The toilet roll tax: UK's strange VAT rules

'Mysterious' and 'absurd' tax brought in £168 billion to HMRC last year

Letters spelling VAT balancing on pound coins
'Essential' goods are meant to be exempt from Value Added Tax (VAT)
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Britain's VAT rules have long triggered confusion and debate – not least about biscuits and cake – yet the tax is one of the top three money-makers for HMRC.

First introduced in 1973, Value Added Tax (VAT) on goods and services brought in £168 billion to the Treasury last year. And while VAT rates have been described as "mysterious" and "absurd", said the BBC, the duty remains central to the government's tax-and-spend plans.

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