The introduction of the new Portuguese Stamp Duty system has arguably been one of the most extensive changes within IPT reporting in 2021 even though the latest reporting system wasn’t accompanied by any changes to the tax rate structure.

The new reporting requirements were initially scheduled to start with January 2020 returns. However this was postponed until April 2020 and once again until January 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

How does this affect reporting?

In addition to the information currently requested, mandatory information required for successful submission of the returns now includes:

Lessons learned and how Sovos helps you adapt

Our reporting systems have evolved to help customers meet these new requirements.

For example, our technical department have built a formula that confirms a valid ID to ease data validation and reporting. Consequently, a sense check was built within our systems to determine whether an ID is valid.

With the recent change in the treatment of negative Stamp Duty lines, we’ve also changed our calculations to account for two contrasting methods of treating negatives within our systems.

Previously, both the Portuguese Stamp Duty and parafiscal authorities held identical requirements for the submission of negative lines. However, the introduction of the more complex Stamp Duty reporting system called for amendments to the initial declaration of the policy.

Understandably, this new requirement is a more judicious approach towards tax reporting and will likely be introduced within more tax systems in the future.

Looking ahead

As with any new reporting system, changes within your monthly procedures are necessary. Our IPT compliance processes and software are updated as and when regulatory changes occur providing peace of mind for our customers.

And with each new reporting system, we learn more and more about how tax authorities around the world are trying to enter the digital age with more streamlined practices, knowledge and insight to increase efficiency and close the tax gap.

Take Action

Contact our experts for help with your Portugal Stamp Duty reporting requirements.

Update: 23 March 2023 by Dilara İnal

Japan’s Qualified Invoice System Roll-out Approaches

Japan is moving closer to the roll-out of its Qualified Invoice System (QIS), which will happen in October 2023.

Under QIS rules, taxpayers will only be eligible for input tax credit after being issued a qualified invoice. However, exceptions exist where taxpayers do not require a qualified invoice to take input credit.

The new system does not entail mandatory e-invoice issuance, though QIS introduces the following requirements for invoices:

While only taxpayers can register and obtain a QIIN, a supplier exempt from Japanese Consumption Tax (JCT) can register under the QIS – provided that it voluntarily applied to become a taxpayer.

In line with the implementation of the new invoicing system, the Japanese government’s 2023 Tax Reform introduces new measures for the QIS transition. It is implementing efforts to reduce the tax liability amount for three years.

The measures will also lessen the administrative burden on businesses below a specific size for six years. The government will allow companies to take an input tax deduction for book purposes, but only for small-amount transactions.

Need assistance preparing for Japan’s QIS? Our expert team is ready and waiting to speak with you.

 

Update: 13 July 2021 by Coskun Antal

What is Japan’s Qualified Invoice System?

Japan is in the middle of a multi-year process of updating its consumption tax system. This started with the introduction of its multiple tax rate system on 1 October 2019 and the next step is expected to be the implementation of the so-called Qualified Invoice System as a tax control measure on 1 October 2023.

Through this significant change, the Japanese government is attempting to solve a tax leakage problem that has existed for many years.

The cascade effect of multiple tax rates

The Japanese indirect tax is referred to as Japanese Consumption Tax (JCT) and is levied on the supply of goods and services in Japan. The consumption tax rate increased from 8% to 10% on 1 October 2019. At the same time, Japan introduced multiple rates, with a reduced tax rate of 8% applied to certain transactions.

Currently, Japan doesn’t follow the common practice of including the applicable tax rate in the invoice to calculate consumption tax. Instead, the current system (called the ledger system) is based on transaction evidence and the company’s accounting books. The government believes this system causes systemic problems related to tax leakage.

A new system – the Qualified Invoice System – will be introduced from 1 October 2023 to counter this. The key difference when compared to an invoice issued today is that a qualified invoice must include a breakdown of applicable tax rates for that given transaction.

Under the new system, only registered JCT payers can issue qualified tax invoices, and on the buyer side of the transaction, taxpayers will only be eligible for input tax credit where a qualified invoice has been issued. In other words, the Qualified Invoice System will require both parties to adapt their invoicing templates and processes to specify new information as well as the need to register with the relevant tax authorities.

Preparing for the Qualified Invoice System in Japan

A transitional period for the implementation of the new e-invoicing system applies from 1 October 1 2019 until 1 October 2023.

In order to issue qualified invoices, JCT taxpayers must register with Japan’s National Tax Agency (“NTA”). It will be possible to apply for registration from 1 October 1 2021 at the earliest, and this application must be filed no later than 31 March 2023, which is six months in advance of the implementation date of the e-invoicing system. Non-registered taxpayers will not be able to issue qualified invoices.

The registered JCT payers may issue electronic invoices instead of paper-based invoices provided that certain conditions are met.

What’s next?

The introduction of the Qualified Invoice System will affect both Japanese and foreign companies that engage in JCT taxable transactions in Japan. To ensure proper tax calculations and input tax credit, taxpayers must make sure they understand the requirements, and update or adjust their accounting and bookkeeping systems to comply with the new requirements in advance of the implementation of the Qualified Invoice System in 2023.

Take Action

Get in touch with our experts who can help you prepare for the Japanese Qualified Invoice System.

Download VAT Trends: Toward Continuous Transaction Controls to find out more about the future of tax systems around the world.

Turkey’s e-transformation journey, which started in 2010, became more systematic in 2012. This process first launched with the introduction of e-ledgers on 1 Jan 2012 and has since reached a much wider scope for e-documents.

The Turkish Revenue Administration (TRA), the leader of the e-transformation process, has played an important role in encouraging companies to embrace the digitalization of tax and created a successful model for following tax-related procedures.

You can read more about Turkey’s e-transformation in our e-book Navigating Turkey’s Evolving Tax Landscape.

The process was further accelerated with new requirements for e-documents.

Latest developments and expectations in Turkey’s e-transformation

The TRA continues to widen the scope of e-documents and the types of e-documents in use are:

The digitization journey of e-documents

Many taxpayers have voluntarily adopted the new system since the TRA launched this whole process and TRA’s latest updates for e-documents are critically important to monitor for tax-related procedures.

As e-documents become more popular, any income loss arising from tax procedures will reduce. E-documents offer additional advantages for public institutions and private businesses, such as saving time, minimising costs and improving productivity. It’s certain that the scope of e-documents in Turkey will keep expanding in the future, which will affect taxpayers and tax procedures.

Take Action

Get in touch to find out how Sovos tax compliance software can help you meet your e-transformation and e-document requirements in Turkey.

In this blog, we provide an insight into continuous transaction controls (CTCs) and the terminology often associated with them.

With growing VAT gaps the world over, more tax authorities are introducing increasingly stringent controls. Their aim is to increase efficiency, prevent fraud and increase revenue.

One of the ways governments can gain greater insight into a company’s transactions is by introducing CTCs. These mandates require companies to send their invoice data to the tax authority in real-time or near-real-time. One popular CTC method requires an invoice to be cleared before it can be issued or paid. In this way, the tax authority has not only visibility but actually asserts a degree of operational control over business transactions.

What is VAT?

The basic principle of VAT (value-added tax) is that the government gets a percentage of the value added at each step of an economic chain. The chain ends with the consumption of the goods or services by an individual. VAT is paid by all parties in the chain including the end customer. However only businesses can deduct their input tax.

Many governments use invoices as primary evidence in determining “indirect” taxes owed to them by companies. VAT is by far the most significant indirect tax for nearly all the world’s trading nations. Many countries with VAT see the tax contribute more than 30% of all public revenue.

What is the VAT gap?

The VAT gap is the overall difference between expected VAT revenues and the amount actually collected.

In Europe, the VAT gap amounts to approximately €140 billion every year according to the latest report from the European Commission. This amount represents a loss of 11% of the expected VAT revenue in the block. Globally we estimate VAT due but not collected by governments because of errors and fraud could be as high as half a trillion EUR. This is similar to the GDP of countries like Norway, Austria or Nigeria. The VAT gap represents some 15-30% of VAT due worldwide.

What are Continuous Transaction Controls?

Continuous transaction controls is an approach to tax enforcement. It’s based on the electronic submission of transactional data from a taxpayer’s systems to a platform designated by the tax administration, that takes place just before/during or just after the actual exchange of such data between the parties to the underlying transaction.

A popular CTC is often referred to as the ‘clearance model’ because the invoice data is effectively cleared by the tax administration and in near or real-time. In addition, CTCs can be a strong tool for obtaining unprecedented amounts of economic data that can be used to inform fiscal and monetary policy.

Where did CTCs begin?

