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Morocco has introduced a new VAT regime for non‑resident digital service providers, requiring quarterly registration, reporting and payment via a dedicated electronic platform effective 11 June 2026. The 20 % VAT rate applies to B2C digital services, with detailed transaction‑level reporting mandated within 30 days of each quarter. B2B digital services remain nil‑rated for foreign suppliers, with reverse charge applied by Moroccan VAT‑registered businesses.
On 19 February 2026, Togo will impose an 18% VAT on foreign digital services supplied to consumers, following the 2026 Finance Law and a ministerial order. Digital platforms must collect and remit VAT and report annual income, with a 10% penalty for non‑compliance. The regime also introduces mandatory certified e‑invoicing for VAT‑registered businesses.
Global e-Invoicing Requirements Tracker
Malawi will extend VAT to non-resident digital services from 1 April 2026, requiring foreign providers to charge the standard 17.5% rate. The new regime, announced in the 2026/27 Budget Policy Statement, also doubles the VAT registration threshold to MWK 50 million and covers services such as streaming, online advertising, e‑learning and digital content platforms.
China’s new VAT Law took effect on 1 January 2026, prompting a series of administrative releases that align preferential regimes, customs treatment, and reporting obligations. The guidance tightens SME VAT incentives, extends cross‑border e‑commerce import VAT exemptions until 2027, and introduces new import VAT incentives for strategic sectors that run until 2030. Multinational groups should review compliance and documentation to meet the updated thresholds and reporting requirements.
The Bahamas government will exempt all unprepared food items from VAT effective 1 April 2026, giving consumers zero VAT at the point of sale. Merchants have a three‑month window to adjust their point‑of‑sale and accounting systems, and the exemption means importers and retailers cannot claim input credits. The move follows earlier VAT rate cuts and aims to reduce consumer costs and administrative complexity.
EU member states are pushing for a €2 customs handling fee on low‑value parcels (below €150) to take effect on 1 July 2026, ahead of the planned 1 November 2026 date. An interim €3 customs levy will also apply from 1 July 2026 until March 2028, while the €150 duty threshold is slated for removal under the 2028 customs reform. The fee could be reduced to €0.50 for importers registered with the Trust and Check Trader scheme.