Catering Services

& VAT: When Deliveries Are Not Enough

At first glance, it might seem obvious: if a business delivers food, it must be catering. But in VAT terms, it’s not that simple. Across the EU, UK, and beyond, courts and tax authorities have consistently drawn a sharp line between food delivery as a supply of goods and catering as a supply of services.

 

It can mean the difference between charging standard VAT rates or benefitting from reduced/zero-rating. It determines whether input VAT can be recovered on related costs, and shapes the risk exposure businesses face in audits.

 

A recent update highlighted by VATUpdate makes clear that catering is more than just food delivery. It requires genuine service elements, the kind that transform a delivery into a complete dining experience. In this blog, we’ll unpack why that distinction exists, how courts interpret it, and what businesses must do to stay compliant.

In this article:

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Why Catering Is Different from Food Delivery

At its core, VAT distinguishes between the supply of goods and the supply of services. Food sold for takeaway or delivered to a customer’s premises is treated as a supply of goods. Catering, however, is treated as a supply of service, and in most jurisdictions, that service element triggers the standard VAT rate.

 

Goods vs Services

 
  • Food delivery is about providing goods, prepared meals or food items that the customer consumes at their discretion.
  • Catering is about providing a broader experience. The food may be central, but it is embedded in a package of services that support the supply: preparing tables, serving staff, cleaning up, and ensuring that the food is presented and consumed in a specific context.

 

VAT Policy Rationale

 

Why the distinction? Policymakers argue that:

 

  • Basic food should be affordable, so many VAT systems allow zero or reduced rates on cold food, groceries, or basic deliveries.
  • Catering, however, is not just about sustenance, it falls under a service sector activity, often discretionary and linked to events, hospitality, or entertainment, with the standard rate applicable. 

 

This policy reasoning explains why a delivered sandwich might be zero-rated in one jurisdiction, while a served sandwich at a corporate event is fully VATable.

The Service Elements That Define Catering

What pushes a transaction from “food delivery” into “catering” depends on specific service elements in the transaction. These include:

 

  1. Onsite presence of staff – waiters, chefs, or support staff who serve food, pour drinks, or manage buffets.
  2. Event setup – provision of tables, chairs, linens, crockery, cutlery, and sometimes decorations.
  3. Service and support – activities such as clearing away plates, washing up, maintaining food temperature, or plating meals.
  4. Coordination and management – menu planning, timing food service with event agendas, liaising with organisers.
  5. Infrastructure provision – portable kitchens, tents, or equipment provided to enable onsite food service.
  6. Logistics and Transport – Arranging delivery, storage, and safe handling of food to ensure it arrives in the right condition and on time.
  7. Compliance and Safety – Ensuring hygiene, food safety standards, and local licensing requirements are met during service. The more these elements dominate the supply, the more likely the transaction is considered “catering” for VAT purposes.    

Case Law and European Guidance

European VAT law has repeatedly addressed this question. The ECJ (European Court of Justice) has ruled in multiple cases that the decisive factor is whether services predominate over the supply of food.

 

  • In Faaborg-Gelting Linien A/S (Case C-231/94), the ECJ held that restaurant services were not just the supply of meals, but a bundle of services including setting the table, serving, and cleaning up.
  • Later, in Bog and Others (Joined Cases C-497/09, C-499/09, C-501/09 and C-502/09), the Court clarified that takeaway food sales without accompanying services were considered goods, while meals served at a location with services fall under

 

The UK applies the same principal whereby the supply of food and drink for human consumption is generally zero-rated for VAT purposes. However, certain supplies are standard rated when provided in the course of catering, this refers to supplies made in restaurants, cafés, canteens and similar establishments (except supplies of cold takeaway food)

These precedents reinforce the message: it’s not the food itself, but the context of how it’s provided that determines VAT treatment.

Practical Scenarios

To illustrate, consider the following:

 

  • Pizza delivery to an office: The courier drops off the food and leaves. This is a supply of goods, not catering.
  • Buffet delivery with setup: Food is delivered, staff arrange the buffet table and provide chafing dishes to keep food warm. This tips towards catering.
  • Full wedding catering: Staff prepare, serve, and clear multiple courses at a venue. This is unequivocally catering.
  • Sandwich platters delivered to a meeting room: If staff simply deliver, it remains food delivery. If they also set up, serve drinks, and clear the room, it becomes catering.

Why Misclassification Is Risky

Failing to get this distinction right can have costly consequences:

 

  • Under-charging VAT: If you treat catering as delivery and apply a reduced rate (or zero-rate), HMRC or another tax authority can demand the shortfall, with penalties.
  • Over-charging VAT: If you treat delivery as catering, you risk pricing yourself out of the market, and customers may resist unjustified VAT.
  • Input VAT recovery disputes: The classification affects what you can reclaim, particularly on costs linked to events or staff.

 

Given these stakes, businesses must ensure contracts, invoices, and operational practices accurately reflect the true nature of the supply.

Compliance Challenges for Businesses

Mixed Supplies

One of the hardest areas is mixed supplies. A transaction may contain both goods and services. For example, a delivered buffet with optional serving staff. Businesses must assess whether the supply is single and composite (dominated by one element) or multiple supplies (separable for VAT purposes).


Documentation

Businesses must keep clear records to support their VAT treatment. This means retaining contracts, invoices, and evidence of service elements, staffing schedules, setup costs, or hire agreements.


Cross-Border Catering

For operators serving international clients, determining the place of supply becomes critical. Catering services are generally taxable where performed, which can complicate VAT compliance and treatment for cross-border events.

Conclusion

The difference between catering and food delivery may seem like a technicality, but it has real VAT consequences. Delivery alone is usually a supply of goods. Catering requires more: staff, setup, service, and coordination that transform food into an event service.

 

For businesses, the challenge is not just knowing the rules, but applying them in practice, through contracts, invoices, and documentation. Misclassification risks penalties, lost input tax, and strained client relationships.

 

As VAT authorities continue to clarify the boundaries, food and hospitality businesses should act now: audit services, update systems, and ensure compliance. With the right approach, you can deliver great food experiences while staying firmly on the right side of VAT law.

FAQ's

Is every food delivery considered catering for VAT?

No. Delivery alone is usually not considered as catering. Only when substantive service elements are provided does it qualify.

 

What services are enough to make it catering?

Staff serving food, providing furniture and tableware, setting up buffets, and cleaning up are all strong indicators.

 

What if I deliver and also set up a buffet?

That often counts as catering, since the service goes beyond simple delivery.

 

Can a supply be partly catering and partly delivery?

Yes. Where supplies can be clearly separated, tax authorities may require apportionment. But if services dominate, the whole supply may be treated as catering.

 

Does this apply across Europe?

Yes, the principle is consistent under EU VAT law, though national rules and rates differ.

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