SUMMARY
Executive Summary
Peru has established one of Latin America’s most comprehensive and technologically advanced e-invoicing and e-reporting frameworks. Mandatory for virtually all registered taxpayers since 2022, the system covers all business transactions (B2B, B2G, B2C, and exports) and a wide array of electronic fiscal documents. The implementation has been phased, leading to a “clearance model” where transactions are validated by the tax authority (SUNAT) in near real-time. Recent developments include the mandatory rollout of the Integrated System of Electronic Records (SIRE) for sales and purchase ledgers, with grace periods extending full enforcement until January 2026. This system leverages e-invoice data to offer pre-filled VAT returns, fundamentally shifting the role of compliance from data compilation to verification. Non-compliance carries severe penalties, including monetary fines and business closure, highlighting the system’s strict enforcement.
Detailed Review
1. Scope of the E-Invoicing & E-Reporting Mandate
Peru’s e-invoicing mandate is exceptionally broad, covering “all business transactions in Peru.” This includes:
- B2B and B2G invoices (facturas)
- B2C sales receipts (boletas)
- Special documents such as credit/debit notes, self-issued purchase invoices, and electronic transport documents (Guías de Remisión Electrónicas).
- Export invoices are also issued electronically.
The mandate applies to “all domestic transactions whether the customer is a business, consumer, or government entity.” Foreign companies are obligated only if they have a local tax registration (RUC) or fixed establishment. Notably, if a Peruvian business buys from an unregistered supplier (e.g., small farmers or foreign exporters), the buyer may be required to issue a “self-billing document” (“electronic purchase settlement”).
2. Implementation Timeline and Current Status
Peru’s e-invoicing rollout has been a “phased in over many years”:
- 2010: Voluntary introduction.
- 2014: Phased mandatory adoption began with the largest taxpayers.
- 2018: Extended to medium-sized and other designated taxpayers.
- 2021–2022: Mandate extended to small and micro businesses, achieving “near-100% coverage of all taxpayers by 2022.”
- Today: Virtually all registered taxpayers must issue and receive invoices electronically, making Peru’s system one of the most extensive in Latin America.
- B2G: Rolled out concurrently with B2B requirements, meaning suppliers to the public sector must now use e-invoices.
3. Recent Developments (2023-2025) and Grace Periods: SIRE
A major recent initiative is the Integrated System of Electronic Records (SIRE), consolidating electronic Sales Register (RVIE) and Purchase Register (RCE) for VAT purposes.
- Mandatory Implementation: Initially set for August 2024, it was postponed via Resolución No. 000145-2024/SUNAT to “January 2025.”
- Grace Periods for Penalties: SUNAT further extended leniency, announcing via Resolución 000003-2025 (Jan 2025) “discretionary non-enforcement” of penalties for SIRE-related non-compliance for the periods January–June 2025. This was later extended, effectively meaning “no SIRE penalties were applied during all of 2025,” pushing true full enforcement to “January 2026.”
- Meaning of Grace Periods: These periods signify that “no penalties will be applied for non-compliance during the grace period,” offering taxpayers extra time to adapt. However, the transactions still “must be reported,” as it is a delayed enforcement, not an exemption.
4. Future Outlook: Real-time Tax Control
With e-invoicing fully implemented and SIRE coming online, “Peru is moving toward real-time tax control.” The focus is on leveraging the rich data from e-invoices, particularly for streamlining VAT compliance through pre-filled returns.
5. Data Requirements, Format, Transmission, and Clearance
- Data Requirements: Electronic documents must contain detailed transaction data, including date, type, supplier/buyer identities (name, address, RUC), goods/services details (description, quantity, price, tax), discounts, and total payable.
- Format: The official format is UBL 2.1 XML, and all documents must be “digitally signed with an authorized digital certificate” to ensure authenticity and integrity.