The first steps toward this radically different means of enforcement began in Latin American within years of the early 2000s. Other emerging economies such as Turkey followed suit a decade later. Many countries in LatAm now have stable CTC systems. These require a huge amount of data for VAT enforcement from invoices. Other key data – such as payment status or transport documents – may also be harvested and pre-approved directly at the time of the transaction.

What is e-invoicing

Electronic or e-invoicing is the sending, receipt and storage of invoices in electronic format without the use of paper invoices for tax compliance or evidence purposes. Scanning incoming invoices or exchanging e-invoice messages in parallel to paper-based invoices is not electronic invoicing from a legal perspective. E-invoicing is often required as part of a CTC mandate, but this doesn’t have to be the case; in India, for example, the invoice must be cleared by the tax administration, but it’s not mandatory to subsequently exchange the invoice in a digital format.

The objective of CTCs and e-invoicing mandates is often to use business data that is controlled at the source, during the actual transactions, to prefill or replace VAT returns. This means that businesses must maintain a holistic understanding of the evolution of CTCs and their use by tax administrations for their technology and organisational planning.

What’s on the horizon?

As more governments realise the revenue and economic statistics benefits that introducing these tighter controls bring, we’re seeing more mandates on the horizon. We expect the rise of indirect tax regimes based on CTCs to accelerate sharply in the coming five to 10 years. Our expectation is that most countries that currently have VAT, GST or similar indirect taxes will have adopted such controls fully, or partially, by 2030.

Looking ahead, as of today we know that in Europe within the next few years that France, Bulgaria and also Poland will all introduce CTCs. Saudi Arabia has also recently published rules for e-invoicing and many others will follow suit.

Upcoming mandates present an opportunity for a company’s digital transformation rather than a challenge. If viewed with the right mindset. But, as with all change, preparation is key. Global companies should allow enough time and resources to strategically plan for upcoming CTC and other VAT digitization requirements. A global VAT compliance solution will suit their needs both today and into the future as the wave of mandates gains momentum across the globe.

Take Action

With coverage across more than 60 countries, contact us to discuss your VAT e-invoicing VAT requirements.

Since 1993, supplies performed between Italy and San Marino have been accompanied by a set of customs obligations. These include the submission of paperwork to both countries’ tax authorities.

After the introduction of the Italian e-invoicing mandate in 2019, Italy and San Marino started negotiations to expand the use of e-invoices in cross-border transactions between the two countries. Those negotiations have finally bore fruit, and details are now available.

Building SDI connectivity to San Marino

Italy and the enclaved country of San Marino will abandon paper-based customs flows.

The Italian and Sammarinese tax authorities have decided to implement a “four-corner” model, whereby the Italian clearance platform SDI will become the access point for Italian taxpayers, while a newly created HUB-SM will be the SDI counterpart for Sammarinese taxpayers.

Cross-border e-invoices between the countries will be exchanged between SDI and HUB-SM. The international exchange system will be enforced on 1 July 2022, and a transition period will be in place between 1 October 2021 and 30 June 2022.

FatturaPA: The format of choice

HUB-SM’s technical specifications are now available for imports from Italy to San Marino, and exports from San Marino to Italy. The countries have also decided to choose FatturaPA as the e-invoice format, although content requirements for export invoices from San Marino will slightly differ from domestic Italian FatturaPA e-invoices.

The SDI and HUB-SM systems will process e-invoices to and from taxpayers connected to them, or under each country’s jurisdictions.

In other words, Italian taxpayers will send and receive cross-border invoices to or from San Marino via the SDI platform, while Sammarinese taxpayers will perform the same activities via HUB-SM.

Both platforms will deliver invoices to the corresponding taxpayers through the Destination Codes assigned by the respective tax authorities. This means HUB-SM will also assign Destination Codes for Sammarinese companies.

Integration documents for Sammarinese companies

Inspired by the Italian methodology for fiscal controls in cross-border transactions, San Marino will require Sammarinese buyers to fill out an additional integration document (similar to a “self-billing” invoice created for tax evidence reasons) upon receipt of the FatturaPA. This document will be filled out in a new XML-RSM format created by the enclave and sent to HUB-SM.

After the larger rollout of the SDI for B2B transactions in 2019, the platform has proven capable of adapting to new workflows and functionalities.

Since last year, e-purchase orders from the Italian National Health System have been exchanged through the NSO, an add-on to the SDI platform. In January 2022, the FatturaPA replaces the Esterometro as a cross-border reporting mechanism.

SDI has already debuted in the international arena through the acceptance of the e-invoices following the European Norm, which are mapped into a FatturaPA before being delivered to Italian buyers. This integration between SDI and HUB-SM might also reveal the early steps of interoperability between both tax authorities’ platforms for cross-border trade.

Take Action

Get in touch with our experts who can help you understand how SDI and HUB-SM will work together.

Download VAT Trends: Toward Continuous Transaction Controls to find out more about the future of tax systems around the world.

Starting in 2023, French VAT rules will require businesses to issue invoices electronically for domestic transactions with taxable persons and to obtain ‘clearance’ on most invoices before their issue. Other transactions, such as cross-border and B2C, will be reported to the tax authority in the “normal” way.

This will be a major undertaking for affected companies and although the changes are more than a year away, planning should start now. But what does planning mean in the context of a continuous transaction control (CTC) rollout? What have businesses on the cusp of such a transformation learnt when faced with the same challenge in countries such as Italy, India, Mexico and Spain? And how can businesses leverage those best practices for future CTC rollouts?

We share the points businesses should consider when planning for any CTC rollout, which can be used as a checklist for the France 2023 mandate to help you prepare.

Understand the new changes, and be aware of what’s ahead

Understand how your business and operations are affected

Design or evaluate potential solutions

Execute the solution

Once you’ve answered the questions above, you’ll be in a good position to both plan the roadmap to ensure compliant processes in time for the entry into force, as well as to estimate the cost and secure the needed funding for the project.

Take Action

Register for our webinar How to Comply with France’s E-Invoicing Mandate or Get in touch with our experts who can help you prepare.

Treatment of fire charges is tricky in almost all jurisdictions. Fire coverage can vary from as high as 100% to 20%.

No-one would dispute that the most complex fire charge treatment is in Spain. In Portugal, whilst the rules are less complex, they have a unique reporting system for how the policies covering fire must be reported.

How Portuguese Fire Brigade Tax reporting is unique

The Portuguese Fire Brigade Tax (FBT), otherwise known as National Authority for Civil Protection Fire Brigade Charge or ANPC (Autoridade Nacional de Proteção Civil), is due on certain policies covering fire risks. Such policies can be mapped as Class 3-13.

The tax rate is 13%, but usually the fire coverage is set at 30%, so the applied rate is only 3.9%. As per market practice, if the fire proportion is not separately identified in the policy, then 30% fire proportion is assumed. ANPC is settled to the ASF (Autoridade de Supervisão de Seguros e Fundos de Pensões), the body that administrates parafiscal taxes in Portugal, on a monthly basis together with the other parafiscal taxes such as INEM (medical emergencies). There is currently no speciality in the regulation.

The unique feature of the Portuguese fire tax is the five yearly reporting requirement. This five yearly report was last due in 2016 and will be due again in 2021. The report requires insurers to prepare a summary which lists total ANPC or Fire taxes paid in respect of the year when it’s due. So although the report itself is due every five years, the reportable policies are limited only to the policies subject to ANPC in that reporting year.

Another unique feature of this reporting is that although all insurers are subject to settle ANPC liabilities monthly, not all insurers are necessarily obliged to submit this report. ASF informs the insurance companies who are required to submit this report.

How to report Portugal’s Fire Brigade Tax

Reporting is biannual. In 2016 the first semester data (01-01-2016 to 30-06-2016) was due to be reported by 31 August 2016 and the second semester data (01-07-2016 to 31-12-2016) was due by 28 February 2017.

In 2016, when this report was last due, ASF issued an official circular about the reporting requirements. A template has been published to provide help for insurance companies to fulfil their obligations.

In 2016 the report requested a total of the ANPC charges per county and per district. That included more than 300 districts. As yet, we’ve not seen a circular about the requirements for 2021, so we’re in contact with ASF to find out if the report is still due and if yes, the requirements and when the notifications will be sent to the insurance companies.

We hope the complexity of this reporting hasn’t been further increased by the ASF. This unique reporting is time consuming for insurance companies and looking at the global trends in reporting requirements we expect the FBT report will still be due this year.

Take Action

Get in touch about the benefits a managed service provider can offer to ease your IPT compliance burden.

Norway announced its intentions to introduce a new digital VAT return in late 2020, with an intended launch date of 1 January 2022. Since then, businesses have wondered what this change would mean for them and how IT teams would need to prepare systems to meet this new requirement. Norway has since provided ample guidance so businesses can begin preparations sooner rather than later.

