In December 2022, the European Commission proposed to introduce digital reporting requirements for cross-border transactions within the EU. The basis for the reporting system will be an e-invoice with an EU-wide standard. The recommendation is that the same type of reporting obligation should also be introduced nationally.
The proposal, known as ViDA (VAT In The Digital Age), has been discussed extensively in the EU and has been revised several times through various compromises. But in early November 2024, full agreement was finally reached. ViDA will happen.
After two years of negotiations, an agreement has been reached. The unanimous approval by EU finance ministers can be seen as a milestone. Now the ViDA reform can finally move forward. The directive includes a framework for national standards for e-invoices and interoperability between national and EU systems. With a decision now taken, implementation should start in 2030 and be in place by 2035. Described in more detail, a plan to include both near real-time digital reporting and mandatory e-invoicing for cross-border transactions of goods and services within the Union will be set out in July 2030. Member States will then have to harmonize all domestic e-invoicing or digital transaction reporting with the new system by 2035.
An EU directive on a common VAT system has been in place since 2006, but as the years have passed and digital developments have progressed, its content has become outdated and partially obsolete to be applied to current conditions.
For this reason, the European Commission has taken the initiative to modernize the current VAT rules, taking into account the benefits offered by digital technology. The upgrade has been preceded by preparatory work that took almost two years to complete.
The final proposals were presented on December 8, 2022 and have been packaged under the title VAT in the Digital Age (ViDA). In essence, the intention is to create a simple and fair taxation and to leverage the digital solutions available to fight tax fraud, reduce the VAT gap in the EU and adapt cross-border trade to today's data-dominated society.
The objectives of the approved new scheme are essentially three:
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The VAT in the Digital Age package of proposals is divided into three parts requiring changes to EU legislation: the VAT Directive, the Council Implementing Regulation and the Council Regulation on Administrative Work.
The Implementing Regulation, which deals with the formulation of the information requirements for certain VAT schemes, is binding in its entirety and directly applicable across the EU. The amendments must be transposed into the national legislation of the Member States by December 31, 2024 and become applicable as of January 1, 2025.
According to the Swedish Ministry of Finance, the amendments to the VAT Directive do not make any difference for Sweden. Our VAT Act covers the proposed revisions and requires no change in Swedish legislation.
The Council Regulation on administrative cooperation emphasizes the importance of using well-established techniques to tackle VAT fraud. The current method of collecting aggregated data through recapitulative statements has been used since the introduction of the single market in 1993 and is no longer fit for purpose. The intention is now to replace the recapitulative statements with transaction-based reporting obligations. This, in turn, requires an IT structure that allows for a functional exchange between EU countries. The package of proposals from the European Commission puts a stronger focus on digitalization through the following measures: