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Thursday 16 May 2013

Storing and Producing Electronic Invoices

Storing Electronic Invoices

As with paper, you need to keep proper records of all electronic invoices you send and receive for six years. If you upgrade to a new computer system which is not compatible with your old system, you must make sure that the records held on your old system remain accessible for up to six years. If this is not possible, then you must make paper copies.
You can also keep your records on microfilm or microfiche, as long as you have received approval from HMRC and it is easy for VAT officers to view those records when they need to.
You need to store your invoice data securely in a way that allows you to:
  • keep all original invoice data
  • prevent data from being corrupted
  • reproduce original invoices at any time in a readable format
  • find details of any invoice quickly and easily
At the very least, you should consider password-controlled access to your invoice data, and taking regular backups - and checking that you can recover from backup reliably.
These requirements also apply if you store scanned images of paper invoices electronically.
You can store electronic invoices in any EU country as long as you can produce anything HMRC asks for reasonably quickly and in a readable format. You could keep them in a non-EU country as long as it respects European data protection rules and you can still produce them for HMRC within a reasonable time and in a readable format.

Producing invoice records for HMRC

When they check your VAT records, HMRC will need to see your electronic invoices in a readable format. For more complex systems this might mean holding data in a way that allows for it to be converted to a readable format, or it might simply be that you are able to print out an email or invoice attached to an email when requested to do so by HMRC.

Friday 10 May 2013

Health and Safety Executive Notice

Case 171 - Local gym notice states "hairdryers can only be used for drying hair on the head"

Issue

The enquirer read a notice in their local gym stating that for "health and safety reasons members are requested only use the hair dryers for hair on the head".

Panel decision

There is no occupational health and safety legislation regarding the use of hairdryers to dry hair on body-parts other than the head. This is clearly an easy excuse to deter people from using hair dryers inappropriately in a public place and the health club should give the real reason for their decision rather than hiding behind the &health and safety" catch all.