Hitesh Ramsahye

Senior Director
11+ years of experience in indirect tax
Deep expertise in VAT and customs duties
London
@alvarezmarsal
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Hitesh Ramsahye is a Senior Director with Alvarez & Marsal Tax in London. He brings more than 11 years of experience in indirect tax, specializing in value added tax and customs duties, working with both multinational and domestic companies.

Mr. Ramsahye has worked with clients across various industries and sectors, including financial, retail, international, e-commerce and manufacturing. He specializes in global indirect tax advisory, EU VAT compliance and customs duty planning.

Most recently, Mr. Ramsahye has been advising businesses on how to tackle the issues created by Brexit. This included implementing customs simplifications and assisting with enterprise resource planning setup to manage indirect taxes obligations in the U.K. and EU. 

On the transaction side, Mr. Ramsahye has advised on the VAT requirements for the purchase and sale of companies in the energy department, hospitality, electronic services and manufacturing sectors. 

Prior to joining A&M, Mr. Ramsahye served with RSM U.K. for nearly three years, where he focussed on providing EU VAT advisory services to large U.S. multinationals.

Mr. Ramsahye earned a bachelor’s degree in business studies with economics from The Open University. He is a Chartered Tax Advisor and a member of the Association of Tax Technicians. Mr. Ramsahye is fluent in English and French.

Insights By This Professional

The EU is set to overhaul its customs regulations in 2028, with a key focus on modernising e-commerce.
Latest insights The latest insights from Hitesh Ramsahye's team
Thought Leadership
In many M&A share transactions, tax losses may represent significant hidden value. But that value depends particularly on two key questions: Can the tax losses survive the transaction and can the parties mutually agree on a business plan substantiating the future usage of the potentially surviving tax losses? Our article outlines how jurisdiction-specific rules — especially Germany’s strict change-in-ownership regime — affect the usability of tax losses post-closing, whether tax losses can provide a shelter for historic tax risks and why tax losses impact purchase price negotiations.
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