Accounting & Tax for Construction & Trades (CIS)
Specialist construction accountants — Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) management for contractors and subcontractors, VAT Domestic Reverse Charge (DRC), subcontractor verification, monthly CIS returns, CIS deduction reclaim and corporation tax for building and trades businesses. Fixed monthly fees.
CIS and VAT Domestic Reverse Charge — Getting It Right Every Month
The Construction Industry Scheme and VAT Domestic Reverse Charge create a compliance burden that most construction businesses underestimate. Monthly CIS returns, subcontractor verification, deduction reclaim management and the complex DRC rules (which apply, which don’t, and how to invoice correctly) require specialist accounting knowledge — not a generic small business accountant.
CIS (Construction Industry Scheme) requires contractors to verify subcontractors with HMRC before making the first payment, deduct 20% (verified) or 30% (unverified) CIS tax from labour payments, and file monthly returns reporting every payment made and deduction taken. Failure to file monthly returns on time results in a £100 penalty for the first month, rising to £300/month thereafter, with an additional 5% surcharge on the unpaid deductions. We manage the entire CIS process for contractor clients — verification, monthly returns, year-end CIS certificates (P40 equivalent) to subcontractors.
VAT Domestic Reverse Charge (DRC) — introduced March 2021 — applies to most construction services supplied between VAT-registered businesses in the CIS. Under DRC, the VAT is not charged by the supplier — instead, the customer accounts for both the output VAT (on the purchase) and the input VAT (reclaim). The DRC applies throughout the construction supply chain except at the end-consumer level (when the customer is not making onward supplies of construction services). Getting DRC wrong — either not applying it when required or applying it when the customer is an end-user — creates a VAT under-declaration or over-declaration. We review every client’s customer base to determine DRC application.
CIS deduction reclaim — where a subcontractor has had CIS deductions made by their contractors, those deductions are set against the company’s corporation tax and employer NIC liabilities. Any excess is refunded by HMRC. For construction companies that operate as subcontractors, CIS deductions often significantly exceed their CT liability — generating a cash repayment. We ensure CIS deductions are claimed correctly on the CT600 and pursue refunds promptly.
Gross payment status (GPS) — which allows a subcontractor to receive payments without CIS deduction — requires a clean compliance record (tax returns filed, taxes paid, turnover above £30,000 for individuals). GPS significantly improves cash flow for compliant subcontractors. We apply for and maintain GPS for eligible subcontractor clients.
✅ Key Services for Construction & Trades (CIS)
- ✓ CIS registration (contractor and subcontractor)
- ✓ Monthly CIS returns
- ✓ Subcontractor verification
- ✓ CIS deduction statements to subcontractors
- ✓ VAT Domestic Reverse Charge management
- ✓ Gross Payment Status application
- ✓ CIS deduction reclaim (CT600)
- ✓ Construction payroll (PAYE, NIC, CIS)
- ✓ Annual accounts and CT600
- ✓ Self-assessment for sole traders
- ✓ HMRC CIS compliance letters
- ✓ VAT returns for construction businesses
What Construction & Trades (CIS) Face — and How We Solve It
Businesses in This Sector We Regularly Serve
Main Contractors
Principal contractors on domestic and commercial projects — managing CIS deductions from subcontractors, DRC on invoices received, and monthly returns.
Specialist Subcontractors
Electrical, plumbing, plastering, groundworks, scaffolding — receiving CIS deductions and applying DRC on sales invoices to contractor clients.
Housebuilders & Developers
Property developers and housebuilders — combining CIS compliance with complex land/property accounting, VAT elections and capital allowances on development costs.
Labour-Only Subcontractors
PAYE and CIS compliance for businesses supplying labour — correct employment status determination, NIC liabilities and HMRC reporting.
2026 Outlook — Tax & Finance for Construction & Trades (CIS)
HMRC’s CIS compliance activity is running at a historically high level in 2026. CIS fraud — particularly involving phantom subcontractors, inflated labour payments and identity theft — has cost HMRC an estimated £500m+ annually. HMRC’s Fraud Investigation Service specifically targets CIS supply chains, and legitimate construction businesses can find themselves caught in investigations initiated by fraudulent activity further up or down the supply chain. Maintaining clean, documented CIS records is essential.
The VAT DRC has created a persistent cash flow shift for the construction industry. Before DRC, a subcontractor charged VAT to the contractor and received it immediately — effectively receiving an interest-free loan until the next VAT return. Under DRC, the subcontractor invoices without VAT — but has a corresponding reduction in input VAT reclaim. The net effect is neutral for fully VAT-taxable businesses but has a real cash flow impact for construction businesses with partially exempt or mixed supplies.
