William Hill set for £150m windfall over VAT ruling on FOBTs
Bookmaker William Hill said it could receive a windfall of up to £150m after the industry won a challenge over sales tax on controversial fixed-odds machines in betting shops.
The company said the government's Revenue & Customs office had decided not to appeal against a tribunal ruling that found companies had been paying too much value added tax (VAT) on fixed-odds betting terminals (FOBT).
"Whilst William Hill currently expects the net cash recovery to be material, its precise quantum remains uncertain. Nevertheless, the board has considered a number of scenarios which suggest a potential net cash recovery of between £125m and £150m.”
“The group has submitted claims which are substantially similar to those provided in the VAT challenge. Those claims have not yet been subject to the detailed evidential and accounting reviews that will need to take place before entitlement to the refund can be settled.”
The industry and taxman have been at loggerheads after bookmaker Betfred, owned by the billionaire Conservative Party donor Fred Done, said it had been overpaying VAT on winnings from the terminals between 2005 and 2013.
The government in 2018 decided to slash the maximum bet on FOBTs, , called the “crack cocaine” of gambling, from £100 to £2 after concerns about how quickly people could rack up losses. It has come under criticism for the slow implementation of the cut.
The industry as a whole could recoup £1bn in VAT as a result of the ruling based on the rate of VAT paid on combined income from FOBTs between 2005 and 2013, which amounts to more than £8bn plus interest.
A tax tribunal ruled that collecting VAT on FOBTs between 2005 and 2013 had “breached the principle of fiscal neutrality” because similar roulette-style games played in casinos and online were exempt from the tax.