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UAE launches optional B2B 4-corner Peppol framework

On 21st April 2026, the United Arab Emirates formally launched an optional B2B 4-corner Peppol e-invoicing framework.

This development marks the transition from planning to execution in the UAE’s broader move toward a fully digital, real-time reporting ecosystem.

What is a 4-corner e-invoicing model?

The newly introduced 4-corner model enables businesses to exchange invoices electronically through a network of accredited service providers (ASPs).

The four “corners” in this model include:

  1. Supplier (issuer) – generates the invoice
  2. Supplier’s ASP – validates and transmits the invoice
  3. Buyer’s ASP – receives and verifies the invoice
  4. Buyer (recipient) – receives the final validated invoice

This structure ensures secure, standardised, and interoperable invoice exchange using the Peppol network, a globally recognised framework for e-document exchange.

Why the UAE introduced an optional framework first

The 4-corner model is currently optional, allowing businesses to voluntarily adopt e-invoicing before it becomes mandatory.

This phased approach gives organisations time to:

  • Test systems and integrations
  • Select and onboard ASPs
  • Align ERP and accounting processes with structured data requirements
  • Build internal compliance readiness

This phased approach reduces implementation risk, gives the wider Peppol ecosystem time to mature, and ensures that both businesses and infrastructure are fully prepared before real-time reporting to tax authorities becomes mandatory.

Early adoption is particularly valuable for large enterprise preparing for the upcoming mandate.

The bigger picture

While the 4-corner framework is optional, it is only the first step in a broader rollout.

The UAE plans to introduce a mandatory 5-corner Peppol model, where tax authorities are directly integrated into the invoice exchange process.

Timeline:

July 2026 – Pilot phase begins

January 2027 – Mandatory rollout for large businesses

Mid-late 2027 – Expansion to SMEs and government entities

What businesses should do now

Although adoption is currently optional, businesses operating in the UAE should act early. Key steps include:

  1. Assess system readiness – ensure ERP systems can generate structured XML invoices
  2. Choose an ASP – this will be central to compliance and data exchange
  3. Run pilot testing – identify and fix integration issues ahead of deadlines

Delaying preparation could lead to rushed implementation and higher compliance risks once the mandate takes effect.

Take a look at our e-invoicing services here.