN Nummer?
Seit dem 01. Juli 2007 erhält jede Person zur eindeutigen Identifizierung in
Besteuerungsverfahren eine 11-stellige Identifikationsnummer, die sog. TIN. Diese
ändert sich bei Umzug oder Heirat nicht. Die Nummer bleibt der Person lebenslang
zugeordnet.
TIN (Steuer-Identifikationsnummer): TIN steht für Taxpayer Identification Number.
Diese 11stellige Nummer wird jedem Bundesbürger zugewiesen und wird ein Leben
lang behalten. Diese Nummer ist im Programm in den persönlichen Daten des Steuerpflichtigen,
der Ehefrau und der Kinder anzugeben.
In Deutschland haben Unternehmen keine TIN. Nur Personen.
Daher können wir keine TIN für das Unternehmen angeben.
That's nice for you, but it doesn't help here.
Germany is not Portugal and most of the large BL stores in Germany are not one-man-company.
Hat Deutschland eine TIN Nummer?
Seit dem 01. Juli 2007 erhält jede Person zur eindeutigen Identifizierung in
Besteuerungsverfahren eine 11-stellige Identifikationsnummer, die sog. TIN. Diese
ändert sich bei Umzug oder Heirat nicht. Die Nummer bleibt der Person lebenslang
zugeordnet.
TIN (Steuer-Identifikationsnummer): TIN steht für Taxpayer Identification Number.
Diese 11stellige Nummer wird jedem Bundesbürger zugewiesen und wird ein Leben
lang behalten. Diese Nummer ist im Programm in den persönlichen Daten des Steuerpflichtigen,
der Ehefrau und der Kinder anzugeben.
In Deutschland haben Unternehmen keine TIN. Nur Personen.
Daher können wir keine TIN für das Unternehmen angeben.
Was ist die Identifikationsnummer / TIN?
Bei der steuerlichen Identifikationsnummer (abgekürzt IdNr. oder Steuer-IdNr.)
handelt es sich um eine elfstellige bundeseinheitliche Identifikationsnummer,
die jede in Deutschland gemeldete Person für Steuerzwecke erhält. Oftmals wird
diese auch TIN (Tax identification Numbers) genannt.
That's nice for you, but it doesn't help here.
Germany is not Portugal and most of the large BL stores in Germany are not one-man-company.
Hat Deutschland eine TIN Nummer?
Seit dem 01. Juli 2007 erhält jede Person zur eindeutigen Identifizierung in
Besteuerungsverfahren eine 11-stellige Identifikationsnummer, die sog. TIN. Diese
ändert sich bei Umzug oder Heirat nicht. Die Nummer bleibt der Person lebenslang
zugeordnet.
TIN (Steuer-Identifikationsnummer): TIN steht für Taxpayer Identification Number.
Diese 11stellige Nummer wird jedem Bundesbürger zugewiesen und wird ein Leben
lang behalten. Diese Nummer ist im Programm in den persönlichen Daten des Steuerpflichtigen,
der Ehefrau und der Kinder anzugeben.
In Deutschland haben Unternehmen keine TIN. Nur Personen.
Daher können wir keine TIN für das Unternehmen angeben.
Was ist die Identifikationsnummer / TIN?
Bei der steuerlichen Identifikationsnummer (abgekürzt IdNr. oder Steuer-IdNr.)
handelt es sich um eine elfstellige bundeseinheitliche Identifikationsnummer,
die jede in Deutschland gemeldete Person für Steuerzwecke erhält. Oftmals wird
diese auch TIN (Tax identification Numbers) genannt.
What about the hundreds of german stores who run their store as "Kleinunternehmer"?
Are they count as Business or private in BL??
How to register as a business without business registration number, what "Kleinunternehmer"
don't get in Germany.
The registration page do not accept my TIN. It got denied after verifying it.
"We could not verify your TIN. Please check your TIN and try again. If you
notice your TIN is coming up as invalid, you will need to contact our Admin team."
Admin team was informed.
What about the hundreds of german stores who run their store as "Kleinunternehmer"?
Are they count as Business or private in BL??
How to register as a business without business registration number, what "Kleinunternehmer"
don't get in Germany.