With this new VAT return, the Norwegian Tax Administration (Skatteetaten) seeks to provide simplification in reporting, better administration, and improved compliance.

This new VAT return provides for an additional 11 boxes, increasing the count from 19 to 30 boxes which are based on existing SAF-T codes to allow for more detailed reporting and flexibility. It’s important to note that the obligation to submit a SAF-T file will not change with the introduction of this new VAT return.

This change is for the VAT return only – with the SAF-T codes being re-used and re-purposed to provide additional information. Businesses must still comply with the Norwegian SAF-T mandate where applicable and must also submit this new digital VAT return.

Technical specifications of Norway’s digital VAT return

Skatteetaten has created many web pages with detailed information for businesses to look through over the next few months including the following:

Submission method for Norway’s digital VAT return

Norway is encouraging direct ERP submission of the VAT return where possible. However, the tax authorities have announced that manual upload via the Altinn portal will still be available. Login and authentication of the end user or system is carried out via ID-porten.

Additionally, Norway has provided a method for validation for the VAT return file, which should be tested before submission to increase the probability that the file is accepted by the tax authorities. The validator will validate the content of a tax return and should return a response with any errors, deviations, or warnings. This is done by checking the message format and the composition of the elements in the VAT return.

What’s next?

Businesses should begin preparations for the implementation of this new VAT return, as there will likely be challenges along the way.

In addition to the new VAT return, Norway has also announced plans to implement a sales and purchase report, which is currently in an early proposal stage in review with the Ministry of Finance. The next phase is mandatory public consultation which is when a desired launch date will be set. Skatteetaten notes that implementation time will be considered when determining an introduction date for the report.

Take Action

Get in touch to find out how we can help your business prepare for Norway’s 2022 Digital VAT Return requirements. Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to keep up-to-date with the latest regulatory news and updates.

VAT in Norway: All you need to know about Norway’s SAF-T Requirements

Norway’s SAF-T reporting requirements are evolving as tax continues to digitize

Reform
Designed to reduce the compliance burden and administrative costs associated with audits, while giving tax authorities greater visibility of company’s tax and financial data, SAF-T has continued to gain popularity across a growing number of European countries.

Initially introduced in 2017 on a voluntary basis, Norway’s tax authority made SAF-T reporting compulsory in January 2020.

At present, the Norwegian SAF-T must only be submitted on demand in connection with an audit. However, it is expected to be extended to areas such as corporation tax.

On 1 January 2022, the tax authority introduced digital submission of its VAT return, which was also enhanced to capture other data that’s already required whenever a SAF-T submission is needed. However, as SAF-T doesn’t yet need to be submitted regularly in Norway, the completion of these new summary boxes creates a challenge for companies who are unfamiliar with SAF-T.

Have questions? Get in touch with a Sovos expert on Norway SAF-T.

Norway SAF-T Quick facts

  • Norway’s SAF-T requirements apply to businesses with bookkeeping obligations who use electronic accounting systems including registered foreign bodies.
  • Businesses with a turnover of less than NOK 5 million who aren’t subjected to mandatory bookkeeping are exempt unless they have electronic bookkeeping information available.
  • Enterprises with less than 600 vouchers annually that hold accounts in spreadsheets or a text editor program are exempt.
SAF-T NORWAY
  • Norwegian SAF-T is submitted on request and doesn’t currently have periodic submission requirements.
  • SAF-T is a standardised XML format containing exported accounting information.
  • Norwegian SAF-T files will be submitted primarily by upload via the Altinn internet portal.
  • Testing is available and recommended by the tax authority.

Mandate rollout dates

  • 1 October 2016: The first version of the SAF-T Financial was published on the Norwegian tax authority website.
  • 9 June 2017: The administrative body on Norwegian SAF-T standards met for the first time to manage standards to suit both public and private sectors. The body meets at least once a year. 
  • 1 January 2017: Voluntary adoption of SAF-T began.
  • 1 January 2020: Norway introduced mandatory SAF-T reporting on demand.
  • 1 January 2022: Norway updated its VAT Return to allow for more detailed reporting and flexibility, as the new return structure removes numbered boxes and instead requires users to map their transactions to Norway’s existing tax codes that are currently utilised in the SAF-T mandate. The submission frequency of the VAT return remains the same, but users can now directly submit returns from their ERP system to allow for a more efficient process; where this is not possible, users may still upload XMLs or manually populate data via a portal.
INFOGRAPHIC

Norway’s SAF-T Requirements

Understand more about Norway SAF-T including when to comply, submission deadlines and filing requirements and how Sovos can help.

How can Sovos help?

It’s a challenge to extract data from the ERP, map to the correct SAF-T format and ensure it meets tax authority requirements without triggering the need for further scrutiny. Sovos software takes care of this by extracting the data, performing a full analysis and generating the submission-ready SAF-T file.

Our experts continually monitor, interpret and codify regulatory changes into our software, reducing the compliance burden on your tax and IT teams.

Learn how Sovos’ solution to address the changing VAT compliance requirements in Serbia can help companies stay compliant.

Making Tax Digital: All You Need to Know

What is Making Tax Digital?

The UK government introduced Making Tax Digital (MTD) with the aim of making filing VAT returns easier and more efficient for businesses. The regulation requires businesses to keep digital records and submit VAT returns via compatible software.

More than 1.8 million businesses are already benefitting from the service, and more than 19 million returns have been successfully submitted through Making Tax Digital compatible software so far.

Understanding MTD

Making Tax Digital is part of the UK government’s plans to reduce errors and make managing tax affairs easier with the use of digital tools.

Businesses must digitally file VAT returns using one of the HMRC approved compatible software solutions that connect to HMRC’s API. Using software to keep digital records of specified VAT related content is compulsory.

Get the information you need

Making Tax Digital (MTD): Quick facts

  • MTD requires every VAT registered business to record and submit VAT returns electronically using ‘functional compatible software’.
  • Companies must use software to keep digital records of specified VAT-related documents.
  • Stored records must include designatory data and summary VAT data for the period.
  • Use of multiple pieces of software is allowed.
  • The format of the VAT return is a 9-box summary, filed via the HMRC’s JSON API platform, which must be digitally linked between the customer’s source data and the submitted digital return. Businesses receive and send information to HMRC via API.
  • Each business must set up a new digital tax account and should follow a new authentication process.
  • Submission of digital records can be in a range of digital formats, including XML, CSV, and Excel, provided they are API enabled.

Making Tax Digital (MTD): Roll out dates

1 April 2019: MTD for VAT introduced to UK VAT registered businesses exceeding annual gross sales of £85,000.

1 October 2019: MTD applies for businesses eligible for deferral.

1 April 2021: The ‘soft landing’ for digital links ended. Starting with that tax period, all MTD users must meet digital link requirements. HMRC may consider deferrals for taxpayers with complex legacy systems.

1 April 2022: Mandate expanded to include all businesses registered for UK VAT, regardless of size.

1 November 2022: Businesses filing VAT returns can no longer submit via an existing online VAT account unless HMRC has agreed to an exemption from MTD. Businesses that file annual VAT returns will still be able to use their VAT online account until 15 May 2023.

January 2023: Any VAT registered businesses that fail to sign up for MTD and file returns through MTD-compatible software will incur a default surcharge or late submission penalty and interest.

Penalties for not complying with Making Tax Digital (MTD)

  • A default surcharge of up to 15% for any late payments of VAT due.
  • Up to 100% of any VAT understated or over-claimed if a VAT return contains a careless or deliberate inaccuracy.
  • Up to 30% of an understated assessment of VAT due if HMRC isn’t informed within 30 days that it’s incorrect.
  • £400 for submitting a paper VAT return without an exemption.

Making Tax Digital for VAT

Making Tax Digital applies to all VAT registered businesses in the UK. Electronic submission of VAT returns, digital record keeping and digital links are all requirements of the regulation.

Digital link requirement

One of the MTD requirements is ‘digital links’ – the electronic exchange of data between software programs, products or applications without manual intervention.

A digital link is required whenever a business is using multiple pieces of software to store and transmit its VAT records and returns in-line with MTD requirements. 

A digital link can be:

  • XML, CSV import and export, and download and upload of files.
  • Automated data transfer.
  • API transfer.

Transfer of data and subsequent import of data into software by means of email or tangible digital media (i.e. flash drive).

Making Tax Digital for Corporation Tax

MTD doesn’t currently apply for corporation tax but HMRC published results of its consultation and there are plans for a pilot scheme. A potential mandate is likely in 2026. Bookmark this live blog about updates for MTD or follow us on LinkedIn to stay up to date.

uk-penalties-government-building
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How to set up Making Tax Digital with Sovos

Sovos can help you with MTD in two ways:

  1. You can use Sovos Advanced Periodic Reporting software to streamline your compliance workload with one solution, or
  2. You can use Sovos’ Compliance Services Portal to access expert VAT compliance services and get full visibility of how each obligation is being handled, every step of the way.

