- From September 1, 2026, Hungary will require mandatory receipt data reporting for all businesses.
- Businesses using NAV-connected or e-cash registers already meet the new requirements and will not need to change their processes.
- Businesses not using connected cash registers must report receipt data to the tax authority within three days, requiring new workflows or IT solutions.
- The regulation aims to close reporting gaps, align with online invoice reporting, and encourage adoption of digital cash register solutions.
- No duplicate reporting is required for businesses already using compliant, connected cash registers.
Source: fiscal-requirements.com
Click on the logo to visit the website
Hungary introduces mandatory reporting of digital receipt data from September 1, 2026
- Starting January 1, 2026, businesses not using cash registers or ecash registers will be required to report receipt data to Hungary’s National Tax and Customs Administration (NAV), while those already using these systems will be exempt from this change.
- A regulatory framework for ecash registers and ereceipts will be implemented on April 1, 2025, with a daily reporting obligation for non-cash register receipts starting September 1, 2026.
- Traditional online cash registers will be phased out by July 1, 2028, transitioning fully to ecash registers to streamline administrative processes and receipt management.
Source Pagero
Note that this post was (partially) written with the help of AI. It is always useful to review the original source material, and where needed to obtain (local) advice from a specialist.
Latest Posts in "Hungary"
- Hungary to Cut Fruit and Vegetable VAT, Unveils Major Agricultural and Land Reform Plans
- Hungary to Mandate Digital Receipts for B2C Transactions Starting September 2026
- Hungary Mandates Digital Receipts for B2C Transactions Starting 1 September 2026
- Hungary E-Invoicing 2026: Key Dates, RTIR, Sector Mandates, and Compliance Requirements
- EU Refers Hungary to Court Over Discriminatory Retail Tax Breaching Single Market Rules