- Clearance Model: Peru uses a “clearance model,” where the tax authority (SUNAT) or its delegate validates invoices “before or just as they are issued.”Direct Submission: Large taxpayers can connect directly to SUNAT’s servers (SOL system).
- Service Providers: More commonly, businesses use accredited Proveedor de Servicios Electrónicos (PSE) and Operador de Servicios Electrónicos (OSE). The PSE formats and signs the XML, which the OSE then validates against over 100 business rules.
- Validation Receipt: Upon successful validation, an OSE (or SUNAT) issues a “Constancia de Recepción (CDR)” – an acknowledgment of receipt and approval. The e-invoice is only considered valid once the CDR is issued.
- Asynchronous Validation Risk: While technically possible to send invoices before validation, it’s “risky” because rejection makes the invoice non-tax-valid, requiring re-issuance. Most companies opt for real-time clearance.
6. Types of Documents Covered (CPEs)
The system covers a broad range of “Comprobantes de Pago Electrónicos (CPEs),” including:
- Invoices (facturas) for B2B/B2G
- Sales receipts (boletas de venta) for B2C
- Credit and debit notes
- Electronic delivery/transport guides (Guías de Remisión Electrónicas – GRE)
- Invoice cancellation memos (comunicaciones de baja)
- Withholding and perception receipts.
7. Deadlines for Transmitting Data to the Tax Authority
Strict transmission timelines exist:
- Electronic invoices (facturas) and associated credit/debit notes: Up to the “third calendar day after the invoice’s issue date.” (Effectively within 4 days of issue date).
- Electronic public service receipts and certain authorized documents (DAE): Up to “7 calendar days after the day following that date.”
- Electronic purchase settlement: By the “next calendar day after issuance.”
- Daily summaries for B2C receipts (boletas): Usually by the “next day” after issuance.
“Prompt reporting is crucial,” and failure to transmit within the allowed window can result in non-compliance. Contingencies (e.g., system outages) allow for temporary paper invoices, but these must be regularized.
8. Penalties for Non-Compliance
Peru imposes “strict penalties” for non-compliance:
- Failure to issue required electronic documents: Considered a serious infraction, leading to “monetary fines of up to 50% of the tax amount” and potentially “closure of the establishment” (temporary business shutdown).
- Issuing non-compliant documents: Fines of approximately “~EUR 632” (local currency equivalent) and possible business closure for repeated offenses.
- Recipient Acknowledgement: While not a direct penalty, if a recipient does not explicitly acknowledge an e-invoice, it is “deemed accepted after 8 calendar days.”
The system’s real-time nature allows SUNAT to quickly identify non-compliance, leading to audits and enforcement actions.
9. Archiving Requirements and Retention Period
Both issuers and recipients must archive e-invoices:
- Retention Period: A minimum of “5 years” from the first day of the year following the date of issuance.
- Archiving Format: The “original XML file with digital signature” and the corresponding CDR (validation receipt) must be preserved, not just PDFs.
- Accessibility: Archived documents “must be accessible to the tax authority upon request.” Issuers must also make invoices available to customers for at least “one year” after issuance.
- Security: Digital security for archives (integrity and confidentiality) is mandated.
10. Use of E-Invoice Data for Pre-Filled VAT Returns
A significant development is the move toward “pre-filled VAT returns using e-invoice data.”
- Auto-Generation: Under the SIRE process, SUNAT “auto-generate a draft of the taxpayer’s monthly VAT records” (RVIE and RCE) based on e-invoices issued and received.
- Taxpayer Review: Taxpayers must review this proposal online and can “Accept, Complement, or Replace” it.
- Integration with Form 621: Once finalized in SIRE, this information “flows directly into the Form 621 – the monthly IGV (VAT) return” form, which is essentially pre-filled.
- Shift in Accountant’s Role: The accountant’s job is shifting from compiling data to “auditing SUNAT’s pre-filled data” for accuracy, as taxpayers are warned not to blindly accept inaccurate drafts.
