North America
June 3, 2013
The Changes in Mexico are OFFICIAL – Deadline set for December 2013

Scott Lewin

Author

Sovos

This blog was last updated on June 27, 2021

On May 31, 2013, the Mexico SAT, their governmental tax agency, announced the mandatory transition of all invoices, for companies generating more than 250,000 pesos in revenue annually, to an electronic process known as CFDI. With nearly 500,000 organizations potentially having to switch by the end of 2013, there will be a mad rush to identify resources and solutions through the summer of 2013. You should have a team focused on solving these issues no later than July 1, 2013.

It is now more critical than ever to make sure that you have a strategy in place in order to stay compliant and avoid costly fines.Being able to quickly change and adapt yourERP system and business processes to meet these mandates is a costly and time consuming operation.

Unfortunately, most organizations are not prepared for the upcoming changes and will underestimate the work load involved in meeting these new mandates.

Four Things You Need to Know:

  • DON’T WAIT– there are literally hundreds of thousands of organizations that will need to comply and a limited number of vendors to meet the requirements. All of the large companies that were “grand-fathered” into staying on the old paper CFD process now need to migrate to the electronic CFDI by December 31, 2013.
  • THIS IS NOT A TRIVIAL PROJECT: the legislation and required business processes will affect your ability to ship, your ability to collect money from your customers, and your ability to legally file your taxes in Mexico.
  • VENDOR SELECTION IS KEY: As the project will affect your ERP system, ensure your vendor understands the process, has knowledge of the ERP system, provides an end to end solution, and speaks both Spanish and English natively – or you might find yourself in a never ending project.
  • BOTH AP AND AR ARE REQUIRED:The legislation for CFDI requires both the production of electronic invoices when you are the supplier sending to an end customer (Accounts Receivable) and when you are the buyer receiving invoices from your supplier (Accounts Payable). Both processes have their own legal and technical requirements.

For convenience, I have added a link to the new laws: The official documentation of the legislative changes was published: El 31 de mayo de 2013 se publica en el DOF la 2ª Resolución de Modificaciones a la Resolución Miscelánea Fiscal para 2013 (2ª RM para la RMF 2013) – Link to Mexico SAT Documentation

I will have further commentary as we breakdown the details of process changes, but fundamentally this is a major move affecting most companies doing business in Mexico.

Scott Lewin
Gain timely insight and important up to the minute information about the current legislative changes in Latin America, including Brazil Nota Fiscal, Mexico CFDI, Argentina AFIP and Chile DTE. Learn how these changes affect your operations, your finances and also your Information Technology teams.
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