UK confirms mandatory e-invoicing from April 2029: what businesses need to know
The UK has finally drawn a line under years of deliberation. Following its 2025 public consultation, the government has confirmed that mandatory...

Infinite has been our IT systems provider since 2004. The implementation of EDI system automated the flow of documents (such as invoices and orders). The delivery of our products takes place faster now, while the cost of order processing is noticeably lower.
Tomasz Bekasiewicz
IT Manager
2 min read
Admin Jun 24, 2026 4:28:42 PM
The UK has finally drawn a line under years of deliberation. Following its 2025 public consultation, the government has confirmed that mandatory e-invoicing will apply to all VAT invoices from 1 April 2029 — a decisive move from today's voluntary regime toward fully digital tax administration.
Here is what has been confirmed, what is still open, and what it means for businesses trading in the UK.
The mandate was set out in the government's consultation response, published on 26 November 2025 alongside the Autumn Budget. The key points:
For context, e-invoicing has been mandatory for suppliers to the UK public sector since 2020, and VAT invoices must continue to be archived for six years.
The detail is still to come. A period of stakeholder collaboration began in January 2026 to design the regime, and the government will publish a full implementation roadmap at Budget 2026 — covering technical standards, scope and the phased timeline. Until then, businesses should plan around a broad 2029 deadline rather than wait for the final specifications.
The UK's decision aligns it with a fast-moving international trend. Mandates are already live or imminent across Europe — Belgium (January 2026), Poland (KSeF, February–April 2026), France (from September 2026) and Germany (phased through 2028) — while the EU's VAT in the Digital Age (ViDA) package makes cross-border B2B e-invoicing mandatory from July 2030. Businesses operating internationally will encounter structured e-invoicing requirements in several jurisdictions well before the UK's own deadline.
Even though 2029 feels distant, the transition is substantial for organisations with complex supply chains or legacy systems. Sensible first steps include:
Treated early, the mandate is less a compliance burden than an opportunity to modernise invoicing, speed up payments and reduce processing costs across the business.
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