eInvoicing Documentation
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eInvoicing in Slovakia
Act No. 2015/2019 on Guaranteed Electronic Invoicing and the Central Economic System is in force from 01 August 2019. The act specifies regulation for the requirements of eInvoicing for public administrations and their suppliers. They are obliged to use eInvoicing if the invoice amount issues by a public supplier is higher than EUR 5,000[1]. The use of eInvoicing in Slovakia, in the private sector, is allowed on a voluntary basis. The law above covers the transposition as stated in article 11(1) of Directive 2014/55/EU, however, eInvoicing is not yet fully implemented. The obligations of the entities involved in eInvoicing will be introduced incrementally, according to the readiness of the eInvoicing platform called Information System for Electronic Invoicing (IS EFA)[2]. In February 2021, the Ministry of Finance in Slovakia revealed a new draft law[3] on sending invoice data to the Financial Administration. According to the authorities’ preliminary statements, the aim is to introduce real-time invoice reporting that is supposed to be mandatory for all transactions (i.e. including B2B too) over time. A public consultation on the above-mentioned measure was conducted until the end of March 2021. Preliminarily, the validity of the law is proposed at the beginning of 2022. Subsequently, there will be room for testing technical solutions. The latest date for the start of live operations can be expected in January 2023[4]. Currently, there is still no eInvoicing platform for public procurement in Slovakia. The Ministry of Finance has prepared the final concept of a centralised eInvoicing solution (A prototype of product is available on https://dev.einvoice.mfsr.sk/). The financing of the related national project from the European funding has been approved, in December 2019. Entities involved in eInvoicing will receive their profiles in the online billing system. For the purpose of receiving guaranteed eInvoices, this system will be linked to the existing official e-mailbox system (slovensko.sk)[5]. The public procurement process for the delivery of an eInvoicing solution to ensure full transposition of eInvoicing Directive is planned by July 2022. The main goal of the centralised solution implementation is to ensure the mandatory receiving and sending of eInvoices and to enable automatic processing compliant with the EN. The solution will provide also support for public finance management, as a side effect. The implementation will consist of the following three stages[5]: Entities involved in eInvoicing will receive their profiles in the online billing system. As abovementioned, the system will be linked to the existing official e-mailbox system (slovensko.sk). The e-billing system will be similar to the existing system of “e-kasa”, i.e. the financial administration centralised system to which all stakeholders in Slovakia are connected[6]. A central billing system can be used upon agreement with the parts involved in the eInvoice transactions. The date, terms and conditions under which the system will be available to regular businesses will be determined by the Ministry of Finance. The ministry announced back in 2019 that the participation of voluntary participants in the billing system is not expected earlier than 2 years after the new Act came into effect. It can therefore be assumed that the opening of the system could take place in the summer of 2021[3]. The centralised eInvoicing platform, Information System for Electronic Invoicing (IS EFA), will allow the implementation of eInvoicing according to the Directive 2014/55/EU in both central and sub-central level contracting authorities. The EN will be implemented by using the centralised eInvoicing solution (IS EFA) after finishing Stage II, as mentioned above. Therefore, it is forecasted to be fully introduced on July 2022 [3]. Currently, there is neither a system nor an initiative in place to monitor eInvoicing implementation. It is not foreseen that the IS EFA, the central eInvoicing solution will monitor the eInvoicing uptake. Use of Core Invoicing Usage Specifications (CIUS) at national level Today, there is no CIUS implemented at the national level yet. The implementation of CIUS will be analysed before the implementation of the eInvoicing solution. The specifications followed by eInvoice content will be compliant with the European technical standard (OASIS UBL 2.1 or UN / CEFACT) [5]. Today, there is no CIUS implemented at the national level yet. The implementation of CIUS will be analysed before the implementation of the eInvoicing solution. The specifications followed by eInvoice content will be compliant with the European technical standard (OASIS UBL 2.1 or UN / CEFACT)[5]. The eInvoicing solution IS EFA will provide support for the public finance and cash-flow management, budgeting and reporting, besides its core functionality. The Slovak Ministry of Finance (MoF) is continuing with the e-invoicing initiative, informačný systém elektronickej fakturácie. The proposed e-invoicing system would support both the issuance and receipt of e-invoices for domestic transactions and help foreign suppliers to create structured invoices which can be sent via an e-mail. The system would use UBL 2.1 along with an XML format and is aimed to reduce compliance burden and increase transparency. The Ministry of Fincane further launched a new website containing information regarding the e-invoicing initiative as well as a demo system which is open to all for testing and improvement before the live implementation. The planned timeline is as follows: Slovakia has introduced the obligation to submit electronically detailed transactional data (VAT Control Statement) jointly with the VAT return as of January 2014. Before its introduction, there was no other reporting requirement in place. The obligation to submit the VAT Control Statement applies to all taxable person registered in Slovakia for VAT, including non-resident businesses. The reporting frequency is monthly or quarterly (i.e. the frequency of the VAT return). [8] The information must be reported on a transaction-by-transaction basis, with the exception of simplified invoices received, which must be reported in an aggregated form if the total amount of tax deductions from these invoices is below EUR 3 000 per reporting period. The data must be submitted using the XML format, either through the tax authority’s portal or using the downloadable form-filling program (eDane) distributed by the tax authority. Scope of requirements Invoice information to be submitted include the following: [1] (Voxel, 2021), [2] (WTS, 2021), [3] (SKDP, 2021), [4] (Pagero, 2021), [5] (The Netherlands chamber of commerce in the slovak republic, 2021), [6] (Financial Administration Slovakia, 2021), [7] (KPMG Global Tracker), [8] (VAT in the Digital Age Report, 2022)
NO VERIFICATIONLegislation
eInvoicing platform and eInvoicing management solutions
Approach for receiving and processing eInvoices
eInvoicing implementation in sub-central level contracting authorities
Status on the implementation of the European Standard on eInvoicing (EN)
Monitoring eInvoicing implementation
Use of Core Invoicing Usage Specifications (CIUS) at national level
Additional information
The Ministry of Finance has been facilitating meetings, workshops and presentations on eInvoicing to encourage the uptake of eInvoicing at the central and the sub-central levels.Reporting requirements
Last updated:
Mar 22, 2023 10:40