Employment status in construction continues to be HMRC’s second major enforcement priority after CIS fraud. The boundary between employed (PAYE) and self-employed (CIS subcontractor) is frequently challenged — particularly for labour-only gangs working under direct supervision, with tools provided by the contractor, on a permanent basis. The IR35/off-payroll rules (Chapter 8 and 10 ITEPA) are increasingly applied to construction engagements by large main contractors.
Construction industry capital allowances — for plant and machinery used in construction — are significant. Scaffold equipment, plant and machinery, vehicles, tools and trade equipment all qualify for the Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) up to £1 million. Construction businesses routinely underutilise AIA by failing to separate the qualifying plant elements of building expenditure. We review capital expenditure annually to maximise allowances.
Frequently Asked Questions — Construction & Trades (CIS)
You must register for CIS as a contractor if you pay subcontractors for construction work and your construction spend exceeds £3 million (cumulative over any 12-month period) — or if you’re in the construction industry and make one-off construction payments. Once registered, you must verify all subcontractors before making the first payment and file monthly returns. Registration is free and can be done online via HMRC.
Under DRC, when you supply construction services to a VAT-registered customer who is also in the CIS, you do not charge VAT on your invoice. Instead, you state on the invoice: ‘VAT Domestic Reverse Charge applies — customer to account for VAT at 20% (or 5%). Customer accounting for VAT under Section 55A VAT Act 1994.’ The customer then accounts for output VAT (Box 1) and input VAT (Box 4) on their own VAT return. Your invoice shows the net amount only — with the DRC note.
CIS deductions suffered (20% or 30% deducted by your contractor from your payments) are offset against your company’s corporation tax and employer PAYE/NIC liabilities. Any surplus is refundable by HMRC — either via your CT600 (for companies) or your self-assessment (for sole traders and partners). HMRC processes CIS reclaims within 25 working days of a complete return being filed. We file CT600s promptly to ensure early reclaims.
GPS allows eligible subcontractors to receive payments without CIS deduction — receiving the full invoice value rather than 80% (verified) or 70% (unverified). To qualify: you must be registered for CIS, have a clean compliance record (all tax returns filed, all taxes paid, no significant tax debt), and have turnover above the threshold (£30,000 for sole traders, £100,000 for partnerships/companies). We apply for GPS on your behalf and maintain the compliance record required to retain it.
DRC applies when: (1) both you and the subcontractor are VAT-registered; (2) both are registered for CIS; (3) the services are construction services (within the scope of CIS); and (4) the subcontractor is not an ‘end-user’ (i.e., they make onward supplies of construction services). If your subcontractor is supplying to you and you are a contractor making onward supplies, DRC applies. If you are the end-user (developer or property owner not making further construction supplies), DRC does not apply — you receive a normal VAT invoice and reclaim input VAT in the usual way.
4 Costly Mistakes — and How to Avoid Them
Paying an unverified subcontractor without CIS deduction — or with the wrong deduction rate — creates liability for the contractor. HMRC holds the contractor responsible for undeducted CIS tax if the subcontractor doesn’t pay it. Always verify before the first payment — the HMRC verification takes 5 minutes online.
DRC only applies when the customer makes onward construction supplies (i.e., is a contractor or developer who will sell or rent the completed work). If your customer is an end-user (occupying the building themselves, not a VAT/CIS-registered construction business), you charge VAT normally. Incorrectly applying DRC to end-user customers creates an output VAT under-declaration for the supplier.
CIS deductions suffered by the company are a tax credit against the CT liability. Many construction company directors are unaware that these deductions generate a direct credit — resulting in an underclaim that is only corrected (if at all) years later by an amended CT600. We claim CIS deductions on every CT600 and pursue the refund.
Labour-only payments to individuals working under the company’s direct supervision, using the company’s tools and equipment, and integrated into the company’s working arrangements are likely employment — PAYE applies, not CIS. Treating employees as CIS subcontractors to avoid PAYE obligations is a known HMRC target area. We assess employment status for all labour payments before the first payment is made.
Transparent Monthly Fees — No Surprises
Fixed monthly pricing. All-inclusive within your tier. Cancel with 30 days notice. No setup fees. Free onboarding call included.
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Construction Accountants — CIS, DRC & Monthly Returns
Book a free CIS and construction tax review. We audit your CIS compliance, DRC position and reclaim potential — and fix what’s wrong before HMRC does.