For a long time, the advice for offshore entrepreneurs selling software was simple: “If you don’t have an EU office, you don’t have to worry about EU VAT.” That era is officially over.
Since the replacement of VAT MOSS with the more robust One-Stop Shop (OSS), European tax authorities have tightened the net. If your UAE or Hong Kong entity sells SaaS, apps, or digital downloads to a single “private” customer in Germany, France, or Estonia, you are technically liable for VAT from the very first cent.
Leer artículo relacionado: Estonia for EU E-commerce: Simplified VAT via IOSS & Dividend Tax Relief
Here is what global founders need to know about staying compliant in 2026.
To make the article accessible to both seasoned founders and newcomers, adding a “Fundamentals” section is a great move. Since your audience is global, they might be more familiar with one term over the other depending on whether they are coming from the US, Asia, or Europe.
Here is a clear, “Helvetios-style” definition you can slot into the beginning of the article (perhaps right after the introduction):
The Basics: What is VAT and GST?
Before diving into the compliance hurdles, let’s clear up the terminology. Depending on where your customers are, you will hear these two terms used almost interchangeably.
VAT (Value Added Tax)
Commonly used in the European Union, the UK, and the UAE, VAT is a “consumption tax.” It is levied on the “value added” at every stage of the supply chain—from the software developer to the end consumer. However, for digital service providers, the only part that usually matters is the final sale to the customer.
GST (Goods and Services Tax)
This is the term used in countries like Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Singapore, and India. Functionally, it is almost identical to VAT. It is a multi-stage tax collected on the sale of most goods and services.
The Golden Rule for Digital Nomads: > Whether it’s called VAT or GST, the principle is the same: The tax belongs to the country where the customer consumes the service, not where your company is registered.
Why does this matter for your Offshore Entity?
If you have a Hong Kong Ltd (where there is 0% VAT/GST) or a UAE Free Zone entity (where you might be under the registration threshold), you might think you are “tax-free.”
However, VAT/GST laws follow the destination principle. If your customer is a gamer in France or a small business owner in Australia, you are essentially acting as a “tax collector” for su government. You collect the tax from them at the checkout and pass it on to the respective tax authority.
1. MOSS is Dead, Long Live OSS
In July 2021, the EU transitioned from the Mini One-Stop Shop (MOSS) to the full OSS, maintaining the core rule for digital services: the place of supply is the customer’s location.
- B2B (Selling to Businesses): Usually covered by the “Reverse Charge” mechanism. Your customer handles the VAT.
- B2C (Selling to Individuals): This is where it gets tricky. You must charge the VAT rate of the customer’s country (e.g., 19% in Germany, 21% in Spain) and remit it to the EU.
2. The “Non-Union Scheme”: Your Offshore Gateway
If your company is established in a non-EU jurisdiction (like a UAE Free Zone or a Hong Kong Ltd), you don’t need to pick a different VAT representative for every country. Instead, you use the Non-Union OSS scheme.
How it works:
- Pick one “Member State of Identification” (MSI): You choose one EU country to be your tax “hub” (many offshore founders choose Irlanda o Estonia due to English-language portals).
- Register for a “EU” VAT Number: You will receive a VAT ID starting with “EU” (e.g., EU123456789).
- One Quarterly Filing: You submit a single digital return every three months listing your total B2C sales across all 27 EU countries.
- One Payment: You send one lump sum to your hub country, and they distribute the tax to the other 26 nations for you.
3. The “No Threshold” Trap
A common mistake for digital nomads is assuming the €10,000 threshold applies to them.
Crucial Note: The €10,000 exemption for cross-border sales is only available to companies actually established within the EU. For offshore entities (HK, UAE, USA), the threshold is zero. You must collect VAT from your very first European B2C sale.
4. Practical Implementation: The 2-Piece Evidence Rule
To satisfy an EU tax audit, you must prove where your customers are located. You generally need two pieces of non-conflicting evidence, such as:
- The customer’s billing address.
- The IP address of the device used.
- The country code of the SIM card.
- The location of the bank used for payment.
Pro-Tip: Modern payment processors like Stripe Tax, Paddle, o LemonSqueezy can automate this. Using a “Merchant of Record” (like Paddle) can even remove the VAT registration requirement from your offshore entity entirely, as they take on the tax liability themselves.
5. What Happens if You Ignore It?
In 2026, “flying under the radar” is becoming impossible. Under the ViDA (VAT in the Digital Age) initiative, EU tax authorities are increasingly using AI to cross-reference payment processor data with VAT filings. Non-compliance can lead to:
- Hefty back-taxes plus interest (often exceeding 20% of gross revenue).
- Blacklisting of your domain/payment processing accounts.
- Difficulty if you ever decide to sell your company (due diligence will catch the tax debt).
Need a Strategy for Your Global Setup?
Navigating EU VAT while running an offshore company is a balancing act.
Whether you’re looking to incorporate in Estonia to simplify your VAT life or keep your EAU setup while staying compliant, Helvetios is here to help.







