General information
The Latvian government has proposed changes to the VAT Law as part of the 2026 Budget. The amendments aim to adjust reduced VAT rates for publications and certain essential food products.
If approved, the reduced 5% VAT rate will apply only to books, newspapers, and other publications issued in Latvian, Latgalian, or Livonian. It will also cover publications in the official languages of the EU, the European Economic Area, Switzerland, EU candidate countries, and OECD member states.
A one-year pilot project will temporarily lower VAT to 12% on key food items from July 1, 2026, to June 30, 2027. Products included are:
- All types of bread (rye, wheat, gluten-free)
- Fresh, sterilized, or pasteurized milk (excluding ultra-sterilized)
- Fresh chilled poultry meat (chicken, turkey, duck, goose, guinea fowl, quail)
- Fresh poultry eggs in shells
Currently, these items are taxed at the standard 21% VAT rate. The government hopes the reduced rate will ease high food prices, support vulnerable groups, and help local producers compete with cheaper imports.
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Already subscriber? LoginE-invoicing in Latvia starting January 2026
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Author: Nikolina Basić
Latvia is phasing in mandatory e-invoicing and real-time reporting, starting with B2G e-invoices already required and expanding to government-related e-reporting in 2026. By 2028, all B2B invoices between Latvian-registered businesses must be electronic and transmitted to the State Revenue Service for near real-time oversight Latvia is moving forward with its plan to digitize invoicing and reporti... Read more
Latvia introduces a VAT change from July 2026
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Author: Nikolina Basić
Latvia has approved a temporary 12% VAT rate on essential foods like milk, bread, poultry, and eggs—excluding ultra-sterilized milk—effective July 1, 2026, to June 30, 2027, pending parliamentary approval to ease rising food costs. Latvia’s government has approved a reduced value-added tax (VAT) rate of 12% on essential food products. The measure, announced earlier this week, will apply to i... Read more