Extract VAT from a gross amount or add VAT to a net amount.
This page contains 3 VAT utilities:
If you only need one mode, you can use the dedicated pages:
VAT confusion usually comes from one sentence missing in a contract or email:
“Is this price with VAT or without VAT?”
Your client might talk in “gross budgets” while you price in “net rates”. This tool exists so you can translate instantly and avoid under/over-quoting.
If you’re not VAT-registered, “adding VAT” may not be relevant to your invoice totals (depending on your situation). If you are VAT-registered, you must be consistent in how you present net/VAT/gross and how you round totals.
When in doubt, confirm your VAT status and invoicing obligations with your accountant.
Mode: Extract
Input: amount = 1,210 RON, VAT = 21%
Output: net ≈ 1,000 RON and VAT ≈ 210 RON
Mode: Add
Input: net = 10,000 RON, VAT = 21%
Output: VAT ≈ 2,100 RON, gross ≈ 12,100 RON
If you apply a discount, decide whether the discount is on net or gross, then run the matching mode.
If you invoice multiple items, you can:
Both can produce slight differences due to rounding. Pick one approach and keep it consistent.
Best practice:
This is where mistakes happen:
Add: net → gross. Extract: gross → net.
gross * 21%?Because VAT is a fraction of the net base; when gross already includes VAT you need to divide by (1 + rate).
It depends on your invoicing model and VAT status. Don’t guess; confirm with your accountant. This tool is for math — not legal interpretation.
For VAT, confusing net vs gross (VAT included) is the #1 source of mistakes. Always confirm what the client actually provided.