Across the European Union, e-invoicing mandates are accelerating. These policies are not simply about digitization for convenience; they are designed to strengthen tax compliance, combat VAT fraud, improve transparency, and streamline reporting. The core shift is that invoices are increasingly being treated as structured data, not static documents.
For accounts payable and finance teams in real estate organizations, this shift requires more than just a software upgrade. It requires changes in process design, vendor engagement, and AP operations across portfolios, property managers, and shared service centers.
This article explains what is changing, which formats are required where, and how real estate finance teams can prepare. A follow-up article will focus specifically on invoice coding challenges in real estate, and why coding remains hard even when invoices become electronic.
VAT fraud and reporting complexity have long been challenges across the EU. Traditional PDF and paper invoices are difficult for tax authorities to verify in real time. E-invoicing mandates aim to solve this by ensuring that invoice data can be transmitted, validated, and stored in standardized formats, often through government-controlled systems.
Key goals of the EU e-invoicing movement include:
Over time, e-invoicing will shift the role of AP departments from document handling to data validation and workflow oversight.
Not all EU countries require the same type of electronic invoice. Real estate firms operating across multiple markets must be able to support both:
1. Structured E-Invoices (XML via Government Platforms)
These are invoices issued and transmitted in machine-readable XML formats through national tax systems.
Poland (KSeF)
Invoices not transmitted via KSeF will not be recognized as valid invoices for VAT, regardless of whether they were emailed, printed, or stored internally.
Italy (SdI)
Italy’s clearance model requires all invoices to pass through SdI in the FatturaPA XML format. A PDF invoice is not considered “issued.” Failure to use SdI may result in invoices being rejected or penalized.
2. Hybrid E-Invoices (PDF + Embedded XML)
Some jurisdictions permit invoice formats that include both:
These formats comply with the EN 16931 European data standard.
In hybrid models, the XML component is the legally authoritative invoice, while the PDF is provided for visibility and operational clarity.
Plain PDF invoices are slowly being phased out in the EU regulatory environment. Organizations relying heavily on PDF approval workflows should expect growing disruptions if they do not prepare.
For the next several years, real estate finance teams will process both:
If these are handled in separate processes, AP staff will face:
The Goal: A Single Unified Workflow
To avoid this, AP organizations should implement an invoice intake model where:
One Workflow Matters Because:
A unified workflow ensures AP teams spend less time processing invoices and more time reviewing exceptions and conducting oversight.
Even when invoices arrive in structured formats, coding remains a challenge. This is especially true in real estate, where invoices must often be split across:
Structured invoices do not solve coding complexity; they only reduce manual data entry.
But that's more than we can cover in one blog post.
Our next article will focus on how real estate organizations can automate invoice coding, reduce manual review time, and increase accounting accuracy across portfolios.