11. References to Regulations and Official Resources
The legal framework is based on various SUNAT resolutions, including:
- SUNAT Resolución No. 300-2014: Original regulation for the electronic issuance system (SEE).
- Res. 193-2020/SUNAT: Set the 1-day transmission rule (later extended).
- Res. 000003-2023/SUNAT: Extended the transmission deadline to 3 days.
- Res. 000003-2025/SUNAT: Detailed the SIRE grace period.
- Mandatory e-invoicing resolutions: Res. 155-2017 and subsequent modifications.
SUNAT’s official website provides documentation and the SIRE portal.
Conclusion
“Peru’s e-invoicing and e-reporting framework is comprehensive and technologically advanced.” It mandates electronic transactions for nearly all taxpayers, utilizing a clearance model with specific technical formats (UBL 2.1 XML, digital signatures) and strict reporting deadlines. The ongoing full implementation of SIRE and the introduction of pre-filled VAT returns underscore SUNAT’s drive towards “real-time tax control” and a significantly streamlined, yet demanding, compliance environment. Businesses operating in Peru must ensure robust internal controls and technical integration to meet these obligations, as non-compliance carries severe penalties.
INDEPTH ANALYSIS
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B2G timeline: Electronic invoicing to government entities (B2G) was rolled out along with B2B requirements. Now suppliers to the public sector must use e-invoices, just like B2B, and government bodies are required to accept e-invoices. [sovos.com]
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Recent developments (2023–2025): SUNAT has been finalizing complementary systems. One major initiative is the Integrated System of Electronic Records (Sistema Integrado de Registros Electrónicos, SIRE), which consolidates the electronic Sales Register (RVIE) and Purchase Register (RCE) for VAT purposes. Initially, SIRE was to become mandatory for additional taxpayers starting August 2024, but this was postponed. SUNAT issued Resolución No. 000145-2024/SUNAT (July 2024) to extend the mandatory SIRE implementation date by ~5 months, making it effective January 2025 instead. This delay was essentially a grace period to give taxpayers more time to prepare for electronic record-keeping. In early 2025, SUNAT further announced it would not immediately enforce penalties for SIRE-related non-compliance for several months. Specifically, via Resolución 000003-2025 (31 Jan 2025), SUNAT applied “discretionary non-enforcement” of penalties for the periods January–June 2025 to facilitate a smoother transition. Taxpayers had until 31 July 2025 to rectify or upload any missing records for that first semester. In mid-2025, authorities extended this leniency even further – effectively no SIRE penalties were applied during all of 2025, pushing the true full enforcement into January 2026 for late adopters. In summary, the electronic ledgers (RVIE/RCE) are now required for nearly all businesses, but 2025 was treated as a grace period to get everyone on board without immediate fines. [edicomgroup.com] [sunat.gob.pe], [sunat.gob.pe] [sunat.gob.pe]
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Future outlook: With e-invoicing fully in place and SIRE coming fully online, Peru is moving toward real-time tax control. The focus is now on using the rich data from e-invoices. Notably, SUNAT is leveraging this data to streamline VAT compliance (see “Pre-Filled VAT Returns” below). Moving forward, businesses can expect SUNAT to integrate these systems even further, possibly introducing new requirements or refinements (e.g. new document types or updated technical standards), but as of end-2025 the major framework is already established.
