VAT Changes in the EU 2026: April Update
Selling to the EU and UK in 2026 means keeping up with VAT changes that go beyond standard rates. While there are no widespread increases or decreases this year, several country specific updates affect how VAT must be applied to certain products.
As of 15 April 2026, these are the VAT changes currently known and relevant for ecommerce sellers. Even smaller updates can directly impact checkout pricing, VAT reporting, and overall compliance.
This article outlines the key VAT updates in 2026 and what they mean in practice for online sellers.
Sweden: VAT Reduced on Food from April 2026
According to the Swedish Tax Agency, Sweden is introducing a temporary VAT reduction on food. From 1 April 2026:
- VAT on food is reduced from 12% to 6%
- Applies to food for human consumption, including beverages, takeaway food, edible plants, milk, additives, bottled water and dietary supplements
- Does not apply to alcohol
- Food consumed in restaurants and cafés remains at 12%
The reduced rate is expected to remain in place until the end of 2027.
What this means in practice
For sellers shipping food products to Sweden, VAT must be updated at checkout from April onwards. If the correct rate is not applied:
- VAT may be under collected or over collected
- reporting may be incorrect
- customer pricing may be inconsistent
This change is particularly relevant for businesses selling food, supplements, or similar consumable products.
Austria: 0% VAT on Specific Products
From 1 January 2026, Austria applies a 0% VAT rate to certain essential goods:
- women sanitary products
- contraceptives
What this means in practice
This only applies if products are correctly classified. If classification is incorrect:
- the wrong VAT rate may be applied
- compliance issues may arise in reporting
This is mainly relevant for health and wellness ecommerce businesses.
Finland: Adjustment to Reduced VAT Rate
Finland has adjusted one of its reduced VAT rates in 2026:
- reduced VAT rate changed from 14% to 13.5%
- applies to selected categories such as books, cultural services, and event related services
What this means in practice
Even small changes in VAT rates require updates in:
- pricing calculations
- checkout VAT logic
- reporting systems
Businesses selling books or digital content into Finland should verify that correct rates are applied.
Slovakia: VAT Increase on Selected Goods
Slovakia has introduced a VAT increase on certain goods from January 2026 :
- selected food products increased from 19% to 23%
- only "unhealthy" foods are affected -
Chocolate and confectionery (sweets, candy) Cakes, biscuits, sweet pastries Ice cream and frozen desserts Jams and sweet spreads Sweetened soft drinks and syrups Salty snacks (crisps/chips, salted nuts, snack bars)
What this means in practice
This change depends on product category. Sellers must ensure that:
- products are correctly classified
- the correct VAT rate is applied depending on category
Incorrect classification can lead to incorrect VAT collection.
United Kingdom: VAT Rule Changes
There are no VAT rate changes in the UK in 2026. However, there are updates to VAT treatment in specific cases. One example is updated rules allowing VAT free donation of goods to charity under certain conditions.
What this means in practice
This mainly affects:
- inventory handling
- accounting processes
- VAT reporting
It does not directly impact checkout VAT rates, but it is relevant for operational processes.
What This Means for Shopify, WooCommerce and Marketplaces
A key question for ecommerce businesses is whether these changes are applied automatically or require manual updates.
Shopify
Shopify does not automatically apply all country specific and category specific VAT changes.
- Standard VAT rates are updated automatically
- Reduced rates and category specific rules are not handled automatically and require manual
- Sellers need to:
- adjust or apply tax overrides
- assign products to reduced VAT collcetions
For example, the Swedish VAT reduction on food will require manual configuration change - adjustment of food override for reduced VAT collection.
WooCommerce
WooCommerce requires more manual configuration.
- VAT rates are managed through tax classes set up by EAS
- Changes such as Sweden’s reduced food VAT or Slovakia’s category based increases must be made manually
Without updates:
- incorrect VAT may be applied
- reporting may not match actual requirements
Other E-commerce platforms
Depending on the E-commerce platform you need to adjust applicable rates on collection or individual product level. Most platforms allow for such changes, please refer to the internal manuals.
Marketplace
Marketplaces such as Amazon or eBay often handle VAT collection in certain scenarios, particularly for low value imports. However:
- not all VAT scenarios are covered
- category specific changes may not always be correctly applied
- sellers remain responsible for compliance in many cases
It is important not to assume that marketplaces will automatically handle all VAT changes.
Key Takeaways for Ecommerce Sellers
The VAT changes in 2026 highlight a clear shift in how VAT evolves across the EU and UK:
- VAT changes are increasingly category specific, not broad rate changes
- Even small updates can impact pricing, checkout accuracy, and reporting
- Platforms do not always apply these changes automatically
- Sellers cannot rely solely on default tax settings
To stay compliant, businesses should:
- Review VAT settings for each country they sell to
- Verify that product classifications are correct
- Check whether their ecommerce platform applies updated rates accurately
- Ensure consistency between checkout VAT and reporting
VAT in 2026 is not defined by major rate changes, but by targeted updates that require attention to detail. For ecommerce sellers, the focus should be on making sure these smaller changes are correctly implemented across systems to avoid errors and maintain a smooth customer experience.
Robert Ruutsalo
Chief Revenue Officer
EAS
EAS is a compliance automation platform that empowers businesses to scale globally by managing VAT, product safety, and customs regulations. By streamlining these complex requirements, EAS ensures seamless access to international markets and boosts conversion rates, allowing brands to sell across borders with confidence and ease.