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Japan’s ruling coalition agreed in December 2025 to an outline of 2026 tax reform proposals covering corporate, international, consumption, and individual tax. The proposals include amendments to Pillar Two global minimum tax rules and new measures for consumption tax, R&D credits, and domestic production incentives. The outline is indicative and subject to legislative approval.
KPMG’s latest e‑invoicing developments timeline highlights key implementations for 2026. Belgium will require all VAT payers to issue and receive electronic invoices for domestic B2B transactions from 1 January 2026, with a fallback rule for technical issues. Poland will implement the remaining four e‑invoicing acts in February 2026 after signing them on 9 December 2025.
Global e-Invoicing Requirements Tracker
The European Data Protection Supervisor has warned that the European Commission’s proposal to grant the European Public Prosecutor’s Office and OLAF direct access to VAT information at EU level needs clearer safeguards to prevent blurring administrative and criminal boundaries. The proposal, aimed at tackling VAT fraud costing the EU €12.5‑32.8 bn annually, would amend an EU regulation to centralise access to VAT data for law‑enforcement purposes.
Spain’s December 2025 draft law transposes the first wave of the EU ViDA directive, tightening OSS rules, clarifying the €10,000 distance‑sales threshold, and expanding non‑Union OSS scope. It also introduces a representative requirement for non‑EU businesses seeking VAT refunds and sets transitional measures for call‑off stock and energy supplies. The draft signals that the most significant e‑invoicing and digital‑reporting mandates will arrive in 2030 and 2035.
Belgium will require VAT‑liable businesses to issue and receive structured electronic invoices (PEPPOL) from 1 January 2026. For the first three months of 2026, no sanctions will be imposed if companies can prove timely and reasonable preparations, but the tolerance is case‑by‑case and not a blanket postponement.
The CJEU ruled that a lawyer providing free legal assistance who receives a fee from the opposing party upon a successful outcome is considered a VAT taxable person. The court held that the lawyer's fee constitutes a supply of services for consideration, subject to VAT under the EU VAT Directive. This decision clarifies that such fees are taxable even when paid by a third party.
The EU has updated its eInvoicing standard EN 16931, adding B2B extensions, new technical specifications, and a semantic data model. The ViDA initiative now requires near real‑time VAT reporting for intra‑EU transactions, with a new Digital Reporting Requirements (DRR) message that is a VAT report, not an invoice. Businesses aligning early will avoid compliance issues and benefit from streamlined invoicing and reporting.