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Format: The official format for Peruvian e-invoices is UBL 2.1 XML (the OASIS Universal Business Language standard). All Comprobantes de Pago Electrónicos (CPEs) – whether invoices, notes, receipts, etc. – must be generated in this XML format. They also must be digitally signed with an authorized digital certificate to guarantee the document’s authenticity and integrity. A compliant invoice file in Peru is essentially an XML document that meets SUNAT’s UBL schema and includes a valid digital signature. [edicomgroup.com], [avalara.com] [avalara.com], [ecosio.com]
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Transmission and Clearance Process: Peru uses a clearance model for e-invoicing, meaning the tax authority (or its delegate) plays a role in validating invoices before or just as they are issued. Taxpayers have two main options to send their invoice data to the authorities: [invopop.com]
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Direct submission to SUNAT: Some large taxpayers connect directly to SUNAT’s servers (using SUNAT’s online system called SOL) and transmit their XML invoices for validation. This requires the company’s own IT system to handle formatting and digital signing, and is generally used by those with significant IT capability. [ecosio.com]
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Through authorized service providers (PSE/OSE): The more common method is to use an accredited Proveedor de Servicios Electrónicos (PSE) – an electronic service provider – coupled with an Operador de Servicios Electrónicos (OSE). In practice, the PSE takes the company’s invoice data, formats it into the required UBL XML and signs it. The invoice is then sent to an OSE (a SUNAT-authorized operator) which performs an official validation check against over 100 business rules. If the invoice passes all validations, the OSE (or SUNAT itself, in the direct model) issues a “Constancia de Recepción” (CDR) – essentially an acknowledgment of receipt and approval. Only once this CDR is issued is the e-invoice considered fully valid for tax purposes. The OSE/SUNAT returns the CDR (and stamped invoice) to the issuer, who must then deliver the electronic invoice (XML + CDR) to the customer (usually via email or integration). [ecosio.com], [basware.com] [ecosio.com] [ecosio.com], [ecosio.com] [basware.com]
Important: Peru technically allows invoices to be sent to the buyer before obtaining the SUNAT/OSE validation (i.e., asynchronous validation), but this is risky. If the authority later rejects the invoice (for failing a validation rule), the invoice is not tax-valid and the issuer must correct it and re-issue, which could disrupt business. Therefore, in practice most companies do the clearance in real-time or near-real-time (sending to SUNAT/OSE immediately at issuance) so that the invoice is validated before or at the moment it’s delivered to the customer. [sovos.com] -
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Types of documents covered: The e-invoicing system isn’t just for invoices. SUNAT’s system covers a wide range of electronic fiscal documents (all under the umbrella term CPE). These include standard invoices (facturas) for B2B/B2G, boletas de venta (simplified invoices/receipts for B2C), credit notes and debit notes (which must reference an original invoice), Guías de Remisión Electrónicas (GRE) which are electronic delivery/transport guides required for moving goods, comunicaciones de baja (invoice cancellation memos), withholding and perception receipts for VAT withholding agents, and others as defined by SUNAT. All of these must follow the electronic format and reporting process. By standardizing all transaction types, SUNAT captures both sales and related adjustments or transport documents in its systems. [ecosio.com] [sovos.com]
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Electronic invoices (facturas) and associated credit/debit notes: Must be sent by the issuance date or up to 3 calendar days after the day following issuance. (Effectively up to 3 days after next-day, i.e. within 4 days of the issue date.) [edicomgroup.com]
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Electronic public service receipts (e.g. utility bills) and certain authorized documents (DAE), and their related notes: Must be sent by the issue date or up to 7 calendar days after the day following that date. (SUNAT provided a longer window for these specific types of documents, recognizing they often involve periodic billing.) [edicomgroup.com]
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Electronic purchase settlement (self-issued invoice for certain purchases): Must be transmitted by the issue date or at the latest by the next calendar day after issuance. [edicomgroup.com]
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Daily summaries for B2C receipts: For sales receipts (boletas) issued to consumers, companies typically send a daily summary report rather than individual invoice files for each receipt. The summary of all B2C receipts issued in a day must usually be submitted to SUNAT by the next day. (This rule is part of the electronic invoicing system to capture B2C sales without overloading the system with individual small invoices.) In effect, while an individual “boleta” can be given to a customer immediately, the electronic data for all such receipts is aggregated and sent within about 24 hours in a summary CPE. (Note: This specific point is inferred from the system design – SUNAT’s resolutions allow “individual or daily summary” for receipts, and in practice the daily summary is sent the next day. This ensures even cash sale data is reported almost real-time.) [edicomgroup.com]
