£50 plus VAT
£50 plus 20% VAT is £60. The standard-rate VAT on £50 is £10. Change the amount or rate in the calculator below.
To add UK VAT, multiply the net amount by 1 + (rate ÷ 100). At the standard 20% rate that is × 1.20, so £50 × 1.20 = £60, of which £10 is VAT.
UK VAT rates: 20% standard (most goods and services), 5% reduced (domestic energy, children's car seats), 0% zero-rated (most food, books, children's clothes). Zero-rated still appears on VAT returns; exempt supplies (insurance, finance, education) do not.
How it works.
Formula: net × (1 + rate ÷ 100) = gross.
- Convert the rate: 20 ÷ 100 = 0.20.
- VAT amount: £50 × 0.20 = £10.
- Gross: £50 + £10 = £60 (or £50 × 1.20).
Worked examples
£50 + 20% VAT = £60 — the standard-rate VAT is £10, added on top of the £50 net price.
On a receipt — a £50 item shown ex-VAT rings up at £60 once 20% VAT is added at the till.
At the 5% reduced rate (domestic energy, children's car seats): £50 + 5% = £52.50, a VAT amount of £2.50.
Sources:
HMRC VAT rates
· retrieved 2026-06-18.
Frequently asked questions
How much is 20% VAT on £50?
The VAT is £10. Multiply the net amount by 0.20: £50 × 0.20 = £10. Add it to the net price and the gross (VAT-inclusive) total is £60.
What is £50 plus VAT?
£60. To add standard-rate VAT, multiply by 1.20: £50 × 1.20 = £60. The 1.20 multiplier is the same as adding 20%.
What if the reduced 5% rate applies to £50?
Some supplies (domestic energy, children's car seats, some mobility aids) are charged at 5%, not 20%. At 5%, the VAT on £50 is £2.50 and the gross is £52.50.