
What Input and Output VAT Are, Explained Without the Jargon
If you’ve just registered as an autónomo (self-employed worker), or you’ve only been one for a short while, there are two terms that come up constantly and that are worth understanding well from the start: IVA soportado (input VAT) and IVA repercutido (output VAT).
They’re not difficult concepts. They’re difficult to understand when they’re explained in technical language before they have any context. With a concrete example, they fall into place on their own.
The autónomo’s role in the VAT system
VAT (Impuesto sobre el Valor Añadido, value-added tax) taxes consumption. It’s ultimately paid by the final consumer. But it doesn’t reach the Spanish Tax Agency (Agencia Tributaria) directly from the consumer: it arrives through all the links in the chain of production and sale.
As an autónomo, you’re one of those links. Your role in the VAT system is twofold: you collect VAT from your clients, and you pay VAT to your suppliers. The difference between what you collect and what you pay is what you pay over to the Agencia Tributaria.
That’s all. Everything else is detail.
Output VAT: the one you charge
When you issue an invoice to a client, you add the corresponding VAT to the amount of your service or product. That VAT shown on your invoice is called output VAT (IVA repercutido).
Example: you invoice a design project for 2,000 euros. You add 21% VAT (the general rate in force in 2026): 420 euros. Your client pays you 2,420 euros in total.
Of those 2,420 euros, 420 aren’t yours. They belong to the State. You’ve collected them on its behalf and you’ll have to pay them over to the Agencia Tributaria in the next quarterly return.
Output VAT is, therefore, a debt to the Agencia Tributaria. It isn’t income of yours, even though it passes through your bank account.
Input VAT: the one you pay
When you pay a supplier’s invoice for an expense related to your activity, that invoice also carries VAT. The VAT you pay is called input VAT (IVA soportado).
Example: you buy design software for 200 euros plus 42 euros of VAT. You pay 242 euros in total.
Those 42 euros of VAT you’ve paid are deductible: you can subtract them from the VAT you owe the Agencia Tributaria. You don’t recover them directly, but they reduce what you have to pay.
Input VAT is, therefore, a credit against the Agencia Tributaria.
The quarterly settlement: the difference between the two
Each quarter, you do the sum:
VAT to pay = output VAT − input VAT
If the result is positive, you pay that amount to the Agencia Tributaria. If it’s negative, meaning you’ve paid more VAT than you’ve collected, you have a balance in your favour that you can offset in the following quarter or request to be refunded at the end of the year.
Continuing with the previous example:
- Output VAT in the quarter: 420 euros (the design-project invoice).
- Input VAT in the quarter: 42 euros (the software) + other expenses with VAT.
- Amount to pay: 420 − 42 − the rest of the input VAT.
The more input VAT you have (the more professional expenses with VAT you’ve paid), the less you pay to the Agencia Tributaria. Hence the importance of keeping every expense invoice and recording it correctly.
Which input VAT is deductible and which isn’t
Not all the VAT you pay is deductible. Only the VAT on expenses directly related to your economic activity.
The VAT on office supplies: deductible. The VAT on the subscription to the software you use for work: deductible. The VAT on the supermarket shop: not deductible.
The most contentious cases are mixed expenses: the mobile phone you use for both work and personal life, the car, the computer your family also uses. The Agencia Tributaria has specific criteria on what percentage is deductible in each case, and it’s worth knowing them or consulting an accountant before deducting 100% of those expenses.
A general rule that helps avoid problems: if you don’t have a complete invoice with your tax details, the VAT on that expense isn’t deductible. A cash-register receipt with no NIF (tax ID number) won’t do. A simplified invoice without your details won’t either.
VAT on invoices to clients outside Spain
If you invoice clients in other European Union countries or outside it, the rules change.
Exports of services to clients outside the EU are generally exempt from Spanish VAT: your invoice goes out without VAT. You still file the modelo 303 (the quarterly VAT return), but with zero output VAT on those operations.