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Failure to issue invoices or required documents in the mandated electronic format (i.e. not issuing a CPE when you should) is considered a serious infraction. It can result in monetary fines of up to 50% of the tax amount associated with the transaction. In addition, SUNAT can apply closure of the establishment – temporarily shutting down the business premises – for a specified period as a sanction. In practice, SUNAT has the legal authority to close a business for a certain number of days if it finds the business isn’t issuing proper invoices (this is a measure to enforce compliance, used in many Latin countries). [avalara.com] [sovos.com], [sovos.com]
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Issuing invoices that don’t meet requirements (for example, using an outdated format, not including required information, or using paper when electronic is required) also carries penalties. Sovos notes a specific penalty around ~EUR 632 (in local currency equivalent) for issuing non-compliant documents, and again possibly the closure of the establishment for repeated or serious offenses. In other words, even if you do issue an invoice, if it’s not in the prescribed electronic form or missing required data, you face fines. [sovos.com], [sovos.com]
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Recipient acknowledgement rules: While not a penalty on the issuer per se, it’s worth noting a compliance rule affecting buyers. Recipients of e-invoices in Peru are supposed to acknowledge receipt. If they do not explicitly acknowledge, the law provides that the invoice is deemed accepted after 8 calendar days. This protects sellers by preventing buyers from indefinitely claiming they didn’t accept an invoice. On the flip side, buyers who intend to reject an invoice (due to errors, etc.) must do so within that timeframe. Failing to comply with this can result in the invoice being binding. [sovos.com]
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Retention Period: The general rule is a minimum of 5 years of retention for tax purposes. This five-year period is counted from the first day of the year following the date of issuance (which effectively aligns with the statute of limitations for tax audits in many cases). Some sources even phrase it as “at least five years”; in practice many companies keep them for longer (SUNAT can audit past periods within legal limits). [ecosio.com], [invopop.com] [ecosio.com], [ecosio.com]
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Archiving Format: The law requires the electronic XML and the corresponding CDR (validation receipt) to be stored. It’s not enough to keep a PDF or printed copy – the original XML file with digital signature must be preserved, because that is the legal invoice. Businesses should also keep the CDR which is proof that SUNAT/OSE approved the invoice. These files must be stored in a secure, legible format (typically on digital media or cloud storage with backups). [ecosio.com], [ecosio.com]
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Accessibility: During the retention period, the archived e-invoices must be accessible to the tax authority upon request. If SUNAT audits and asks for supporting documents, a company should be able to produce the XML files and CDRs for each transaction in question. Moreover, issuers are required to make the invoices available to their customers for at least one year after issuance for download or printing. This means, for example, if a buyer needs a copy of an invoice, the seller should have a mechanism (web portal or by email) to provide that for up to a year. Beyond that, both parties rely on their archives. [basware.com] [edicomgroup.com]
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If the taxpayer accepts the proposal as is, or adds any missing info and then accepts, the SIRE data is finalized for that period. Once finalized, that information flows directly into the Form 621 – the monthly IGV (VAT) return form. In other words, the VAT return is essentially pre-filled with the totals from the electronic records once you confirm them. This greatly simplifies filing – the taxpayer mainly needs to verify the figures rather than calculate everything from scratch. [summa.org.pe]
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If the taxpayer finds errors or omissions (for example, maybe some purchase invoices weren’t counted because a supplier sent them late, or there were a few transactions that are not required to be e-invoices), the taxpayer can complement or correct the data in SIRE before submission. They might need to add any non-electronic documents (like certain utility receipts or import documents) that don’t automatically feed into SUNAT’s data. After adjustments, the corrected data is submitted. [summa.org.pe]
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