On 15 January 2026 France and Germany will roll out updated hybrid e‑invoicing standards—Factur‑X 1.0.8 in France and ZUGFeRD 2.4 in Germany—aligned with the EU EN 16931 framework and the French AFNOR XP Z12‑012 standard. The update adds support for complex invoice structures, a newer UN/CEFACT CII release, clearer rounding tolerance rules, and updated documentation. Businesses invoicing in either country should verify ERP compatibility and adjust tax logic to meet the new tolerances.
Global e-Invoicing Requirements Tracker
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VATAi · 1 day ago
France will terminate the one‑off fiscal representation route for Customs Procedure 42 on 1 January 2026, requiring non‑EU sellers to register for French VAT in their own name and file ongoing returns. The change removes the simplified “France‑as‑gateway” model and forces operators to adopt a formal French VAT footprint or reroute through other EU members.
VATCalc · 8 days ago
France has proposed raising its VAT registration thresholds for goods, services, legal services, and non‑profit organisations, but the changes are currently on hold pending budget approval. The new thresholds would be €93,500 for goods and accommodation services, €41,250 for services, €55,000 for legal services, and €80,011 for non‑profit organisations, with an EU‑wide scheme offering a €100,000 pan‑Europe threshold for small businesses.
VATCalc · 8 days ago
This guide outlines France’s VAT framework, including standard and reduced rates, registration thresholds, and upcoming e‑invoicing requirements. It also details compliance obligations for non‑resident businesses, digital services, and import VAT deferment schemes.
Novutech · 10 days ago
France confirmed its phased B2B e-invoicing rollout starting September 2026 for large enterprises, with full mandate for all businesses by September 2027. Factur-X is one of three mandatory formats.
EY Global Tax News · about 4 hours ago
Turkiye’s Presidential Decree No. 10813, published 7 January 2026, abolishes simplified customs declarations for B2C e‑commerce shipments valued at €30 or less, effective 6 February 2026. All such imports must now use regular customs procedures, and products up to €1500 that are not of commercial quantity require full duty declaration and necessary permits. Medicines and food supplements under prescription up to €1500 remain exempt from the €30 limit but are subject to fixed duty rates and potential special consumption tax.
BDO · about 5 hours ago
The EU General Court clarified that simplified triangulation can be used in four-party supply chains if the third party has disposal power, even when goods are delivered to a fourth party. Dutch policy confirms this but adds an establishment requirement for party C, which may be overridden by the EU VAT Directive. The ruling also allows Member States to refuse the scheme in cases of VAT fraud.