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Updated June 2026

VAT for Dropshipping Businesses in Ireland

Dropshipping adds import VAT complexity most standard guides skip. Here’s how the Irish threshold and the EU’s IOSS scheme interact.

Last updated: June 2026

Registration threshold
€40,000
same as any Irish services business (€80,000 for goods)
Turnover measured on
Price charged to customer
not your margin
IOSS scheme
For consignments ≤ €150
simplified import VAT collection at point of sale

The threshold still applies the same way

Dropshipping doesn’t get a special VAT threshold — the €80,000 goods threshold (or €40,000 services threshold if selling a service alongside) applies the same as any other retail business, based on the price your customer pays you, not your profit margin.

Where your supplier ships from matters

If your supplier ships from within the EU, normal VAT rules apply. If your supplier ships directly from outside the EU to your Irish customer, that’s an import, and the EU’s IOSS (Import One Stop Shop) scheme applies for consignments valued at €150 or less — sellers registered for IOSS collect VAT at the point of sale and remit it via a single monthly IOSS return.

For consignments over €150, standard import VAT and customs procedures apply at the border instead.

If a marketplace facilitates the sale

Marketplaces often handle IOSS themselves. If you sell through a marketplace registered for IOSS on your behalf, the marketplace may be treated as the deemed supplier responsible for collecting and remitting import VAT, rather than you — check your specific platform’s terms.

Frequently asked questions

Is my dropshipping turnover based on sale price or profit margin?

The sale price — the full amount your customer pays. Your margin is irrelevant to the VAT threshold, which is based on turnover, not profit.

What is IOSS and do I need to register for it?

The Import One Stop Shop scheme lets you collect VAT at the point of sale on consignments up to €150 from outside the EU, remitted via one monthly return. Registration is optional but commonly used by dropshippers.

What happens with goods over €150?

These follow standard import VAT and customs procedures at the border, typically collected by the courier before delivery.

Do I need to register for tax where my supplier is based?

Generally no, if you’re simply purchasing from a foreign supplier and reselling — you’re their customer, not conducting a taxable activity in their jurisdiction.

Does my dropshipping platform handle IOSS for me?

Sometimes yes for larger marketplaces registered for IOSS, which may act as deemed supplier — check your specific platform’s terms.

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General guidance only. Import VAT and IOSS rules are complex and depend on your specific supply chain. Always verify with Revenue.ie or consult a qualified accountant before making decisions.

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