FAQ

Can I use Excel for Making Tax Digital?

Excel is an approved digital format to submit digital records as part of Making Tax Digital, as long as the file is API enabled or the spreadsheet is digital. Using Excel can prove inefficient and error prone in comparison to other digital record software options.

How do I setup MTD?

There are a few steps involved in setting up Making Tax Digital for your business:

Who needs to register for Making Tax Digital?

All UK VAT-registered businesses need to register for Making Tax Digital. New businesses will be automatically signed up for MTD when registering for VAT through HMRC’s new VAT Registration Service (VRS).

What is the threshold for Making Tax Digital?

Since April 2022 Making Tax Digital is mandatory for all VAT registered businesses, regardless of annual turnover.

Do sole traders have to make tax digital?

If a sole trader is a VAT registered business they will have to comply with the Making Tax Digital requirements. In the UK, businesses with an annual turnover of less than £85,000 can opt to register their business for VAT but it is not compulsory.

Poland’s VAT Requirements

Poland’s CTC and SAF-T framework

In an effort to modernise its tax systems and close the VAT gap, Poland’s tax authority, the Krajowa Administracja Skarbowa (KAS), continues to advance its implementation of VAT reform with changes to SAF-T and the introduction of continuous transaction controls (CTCs).

Get the information you need

Poland’s SAF-T evolution

Poland introduced its version of the Standard Audit File for Tax (SAF-T) known as Jednolity Plik Kontrolny (JPK) in 2016. This incorporated multiple regulated JPK structures, of which two, JPK_VAT and JPK_FA, were relevant for VAT.

The requirement for monthly submissions of JPK_VAT was extended to all taxpayers on 1 January 2018. JPK_VAT was combined with the VAT return during 2020 and the consolidated JPK_VAT with the declaration is submitted per the frequency of the VAT Return (monthly or quarterly).

JPK_VAT with the declaration has two variants:

  1. JPK_V7M for taxpayers settling VAT monthly
  2. JPK_V7K for taxpayers who settle VAT quarterly

The remaining JPK structures are submitted upon request of the tax authority in event of an audit.

SAF-T quick facts

There are eight Polish JPK structures that taxpayers should be prepared for. Most are required on demand, but the JPK­_V7M/K must be submitted periodically (monthly or quarterly).

  • JPK_V7M/K declaration for records of VAT purchases and sales combined
  • JPK_FA for VAT and VAT invoices
  • JPK_WB for bank statements
  • JPK_PKPIR for revenue and expense ledger
  • JPK_EWP for revenue account
  • JPK_KR for accounting books
  • JPK_MAG for warehouses
  • JPK_FA_RR for flat rate VAT invoices

Poland’s CTC reforms

Aiming to combat fraud and improve tax collection capabilities, Poland’s first Continuous Transaction Controls (CTC) legislation, the Krajowy System e-Faktur (KSeF), was published in Poland in early 2021.

Adoption of the proposed CTC reform occurred on 18 November 2021, following consultation with industry representatives. The implementation process is ongoing, with the voluntary phase having begun in January 2022 and the mandate due to go-live on 1 July 2024.

CTC quick facts

Participants who wish to get ahead of the mandate can now opt to use the Polish electronic invoice in structured XML format the FA-VAT, to submit supplier invoices to the KSeF (Krajowy System e-Faktur) electronically.

Other considerations for businesses include:

  • During the voluntary phase, buyer acceptance of e-invoices is necessary to receive invoices via KSeF (otherwise supplier will still need to issue invoices in the agreed form/format, such as PDF, paper or via EDI)
  • Refund period reduced from 60 to 40 days
  • Incentives provided to businesses to issue invoices through the KSeF portal during voluntary phase
  • Outsourcing using third-party service provider will be permitted
  • All invoices will be archived in KSeF for ten years
  • A qualified electronic signature or seal (QES), trusted profile or token will be required to authenticate access to the portal

Mandate rollout dates for JPK and CTCs in Poland

Poland SAF-T

  • 1 July 2016: SAF-T introduced in Poland in the form of JPK files
  • 1 January 2018: Poland mandated JPK_VAT for all taxable persons
  • 1 July 2018: Taxpayers must be able to produce accounting documents in JPK structures
  • 1 October 2020:  JPK_VAT with declaration consolidates the VAT Return and JPK_V7M/K
  • 1 July 2021: Amendments to the mandatory JPK_V7M/K adopted
  • 1 January 2022: Amendments to the JPK_V7M/K structure including changes to better align it with the EU VAT e-Commerce package
  • 1 January 2025: Reporting of JPK EWP, JPW PKPIR, and JPK_KR becomes a periodic reporting obligation

Poland CTC

  • 29 October 2021: Legislation for a Continuous Transaction Control (CTC) e-invoicing system adopted; draft specifications released and test system made available
  • 1 January 2022: Voluntary phase begins for the CTC system. There is no obligation to use the e-invoicing system in B2B transactions though there are several benefits if businesses chose to do so, including quicker tax refunds and exemptions from submitting the report of invoices, JPK-FA
  • 10 June 2022: The Council of the European Union published the Council Implementing Decision authorizing the Republic of Poland to apply a special measure derogating from Articles 218 and 232 of Directive 2006/112/EC, based on the European Commission proposal published on 30 March 2022. The decision will be granted from 1 January 2024 until 31 December 2026, after being published in the Official Journal of the European Union.
  • 1 July 2024: The CTC system will become mandatory
  • 1 January 2025: The mandatory e-invoicing expands to the VAT-exempted taxpayers
  • 1 January 2025: The end of the grace period for the application of the penalties

Penalties

The new SAF-T structure, like the JPK_VAT and VAT returns, must be submitted monthly, or quarterly. Failure to submit accurately and on time may result in penalties. The Polish tax authority will react quickly to inconsistencies detected in SAF-T files and use data analysis algorithms to identify fraudulent transactions.

INFOGRAPHIC

Poland's SAF-T Requirements

Understand more about Poland SAF-T including when to comply, penalties, requirements and how Sovos can help.

INFOGRAPHIC

Poland CTC Requirements

Understand more about Poland’s continuous transaction controls including when businesses need to comply and how Sovos can help.

Need help to ensure your business stays compliant with the evolving reporting and emerging SAF-T and CTC obligations in Poland?

Keeping up with VAT compliance obligations has become more difficult as Poland continues to take steps to reduce its VAT gap and modernise the system.

Our experts continually monitor, interpret and codify complex legal and technical changes into our software solutions, keeping you up-to-date and reducing the compliance burden on your tax and IT teams.

Learn how Sovos’ solution for JPK_V7M/K, CTC reforms and other VAT compliance changes can help companies stay compliant in Poland and around the world.

SII Spain: An Overview

SII Spain: Suministro Inmediato de Información

SII Spain is an electronic VAT system that affects thousands of large companies across the country. It can seem complicated, but it doesn’t have to be.

The mandate is demanding, with the impacted groups having to stay on top of the four-day reporting period. If your business meets the criteria of SII Spain, you will likely be feeling the pressure of having to comply.

Sovos is here to help, breaking down Spain’s SII system into:

  • How companies can comply (and what to expect if they don’t)
  • Key details about the mandate and how it’s developed over time
  • How Sovos can ease the burden for you at every stage

SII Spain is only one of the country’s tax compliance obligations. Our Spain VAT Compliance overview can help you stay on top of other mandates and obligations you may be subject to.

Get in touch

Who SII affects

The mandate affects Spanish companies above an annual turnover threshold of over €6 million. It’s also applicable to VAT business groups, companies that participate in the monthly tax refund system known as REDEME and other businesses that voluntarily sign up.

Where is SII applicable in Spain?

Spain’s compliance obligations are further complicated by the country being divided into regions. Depending on where your business is based, you may well be subject to a specific combination of tax mandates.

The distinct areas where SII is applicable include:

  • Mainland Spain
  • Canary Islands
  • Bizkaia
  • Gipuzkoa
  • Alava

Quick facts about SII Spain

  • The Spanish mandate applies to companies with an annual turnover above €6 million, companies that are part of VAT groups, and companies using the REDEME system.
  • The following records must be sent to the tax authority:
    • Registered book of issued invoices
    • Registered book of received invoices
    • Registered book of investment goods
    • Registered book of certain intra-community operations
  • The transmission of the information must be via web services available to exchange XML messages.
  • Some formal obligations are reduced as taxpayers will no longer be required to file the information returns form 347 (third-party information), form 340 (transactions in register books) and form 390 (VAT annual summary).
  • In 2020 the Spanish tax administration introduced a service to pre-populate the periodic VAT return (Modelo 303) using the information taxpayers supplied via the SII.

