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UAE's Ministry of Finance has extended the deadline for large taxpayers to appoint an Accredited Service Provider (ASP) to 30 October 2026, while keeping the mandatory e‑invoicing go‑live dates unchanged. Large businesses must issue e‑invoices via the Peppol network in PINT AE format from 1 January 2027, with smaller businesses and government entities following in July and October 2027 respectively. The amendment also introduces a white‑label mechanism for ASP accreditation, allowing UAE‑based firms to partner with international technology providers.
The UAE Ministry of Finance has postponed the first phase of its e‑invoicing mandate, extending the deadline for large businesses to appoint an Accredited Service Provider (ASP) to 30 October 2026. The broader implementation timeline remains unchanged, with the pilot phase launching on 1 July 2026 and mandatory e‑invoicing via the Peppol network scheduled for 1 January 2027 for large firms, 1 July 2027 for smaller businesses, and 1 October 2027 for government entities.
Global e-Invoicing Requirements Tracker
Poland’s VAT regime requires businesses to file the JPK_V7 XML report by the 25th day of the month following the billing period, with a 12% annual statutory interest on late payments. Small businesses benefit from a turnover exemption that rises from 200,000 PLN to 240,000 PLN in 2026, while refund processing times are shortened to 40 days. Penalties include a 500 PLN fine per JPK error and a 14‑day correction window.
The UAE Ministry of Finance has extended the deadline for appointing Accredited Service Providers (ASPs) for the eInvoicing system to 30 October 2026. Entities with annual revenues exceeding AED 50 million must fully implement eInvoicing by 1 January 2027. Amendments to Ministerial Decisions now allow local firms to partner with third‑party providers, and 32 ASPs have been approved.
The Ministry of Finance has extended the deadline for appointing Accredited Service Providers (ASP) for e‑invoicing to 30 October 2026 for businesses with annual revenues above AED 50 million. The mandatory implementation deadline remains 1 January 2027. The amendment also introduces a white‑label framework enabling UAE firms to partner with international providers.
The May 2026 Global VAT Guide compiles key VAT developments across 12 jurisdictions, highlighting new compliance requirements such as Belgium’s bank account change, Poland’s updated JPK_VAT guidance, and Bulgaria’s removal of the reverse charge clause for goods with installation. It also notes updates to Germany’s Form USt 1 TN and the launch of Belgium’s SME ePortal for quarterly returns. The guide serves as a concise reference for businesses to stay compliant with upcoming regulatory changes.
The article outlines a compliance roadmap for UK firms expanding globally, highlighting the need to register for VAT in each jurisdiction, including Germany's €1 threshold and the EU's ViDA initiative. It details penalties for non‑registration, the adoption of PEPPOL e‑invoicing, and the launch of the Crypto‑Asset Reporting Framework in 2026. UK firms are urged to map their nexus, maintain accurate digital audit trails, and integrate tax engines compatible with EU standards.
Sweden’s Parliament approved a proposal that will allow the Swedish Tax Agency to conduct online audits of businesses’ cloud accounting and VAT records starting 1 April 2026. The new powers remove the ban on internet access, enabling auditors to log in directly to live systems via read‑only profiles or secure APIs, even when the taxpayer does not cooperate. The change also updates evidence rules to support remote examination of electronic records and is part of a broader move toward structured e‑invoicing and digital compliance.
RSM Ireland’s Spring 2026 VAT newsletter highlights key updates from Irish Revenue, including a new e‑invoicing mandate for large corporates, a 9% VAT rate for qualifying apartment construction, and guidance on Relevant Contracts Tax and fraud prevention.
A buyer-side framework for tax, compliance and IT leaders preparing for global e-invoicing mandates that now bring penalties from day one. The five sequential steps are: map the mandate landscape (countries, transaction types, deadlines, urgency tiers), understand the compliance model behind each country (post-audit, decentralised/Peppol, real-time reporting, centralised platform, clearance), define technical requirements starting with ERP integration, formats and data residency, match vendors to your specific requirements through structured scoring rather than manual shortlisting, and validate the shortlist through peer intelligence on country-and-model-specific implementations. The article emphasises matching vendor architectural strengths to your country mix rather than chasing 'global coverage' claims.
Brazil has introduced a dual VAT model replacing PIS, COFINS, ICMS, and ISS with CBS and IBS. Nonresident sellers must register for CBS/IBS, issue electronic invoices, and comply with split payment rules from August 2026, with CBS fully operational at 8.8% from 2027 and full implementation by 2033.
Morocco is moving toward a mandatory electronic invoicing system in 2026, with a centralized CTC model that will validate invoices in real time via the DGI platform. The reform will roll out progressively, starting with B2B transactions for large companies and later expanding to SMEs and B2C. The UBL format will be the required structured data standard, and invoices must include an electronic signature before validation.
UAE businesses face a July 1, 2026 deadline to pick an accredited e‑invoicing service provider and prepare their systems for the mandatory rollout. From January 1, 2027, e‑invoicing will apply to firms with annual turnover above Dh 50 million, using a decentralised 5‑corner model for B2B and B2G transactions. Companies must review accounting systems, conduct gap analyses, upgrade infrastructure, and train staff to avoid operational disruption.