Comment by nick88msn

Comment by nick88msn 4 days ago

2 replies

In Italy, many of these invoicing challenges have already been tackled through a nationwide standardized system.

Every invoice—whether B2B or even B2C (receipts included)—must be sent electronically using a government-defined XML format. This invoice includes predefined metadata and is digitally signed by the issuing party. Once ready, it gets submitted to the national tax agency’s centralized system, called the Sistema di Interscambio (SdI), which validates and registers it before forwarding it to the recipient.

This system essentially acts as a clearinghouse: it ensures all invoices go through the same format, are verifiably issued, and are automatically recorded on both ends. For consumers (B2C), the invoice still goes through the same pipeline and is made available in their personal portal on the IRS website, while the seller can still email a copy (PDF) for convenience.

This centralized and machine-readable approach has eliminated a lot of the fragmentation seen elsewhere. There’s no vendor lock-in, no OCR, and no AI needed to parse PDFs—just a signed XML file going through a common pipeline. It’s not perfect, but it shows how much smoother things can be when the rules (and formats) are defined at the infrastructure level.

LeonM 4 days ago

> Every invoice—whether B2B or even B2C (receipts included)—must be sent electronically using a government-defined XML format

So not a universal standard then. Imagine having to implement a different format for every country you do business with...

For the Netherlands there is a similar (but slightly different I believe) XML type format required if you want to do business with the government. Initially a company successfully lobbied to get their closed-specification version to be the mandated standard for government, to get the XML spec you had to become partner (I believe for €8k/year or something).

Luckily they are now performing a XKCD 927 and have defined a few new (this time open) standards, which they aim to consolidate into a new spec that complies to EN 16931. EN 16931 is the EU compliance standard for e-invoicing.

  • mappu 3 days ago

    In New Zealand we are also phasing in eInvoicing using Peppol BIS 3.0, which complies to EN 16931.