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UAE Gives Businesses More Time to Appoint E-Invoicing Providers

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The UAE has extended the deadline for certain businesses to appoint accredited e-invoicing service providers, giving companies more time to prepare for the country’s upcoming e-invoicing framework.

Businesses with annual revenues exceeding AED 50 million will now have until October 30, 2026 to appoint an accredited service provider, instead of the previously expected July 31, 2026 deadline.

The extension comes as the UAE continues rolling out its wider e-invoicing initiative, which is designed to modernise tax administration, improve VAT compliance, and accelerate the country’s broader digital transformation agenda.

For many businesses, the additional time will be welcome. Implementing e-invoicing is not simply a technical formality, it can require system upgrades, ERP integration, workflow adjustments, and coordination across finance, tax, and operational teams.

Larger businesses in particular may still need significant preparation work, including:

  • assessing accredited service providers,
  • reviewing accounting and ERP compatibility,
  • updating invoicing and reporting procedures,
  • strengthening VAT documentation processes, and
  • preparing internal teams for digital compliance requirements.

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While the revised timeline reduces immediate pressure, businesses are still likely to benefit from starting preparations early, especially where existing systems are complex or heavily customised.

Businesses preparing for the upcoming changes may also find useful our detailed guide on the UAE’s e-invoicing framework and implementation process.

The UAE’s approach reflects a wider international trend as tax authorities increasingly move toward real-time or near real-time digital reporting systems to improve transparency and streamline tax oversight.

For companies operating internationally, the shift toward digital tax reporting also reinforces the growing importance of substance, operational alignment, and consistent compliance across jurisdictions. Tax authorities are increasingly looking beyond formal structures and focusing more closely on how businesses actually operate in practice.

Businesses affected by the upcoming e-invoicing requirements may benefit from reviewing their existing accounting systems, VAT processes, and implementation timelines well in advance. WellTax, a UK/UAE boutique accountancy and tax advisory firm, continues to monitor developments around the UAE’s e-invoicing framework and related compliance obligations.

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