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A value added tax identification number or VAT identification number (VATIN) is an identifier used in many countries, including the countries of the European Union, for value added tax purposes.
In the EU, a VAT identification number can be verified online at the EU's official VIES[1] website. It confirms that the number is currently allocated and can provide the name or other identifying details of the entity to whom the identifier has been allocated. However, many national governments will not give out VAT identification numbers due to data protection laws.
The full identifier starts with an ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code (except for Greece, which uses the ISO 639-1 language code EL for the Greek language, instead of its ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code GR) and then has between 2 and 12 characters. The identifiers are composed of numeric digits in most countries, but in some countries they may contain letters.
Foreign companies that trade with non-enterprises in the EU may have a VATIN starting with "EU" instead of a country code.[2]
BTW-nr Mwst-nr
The French key is calculated as follow : Key = [ 12 + 3 * ( SIREN modulo 97 ) ] modulo 97, for example : Key = [ 12 + 3 * ( 404,833,048 modulo 97 ) ] modulo 97 = [12 + 3*56] modulo 97 = 180 modulo 97 = 83 so the tax number for 404,833,048 is FR 83,404,833,048 source from : www.insee.fr
'IE'+7 digits and two letters, e.g. IE1234567FA (since January 2013, see [1]) 'IE'+one digit, one letter/"+"/"*", 5 digits and one letter (old style, currently being phased out, see [2])
For the 9-digit scheme, the 2-digit block containing the 8th and 9th digits is always in the range 00 to 96 and is derived from a weighted modulus-97 check number (an identical algorithm is used for the 12-digit scheme, ignoring the extra 3-digit block).[11] The current modulus-97 series ran out during 2010, so a parallel series of numbers was introduced from November 2009 for new registrations, restarting at 100 nnnn nn and following the same format but with the last two digits derived from an alternative algorithm known as "9755".[12] The algorithm is identical to the one for the established series except that 55 is subtracted to give the check number (modulus 97), so the check number is either 55 less than or (if this would be negative) 42 greater than the check number that a VAT number in the established series would have if it were identical in the first seven digits.[13] The details of the 97−55 check algorithm were to be secret[14] but are now available from HMRC on request.[15]
The GD and HA formats may also be formatted as GB888 8xxx yy for EU compatibility, where xxx is the 3-digit number from the short format and yy is the 2-digit modulus-97 check number.[16]
Isle of Man registrations share the 9- and 12-digit formats with the UK, with GB as the country code prefix, but are distinguished by having 00 as the first two digits.[17] Numbers with 01 to 09 in the first two digits are reserved by HM Revenue & Customs for UK non-VAT reference schemes.[13]
CST TIN
Personas físicas extranjeras: 10 and 12 digits. It is the NITE (Número de Identificación Tributaria Especial) without hyphens.
Persona jurídica: 10 and 12 digits. It is the Cédula de Persona Jurídica (enterprise's national identification number) without hyphens.
Persona extranjera (residente): 11 and 12 digits. It is the DIMEX (Documento de Identificación de Migración y Extranjería) without hyphens.
Companies: 3 digits, 6 numbers (YYMMDD), 3 digits (like P&G851223B24)
Companies: 9 digits without hyphen.
Agreed to publish on request, and make available to JVCC, but not to include on website in case it confuses and provokes low value contact.
European Parliament, Malta, Estonia, Romania, European Council
Manx language, United Kingdom, Scotland, England, Tynwald
United Kingdom, French language, Spanish language, France, United Nations
Namespace, Metadata, Computer science, Code, Representation term
J. R. R. Tolkien, United Kingdom, Oxford, Tolkien Estate, World Wide Fund for Nature
Linux kernel, ARM architecture, Samsung, ARM Holdings, Texas Instruments
Barrel, Vát, Vanajan Autotehdas, Storage tank, Laundry tub
Spain, Italy, Isle of Man, Cyprus, Greek language