Spain: Rollout dates

2 January 2017: The immediate supply of information on a voluntary basis for taxpayers in Spain begins.

1 July 2017: The mandatory phase of the immediate supply of information for taxpayers under the scope of the mandate begins.

1 January 2018: The period to supply information was reduced from 8 days to 4 days. The mandate also extended to other Spanish territories (Basque Provinces and Canary Islands).

1 January 2020: Introduction of a ledger to record operations related to the sale of goods in consignment.

4 January 2021: Introduction of new validations and fields that record the sales of goods in consignment

Penalties: What happens if you don’t comply

  • Omissions or inaccuracies in the information reporting obligation have a penalty of up to 1% of the total amount missed, with a maximum of €6,000.
  • Late reporting of real-time electronic VAT ledgers will trigger a penalty of 0.5% of the total amount reported, with a minimum of €300 and a maximum of €6,000 per quarter.
  • Errors or omissions in the Registered book of certain intra-community transactions and Registered book of Investment goods have a fixed penalty of €150.

Sovos Helps Companies Stay Compliant with Spain’s SII

Sovos serves as a true one-stop shop for managing all VAT compliance obligations in Spain and across the globe.

Sovos supports the Suministro Inmediato de Información (SII) platform, ensuring our customers remain compliant with the legal and technical framework developed by the Spanish tax authority (AEAT).

Sovos experts continually monitor, interpret, and codify these changes into our software, reducing the compliance burden on your tax and IT teams.

Learn more about our solution

Additional obligations for VAT compliance in Spain

Spain albarracin city

While SII Spain affects many large companies nationwide, there are numerous other compliance obligations taxpayers must be aware of.

Spain B2G E-invoicing: E-invoicing has been mandatory in Spain for all transactions between public administrations and their suppliers since 2015.

Read our dedicated Spain e-invoicing overview for more information on B2G electronic invoicing.

Spain B2B E-invoicing: Businesses are under varying obligations where e-invoicing is concerned, largely depending on the nature of transactions. Mandatory B2B e-invoicing is anticipated to be implemented from 2024.

Read our dedicated Spain e-invoicing overview for more information on B2B electronic invoicing.

Bizkaia Batuz: Batuz is a tax control strategy governed by the government of Bizkaia which applies to all companies and taxpayers that are subject to the province’s regulations.

Find out more about Bizkaia’s Batuz tax system.

TicketBAI: TicketBAI is an e-invoicing mandate from the numerous tax authorities in the Basque Country which covers Álava, Biscay, and Gipiuzkoa. It outlines obligations for both individuals and companies to use software to report invoice data to the Tax Administration in real-time.

Understand TicketBAI with our dedicated blog.

FAQ for SII in Spain

The Suministro Inmediato de Información (SII) is a platform to submit invoice data to the tax authority in Spain. Taxable persons who are in scope must report invoice data within four business days following the date of issue.

In 2020 the tax administration announced a new version of the SII, introducing a ledger to record operations related to the sale of goods in consignment. This came into effect on 1 January 2021.

The Suministro Inmediato de Información (SII) was introduced on 2 January 2017 on a voluntary basis, extending to a mandatory basis on 1 July 2017. Since then, there have been changes and additional requirements

SII applies to multiple regions in Spain, including Mainland Spain, the Canary Islands, Álava, Biskaia, and Gipiuzkoa.

This was not the case when the legislation originally came into effect, as it excluded the likes of the Canary Islands, Ceuta, Melilla, Basque Country and Navarra.

The Immediate Supply of Information (Suministro Inmediato de información) SII is a system for keeping the Value Added Tax record books in the local Tax Authority’s electronic headquarters by supplying VAT-relevant information on a near-real-time basis.

  1. Issued Invoices Ledger
  2. Received Invoices Ledger
  3. Investment goods ledger
  4. Certain Intra-Community operations ledger

Tax in Hungary: All you need to know about RTIR Hungary

RTIR Hungary

In 2018, Hungary established a legal framework requiring taxpayers to use a designed schema to report invoice data to the tax authority (NAV) in real-time for domestic transactions above a minimum VAT amount.

Due to the success of this measure, the scope of the mandate has been extended to include a wider range of transactions, and the earlier thresholds have been abolished. The impact of the mandate is now broadly felt in Hungary where all transactions between domestic taxable persons must be reported to the NAV, regardless of the amount of VAT accounted.

 

Have questions? Get in touch with a Sovos expert on RTIR Hungary.

Hungary VAT mandate quick facts

  • Immediate disclosure of data from all invoices issued under the scope of the mandate.
  • Once an e-invoice is issued, transmission of data must occur automatically using a machine-to-machine interface and must be done without human intervention
  • The transmission must include identification data and the obligatory data content as required under the Hungarian VAT Act.
  • VAT returns are filed monthly or quarterly and are due on the twentieth of the month after the end of the tax period.
  • The VAT return contains several appendices requiring additional information on transactions such as supplies of new means of transport and metals subject to the domestic reverse charge.
  • Alongside the VAT return, taxpayers must submit a summary report on all domestic purchases for which they’re claiming an input tax deduction.

Mandate rollout dates

  • 1 July 2018: Mandate applies to all taxable persons to report invoice data in real-time to the National Custom and Tax administration of Hungary for domestic transactions with a minimum VAT amount of 100,000 HUF.

  • 1 July 2020: The VAT threshold was abolished and all domestic transactions between taxable persons in Hungary must be reported regardless of the VAT accounted.

  • 1 January 2021: Reporting obligations include B2C invoice issue and B2B intra-community supplies and exports.

  • 1 January- 31 March 2021: The Ministry of Finance granted a sanction-free three-month grace period to comply with new reporting obligations and to give businesses time to transfer from the current version (v 2.0 XSD) to the new version v3.0 XSD.

  • 1 April 2021: Mandatory usage of the new version (v3.0 XSD) begins.

RTIR Penalties

  • Failure to report the invoices in real-time could lead to an administrative penalty of up to 500,000 HUF per invoice not reported.

  • Additional penalties would apply for non-compliance with the invoicing software requirements.

Infographic

Hungary’s CTC Requirements

Understand more about Hungary’s NAV system, how to file invoices, when businesses are required to comply and how Sovos can help.

Sovos helps companies stay compliant with Hungary Real Time Reporting Requirements

As Hungary edges ever closer to CTC e-invoicing invoice clearance, Sovos enables businesses to stay up to date with the latest requirements and technical specifications so they can effectively connect with the NAV and honour their VAT compliance obligations.

E-invoicing France

France will implement mandatory B2B e-invoicing, as well as an e-reporting obligation. This mandate impacts all companies operating in France.

This new e-invoicing mandate is complex and introduces the continuous transaction controls (CTC) model.

Note: On 15 October the French Tax Authorities (DGFiP) announced that that the PPF’s role has been significantly reduced and they will no longer handle the exchange of invoices for all companies across the country. As such, all companies are now required to select a PDP. Find out what this means for businesses in our blog.

France’s e-invoicing mandate, combined with the e-reporting obligation, provides the tax authorities with access to transaction data. This is to increase efficiency, cut costs and fight fraud. Whether you are a buyer or supplier, the mandate’s effect on businesses and their operational processes, financial systems and people is extensive.

This France e-invoicing guide will explain:

  • How e-invoicing in France works
  • Who needs to comply and when
  • Key information about penalties and non-compliance

At a glance: France e-invoicing

France B2B e-invoicing

Network
ChorusPro

Format
UBL, CII or Factur-X

France B2G e-invoicing

Network
ChorusPro

Format
UBL, CII or Factur-X

E-invoicing in France: Requirements and regulations

  • The e-invoice mandate is a model based on registered certified service providers connecting taxpayers to a centralized platform (Chorus Pro).
  • The structure of the e-invoices can be UBL, CII or Factur-X (a mixed format) or any other structured format. Also, during a transitional period (up until December 2027), taxpayers may submit their invoices in an unstructured PDF format.
  • E-invoices must contain all existing tax mandatory fields as well as those required by commercial laws, including line-item details (and for line-item data from January 2026). The invoice must mention the operation type (goods, services, mixed) and the VAT payment option. The inclusion of additional mandatory fields in e-invoices is a requirement. Accepted formats include structured and hybrid (image + structured data).
  • Exchanging e-invoices directly between trading parties is not allowed. Invoices must be exchanged betweenparties through certified service providers to the buyer party.
  • Payment status data for each service invoice is shared.
  • E-reporting frequencies are based on the VAT regimes that taxpayers are subject to.

