OSS Compliance Obligations
Overview
The EU’s One Stop Shop (OSS) scheme comes with strict legal obligations established by EU VAT legislation and enforced by national tax authorities. Businesses using OSS must follow these rules to remain compliant.
This article explains your legal responsibilities under OSS and what is required from you as a registered OSS participant in France.
⚖️ Your Legal Obligations Under EU OSS Rules
OSS participants must follow the compliance framework set out by the EU VAT Directive (Council Directive 2006/112/EC) and the Implementing Regulation (EU) 2019/2026.
Below are the key obligations for French OSS users.
1. File Your OSS Return Every Quarter
You are legally required to:
- Submit an OSS VAT return every quarter, even if no sales were made (“zero return required”).
- Submit the return by the official EU deadline for your French OSS registration.
Failure to file on time may result in:
- Penalties
- Late interest
- Suspension or exclusion from the OSS scheme
French context: OSS filings in France are submitted electronically via the official portal provided by Direction Générale des Finances Publiques (DGFiP).
2. Pay the VAT Declared in Your OSS Return
The VAT due in your OSS return must be paid in full and on time to the French tax authority administering your OSS registration.
Late payment may result in:
- Interest charges
- Additional penalties
- Enforcement measures
French context: Payment is made directly to DGFiP, which manages OSS registrations for French businesses.
3. Keep Complete and Accurate Records for 10 Years
EU law requires OSS users to:
- Keep records of all cross-border B2C transactions for 10 years
- Make them available electronically to any EU tax authority upon request
These records must include:
- Customer country
- Value of sale
- VAT rate used
- VAT amount
- Evidence of customer location
- Marketplace/platform details (if applicable)
4. Provide Accurate, Complete Transaction Data
You must ensure:
- All reportable cross-border B2C transactions are included
- VAT rates for each country are correct
- Uploaded data is accurate and free of gaps
Incorrect or missing information may lead to:
- Incorrect filings
- Follow-up queries from tax authorities
- Penalties or corrections at your expense
5. Notify Authorities of Changes
Under OSS rules, you must notify DGFiP if:
- Business details change (address, legal form, contact details)
- VAT number changes or is deregistered
- You cease selling cross-border B2C in the EU
- You switch schemes (e.g., move to IOSS or deactivate OSS)
- Changes to warehouse storage
6. Do Not Double-Report VAT
If you are registered in OSS:
- Cross-border EU B2C sales must not be reported in domestic French VAT returns
- Double-reporting may cause audits or mismatches and lead to double taxation
7. Cooperate With Tax Authorities
You must respond to:
- Audit requests
- Information requests
- Record-checking
- Any compliance review carried out by DGFiP or other EU tax authorities
Failure to cooperate can result in exclusion from the OSS scheme.
🟦 Summary of Your Legal OSS Responsibilities
| Obligation | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Quarterly OSS filing | Must submit every quarter, even if zero sales |
| Pay VAT due | Must be paid to DGFiP on time |
| Keep records | Maintain for 10 years and provide on request |
| Accurate data | Ensure correctness of VAT rates & transactions |
| Notify changes | Inform authorities of any business changes |
| Avoid double reporting | Do not report cross-border B2C sales twice |
| Cooperate with authorities | Required by EU law |
Need Help Staying OSS-Compliant?
hellotax ensures your OSS filings meet all EU requirements, but your data accuracy and timely uploads are essential to maintaining compliance under EU law.
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