It is irrelevant if you are Kleinunternehmer or not.
If you are in one of the German databases listed here
https://e-justice.europa.eu/489/EN/business_registers__search_for_a_company_in_the_eu?init=true&idSubpage=1
then you add the information. Otherwise you select that you do not have a registered
business.
That's nice for you, but it doesn't help here.
Germany is not Portugal and most of the large BL stores in Germany are not one-man-company.
Hat Deutschland eine TIN Nummer?
Seit dem 01. Juli 2007 erhält jede Person zur eindeutigen Identifizierung in
Besteuerungsverfahren eine 11-stellige Identifikationsnummer, die sog. TIN. Diese
ändert sich bei Umzug oder Heirat nicht. Die Nummer bleibt der Person lebenslang
zugeordnet.
TIN (Steuer-Identifikationsnummer): TIN steht für Taxpayer Identification Number.
Diese 11stellige Nummer wird jedem Bundesbürger zugewiesen und wird ein Leben
lang behalten. Diese Nummer ist im Programm in den persönlichen Daten des Steuerpflichtigen,
der Ehefrau und der Kinder anzugeben.
In Deutschland haben Unternehmen keine TIN. Nur Personen.
Daher können wir keine TIN für das Unternehmen angeben.
Was ist die Identifikationsnummer / TIN?
Bei der steuerlichen Identifikationsnummer (abgekürzt IdNr. oder Steuer-IdNr.)
handelt es sich um eine elfstellige bundeseinheitliche Identifikationsnummer,
die jede in Deutschland gemeldete Person für Steuerzwecke erhält. Oftmals wird
diese auch TIN (Tax identification Numbers) genannt.
What about the hundreds of german stores who run their store as "Kleinunternehmer"?
Are they count as Business or private in BL??
How to register as a business without business registration number, what "Kleinunternehmer"
don't get in Germany.
The registration page do not accept my TIN. It got denied after verifying it.
"We could not verify your TIN. Please check your TIN and try again. If you
notice your TIN is coming up as invalid, you will need to contact our Admin team."
Admin team was informed.
The same problem i have with my Vat ID. But this is 100% correct. Without this
i can not complete the process. To click on "i have no VAT ID" would
not be correct.
How is Bricklink going to safeguard this extremely sensitive information in regard
to last years' big hack attempt?
from what i remember there wasn't actually a hack. it was a bluff by hackers
who were using account credentials they acquired elsewhere and bricklink was
not a leak
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
I'm now worried about approximate/erroneous interpretations of "within
one calendar year".
If I search this definition:
A calendar year is a one-year period between January 1 and December 31, based
on the Gregorian calendar. The calendar year commonly coincides with the fiscal
year for individual and corporate taxation.
So that means for 2024, the sales of the previous year, 2023 are the ones
and only ones accounted?
It's not for me as I'm whatever off those numbers.
But people may instead understand "the last 365 days" (starting from
where?), or "the current year (2024)" or something else.
I would suggest someone clears this "calendar year" concept in Help and
e-mails from Administration?
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
I'm now worried about approximate/erroneous interpretations of "within
one calendar year".
If I search this definition:
A calendar year is a one-year period between January 1 and December 31, based
on the Gregorian calendar. The calendar year commonly coincides with the fiscal
year for individual and corporate taxation.
So that means for 2024, the sales of the previous year, 2023 are the ones
and only ones accounted?
It's not for me as I'm whatever off those numbers.
But people may instead understand "the last 365 days" (starting from
where?), or "the current year (2024)" or something else.
I would suggest someone clears this "calendar year" concept in Help and
e-mails from Administration?
Or is it just me?
I have the same question - is this for 2024 and forward or also for 2023, 2022
etc etc?
I´m not near in 2024 but might be for 2023.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
I'm now worried about approximate/erroneous interpretations of "within
one calendar year".
If I search this definition:
A calendar year is a one-year period between January 1 and December 31, based
on the Gregorian calendar. The calendar year commonly coincides with the fiscal
year for individual and corporate taxation.
So that means for 2024, the sales of the previous year, 2023 are the ones
and only ones accounted?
It's not for me as I'm whatever off those numbers.