Want to learn about the upcoming mandatory e-invoicing requirements in France? Download our ebook, France: A New Horizon – E-invoicing Mandate.

E-invoicing and e-reporting in France: Implementation timeline

  • August 2023: The French Directorate General of Public Finances (DGFiP) postponed the implementation of the country’s e-invoicing mandate
  • December 2023: The Finance Law for 2024 is adopted, establishing new implementation dates for the e-invoicing mandate
  • June 2024: French authorities published a new version of the e-invoicing mandate External Specifications file
  • 2025: Pilot phase expected to begin
  • September 2026: first phase of mandate to be enforced, mandating inbound e-invoicing for all companies and outbound e-invoicing and e-reporting for large & mid-sized businesses
  • September 2027: Second phase of mandate to be enforced, mandating outbound e-invoicing and e-reporting for all other companies

Register for e-invoicing in France with Sovos

Sovos can help your business comply with the French mandate with a range of services:

  • Tax compliance services – to control, sign, archive and format invoicing data according to the legal requirements as well as create SAF-T (FEC) reporting for both suppliers and buyers
  • Sovos PDP – Sovos is a confirmed Partner Dematerialization Platform (PDP)
  • Connectivity services – through Sovos or via our partners to deliver e-invoice, e-reporting and lifecycle status data

Learn more about our scalable solution for France’s continuous transaction controls requirements.

Complete the form below to speak with one of our e-invoicing experts

FAQ

France’s e-reporting requirements are established alongside the new e-invoicing mandate, with the reporting frequency based on the taxpayers’ applicable VAT regime. The e-reporting requirement will complement the e-invoicing mandate by facilitating the transmission of data on B2C transactions or supplied to foreign entities.

In France, an electronic invoice is defined as an invoices which is issued and transmitted in paperless form, following a structured format.

France’s e-invoicing requirements come into effect during 2026-2027, depending on business size. However, from September 2026, all companies must be able to receive e-invoices.

  • E-invoicing:€15 per invoice, capped at €15,000 per year
  • E-reporting: €250 per transmission, capped at €45,000 per year

The structure of the e-invoices can be UBL, CII or Factur-X (a mixed format) or any other structured format.

During a transitional period until December 2027, taxpayers may submit their invoices in an unstructured PDF format.

Exchanging e-invoices directly between trading parties is not allowed. Originally it was intended that either a registered service provider (PDP) or the centralized platform (Portail Public de Facturation – PPF) would transmit the e-invoice to the buyer party, which would then be able to leverage either a PDP or the PPF for receiving the invoice.

However, the French Tax Authorities announced on 15 October that the PPF’s role has been significantly reduced and they will no longer handle the exchange of invoices for all companies across the country. As such, the French State’s “own free-of-charge” PDP utility service will not become available to French businesses.

Therefore, all companies in scope are required to select a PDP. Without the PPF being available as a free invoice exchange platform, it is estimated that 4+ million companies will now have to rely on PDP-enabled accounting software to receive those transactions.

PDPs are private service providers accredited by the tax authority to intermediate data flows between trading partners and the PPF. They will act as the interface between companies and the French government and will be directly involved in issuing and receiving invoices. Following the announcement, on 15th October 2024, that the PPF will no longer be acting as a free invoice exchange platform, all companies in scope are required to select a PDP.

On Monday 26 August 2024, the French Tax Authority officially confirmed Sovos as a Partner Dematerialization Platform (PDP). This authorization comes after a rigorous application and review process. Read more in the press release.

There are a growing number of tax authorities that have implemented e-invoicing globally, including France, ItalySaudi Arabia and India. There are also many countries working on implementing e-invoicing including Germany and Spain.

Learn more about e-invoicing and how to comply.

E-invoicing Italy: All you need to know

Italy was the first country in the region to introduce a clearance e-invoicing model with the Sistema di Interscambio (SdI) platform. Seeking to close one of Europe’s most significant VAT gaps, the government has steadily improved its Continuous Transaction Controls (CTC) system.

Beginning with B2G e-invoicing in 2014 and extending to cover domestic B2B and B2C e-invoices in 2019, Italy became the first EU country to make B2B e-invoicing mandatory through a clearance process.

This page will:

  • Explain how Italy’s e-invoicing works
  • Help you understand how to comply with the e-invoicing regulations
  • Answer your questions about the Sistema di Interscambio

Have questions? Get in touch with a Sovos Italy e-invoicing expert.

Quick facts about e-invoicing in Italy

  • Issuing e-invoices requires creation in a structured format and transmission is via the Sistema di Interscambio
  • The Fattura PA – the tax authority’s XML schema format – is the required format for issuing e-invoices
  • For B2B e-invoices, businesses can choose how to ensure the integrity and authenticity of invoices, but there is a strong market preference for Qualified Electronic Signatures. However, B2G e-invoices must be electronically signed.
  • Exchange of National Health Service purchase orders is through the NSO platform and referenced accordingly in the e-invoice.
  • E-archiving invoice requirements include the obligation to:
    • Execute a signing and time stamping process for e-invoices in an archive
    • Maintain a documented description of the archive and the archiving process (Manuale della Conservazione)
    • Put in place a clear delegation plan setting up the responsibilities around the archiving process
  • Since 1 July 2022, all cross-border transactions must be reported through the SdI in the FatturaPA format. Taxpayers can continue to exchange cross-border invoices in any agreed way.

Scope of e-invoicing in Italy

B2B e-invoicing in Italy applies to:

  • Domestic B2B transactions between Italy resident/established taxpayers
  • Almost all Italy resident/established taxpayers
  • Included in 2022: Taxpayers who adopt the flat-rate tax regime (regime forfettario) and amateur sports associations and third sector entities with revenue up to EUR 65,000
  • From 1 Jan 2024: Microenterprises with revenues or fees up to EUR 25,000

B2G e-invoicing in Italy applies to:

  • All taxpayers supplying goods/services to public administration entities

E-invoicing in Italy: Mandate Rollout Dates

  • 6 June 2014: Phased roll-out of mandatory B2G e-invoicing starts in Italy
  • 1 July 2018: Clearance mandate goes into effect for manufacturers and distributors of petrol and diesel intended for use as a motor fuel in cars and road vehicles
  • 1 September 2018: Mandate starts for tax-free sales to non-EU individuals acting as final customers
  • 1 January 2019: Mandate becomes a requirement for domestic B2B and B2C transactions in Italy, with minor sector-specific exceptions
  • 1 February 2020: Exchange of purchase orders for the supply of goods to entities associated with the National Health Service through the NSO platform becomes compulsory and reference in the e-invoice becomes a requirement
  • 1 January 2021: Introduction of pre-populated VAT returns and enforcement of new FatturaPA schema
  • June 2021: Enforcement of the new requirements for the creation and archiving of electronic documents
  • October 2021: Voluntary transition phase for e-invoicing between Italy and San Marino began
  • 1 July 2022:
    • Italian businesses must report information on cross-border transactions to the SDI in the FatturaPA format. As a result, Esterometro was abolished on 30 June 2022
    • E-invoicing using the FatturaPA format becomes mandatory between Italy and San Marino, with the Italian SdI as the access point for Italian taxpayers and the HUB-SM platform as the SdI counterpart on San Marino’s side
    • Scope of the B2B e-invoicing mandate in Italy broadened to include:
      • Taxpayers who adopt the flat-rate regime (regime forfettario)
      • Amateur sports associations and third sector entities with revenue up to EUR 65,000
  • January 2024: E-invoicing scope to include microenterprises with revenues or fees up to EUR 25,000

Penalties: What happens if you don’t comply

  • Failure to issue an invoice or issuing an invoice that doesn’t meet the XML format will result in a penalty between 90-180% of the associated VAT amount.
  • Issuing a purchase invoice to a client without adhering to mandate requirements will result in a penalty of 100% of the associated VAT amount.
  • After a grace period (expired for the supply of goods and services), there will be no payment for invoices issued to entities associated with the National Health Service if no prior purchase order has been transmitted through the NSO platform and referenced in the e-invoice

Register for e-invoicing in Italy with Sovos

Sovos ensures compliance with all SdI e-invoicing and VAT requirements in Italy including CTC e-invoicing, reporting and e-archiving. All you need to do is work with us and you can use our solution that connects directly with the SdI.

Want to learn more about e-invoicing?

Download the 13th edition of Trends to learn about the global e-invoicing landscape

Eastern Europe is another region adopting e-invoicing. Find out more in our ebook, VAT Digitization in Eastern Europe

FAQ for e-invoicing in Italy

Is e-invoicing mandatory in Italy?

