Tax Free Shopping, Taxation & Regulation

In 2022, non-EU visitor spending in Europe rose to 198% compared to 2019 but dropped by 28% in Britain over the same period.

On January 1st 2021, the Treasury withdrew the tax-free shopping scheme in the UK - despite extensive campaigning by Walpole and its partners. The loss of the scheme has been an ongoing burden to the UK’s competitiveness, hampered its retail, hospitality and manufacturing sectors and had a considerable knock-on effect on regions across the United Kingdom.

The benefits of this scheme were felt across the UK, by manufacturers as well as retailers – for instance Wedgwood based in Staffordshire, or Burberry, which manufactures in Yorkshire or Mulberry in the South West. We now see that visitors are shifting their spending to European cities like Paris and Milan, where tax-free shopping is still on offer.

The Government previously said that the scheme would cost around £2bn a year when fully operational. This estimate is rooted in an inaccurate set of assumptions.

An Oxford Economics study commissioned by our partners at the Association for International Retail in 2023 showed that rather than costing the Treasury £2bn, reintroducing tax free shopping would make an extra £340mn for the Exchequer.

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Oxford Economics Study

The study found that the additional international visitor spending generated by tax-free shopping would:

£4.2bn
Support of GDP annually
7:1
Return on investment
78,000
Jobs created

While the return of tax-free shopping remains our number one priority, Walpole also engages with Government on a wide range of other tax and regulatory issues. These include business rates, tax support for manufacturing and exporting businesses, Sunday trading laws and environmental regulation.

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Walpole is calling on the Government to

01
Introduce a new, reformed, digital Tax-Free Shopping scheme 
for Great Britain to unleash a tourism and shopping boom

02
Extend Full Expensing to 2nd hand plant and machinery 
to boost highly skilled manufacturing

03
Reform business rates with annual revaluations, and set increases by current, not past levels of inflation to help fix 
the cost of doing business crisis

04
Reform Sunday Trading rules in London’s international 
centres to show that Britain is open for business

05
Introduce a tax credit to support companies starting 
their export journey

Knowledge & Insights

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Hospitality & Services

...At Sloane curates our Walpole Weekend Wind-Down playlist

01/12/2023