But people may instead understand "the last 365 days" (starting from
where?), or "the current year (2024)" or something else.
I would suggest someone clears this "calendar year" concept in Help and
e-mails from Administration?
Or is it just me?
I have the same question - is this for 2024 and forward or also for 2023, 2022
etc etc?
I´m not near in 2024 but might be for 2023.
Anyone with knowledge?
To me it's about 01 JAN 2023 to 31 DEC 2023.
It seems to be confirmed with a few pages I've found online.
But a BrickLink Admins should reply and correct the FAQ page.
Today is the first day that you can submit additional information that is needed
for the DAC7 reporting directive. EU DAC7 regulation requires BrickLink to start
collecting additional information and documents from our sellers in the EU.
To qualify for DAC7 reporting, you should meet at least one of the two criteria:
a. 30 or more sales through the BrickLink platform within one calendar year,
excluding orders that have been cancelled within the same year;
b. Total sales in the amount of EUR 2,000 or more within one calendar year. This
amount only includes item cost totals and not shipping and other additional costs.
All required information should be submitted through the Seller Verification
page: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/mystore/registration.page (only accessible
for the sellers in the EU). Your store will still be open while your Seller Verification
request is being reviewed by the administration, even if we request additional
information or ask you to resubmit your request.
We will also be sending out personal invitations to sellers to submit their Seller
Verifications. These emails will be sent out to some sellers before others with
the goal to relieve the load on our administration and to ensure that all requests
are handled in a timely manner.
The deadline for all eligible EU sellers is November 30, 2024. However, we encourage
you to go ahead and submit your Seller Verification at your first convenience
if your store matches the criteria that we mentioned above.
I see now the message to go through verification since few days on my orders
screen, but I already went through the verification process. is it because it
appears to every EU seller or should i worry that i still see it that something
went wrong?
[…]
I see now the message to go through verification since few days on my orders
screen, but I already went through the verification process. is it because it
appears to every EU seller or should i worry that i still see it that something
went wrong?
It seems that everybody sees the message. Even when you are under the limits,
even when you’ve already done the paperwork.
I think it’s because the message is just that, a message, and not a notification
like when you have an order or something else specifically related to your account.
They may only be able to limit it to EU sellers.
hi
i want to understand i have already sent everything, everything approved
why the request message continues to persist is it something that remains until
3011 and automatically goes away?
i dont want problems
on the page it tells me everything complete and approved
what should i do?
thanks
In Administrative, SylvainLS writes:
In Administrative, shayke100 writes:
[…]
I see now the message to go through verification since few days on my orders
screen, but I already went through the verification process. is it because it
appears to every EU seller or should i worry that i still see it that something
went wrong?
It seems that everybody sees the message. Even when you are under the limits,
even when you’ve already done the paperwork.
I think it’s because the message is just that, a message, and not a notification
like when you have an order or something else specifically related to your account.
They may only be able to limit it to EU sellers.
hi
i want to understand i have already sent everything, everything approved
why the request message continues to persist is it something that remains until
3011 and automatically goes away?
i dont want problems
on the page it tells me everything complete and approved
what should i do?
thanks
It's an automated reminder shown to every seller. The banner also says Ignore
this message if you have updated your dashboard earlier.
Having read up on DAC7, the laws in my country, etc., it seems I'll have
to change my hobby into a business in the near future.
My question is, can I at this point submit my personal details as the BrickLink-store
owner and later change this same BrickLink-store to a business - i.e. adding/changing
the VAT number to the business I will be operating?
Also when the store is operated under a business, is the information on the owner
(name, date of birth) still relevant/applicable?
Having read up on DAC7, the laws in my country, etc., it seems I'll have
to change my hobby into a business in the near future.
My question is, can I at this point submit my personal details as the BrickLink-store
owner and later change this same BrickLink-store to a business - i.e. adding/changing
the VAT number to the business I will be operating?
At this point you HAVE to submit your personal details.
It'll be valid until you change your status.
Also when the store is operated under a business, is the information on the owner
(name, date of birth) still relevant/applicable?
AFAIK, you'll have then to re-apply the whole DAC7 process, including with
your new business infos.
Previous infos probably won't be relevant, it's the whole to have to
be done again.