An Introduction to E-Invoicing: Formats, Networks and Digital Reporting

E-invoicing is no longer a future ambition – it is becoming the standard way businesses exchange invoice data across Europe and beyond. Driven by regulatory initiatives such as ViDA (VAT in the Digital Age), companies are moving away from PDFs and manual data entry towards structured, automated, and compliant invoice processing.
In this blog, we explain what e-invoicing really is, which formats are used, how ViDA is accelerating adoption across Europe, how invoices are exchanged via networks or e-mail, how this connects to e-reporting, and why e-invoices form the foundation for true end-to-end automation—especially from the perspective of receiving invoices.
What Is an E-Invoice?
An e-invoice is not simply a PDF sent by email. A true e-invoice is a structured, machine-readable document that can be automatically processed by accounting and ERP systems—without manual intervention or OCR.
Unlike unstructured formats, e-invoices contain clearly defined data elements such as supplier, buyer, VAT amounts, line items, and tax breakdowns, all encoded in a standardized data model.
Common E-Invoice Formats in Europe
While the regulatory landscape differs per country, most European e-invoice formats are aligned with the EN 16931 standard.
Key examples include:
- Peppol BIS 3.0
A widely adopted European standard used on the Peppol network for both B2G and B2B invoicing. - XRechnung
Germany’s mandatory B2G format. It is XML-only and designed for automated processing. - ZUGFeRD / Factur-X
Hybrid formats combining structured XML with a human-readable PDF, commonly used in Germany and France. - FatturaPA
Italy’s structured invoice format, exchanged exclusively via the government SDI platform. - KSeF XML
Poland’s national e-invoice format, required for invoices submitted through the KSeF system.
Embedded PDFs and Invoice Visualization
Some formats include a PDF representation (for example ZUGFeRD / Factur-X), while others are purely structured XML.
When no PDF is included, modern invoice processing solutions can automatically generate a visual invoice representation from the structured data. This ensures usability for finance users, supports audit requirements, and delivers a consistent invoice experience—regardless of the original format.
ViDA: The Key Driver Behind E-Invoice Mandates in Europe
ViDA (VAT in the Digital Age) is the European Commission’s initiative to modernize VAT reporting and close the VAT gap across EU Member States. A core pillar of ViDA is the shift toward digital, transaction-based VAT reporting, with e-invoicing as its technical foundation.
Under ViDA:
- Invoice data must become available to tax authorities faster and in a standardized format
- Cross-border transactions require near real-time reporting
- Manual, periodic VAT reporting becomes increasingly inefficient and error-prone
As a result, many countries are introducing or expanding mandatory e-invoicing and e-reporting regimes, either through national platforms or interoperable networks. While implementation timelines differ, the direction is uniform: structured invoice data exchanged digitally, with built-in compliance.
In short, ViDA is not introducing e-invoicing from scratch—it is accelerating and harmonizing initiatives that already exist across Europe.
How Are E-Invoices Exchanged?
E-invoices can be exchanged in multiple ways, depending on the country, the regulation, and the technical maturity of the parties involved.
Exchange via E-Mail
E-invoices can be exchanged via e-mail. This is still a common channel, especially in B2B scenarios or during transition phases.
However, the key difference lies in the content, not the transport:
- A PDF sent by e-mail is not a true e-invoice
- A structured e-invoice (XML), even when sent via e-mail, can still be automatically processed
Modern invoice processing platforms are able to:
- Ingest structured e-invoices received by e-mail
- Validate them against regulatory requirements
- Convert them into a consistent internal format for processing
This ensures continuity for suppliers, while buyers can already benefit from automation.
E-invoice can also be exchanged via networks and platforms:
Exchange via Networks and Platforms
In regulated scenarios, invoices are exchanged via e-invoicing networks or national platforms, which handle validation, routing, and sometimes reporting to tax authorities.
This includes both:
- International networks, such as Peppol
- National platforms, such as KSeF, Chorus Pro, or SDI
These models reduce bilateral integrations and ensure compliance by design.
E-Reporting and the Future of VAT Compliance
E-invoicing and e-reporting are increasingly inseparable.
E-reporting requires invoice data to be transmitted to tax authorities in near real time. Instead of compiling VAT data retrospectively, compliance becomes part of the daily invoice flow.
This leads to:
- Reduced administrative burden
- Fewer VAT errors
- Increased transparency and control
While monthly VAT returns will remain in place for now, ViDA clearly moves Europe toward continuous transaction controls (CTC).
E-Invoicing as the Foundation for True Automation
Beyond compliance, e-invoicing enables a higher level of automation for invoice receivers.
Structured invoice data allows:
- Touchless invoice posting
- Reliable VAT determination
- Accurate matching against purchase orders and goods receipts
- Faster approvals and fewer exceptions
E-invoicing therefore acts as the foundation for scalable, future-proof AP automation.
Conclusion
E-invoicing brings together structured formats, digital exchange channels, and real-time reporting. With ViDA driving harmonization across Europe, companies that prepare early gain both regulatory readiness and operational efficiency.
For organizations receiving invoices, the message is clear:
e-invoicing is not an IT burden—it is a strategic enabler.
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