Operations with EU clients that are companies or self-employed have their own regime: the reverse charge (inversión del sujeto pasivo). In these cases, you don’t charge VAT on the invoice and the client declares the VAT in their own country.
If you have clients outside Spain, this is an area where it’s worth at least consulting an accountant the first time, to make sure you’re applying the right regime.
Why it’s important not to mix VAT with your income
Output VAT passes through your bank account, but it isn’t yours. This is a common misperception, especially in the first months as an autónomo.
If you invoice 2,420 euros (2,000 base plus 420 VAT), your real income is 2,000 euros. The 420 are a temporary deposit from the State in your account. When the quarter comes, you’ll have to give them back.
If you make spending decisions assuming you have 2,420 euros available, on the day of the return you’ll run into a problem. It’s not unusual for autónomos with only a few months of activity to reach the quarter without enough liquidity to pay the VAT for exactly this reason.
The solution is mental before it’s technical: every time you collect an invoice, set aside (mentally, or physically, in a separate account) the VAT that isn’t yours. When the quarter comes, that money is already reserved.
A three-line summary
- Output VAT (IVA repercutido): the one you charge your clients. It isn’t yours, you owe it to the Agencia Tributaria.
- Input VAT (IVA soportado): the one you pay your suppliers for professional expenses. It reduces what you owe.
- Quarterly amount: the difference between the two. If it’s positive, you pay it. If it’s negative, you offset it or get it refunded.
With that clear, the modelo 303 stops being a mysterious form and becomes what it is: a subtraction with a few extra details. If you want to see your result instantly, try the quarterly VAT calculator.
How does Cuéntamo help with this?
All this separation between the VAT you charge and the VAT you pay is exactly what Cuéntamo’s freelance module keeps track of for you. When you record an issued invoice, its output VAT goes on one side; when you record a professional expense, its input VAT goes on the other. The quarter’s amount, the subtraction of the two we saw above, comes out on its own, broken down by VAT rate, without you adding up two columns of a notebook by hand.
That helps directly with the idea of not mixing VAT with your income: because output and input VAT are identified from the very first entry, you always know how much of your balance is really yours and how much is money you’ll have to hand over. And if in a given quarter the input VAT exceeds the output VAT, that balance in your favor carries forward to offset in the following quarters instead of being lost.
To get started without entering invoice by invoice, you can import your bank statement and let Cuéntamo help you classify the transactions. The next step, once both sides are clear, is to calculate the quarterly VAT and file the modelo 303.
The freelance module is part of Cuéntamo Más. You can get started at cuentamo.com.
Frequently asked questions
What’s the difference between input and output VAT?
Output VAT is the one you charge your clients when you issue an invoice; it isn’t yours, you owe it to the Agencia Tributaria. Input VAT is the one you pay your suppliers on business expenses, and it reduces what you have to pay over.
Is the VAT I charge my clients mine?
No. Even though it passes through your bank account, output VAT belongs to the State: you collect it on its behalf and pay it over each quarter. If you invoice 2,000 euros plus VAT, your real income is 2,000 euros; the VAT is a temporary deposit you’ll have to return.
Is all the VAT I pay deductible?
No. Only the VAT on expenses directly related to your economic activity and with a complete invoice in your name. The VAT on office supplies or work software is deductible; the supermarket shop is not. A receipt without your tax details doesn’t give you the right to deduct either.
How is the quarterly VAT amount calculated?
It’s a subtraction: output VAT minus input VAT. If the result is positive, you pay it to the Agencia Tributaria; if it’s negative, you offset it in the following quarter or request a refund at the end of the year.
What happens with VAT if I invoice clients outside Spain?
The rules change. Exports of services to clients outside the EU are generally exempt from Spanish VAT, and operations with EU companies or freelancers fall under the reverse charge (invoices without VAT, with the client declaring it in their own country). It’s worth consulting an accountant the first time.
Figures for 2026. The general VAT rate of 21% has been in force since 2012 (RDL 20/2012).
This article is checked against official sources and reviewed periodically. If you spot anything out of date, email us at [email protected].