FYR Macedonia Lower VAT registration threshold enacted; possibility of electronic invoicing introduced

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

FYR Macedonia Lower VAT registration threshold enacted; possibility of electronic invoicing introduced

kostovska.jpg

Elena Kostovska

The Law on Value Added Tax in FYR Macedonia underwent several revisions in 2014, with the most recent reform taking place in early September. Published in the Official Gazette no. 130/2014 and effective as of September 11 2014, the new Law on VAT introduces some amendments that are expected to impact a large percentage of small and medium businesses. According to the Law, as of 2015, the threshold for mandatory VAT registration is being slashed in half, from the current MKD 2 million ($40,000) in annual turnover to a mere MKD 1 million. It is expected that this change alone will make VAT registration mandatory for a large number of micro and small entities that are currently outside the VAT scheme based on lower annual turnovers. As a reminder, companies that have elected not to voluntarily register for VAT purposes before realising the turnover threshold are required to do so within 15 calendar days of the day on which the threshold turnover is reached. As the Law will be in force as of 2015, this will create an obligation for a large number of companies that will reach a turnover of MKD 1 million within the 2014 fiscal year to mandatorily register for VAT purposes in the first 15 days of 2015.

The new Law also prescribes the possibility to issue electronic invoices between companies as of March 1 2015. The revised article has received positive feedback from the business community as it seems to open up possibilities for more streamlined and technologically advanced invoicing procedures which are now being regulated by old-fashioned laws and procedures. The article does, however, specify that the company being invoiced must be given a prior written approval declaring its willingness to accept electronic invoicing as opposed to paper-based invoices. It remains to be seen how further bylaws will regulate details of the application of this amendment and whether it will truly be aimed at simplifying B2B documentation and communication or whether it will result in the creation of additional compliance obligations and procedures.

Elena Kostovska (elena.kostovska@eurofast.eu)

Eurofast Global, Skopje Office

Tel: +389 2 2400225

Website: www.eurofast.eu

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

As World Tax unveils its much-anticipated rankings for 2026, we highlight the two Brazilian firms that had a standout year of tier promotions
ITR understands that UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves will announce a consultation on the proposed financial reward scheme, which had left advisers fretting
The long-running dispute centres on Medtronic’s use of the comparable uncontrolled transaction TP method; in other news, Paul Hastings and FTI Consulting both made double tax hires
The boutique Australian firm’s TP award recognition proves that world-class advisory services aren’t limited to the ‘big four’, the firm’s founder tells ITR
Canadian and Indian dual VAT models have been a source of inspiration for the Brazilian model, but the latter has unique and innovative features, the OECD paper claimed
More sophisticated use of technology, heightened TP scrutiny and stricter filing requirements are making South African Revenue Service audits a formidable challenge
The hire of Doug Wick expands Baker McKenzie’s state and local tax practice and adds to the firm’s growing ex-IRS expertise
One year after Nuwaru joined the WTS network, leaders James Jobson and Matthew Missaghi reflect on the firm’s mission to offer mid-tier pricing but deliver top-tier results
Join ITR's Head of Research, John Harrison, for an overview of key dates, new developments, best practices, and more for next year’s research cycle
The president’s tariff regime has already caused misery for taxpayers. Losing at the Supreme Court would mean it was all for nothing
Gift this article