E-invoicing in Italy is mandatory for the majority of the B2B, B2C and B2G invoices. Suppliers performing activities classified as “Commercio al minute e attivitá assimilate” are exempt from the obligation of issuing e-invoices, unless their customers so request them; on the other hand, those suppliers are required to electronically transmit a daily aggregate report (It.: Scontrino Elettronico). Reporting of cross-border transactions through the SDI in the FatturaPA format is also mandatory.

How does e-invoicing work in Italy?

The tax authority requires all invoices in the Fattura PA XML schema format. Transmission of e-invoices happens through the Sistema di Interscambio. E-invoices must be cleared by the tax authority. The Italian tax authority delivers the legal cleared e-invoice to the recipient.

How do you securely connect with the SdI to issue invoices?

With ease. Our solution connects securely with the SdI, freeing you from the burden of knitting together different systems and platforms.

How do you comply with Conservazione sostitutiva?

The term conservazione sostitutiva refers to a long-term preservation process required for compliant archiving of e-invoices in Italy. E-invoices must be preserved after being archived by grouping them together in a so-called ‘package’, and providing that e-invoice package with a qualified digital signature or seal and a time reference.

This process must be completed no later than three months after the deadline for the submission of the annual fiscal declaration at the end of the fiscal year. E-invoice preservation is an integral feature of Sovos eArchive for invoices stored under Italian law.

What is Turkey's E‑Transformation?

While many governments and tax authorities are now on an e-Transformation journey, this trend began in Latin America in the early 2000s. Turkey followed suit a decade later when it began the digitization of its tax system.

Turkey is further along in its e-Transformation journey than most countries – including EU Member States, which are working towards digitization in their own way with the overarching VAT in the Digital Age initiative.

From e-invoicing to electronic self-employment receipts, Turkey now has a fully-fledged, established digital tax system with many moving parts. To understand Turkey’s e-Transformation, bookmark this page then read on.

At a glance: E-Transformation Turkey

E-Fatura Turkey

CTC Type
E-invoice clearance with both parties registered on the portal

Network
Centralised – e-Fatura Portal delivers the e-invoices to Buyers for B2B transactions

Format
UBL-TR format

eSignature Requirement
Required – fiscal stamp or qualified electronic signature

Archiving requirement
10 years

E-arşiv Fatura Turkey

CTC Type
E-invoice reporting (daily basis)

Network
Decentralised – e-Fatura Portal does not deliver e-arşiv invoices; it’s the taxpayers’ responsibility

Format
UBL-TR format or in a free format such as PDF and must also be available in paper form

eSignature Requirement
Required – fiscal stamp or qualified electronic signature

E-Transformation in Turkey

Turkey stepped up its tax system through digitization in 2012 to help important information be gathered and transmitted with ease and accuracy. It’s further ahead than many other countries, with a variety of electronic systems and documents mandated for many taxpayers – all starting with its e-Ledger obligation.

Turkey joined the eEurope+ initiative and moved fast to ensure it was keeping up with tax digitization efforts, relieving its entire economic ecosystem where information is concerned. The aims of such changes are to reduce VAT fraud, increase governmental access to and control of data, standardise financial and accounting processes and reduce errors.

Now effectively utilising electronic versions of invoices, ledgers, delivery notes, self-employed receipts and more, there are a lot of challenges for taxpayers to overcome to remain compliant amidst Turkey’s e-Transformation.

E-Transformation practices and applications

Turkey’s ambition to electronically transform its tax ecosystem required the development and implementation of many products and services. This presented taxpayers with new requirements and, subsequently, new challenges.

Here are the products and services in Turkey’s e-Transformation system:

e-Fatura

e-Fatura is Turkey’s e-invoicing initiative. Mandated for companies with turnovers of over TRY 5 million, this obligation came into effect on 1 April 2014. There are also sector-based parameters for the nation’s e-invoicing mandate, ignoring the turnover threshold, qualifying the following for an electronic invoice obligation:

  • Companies licensed by the Turkish Energy Market Regulatory Authority
  • Middlemen or merchants trading fruits or vegetables
  • Online service providers facilitating online trade
  • Importers and dealers

Turkey’s e-invoicing initiative is a clearance model and two-way application, with issued invoices needing to be in the UBL-TR format and archived for 10 years. Sovos’ e-invoice solution enables compliance with e-Fatura requirements.

e-Arşiv Fatura

e-Arşiv Fatura is Turkey’s e-arşiv invoice initiative. Taxpayers registered in the e-Fatura system must also issue e-Arşiv invoices, either in the UBL-TR format or in a free format such as PDF.

Real-time clearance is not conducted for the issuance of these invoices, though an e-Arşiv report must be submitted electronically to the tax authority by the end of the following day. e-Arşiv invoices are always created electronically but must be available in paper form unless the buyer agrees to receive the document electronically.

The Sovos e-Arşiv Invoice solution makes e-archive invoice compliance simple.

e-İrsaliye

e-İrsaliye is Turkey’s e-WayBill initiative. The use of e-İrsaliye documents became obligatory for taxpayers that surpass the TRY 10 million revenue threshold on 1 July 2023, though those outside of the scope can voluntarily switch to electronic WayBill documents.

There are two types of paper waybills, namely shipment and transportation. e-İrsaliye largely replaces the shipment waybill.

Information required in this type of e-document includes:

  • Supplier information
  • Issue date and document number
  • Buyer information
  • Type and quantity of the transported goods
  • Shipment date and time

Legally, there is no difference between paper waybills and eWayBills, though the electronic version requires both parties to be registered in the national system.

e-Defter

e-Defter is Turkey’s e-Ledger initiative. The Turkish tax authorities made the e-Ledger application mandatory for e-invoice users and taxpayers, subject to independent audit, in 2015.

These e-documents must be prepared in XBRL-GL format and include specific information in standard XML format – all signed with a financial seal. In addition to producing e-ledgers, taxpayers are required to create a ledger summary which is to be sent monthly to the TRA and archived for 10 years.

Electronic ledgers reduce the time it takes to collect data, save costs associated with the notarization process and ensure compliance with tax processes.

e-Mutabakat

e-Mutabakat is Turkey’s e-Reconciliation initiative. Reconciliation is the communication between accounts to mutually agree on the debit and credit between companies that are part of an agreement.

Turkey’s tax authority has ruled that companies are obliged to make reconciliations at particular times. The last day of the year is typically the day when the account between two parties will be closed unless an agreement or legal requirement states otherwise.

The BA-BS web application developed by the TRA for e-Reconciliation enables taxpayers to compare current agreements and unbalanced agreements before electronic submission of the BA-BA forms.

e-Müstahsil Makbuzu

e-Müstahsil Makbuzu is Turkey’s e-Producer Receipt initiative. This commercial e-document is issued by farmers or wholesalers to keep a record of the products they buy from farmers that don’t bookkeep.

Taxpayers that are obliged to issue producer receipts have had to issue electronic versions of the document, known as e-Müstahsil Makbuzu, since 1 July 2020. However, fruit and vegetable brokers or merchants have been required to issue e-Producer Receipts since 1 January 2020.

Those obliged to utilise e-Producer Receipts may be outside of the scope of e-Fatura, e-Arşiv Fatura and e-Defter requirements.

e-Serbest Meslek

e-Serbest Meslek is Turkey’s e-Self-Employed Receipt (e-SMM) initiative. This obligation came into effect on 1 February 2020 and applies to all self-employed individuals, including:

  • Architects
  • Engineers
  • Financial advisors
  • Lawyers
  • Screenwriters, writers, composers and painters
  • Self-employed doctors, dentists and veterinarians

e-SMM receipts can be created, submitted and reported electronically and carry the same legal weight as paper Self-Employment Receipts. They must be archived for 10 years.

While all the above are prominent e-documents, there are even more electronic documents in Turkey that you should know about. To learn more, read our e-documents overview.

Who is affected by e-Transformation?

E-Transformation includes many documents, each subject to specific thresholds and criteria based on their type. Additionally, certain documents are mandatory for particular sectors without any threshold criteria. E-invoicing is now mandatory for the majority of taxpayers, but it is important to understand which documents are required to be submitted to the tax authorities.

The TRA continues to announce new taxpayer groups in scope of the different document types, so it’s important that businesses stay up to date with the latest information to ensure they remain compliant.

What are the benefits of e-Transformation?

Turkey’s tax transformation aimed to deliver benefits to both the government and taxpayers.

The e-Transformation initiative aims to produce the following benefits:

  • Real-time collection of financial data
  • Reduce VAT fraud and the circulation of fake invoices
  • Increased standardisation to automate accounting processes
  • Improved efficiency and reduction of manual errors through data auto-population

Tax compliance and e-Transformation

Turkey’s e-Transformation has impacted tax compliance, successfully implementing real-time transmission of important financial data.

