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Public Malaysia Author: Ema Stamenković
Malaysia's e-invoicing, initiated by the Inland Revenue Board (IRBM/LHDN), mandates electronic invoicing from 1 August 2024, positioning it as a leader in Southeast Asia's Continuous Transaction Control (CTC) landscape. The MyInvois platform facilitates B2B, B2C, and B2G transactions, targeting a tax gap reduction amid significant identified non-compliance issues. The regulatory framework includes the Income Tax Act 1967 and the Electronic Invoice Rules 2024, guiding mandatory e-invoicing thresholds based on turnover. Key dates include a pilot from May 2024 and phased mandatory implementation from August 2024 to January 2026, with specific exemptions for low-turnover entities. A centralized model supports real-time validation, enhancing compliance through digital infrastructure.
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General information

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Content accuracy validation date: 10.06.2026
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Malaysia’s e-invoicing is part of the 12th and 13th Malaysia Plans for digital transformation. The Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia (IRBM/LHDN) mandated electronic invoicing from 1 August 2024, making Malaysia one of the first in Southeast Asia to implement a nationwide Continuous Transaction Control (CTC) model. Announced on 22 May 2023, it entered pilot on 1 May 2024. The MyInvois platform serves as the central validation hub for B2B, B2C, and B2G transactions.

Rationale

  • Tax gap reduction and fraud prevention (over 500,000 non-compliant cases and RM14 billion unreported income identified by February 2026).
  • Administrative modernisation: Replace paper/PDF with structured formats.
  • Digital economy growth and enhanced compliance/transparency via near-real-time data for audits.

Regional and International Landscape

Malaysia leads ASEAN in mandatory CTC e-invoicing covering B2B/B2C/B2G. It aligns with OECD CTC, Latin American, and European models. It has adopted the Peppol framework (MDEC as national Peppol Authority).

Supranational Authorization

Not applicable (non-EU). Malaysia participates in ASEAN e-invoicing initiatives (ASEAN Digital Trade Standards, Bandar Seri Begawan Roadmap). No specific WTO notification reported.

Regulatory Framework

Primary Legislation

  • Income Tax Act 1967 (Sections 82C, 120(1)(d), 82, 82A, 134A, 154(1)(b)).
  • Income Tax (Issuance of Electronic Invoice) Rules 2024 [P.U. (A) 265], gazetted 30 September 2024, effective 1 October 2024. Prescribes scope, timelines, mandatory fields, and exemptions.

Implementing Regulations

Guidance

  • e-Invoice Guideline v4.6 (7 Dec 2025).
  • e-Invoice Specific Guideline v4.7 (20 Apr 2026) — extended Phase 4 relaxation to 31 Dec 2027.
  • General FAQs (updated 5 May 2026).
  • Industry-specific FAQs and MyInvois SDK.

Supranational Basis

Domestic framework. Aligned with Peppol and ASEAN initiatives.

Scope of the Mandate

Transactions in Scope

  • Domestic B2B/B2G: Mandatory individual e-invoices (consolidated banned for single transactions > RM10,000 from 1 Jan 2026).
  • Domestic B2C: Consolidated allowed unless buyer requests individual or transaction > RM10,000 (from 1 Jan 2026); electricity/telecom require individual from 1 Jan 2026.
  • Exports (Outbound): Malaysian seller issues e-invoice.
  • Imports (Inbound): Malaysian buyer issues self-billed e-invoice (deadlines: end of following month).

Special Transactions

Self-billing mandatory for agents, foreign suppliers, e-commerce, etc. Triangulation/chain transactions follow general rules. Industry-specific guidance issued.

Excluded/Exempt

Foreign diplomatic offices, non-business individuals, certain statutory bodies/international organisations (pre-1 Jul 2025), turnover < RM1 million (permanent exemption), specific income types (employment, pensions, etc.), and MSME-related company rules (20% shareholding test).

Taxable Persons in Scope

All domestic entities (companies, sole props, partnerships, SPVs) with turnover ≥ RM1 million. Foreign suppliers excluded from issuing but trigger self-billing by Malaysian buyers. Foreign entities with Malaysian TIN are in scope based on turnover.

Voluntary participation allowed.

No industry-wide exemptions; sector-specific FAQs apply.

Implementation Timeline

Important dates: Announcement 22 May 2023; Pilot 1 May–31 Jul 2024; Rules gazetted 30 Sep 2024; Threshold raised to RM1m and Phase 5 cancelled (6–7 Dec 2025).

Mandatory Phases (based on FY2022 turnover):

  • Phase 1 (>RM100m): 1 Aug 2024.
  • Phase 2 (>RM25m–RM100m): 1 Jan 2025.
  • Phase 3 (>RM5m–RM25m): 1 Jul 2025.
  • Phase 4 (RM1m–RM5m): 1 Jan 2026 (relaxation to 31 Dec 2027).
  • New businesses (2023–2025): 1 Jul 2026 (relaxation to 31 Dec 2027).
  • Below RM1m: Exempt.

6-month relaxation periods (extended for Phase 4). Sandbox and SDK available.

How E-Invoicing Works (Operating Model)

Centralized CTC model via MyInvois: Create (XML/JSON UBL 2.1) → Submit (Portal/API/Peppol) → Validate (near real-time) → UIN + QR code assigned → Share with buyer → 72-hour rejection/cancellation window → Credit/Debit/Refund notes for later corrections. IRBM stores 2 years; taxpayers 7 years.

Acceptable Formats

Mandatory: XML (UBL 2.1) or JSON. Peppol PINT BIS Malaysia (v1.2.0). No PDF/paper for in-scope. Attachments via references.

Technical & Functional Requirements

Up to 55 fields (supplier/buyer details, line items, tax, etc.). Digital signature mandatory (IRBM certificate, v1.1). Near real-time processing. No separate SAF-T/e-reporting.

Corrections

Within 72 hours: Cancel/reject. After: Credit (02), Debit (03), Refund (04) notes via platform.

Transmission & Workflow

MyInvois (Portal, e-POS, API) or Peppol. Digital certificates and OAuth required.

Self-Billing

Mandatory in specified cases. Uses same platform and format (buyer as issuer).

Triangulation & Special Scenarios

General rules apply. No VAT-style simplifications. Zero-rated/exempt supplies use specific tax codes.

Archiving & Retention

Taxpayers: 7 years (structured format + PDF recommended), accessible in Malaysia. IRBM: 2 years.

Penalties & Enforcement

RM200–RM20,000 per offence (or imprisonment up to 6 months) under Section 120(1)(d). Strict liability. 12-year prosecution window. Expense disallowance possible.

Pre-Filled Returns

Not currently available. CTC data enables future potential.

Readiness for International Frameworks

Aligned with OECD CTC, UBL 2.1, and Peppol. ASEAN leader. Transferable infrastructure for multinationals.

Impact on SMEs

Phase 4 relaxation to 31 Dec 2027. Free tools (Portal, e-POS), tax deductions up to RM50,000/year. Initial costs vs. long-term benefits.

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