UAE e-invoicing replaces PDFs with structured PINT AE invoices exchanged through FTA-Accredited Service Providers over Peppol — pilot now, ASP appointed by 30 October 2026 for AED 50m+ businesses, mandatory from 1 January 2027, smaller phases after.
Every VAT-registered business in the country is about to change how it invoices. Most are treating it as an IT project. It is also a tax-compliance and contracts project — and the businesses that realise that early will spend a fraction of what the January laggards will.
The timeline
| Date | What happens | Who |
|---|---|---|
| Jul 2026 | Voluntary pilot phase live | Early adopters |
| 30 Oct 2026 | Deadline to appoint an Accredited Service Provider | Revenue ≥ AED 50m |
| 1 Jan 2027 | Mandatory B2B/B2G e-invoicing begins | Revenue ≥ AED 50m |
| Later phases | Progressive extension | Smaller businesses |
How the system actually works
Invoices are issued as PINT AE structured XML — not PDFs — and exchanged through an FTA-Accredited Service Provider over the Peppol network, which validates the document, delivers it to your counterparty's ASP, and reports the tax data to the FTA (the "five-corner model"). The legal consequence: once your phase starts, a PDF or paper invoice is no longer the operative tax invoice for in-scope transactions.
Why this is a legal project, not just an IT one
- Invoice validity — a non-compliant invoice risks not being a valid tax invoice, jeopardising your customer's input-VAT recovery and your VAT position.
- Contracts — invoicing clauses, self-billing arrangements, disbursement mechanics and payment triggers written for the PDF era need reviewing against the structured-data reality.
- Intercompany flows — management fees and group recharges become visible, structured data — the same flows transfer pricing scrutinises. Undocumented arrangements photograph badly in XML.
- QFZP exposure — for free-zone companies on the 0% rate, e-invoicing hands the FTA a live view of revenue composition. The de-minimis line becomes machine-checkable.
- Penalties — the FTA's penalty framework was rewritten with effect from April 2026; e-invoicing failures land inside it, on top of the existing compliance calendar.
The five-step preparation plan
- 1. Confirm your phase — measured on revenue; groups should check entity by entity.
- 2. Appoint the ASP now — selection, contract terms (liability, data, exit) and integration lead-time all sit on your side of the October deadline.
- 3. Clean master data — TRNs, legal names, addresses; validation failures are mostly data failures.
- 4. Map every invoice flow — standard sales, self-billing, disbursements, intercompany — against PINT AE data requirements, and fix the contracts that don't match.
- 5. Test in the pilot — the window exists precisely so January is boring.
How we help
Neo Legal handles the legal layer of e-invoicing readiness: ASP contract review, invoicing and self-billing clauses, intercompany documentation, and the QFZP and VAT analysis the new data transparency demands — part of our tax practice.
This article is general information as at July 2026 and is not legal advice. Phase thresholds and dates continue to be refined by Ministerial Decision; confirm current requirements for your business before acting.