With data automatically being populated in documents, it reduces the possibility of error via manual input and fraudulent invoices being submitted. The reduction of the VAT gap has been a driving force for many countries, including Turkey. 

Eliminating paper, cartridge, shipping and archiving costs associated with paper invoices is also an advantage to businesses and government.

With over 16 document regulations, Turkey’s e-transformation system requirements are extensive and complex. Understanding which regulations apply and keeping up with the latest tax compliance guidelines is key.

How Sovos can help with your e-Transformation journey

Sovos provided the first global e-Transformation solution suite, helping businesses of all shapes and sizes to meet the demands of Turkish tax mandates. Our platform meets all the requirements, standards and formats defined by the Turkish Revenue Authority.

Organisations choose Sovos as their global compliance partner, partly due to the convenience of having a single vendor to aid compliance wherever and however they do business.

E-Transformation FAQ

E-defter is not mandatory for voluntary e-fatura use.

A special integrator is an intermediary service provider authorised by the Turkish Revenue Administration. Special integrators have the authority to create electronic records on behalf of taxpayers.

Related resources to e‑Transformation

Sovos recently sponsored a benchmark report with SAP Insider to better understand how SAP customers are adapting their strategies and technology investments to evolve their finance and accounting organizations. This blog hits on some of the key points covered in the report and offers some direct responses made by survey respondents, as well as conclusions made by the report author. To get the full report, please download your complimentary copy of SAP S/4HANA Finance and Central Finance: State of the Market.

In this year’s benchmark report, research found that most companies are focused on reducing complexity and cost as a primary driver of their overall finance and accounting, including tax, strategies. With this reduction, they are working to solve their biggest pain point which continues to be a lack of visibility into financial transactions and reporting.

The survey revealed several key strategies and investments that SAPinsiders are prioritizing to evolve their finance and accounting processes and organizations. The number one driver of finance and accounting strategy in 2021 is to reduce cost and complexity. This was named by 57% of our audience as the top driver of their finance and accounting strategy. This jumped 24% from last year. To support their top drivers, a majority (56%) of the finance and accounting teams in the study plan to increase their use of automation in 2021.

Clean and harmonized data and a centralized single point of truth are the most important requirements that SAPinsiders are prioritizing. 83% of survey respondents report that clean data is important or very important, while 80% highlight the significance of the Universal Journal in centralizing critical information.

How do technology and tax intersect?

Continued complexity within core financial and accounting systems is limiting organizations’ ability to adapt rapidly to changing business conditions and provide real-time visibility into operations. That is why the number one driver of finance and accounting strategy based on this year’s survey is the pressure to cut both cost and complexity.

Survey responses and interviews with customers about their largest sources of pain consistently mention system and process complexity as one of their most significant challenges. Respondents are focused on addressing this obstacle in a variety of ways such as through investments in analytics, automation, centralization, and system consolidation.

This directly impacts how companies approach tax as rapidly changing global tax laws and mandates often have organizations playing catch up to ensure they are charging and remitting the proper amounts of tax to each country in which they operate. Failure to do this can lead to costly audits, potential fines and penalties and damage to brand reputation.

Why move to SAP S/4HANA Finance?

Simplicity, speed, and easy access to data were among the top benefits cited by survey respondents who have completed or nearly completed their move to SAP S/4HANA Finance. Several mentioned the ease with which they can go from high-level reports and drill down to the document or line-item level, making it easier to understand the numbers and perform in-depth analysis quickly. This directly aligns with the pain points that were identified in the benchmark report survey.

Why now?

What is clear from this survey and subsequent report is that complexity across all layers of finance is having a direct impact on a companies’ ability to function at the highest operational level possible and is threating to impact the bottom line.

Accounting for tax early in your migration strategies and technology upgrades is a key component to ensuring that you are prepared to handle the challenges of modern tax on an international scale. For companies that operate on a multi-national basis, having a centralized approach to tax with enhanced visibility and reporting capabilities is imperative to achieving and remaining compliant no matter how many changes to tax law are introduced every year.

Please download the full report for a more detailed explanation of these critical areas of focus.

 

Take Action

Ready to learn more about the impact SAP S/4HANA Finance can have on your tax organization? Download your complementary copy of the SAP S/4HANA Finance and Central Finance: State of the Market report for all the latest information.

Six months after Brexit there’s still plenty of confusion. Our VAT Managed Services and Consultancy teams continue to get lots of questions. So here are answers to some of the more common VAT compliance concerns post-Brexit.

How does postponed VAT accounting work?

Since Brexit, the UK has changed the way import VAT is accounted for. Before January 2021, you had to pay or defer import VAT at the time the goods entered the UK. Because of the volumes of trade between the UK and the EU, the government have understandably changed this. So, now rather than having to pay import VAT you can choose to postpone it to the VAT return. In practice, this effectively means it’s paid and recovered on the same VAT return. This is a significant cash flow benefit. It’s common among many EU Member States and it was allowed in the UK many years ago. The UK reintroduced it from the start of this year.

There’s no need to be approved to use postponed VAT accounting but an election to use it must be made when completing each customs declaration. It doesn’t happen automatically and the reality is that businesses can choose whether they want to use it or not. The import VAT is then accounted for in box 1 of the UK VAT return and then recovered in box 4. If you’re a fully taxable business and the VAT is recoverable, this will mean that there is no need to make any payment of the import VAT. There are no costs involved in using postponed VAT accounting. The business will have to download a monthly statement from the Customs Declaration Service. The statement shows the postponed amount of VAT.

There are also import VAT accounting mechanisms in place in the EU but they vary from country to country. If you’re a UK business and you’re going to be the importer of the goods into the EU, there is the ability to use postponed accounting in some other countries but the rules on how it applies can vary. In some countries it’s like the UK, so no permission required.

In others you’ll need to make an application and meet the conditions in place. If there is no postponed VAT accounting, there may be the opportunity to defer import VAT which can still provide a cash flow benefit. It’s really important that companies understand how it works in the Member State of import, and if it’s available to them as it can have a big impact on cash flow. It’s good news that the UK have reintroduced postponed VAT accounting as it’s certainly a benefit and applies to all imports, not just those that come from the EU.

I’m shipping my own goods to a third party logistics provider in the Netherlands. I will ship the goods to customers around the EU. How do I value the goods for customs purposes as they remain in my ownership? They’re not of UK origin so customs duty may apply.

This question comes up a lot as customs valuation, like the principle of origin has not arisen for many years for UK companies who have only traded with the EU.

The rules on customs valuation are complex. In this scenario, there is no sale of the goods. So it’s not possible to use the transaction value which is the default valuation method. As customs duty is not recoverable, it’s essential that the correct valuation method is used. This minimises the amount of duty paid and also to remove the possibility of the customs and VAT authorities challenging a valuation. We would recommend seeking  specialist advice.

If I sell B2C to customers in the EU do I need to register for VAT in each Member State?

When goods go from Great Britain to the EU, we’re currently in the transition period between Brexit and the introduction of the EU e-commerce VAT package which comes into play on 1 July 2021. Until then, whether you need to be registered or not in an EU country depends on the arrangements in place with your customer. If you sell on a Delivery Duty Paid (DDP) basis, you’re undertaking to import those goods into the EU. So if you do that, you’ll incur import VAT on entry into each country and then make a local sale. If you do that in every Member State country, you’ll have to register for VAT in every Member State.

It should be noted that these are the rules for GB to EU sales and not those from Northern Ireland. This is because the Northern Ireland protocol treats NI to EU sales under the EU rules. The distance selling rules that were in force before the end of 2020 still apply.

Going forward, the EU has recognised that this isn’t really a manageable system. There has been significant abuse of low value consignment relief. LCVR relieves imports of up to €22 from VAT. So they’re introducing a new concept – the Import One Stop Shop (IOSS). IOSS will be available from 1 July 2021 as part of the EU E-Commerce VAT package. From this point, the principle is that for goods with an intrinsic value of below €15. you can use the IOSS. IOSS accounts for VAT in all the countries to which you deliver. You only need a VAT registration in one country where you then pay all your VAT. You submit one return in that country on a monthly basis. This should simplify VAT compliance and ease the admin burden.

There will also be a One Stop Shop (OSS) for intra-EU transactions. So the simplifications ahead will reduce the burden to businesses. What’s important is making sure you review your options. Make an informed decision as to which is the right scheme for your business. Ensure you can comply with VAT obligations to avoid VAT compliance problems in the future.

Take Action

Get in touch to discuss your post-Brexit VAT requirements and download our e-book EU E-Commerce VAT Package: New Rules for 2021.