Published: March 2026
The Dutch Ministry of Finance has submitted a report to the House of Representatives examining the potential introduction of electronic invoicing and digital reporting obligations in the Netherlands in line with the European Union’s VAT in the Digital Age (ViDA) initiative. The report outlines policy considerations and possible next steps for implementing these systems within the national tax framework.
The ViDA package was adopted by the EU’s ECOFIN Council in March 2025 and subsequently published in the Official Journal of the European Union. Under the reform, mandatory electronic invoicing and digital reporting for cross-border B2B transactions within the EU are expected to take effect on 1 July 2030. Businesses will be required to issue electronic invoices that comply with a common EU standard and digitally report transaction data to tax authorities.
According to the Dutch government, the initiative aims to address two key issues: outdated reporting systems for intra-EU trade and the fragmentation of national digital reporting obligations across Member States. Harmonised e-invoicing and transaction-level reporting are expected to improve VAT fraud detection while reducing administrative burdens for businesses engaged in cross-border trade.
The report indicates that the Netherlands is considering a broad implementation model covering both domestic and intra-EU transactions, although several policy and technical conditions still need to be defined. A public consultation on a draft legislative proposal is expected in the fourth quarter of 2026, with further details on the national approach anticipated later this year.
