In my opinion, and this is just my opinion, residential window cleaners should not be vat registered. I will always do my utmost to stay under the vat threshold, even if meant dropping a few customers.
You just can't charge vat for this kind of service, most people see it as a menial unskilled job and don't want to pay huge amounts of money to have it done, especially in uncertain economic times.
probably 90% of residential window cleaners are not vat registered and most customers would actually be shocked at being charged vat for this type of service.
Especially when they know they could easily swap you for someone cheaper.
The only way I would ever be vat registered is if I was confident I could absorb most of the costs without passing it my customers.
Most window cleaners I know in this neck of the woods split there business in order to avoid charging vat to customers.
Can you not do the same?
Technically that's illegal.
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/+/http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/vat/reg-how-to.htm#3Do not avoid registering for VAT by artificially separating business activities
If you run more than one business the sales in all those businesses must normally be added together to determine whether or not you must register for VAT.
However, if you are involved in the running of several separate legal entities, you may not need to combine the sales of those businesses to find whether you need to be VAT registered.
If HMRC decides that you artificially separate one business into smaller parts to avoid registering for VAT, it can decide that the entire business is a single taxable person and therefore must be registered for VAT.
Situations that HMRC may consider a single taxable person for VAT purposes include:
Separate entities selling to registered and unregistered customers. The VAT registered business sells only to VAT registered customers and the business not registered for VAT sells to customers who are not registered for VAT.
The same equipment or premises being used by different entities on a regular basis. The premises and/or equipment are owned by one of the parties, who charges rent to the others. This situation may occur in businesses such as launderettes and takeaway food operations.
Splitting up what is usually a single sale. This is common in industries such the bed and breakfast trade, where one business supplies the bed and another the breakfast.
If you deliberately avoid registering for VAT, you may be liable to a penalty. For serious offences, the matter will be investigated and you may be prosecuted.
Just sayin like.