VAT and Churches
Construction work to repair buildings, including historic churches, is charged VAT at the 20% standard rate. The Listed Places of Worship Grant Scheme has provided grants to mitigate the VAT costs for these repairs.
The construction of new buildings is charged a zero rate of VAT, provided the supply in question is for a social purpose. In effect, this means that only the construction of new houses, dwellings and buildings with a charitable purpose is zero-rated.
Generally, VAT is charged at the standard rate - currently 20% - on all repair, renovation and maintenance work whatever the status of the building concerned. This includes repair work carried out on churches.
HMRC publish detailed guidance on the VAT treatment of construction work.
The campaign for VAT relief on church repairsThere has been a long-running campaign for the introduction of a zero rate of VAT on repair work carried out on historic church buildings.
In the past ministers have ruled this out on a number of grounds:
- VAT is designed to be as broadly based as possible, in the interests of fairness, simplicity and legal certainty. Introducing a new reduced rate on repair work on churches could lead to the introduction of further reduced rates on other supplies, eroding the base of the tax at considerable cost to the public purse.
- Rather than making VAT more complex, a better way to support the maintenance of historic churches is to encourage charitable donations, and provide direct grants from bodies such as English Heritage.
Before the UK left the EU, an additional obstacle to cutting the rate of VAT on this specific supply is that it would have been contrary to EU-wide rules on setting VAT rates.
Alteration work to listed buildings, included historic churches, used to be charged VAT at the zero rate. In the 2012 Budget the Coalition government proposed a number of changes to the scope of VAT from 1 October 2012, including the withdrawal of zero-rating for alterations to listed buildings. In response to concerns about the impact of this change, the government announced that transitional arrangements for alteration work that was already in progress by the time of the Budget would be made more generous. These transitional arrangements were for three years only, so ended in September 2015.
Since this change Members have raised the case for a zero or reduced rate of VAT on repairs and alterations to listed church buildings on a number of occasions, but with no indication of any change in the government’s position. In answer to a PQ on the case for zero-rating in January 2025 the Financial Secretary Lord Livermore noted that “evidence suggests that businesses only partially pass on any savings from lower VAT rates”, going on to make the point that “in some cases, reliefs do not represent good value for money, as there is no guarantee that savings will be passed on to consumers.”
What is the Listed Places of Worship Scheme?In 2001 the Labour government introduced a new grant scheme to mitigate the VAT costs for the repair of historic church buildings, and other listed buildings used as places of worship: the Listed Places of Worship Grant Scheme. In 2012 the scope of the scheme was widened to mitigate the impact that the phased removal of the zero rate on alteration work to listed buildings would have on those listed buildings that were places of worship. The scheme has received around 7,000 claims a year, and paid grants to churches, synagogues, mosques and temples worth over £350 million in total.
What has happened to the Listed Places of Worship scheme?In October 2022 the Conservative government announced funding for the scheme up to 31 March 2025. Subsequently ministers in the Conservative government reiterated its commitment to the scheme, but gave no indication that they saw a case for introducing any new VAT relief.
In January 2025 the government announced the scheme would be extended to 31 March 2026, with some modifications. On 22 January 2026 Baroness Twycross (Minister for Museums, Heritage and Gambling at the Department for Culture, Media and Sport) announced that following a review, the government would introduce a new Places of Worship Renewal Fund. The Listed Places of Worship Grant Scheme would be closed on 31 March 2026, or when the budget for the year was spent. The scheme has now been closed to new applications.
The Library briefing Funding for places of worship provides more information on the Places of Worship Renewal Fund, and other sources of funding.