Are you e-Invoice ready? Get your free compliance assessment in 5 minutesAre you e-Invoice ready?Get Your Score
e-Invoice.app
All Guides
United Arab Emirates

United Arab Emirates e-Invoicing Guide

Key facts, deadlines, and compliance requirements for the UAE's national e-invoicing rollout.

Model:DecentralisedStandard:PINT AE (UAE-specific e-invoicing standard based on UBL 2.1)B2B:Phased Rollout
Updated 2026-03-06

What is e-Invoicing in United Arab Emirates?

The United Arab Emirates is rolling out a large-scale e-invoicing program in the Gulf region. Under Cabinet Decision No. 100/2025, all VAT-registered businesses will be required to issue structured electronic invoices through a 5-corner DCTCE model, a framework where Accredited Service Providers handle invoice exchange while the Federal Tax Authority receives tax data as the fifth corner in near real-time.

Unlike simpler PDF-based systems, the UAE mandate requires invoices in the PINT AE format, built on UBL 2.1. The Ministry of Finance published official Electronic Invoicing Guidelines V1.0 in February 2026, detailing mandatory field specifications across 6 tax categories and 6 invoice categories. Businesses need compliant software capable of generating, transmitting, and receiving structured XML data through the Peppol network.

What is the DCTCE model?

Decentralised Continuous Transaction Control and Exchange. A 5-corner framework where Accredited Service Providers handle invoice exchange via Peppol while the FTA receives tax data as the fifth corner in near real-time.

View full country data

Key Deadlines & Milestones

The UAE is taking a phased approach. Voluntary adoption opens in July 2026, with Phase 1 mandatory compliance starting January 2027 for businesses with annual revenue above AED 50 million. Businesses in Phase 1 must appoint an Accredited Service Provider by 31 July 2026. Subsequent phases will progressively lower the revenue threshold through 2027.

Oct 2024
Legal amendments introducedNational
Mar 2025
Accreditation requirements for service providers publishedPreparation
Sept 2025
Major Regulatory AnnouncementsNational
Nov 2025
Cabinet Decision No. 106/2025 - Penalties framework publishedNational
Feb 2026
Ministry of Finance Publishes E-Invoicing Implementation GuidelinesPreparation
Jul 2026
Pilot Phase LaunchPilot
Jul 2026
Phase 2: Large Taxpayers (>AED 50M) - ASP Appointment DeadlineLarge businesses
Jan 2027
Phase 2: Large Taxpayers Mandatory ImplementationLarge businesses
Mar 2027
Phase 3 & 4: ASP Appointment DeadlineSMEs and Government
Jul 2027
Phase 3: Other Businesses Mandatory ImplementationSMEs
Oct 2027
Phase 4: Government Entities Mandatory ImplementationGovernment sector

When does the UAE's e-invoicing mandate become mandatory?

Phase 1 is mandatory from 1 January 2027 for businesses with annual revenue above AED 50 million. Voluntary adoption opens from 1 July 2026.

View full implementation timeline

Who Needs to Comply?

All VAT-registered entities conducting B2B transactions will eventually fall under the mandate. The rollout is revenue-based: businesses with the highest annual turnover are in the first wave, with subsequent phases lowering the threshold progressively. Non-UAE resident entities registered for UAE VAT must also implement electronic invoicing if they are obligated to issue tax invoices under the VAT Decree-Law.

B2C transactions are currently excluded from the mandatory scope. Self-billed commercial documents are also excluded from the requirements. Entities that voluntarily adopt e-invoicing before their mandatory date are not subject to penalties during the voluntary period, making early adoption a low-risk strategy.

For businesses operating within VAT groups, a 24-month grace period beginning January 1, 2027 exempts intra-group transactions from e-invoicing requirements. The guidelines also address special scenarios including Free Zone entities, margin scheme supplies, summary invoices, continuous supplies, and exports.

