HomeBlogNewsFrance Finance Bill 2026: e-Invoicing Grace Period Removed 

France Finance Bill 2026: e-Invoicing Grace Period Removed 

France’s Finance Bill 2026 (PLF 2026)—specifically Article 28—clarifies the future of the e-invoicing mandate and closes the door on the discussed two-year grace period on penalties. 

1. E-invoicing timetable unchanged 

Finance Bill 2026 does not move the core dates already set in the 2024 Finance Law and government guidance: 

  • From 1 September 2026 
  • All VAT-registered businesses established in France must be able to receive e-invoices. 
  • Large enterprises and mid-caps must issue e-invoices (and e-reporting data) for in-scope B2B transactions. 
  • From 1 September 2027 
  • The issuing obligation extends to SMEs and micro-enterprises

These dates remain the planning baseline. 

2. Article 28: platform framework and sanctions 

Article 28 of Finance Bill 2026 mainly: 

  • Re-labels former PDPs as “plateformes agréées” (PAs) and tightens their approval and supervision regime. Only approved PAs (or the public portal) may sit in the core e-invoicing flow. 
  • Provides an explicit legal basis for structured e-invoice and e-reporting data flows from PAs to the tax administration (new Article 290-0 CGI). 
  • Adjusts penalties for e-invoicing / e-reporting non-compliance (Articles 1737 and 1788 D CGI). Earlier drafts increased fines per faulty invoice or missing report; subsequent amendments softened some increases and dropped a standalone penalty for failing to appoint a PA, while keeping sanctions for not being able to issue/receive e-invoices when required. 

3. The proposed 2026–2028 grace period (Amendment I-1028) 

The two-year grace period came from a separate amendment, not from the core Article 28 text: 

  • Amendment I-1028 proposed that businesses acting in good faith would not be subject to penalties under Article 1737 III and Article 1788 D I–II for infringements recorded between 1 September 2026 and 31 August 2028
  • A decree of the Conseil d’État would have defined what “good faith” means and how the tolerance operates. 

4. Current status: grace-period amendment withdrawn 

Crucially, the National Assembly’s official page for Amendment I-1028 now shows the status “Retiré” (withdrawn). That means: 

  • The amendment was not adopted by the Assembly. 
  • The two-year tolerance paragraph does not appear in the version of Article 28 agreed between the Assembly and the Senate. 

Recent updates confirm that while Parliament converged on Article 28’s technical e-invoicing provisions, it rejected the proposed 2026–2028 grace period

As a result: 

There is no statutory two-year grace period for e-invoicing penalties in the current Finance Bill 2026 package. 

5. Practical implication for businesses 

From an e-invoicing perspective, you should now work on the basis that: 

  • The September 2026 / 2027 dates remain firm for receiving and issuing e-invoices. 
  • Penalty provisions will be available from go-live, subject only to the calibrated levels set in Article 28. 


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