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HMRC has released guidance (GfC18) to help businesses in the oil and gas sector determine the VAT place of supply for services. The document outlines special place of supply rules, general rules, fixed establishment rules and other factors that may affect VAT treatment. It is intended to reduce the risk of errors and penalties.
This webinar discusses how Booking.com scaled its e‑invoicing compliance across multiple European markets by centralizing tax data and partnering with Fonoa. The presentation highlights the shift from a country‑by‑country approach to a unified strategy, the cross‑functional collaboration required, and practical guidance on vendor selection and implementation planning.
Global e-Invoicing Requirements Tracker
KPMG releases its latest installment of the Taxation of the Digitalized Economy series, summarising VAT and indirect tax updates that affect digital platforms and cross‑border services. The update covers new VAT responsibilities in Chile, Significant Economic Presence rules in Côte d’Ivoire, DAC8 crypto and platform reporting progress in the EU, and emerging VAT measures for digital services in Jamaica, South Africa, Kazakhstan, Sweden, Mexico and Poland. These developments are relevant for businesses relying on digital business models, platforms and data‑driven services.
Governments worldwide are banning PDF invoices in favor of structured e-invoicing formats, with Belgium mandating Peppol BIS Billing 3.0 from 1 January 2026 and the EU’s ViDA regulation requiring structured invoices for all intra‑EU B2B transactions by July 2030. France, Germany, Poland, and India also have specific structured‑invoice mandates, creating a global shift toward machine‑readable data. The article explains the legal, operational, and cost implications of this transition for finance teams.
Basware’s latest blog post outlines ten key performance indicators that distinguish high‑performing organizations in e‑invoicing compliance. The research, based on responses from 400 finance, tax, IT, and compliance leaders, highlights challenges such as limited visibility into evolving mandates and reliance on spreadsheets, and offers practical steps for building a strategic compliance capability.
Fintua’s blog post outlines how digital platforms and marketplaces must shift to real‑time VAT compliance, driven by EU directives DAC7 and ViDA. It highlights the need for continuous transaction controls, platform liability to collect and remit VAT, and the challenges of reconciling data across jurisdictions such as Mexico and South Korea. The article stresses embedding compliance into systems and cross‑functional collaboration to meet evolving regulatory demands.
The article explains how the place of supply rules for travel services differ from standard B2B and B2C rules, highlighting key exceptions such as accommodation, transport, restaurants and event admission. It details how the Tour Operators Margin Scheme (TOMS) shifts the place of supply to the supplier’s location, offering potential VAT savings for UK and non‑UK businesses. Practical examples illustrate how different scenarios can change whether UK VAT is due.
The French e-reporting framework complements e-invoicing by capturing B2C, cross-border B2B and certain payment transactions through Flow 10 (F10). Flow 6 (F6) confirms acceptance or rejection of the reporting file. Reporting frequency and deadlines vary by VAT regime, with standard monthly taxpayers submitting transaction data three times a month and payment data once, all due 10 days after each period.
Germany’s KoSIT confirms progress on XRechnung 4.0, aligning with the forthcoming EN 16931‑1:2026 standard. The article outlines key milestones: the EN 16931 release in March 2026, XRechnung 4.0 specification in the second half of 2026, mandatory electronic invoicing for all German businesses by 2028, and national and intra‑community VAT reporting from July 2030.
This article provides a comprehensive, region‑by‑region overview of e‑invoicing requirements, detailing mandatory formats, transmission protocols, and deadlines for each country. It highlights key national mandates such as Italy’s FatturaPA, France’s Factur‑X, Germany’s XRechnung, and India’s JSON‑based IRP system, offering a practical guide for businesses operating across borders.
Poland has made e‑invoicing mandatory for all VAT‑registered businesses through its KSeF platform, effective February 2026 for large taxpayers and April 2026 for SMEs and foreign entities. The new system integrates with the existing JPK SAF‑T reporting framework, requiring KSeF identification numbers in VAT returns and imposing penalties for non‑compliance. The rollout also mandates KSeF IDs in bank transfers from August 2026 and extends to micro‑entrepreneurs from January 2027.
The Fintua blog post discusses OECD's latest updates on indirect tax, highlighting the shift toward real‑time, data‑driven administration, e‑invoicing, and digital reporting across jurisdictions. It covers the rollout of e‑invoicing and B2C digital services in EU countries, the UAE's expansion to non‑resident entities, and the development of the DCTR toolkit. The article emphasizes collaboration between businesses and tax authorities and the role of AI in tax compliance.
The article discusses how e‑invoicing transforms VAT recovery on travel and entertainment expenses, highlighting the shift from manual, employee‑driven processes to automated, XML‑based workflows. It outlines the challenges of identifying T&E invoices, preventing duplicate payments, and the varying complexities across EU jurisdictions, and offers practical guidance for businesses to implement classification logic and align e‑invoicing with ERP transformations.