France is pressing ahead with one of the European Union’s most ambitious digital tax reforms, the rollout of a mandatory B2B electronic invoicing and e-reporting regime. This move aims to modernise VAT collection, combat fraud, and improve operational efficiency across all companies operating in France.
Since 2023, the French government has been steadily preparing for this transformation as part of a broader digital tax strategy. Under the new framework, businesses in scope must issue invoices in structured formats and be able to receive them through certified platforms. By doing so, invoice processing will become faster, VAT reporting will be more accurate, and administrative overheads will be significantly reduced.
With deadlines now confirmed, the time for planning is over. Companies must ensure their systems and processes are ready to meet both technical and legal requirements well ahead of the go-live dates.
The mandate has its legal foundation in Ordinance No. 2021-1190 and Article 26 of the 2022 Finance Law. It applies to VAT-registered businesses established in France and requires them to issue, receive, and electronically report domestic B2B invoices.
Invoice data will flow through the Portail Public de Facturation (PPF), the government’s public invoicing portal, using structured formats such as UBL or CII. A hybrid format, Factur-X, combines a PDF with embedded XML data, ensuring both human readability and machine processing.
This system builds on the Chorus Pro platform already in use for B2G (business-to-government) invoicing since 2020. Over time, the scope will expand to cover B2C transactions and cross-border reporting through structured e-reporting.
Defining necessary criteria for Fixed Establishment.
Originally set for July 2024, the rollout was postponed to allow more time for readiness. The French government has now locked in a phased approach:
In June 2025, the National Assembly rejected proposals for further delays, confirming these dates as final. While a three-month grace period may be granted by decree, companies should treat September 2026 and September 2027 as immovable deadlines.
A number of updates have reshaped the technical backbone of the mandate.
In May and June 2025, AFNOR released version 3.0 of its technical specifications, refining the data model, invoice lifecycle stages, and message formats. Three formal standards were introduced:
The Factur-X format was also updated to v1.07, bringing it in line with EU semantic standards and supporting additional lifecycle states.
In July 2025, France’s DGFiP was recognised as the official Peppol Authority. This allows certified Partner Dematerialisation Platforms (PDPs) to route invoices domestically and internationally via the Peppol Network.
On 27 June 2025, the PPF business directory went live, listing over 8,000 companies and enabling address-based routing of invoices. Over 90 PDPs are currently engaged in sandbox testing, with Peppol endpoints and validation tools being progressively integrated.
DGFiP has confirmed it will introduce two levels of certification:
This tiered approach offers smaller providers a pathway to full compliance.
France’s e-invoicing pilot, launched in early 2025, is moving through three phases:
The final testing phase begins in February 2026 and will include validation of the national “concentrator”, a data aggregation and audit tool.
With less than a year before the first compliance deadline, businesses should be taking action now. This includes:
The earlier companies start, the smoother the transition will be, especially as certification slots for PDPs and system integrations may become scarce closer to the deadline.
Beyond avoiding penalties, aligning with the France B2B e-invoicing mandate has broader benefits. Real-time invoice exchange improves cash flow visibility, reduces payment disputes, and creates a complete digital audit trail. For VAT compliance teams, it means faster reconciliation and more accurate tax reporting.
In a wider context, France’s move is part of the EU’s trend toward continuous transaction controls (CTCs). Businesses that adapt early will be better placed to handle similar requirements in other jurisdictions.
At VAT IT, e-invoicing is part of our end-to-end VAT ecosystem – alongside reclaim and compliance. As an active participant in France’s pilot programme and a certified Partner Dematerialisation Platform (PDP), we work closely with the DGFiP and AFNOR to deliver compliant, user-friendly invoicing solutions. Our technology integrates seamlessly with ERP systems, Peppol routing, and the PPF, ensuring businesses stay ahead of regulatory deadlines while keeping operations simple, connected, and future-proof.
Marketplace Facilitator Laws and US Sales Tax: Impact...
Marketplace Facilitator Laws and US Sales Tax: Impact on Global E-Commerce Sellers Global e-commerce continues to expand at an unprecedented pace, but with that growth comes increasing complexity in electronic commerce taxation. One of the most significant developments in recent years is the introduction of marketplace facilitator laws across the United States. These rules have […]
Cross-Border VAT Compliance Pitfalls That Cost Finance Teams...
Cross-Border VAT Compliance Pitfalls That Cost Finance Teams Millions Expanding across borders offers tremendous opportunities for growth. However, for finance teams, international expansion often introduces one of the most complex areas of indirect taxation: cross-border VAT compliance. Value Added Tax systems are enforced in more than 170 countries worldwide, each with their own rules, […]
e-Invoicing Data Quality: Common Errors Across Jurisdictions Data...
e-Invoicing Data Quality: Common Errors Across Jurisdictions Data quality is central to modern tax compliance. With e-invoicing mandates expanding globally, invoices must meet strict technical and regulatory standards in clearance and real-time reporting systems. Even minor errors can trigger immediate rejection or penalties, as machine-readable e-invoices leave little room for interpretation once submitted to tax authorities. […]
Top Indirect Tax Compliance Services in 2026 As...
