Ireland will introduce a 9% reduced VAT rate for restaurant, catering and hairdresser services from 1 July 2026, replacing the previous 13.5% rate. The change requires businesses to correctly allocate mixed supplies to the appropriate rates—accommodation remains at 13.5% and alcoholic drinks at 23%—to avoid penalties.
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The Invoicing Hub · about 1 month ago
Ireland is set to introduce a comprehensive e‑invoicing mandate in phases, with B2B reception mandatory from November 2028 and full ViDA compliance by July 2030. The mandate will rely on the Peppol network, using Peppol BIS 3.0 for B2B and Peppol BIS/PINT‑EU 4.0 for cross‑border e‑reporting. Revenue will issue detailed guidance ahead of each phase.
RSM Ireland · about 2 months ago
RSM Ireland’s Spring 2026 VAT newsletter highlights key updates from Irish Revenue, including a new e‑invoicing mandate for large corporates, a 9% VAT rate for qualifying apartment construction, and guidance on Relevant Contracts Tax and fraud prevention.
Fintua · 3 months ago
Ireland is rolling out a domestic eInvoicing regime, beginning with large corporates in November 2028 and expanding to all VAT‑registered businesses by July 2030. The initiative aligns with the EU’s ViDA framework and uses the EN 16931 standard for structured invoices, aiming to improve real‑time reporting and fraud prevention.
Fintua · 4 months ago
Fintua’s blog post reviews Ireland’s upcoming e‑invoicing mandate under the EU’s Digital Reporting Requirements, outlining the phased implementation schedule and the planned adoption of Peppol. It highlights the 10‑day invoicing window, the 2030 compliance deadline, and the role of AI in ensuring data quality. The piece serves as a practical guide for Irish businesses preparing for the new digital VAT regime.
Shared Services Link · 4 months ago
Irish Revenue has clarified the implementation schedule and scope for the B2B e‑invoicing and real‑time reporting regime under the ViDA reforms. The phased rollout begins in November 2028 for large corporates, expands to all VAT‑registered businesses in intra‑EU trade by November 2029, and covers all cross‑border B2B transactions from July 2030. Large corporates must issue structured e‑invoices and report key data, while all VAT‑registered businesses must be technically capable of receiving structured e‑invoices.
EY Global Tax News · 4 months ago
Ireland’s Revenue has clarified that large corporates managed by its Large Corporates Division will be required to adopt e‑invoicing from 1 November 2028, while financial services firms will not be in scope for Phase One but must still receive e‑invoices from that date, with full implementation starting in November 2029. The move aligns with the EU’s VAT in the Digital Age initiative and will be followed by real‑time VAT reporting.
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Key Takeaways
The new reduced VAT rate is 9%, effective 1 July 2026.
It takes effect on 1 July 2026.
Accommodation remains at 13.5% reduced rate, while alcoholic drinks are taxed at the standard 23% rate.
Businesses must correctly allocate each component to its applicable rate (e.g., accommodation 13.5%, dinner 9%, drinks 23%) to avoid penalties.
Primary source
Read the full article at Meridian Global ServicesThis summary was published on VATfaqs.com on 2 July 2026. It relates to VAT developments in Ireland. The original source is Meridian Global Services.