Norway is taking a decisive step toward digital tax compliance. In March 2026, the government announced plans to introduce mandatory e-invoicing for businesses starting January 1, 2027, followed by broader digital accounting obligations in the coming years.
The proposal, published by the Norwegian Government, outlines a phased approach that will significantly reshape how companies issue, receive, and process invoices.
Under the proposed framework, all businesses will be required to send electronic invoices from 2027. This marks a major shift from the current setup, where e-invoicing is widely used—especially in the public sector—but not universally mandatory in B2B transactions.
The reform does not stop there.
From January 1, 2030, companies will also be required to:
This means that e-invoicing will become part of a broader digital ecosystem, rather than a standalone compliance requirement.
Norway is not starting from scratch. The country already has a mature e-invoicing landscape, particularly through its use of Peppol, the international framework for electronic document exchange.
The new mandate is expected to build on this existing infrastructure, leveraging standardized formats and interoperability across systems. For businesses, this should reduce implementation friction compared to markets where entirely new platforms are introduced.
At the same time, it reinforces a growing global trend: governments are moving toward structured, real-time financial data flows instead of relying on periodic reporting.
Although the mandate is still in the proposal stage, the direction is clear. Companies operating in Norway should begin preparing for:
For multinational organizations, this is yet another example of how fragmented the global e-invoicing landscape is becoming. Each country follows a slightly different model, timeline, and technical standard.
Norway’s announcement fits into a wider European and global movement toward digital VAT reporting and e-invoicing mandates. While some countries adopt clearance models with real-time validation by tax authorities, others—like Norway—are evolving toward standardized exchange frameworks supported by interoperable networks.
In both cases, the objective is the same: greater transparency, reduced fraud, and more efficient tax collection.
The proposed timeline gives businesses time to adapt—but not to delay.
With mandatory e-invoicing set for 2027 and full digital accounting requirements by 2030, organizations that start preparing early will be better positioned to handle both regulatory and operational changes.
As Norway moves forward, it reinforces a key message for businesses worldwide:
e-invoicing is no longer optional—it is becoming the foundation of modern financial operations.