Top Indirect Tax Compliance Services in 2026 As global tax authorities accelerate digital reporting and real-time oversight, indirect tax compliance has become a growing operational priority for multinational businesses. Unlike direct taxes, indirect tax obligations, including VAT, GST, sales tax and customs duties, are transaction-driven, jurisdiction-specific and increasingly automated by governments. Errors can lead not only to […]
Vietnam VAT Refunds: Seller Declaration No Longer a...
Vietnam VAT Refunds: Seller Declaration No Longer a Barrier for Buyers VAT refunds have long been a source of frustration for businesses operating in Vietnam. Even when buyers complied fully with the law, refunds could be delayed or denied for reasons entirely outside their control. The most common issue was simple but damaging: if a supplier failed to declare […]
7 Best e-Invoicing Compliance Solutions in 2026 As...
7 Best e-Invoicing Compliance Solutions in 2026 As governments accelerate digital tax reform, e-invoicing is no longer a process improvement, it is a legal requirement. From real-time clearance models in Europe to continuous transaction controls emerging across the Middle East, businesses must now implement compliant, scalable and future-ready systems. Selecting from the best e-invoicing compliance solutions in 2026 […]
Marketplace Facilitator Laws and US Sales Tax: Impact...
Marketplace Facilitator Laws and US Sales Tax: Impact on Global E-Commerce Sellers Global e-commerce continues to expand at an unprecedented pace, but with that growth comes increasing complexity in electronic commerce taxation. One of the most significant developments in recent years is the introduction of marketplace facilitator laws across the United States. These rules have […]
Cross-Border VAT Compliance Pitfalls That Cost Finance Teams...
Cross-Border VAT Compliance Pitfalls That Cost Finance Teams Millions Expanding across borders offers tremendous opportunities for growth. However, for finance teams, international expansion often introduces one of the most complex areas of indirect taxation: cross-border VAT compliance. Value Added Tax systems are enforced in more than 170 countries worldwide, each with their own rules, […]
e-Invoicing Data Quality: Common Errors Across Jurisdictions Data...
e-Invoicing Data Quality: Common Errors Across Jurisdictions Data quality is central to modern tax compliance. With e-invoicing mandates expanding globally, invoices must meet strict technical and regulatory standards in clearance and real-time reporting systems. Even minor errors can trigger immediate rejection or penalties, as machine-readable e-invoices leave little room for interpretation once submitted to tax authorities. […]
Top Indirect Tax Compliance Services in 2026 As...
Top Indirect Tax Compliance Services in 2026 As global tax authorities accelerate digital reporting and real-time oversight, indirect tax compliance has become a growing operational priority for multinational businesses. Unlike direct taxes, indirect tax obligations, including VAT, GST, sales tax and customs duties, are transaction-driven, jurisdiction-specific and increasingly automated by governments. Errors can lead not only to […]
Vietnam VAT Refunds: Seller Declaration No Longer a...
Vietnam VAT Refunds: Seller Declaration No Longer a Barrier for Buyers VAT refunds have long been a source of frustration for businesses operating in Vietnam. Even when buyers complied fully with the law, refunds could be delayed or denied for reasons entirely outside their control. The most common issue was simple but damaging: if a supplier failed to declare […]
7 Best e-Invoicing Compliance Solutions in 2026 As...
7 Best e-Invoicing Compliance Solutions in 2026 As governments accelerate digital tax reform, e-invoicing is no longer a process improvement, it is a legal requirement. From real-time clearance models in Europe to continuous transaction controls emerging across the Middle East, businesses must now implement compliant, scalable and future-ready systems. Selecting from the best e-invoicing compliance solutions in 2026 […]
VAT on Employee Expenses: What is Recoverable and...
VAT on Employee Expenses: What is Recoverable and What Is Not Employee expenses are a necessary part of doing business. From travel and accommodation to meals, client meetings, and day-to-day operational costs, employees often incur expenses on behalf of their employer. What many businesses underestimate, however, is how much VAT sits within these costs and […]
VAT Compliance Risk in the EU: Where Companies...
VAT Compliance Risk in the EU: Where Companies Lose Control Value Added Tax (VAT) remains one of the more complex tax systems in the world. For companies trading across borders, particularly within the European Union, VAT is an integrated compliance system including registrations, reporting, invoicing, and data exchange. As the regulatory environment and digital reporting requirements continue to expand, VAT compliance risks have become a greater concern. Businesses that fail to control it face the probability of incurring penalties, reduced cash-flow, […]
VAT IT and Navan make Reclaiming VAT Easy...
VAT IT and Navan make Reclaiming VAT Easy Companies forfeit billions annually in unclaimed VAT from travel expenses, as highlighted here. Many businesses overlook this refund opportunity or struggle with its complexities, missing out on vital cash flow opportunities. Two-thirds of businesses do not explore VAT reclaims or capture just a small portion of what they could be rightfully due. That’s a costly implication, as travel and expense data holds untapped VAT potential. “The European VAT landscape […]
Sweden’s Temporary VAT Cut on Food: What It...
Sweden’s Temporary VAT Cut on Food: What It Means for 2026 and Beyond Rising food inflation has placed sustained pressure on households and businesses across Europe. In response, Sweden has introduced a temporary VAT reduction on food, aiming to ease cost pressures while stabilising consumer demand. While the policy is positioned as a short-term relief […]
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields
"*" indicates required fields