Are B2C transactions covered by the UAE mandate?

B2C transactions are currently excluded from the mandatory scope. Self-billed commercial documents are also excluded.

View full exemption details

How Does It Work?

The UAE uses a decentralised 5-corner model. Businesses do not connect directly to a government platform. Instead, they send and receive invoices through Accredited Service Providers who handle validation, routing, and delivery via the Peppol network.

The FTA sits as the fifth corner, receiving tax-relevant data from ASPs in near real-time. This means the tax authority has visibility into transactions without being a bottleneck in the invoice exchange process. Businesses must appoint an ASP (official guidelines for selecting an Accredited Service Provider were published in February 2026) and ensure their ERP or accounting software can generate PINT AE-compliant invoices.

VAT amounts and total payable figures must be displayed in AED, with foreign currency conversions following UAE Central Bank exchange rates. The mandatory fields specification covers invoice type codes, transaction type flags, seller and buyer identifiers (including TIN-based electronic addresses and TRN where applicable), tax category breakdowns, and line-level attributes, all transmitted as structured XML aligned to the PINT AE specification.

How long must invoices be retained in the UAE?

5 years per Federal Decree-Law No. 8/2017 on VAT. Accredited Service Providers must also adhere to data storage and archival requirements.

View full technical specifications

What Are the Penalties?

The UAE has published a detailed penalty framework under Cabinet Decision No. 106/2025. Penalties are structured by violation type, with the heaviest fines targeting businesses that fail to implement the system entirely or fail to appoint an Accredited Service Provider.

Failure to Implement E-Invoicing System—AED 5,000 per month (or part thereof) for failure to implement the Electronic Invoicing System or appoint an Accredited Service Provider within the prescribed timeline under Cabinet Decision No. 106/2025.
Failure to Issue/Transmit Electronic Invoice—AED 100 per Electronic Invoice, up to a maximum of AED 5,000 per calendar month for failure to issue and transmit invoices to recipients through the system within the prescribed timeline.
Failure to Issue/Transmit Electronic Credit Note—AED 100 per Electronic Credit Note, up to a maximum of AED 5,000 per calendar month for failure to issue and transmit credit notes to recipients through the system within the prescribed timeline.
System Failure Notification (Issuer)—AED 1,000 per day (or part thereof) for failure by the issuer to notify the Federal Tax Authority of a system failure within the prescribed timeline.
System Failure Notification (Recipient)—AED 1,000 per day (or part thereof) for failure by the recipient to notify the Federal Tax Authority of a system failure within the prescribed timeline.
Failure to Notify Data Changes to ASP—AED 1,000 per day (or part thereof) for failure by issuer or recipient to notify the appointed Accredited Service Provider of changes to data registered with the Authority within the prescribed timeline.

What are the penalties for not implementing the e-invoicing system in the UAE?

AED 5,000 per month for failure to implement the system or appoint an Accredited Service Provider. AED 100 per invoice (capped at AED 5,000/month) for failure to issue or transmit e-invoices. AED 1,000 per day for failure to notify the FTA of system failures.

View full penalty details

Looking for a vendor that supports United Arab Emirates's e-invoicing requirements?

Get matched with compliant vendors based on your countries, ERP, and business size.

Start vendor matchBrowse vendors

How e-invoice.app Helps

From regulatory research to vendor selection, we provide the tools to navigate United Arab Emirates's e-invoicing requirements with confidence.

Assess Your Compliance

See full regulatory details, mandate status, and implementation timeline.

View country data

Find the Right Vendor

Get matched with e-invoicing vendors that support your countries and ERP.

Start vendor match

Compare Vendors

Browse 200+ benchmarked e-invoicing vendors. Filter by country, category, and capabilities.

Browse vendor directory

Stay Compliant

Get notified when regulations change. Track updates across 90+ countries.

View news & updates

Related Guides

ILIsrael GuideSGSingapore GuideSKSlovakia Guide