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Should VAT on veterinary fees for pet owners be dropped?

6 February 2015

In the third Vet Futures guest blog Sunday Express writer Stuart Winter asks whether charging VAT on veterinary fees is a barrier to owners registering their pets with a veterinary surgery.

Stuart WinterIn conjunction with this blog, Vet Futures is asking members of the profession to consider whether VAT should be removed from vet fees. Owning a pet, argues Stuart, is not a luxury to be taxed when they need medical intervention but owning a companion improves the health and wellbeing of its owner.

Stuart writes that removing VAT on vets’ fees for domestic animals, or at least reducing it to five pence in the pound, would improve the nation’s animal welfare. It would allow low-income families to seek medical attention earlier, he argues, while allowing more owners to afford and take out pet insurance.

He says that shifting Government thinking on the subject might be a Herculean task, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t campaign for its removal. “No Chancellor delights in losing revenue.  Treating, curing and caring for sick and injured animals is nothing more than a service and services are ripe to be harvested.

“It is time for a counter argument. Pet ownership is not a luxury. It is more than a privilege. Is it not a human right? Welcoming animals into our lives makes our lives more fulfilled and more civilised,” he writes.

This month’s poll asks: Would you agree that VAT should no longer be levelled on vet fees? We encourage members of the veterinary team and the public to take part in the poll so that we can generate debate on the issue of VAT and better understand the full consequences if it was removed.

Please note: the views expressed in the blog are Stuart’s own, and not necessarily those of the RCVS or BVA.

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