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How to Write an Invoice in Ireland: Guide, Templates & Legal Requirements

December 1, 2025

Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute tax, legal or accounting advice. For guidance specific to your situation, please consult a qualified accountant or tax adviser.

1. Introduction

Invoices are essential. They apply to every kind of business — sole traders, limited companies, freelancers, tradespeople, and sometimes even private individuals. A well-written invoice helps you get paid on time, keeps your records straight, and satisfies the Revenue Commissioners.

In Ireland, invoicing rules depend primarily on whether you are VAT-registered. VAT-registered businesses must follow strict Revenue rules for what a VAT invoice must contain. Businesses below the VAT registration threshold have more flexibility, but still need to issue clear, professional invoices.

E-invoicing is also growing in importance. Public sector bodies already require PEPPOL-compliant e-invoices for central government procurement, and Revenue is actively consulting on broader digital reporting requirements for the future.

This guide covers everything you need to know about invoicing in Ireland:

  • All required fields for a valid Irish invoice
  • Differences between VAT invoices, simplified invoices, and non-VAT invoices
  • An overview of e-invoicing and PEPPOL for public sector suppliers
  • Free templates in Word and PDF format
  • Tips on software, tools, and online generators
  • Key legal information: record retention, late payment rules, and how to correct invoices

Follow this guide step by step to create invoices that are fast, professional, and legally compliant.

2. What is an Invoice? The Basics

An invoice is a written document that records a transaction between a seller and a buyer. It states what goods or services were provided, the amount owed, and the payment terms. Sole traders, limited companies, freelancers, tradespeople, and — in some cases — private individuals can all issue invoices.

An invoice serves three main purposes: it is a payment request, a record of the transaction, and a document required for tax purposes.

2.1 Why Do You Need an Invoice?

An invoice:

  • Records income and expenditure for your accounts.
  • Is essential for bookkeeping and your Income Tax return or Corporation Tax return.
  • States the payment terms and due date.
  • Provides proof that a supply of goods or services took place.
  • Allows VAT-registered customers to reclaim input VAT.

2.2 Net, VAT and Gross — Simply Explained

If you are VAT-registered, every invoice must clearly show:

  • Net amount = price excluding VAT
  • VAT amount = the VAT charged (at 23%, 13.5%, 9%, or 0% depending on the supply)
  • Gross amount = total including VAT

💡 Example: A service costs €100 net. At 23% VAT, the gross total is €123.

If you are not VAT-registered, you simply charge the net price — no VAT to add, no separate VAT line needed.

2.3 Who Can Issue an Invoice?

Anyone who has supplied goods or services can issue an invoice. This includes:

  • Limited companies
  • Sole traders and self-employed individuals
  • Freelancers and contractors
  • Tradespeople and craftspeople
  • Private individuals (for occasional sales)

The required information on the invoice varies slightly depending on your business structure and VAT status.

2.4 Paper & PDF Invoices vs. E-Invoices

Traditional paper and PDF invoices are still widely accepted. However, e-invoices — structured digital documents that can be processed automatically — are increasingly required, especially for public sector contracts.

⚡ Important: A standard PDF is not the same as an official e-invoice. See Section 5 for details.

3. Writing an Invoice — Step by Step

Writing a correct invoice is simpler than it sounds. The key is including all the required information. This section walks you through exactly what to include.

3.1 What Every Invoice Must Include

Revenue sets out what a full VAT invoice must contain under the Value Added Tax Consolidation Act 2010 (VATCA 2010). Even if you are not VAT-registered, it is good practice to follow a similar structure:

  • The word "invoice" — clearly displayed at the top.
  • Your business name and address — the supplier's full contact details.
  • Your VAT registration number — mandatory if you are VAT-registered (Irish VAT numbers begin with "IE", e.g. IE1234567T).
  • The customer's name and address.
    ✨ Tip: For B2B transactions within the EU, also include the customer's VAT number where applicable.
  • Invoice date.
  • A unique, sequential invoice number (e.g. 2025-INV-001).
  • Date of supply (tax point) — when the goods were delivered or the service was completed. Must be shown if different from the invoice date.
  • Description of goods or services — clear and specific.
  • Net unit price per item (excluding VAT).
  • Quantity and unit of measure.
  • VAT rate applied to each line (e.g. 23%, 13.5%, 9%, or 0%).
  • Total net amount (excluding VAT).
  • Total VAT amount.
  • Total gross amount (including VAT).
  • Payment terms — due date, accepted payment methods, bank details (including IBAN and BIC for Irish bank accounts).
  • If multiple VAT rates apply: show the net amount, VAT rate, and VAT amount separately for each rate.
  • If registered at the Companies Registration Office (CRO): your registered company name (exact), CRO registration number, and registered office address.

✨ Tip: Always check your invoice before sending. A missing or incorrect field can result in the invoice being rejected — especially by VAT-registered customers who need to reclaim input VAT.

3.1.1 Simplified VAT Invoices (Under €100)

For supplies where the total consideration does not exceed €100, Revenue allows a simplified invoice under Section 66A of the VATCA 2010. You only need:

  • Your business name, address and VAT registration number
  • Date of supply
  • Description of goods or services
  • Total amount including VAT
  • VAT rate (e.g. 23%) — or a note if the supply is exempt or zero-rated

✨ Tip: Ideal for retail transactions, small jobs or point-of-sale receipts.

3.2 Differences by Business Type

3.2.1 VAT-Registered Businesses

  • Must always show net, VAT and gross amounts.
  • VAT registration number is mandatory on every invoice.
  • Full company details including CRO registration number (if a limited company).
  • The VAT rate for each line must be clearly stated.

3.2.2 Sole Traders and Freelancers (Not VAT-Registered)

  • No VAT to charge — your invoice total is the full amount due.
  • You may add a note: "Not registered for VAT."
  • No net/VAT/gross breakdown required — just show the total amount.
  • Still good practice to include invoice number, date, description, and payment terms.

⚡ Important: If your annual taxable turnover reaches or exceeds the VAT registration threshold (€42,500 for services or €85,000 for goods), you must register for VAT with Revenue. From that point on, all full VAT invoice rules apply.

3.2.3 Limited Companies

  • Must include the registered company name (exactly as registered at the CRO — not just a trading name).
  • CRO registration number.
  • Registered office address in Ireland.
  • VAT number if VAT-registered.

3.3 How to Describe Your Goods or Services

Be specific. A clear description helps your customer understand exactly what they are paying for, and it helps Revenue if your records are ever reviewed.

  • "Website design: homepage build, delivered 12 March 2025"
  • "Plumbing: replacement of bathroom taps, 8 February 2025"
  • "Consulting: 3 hours strategy coaching, 20 February 2025"
  • "5 × summer tyres, brand XY, delivered 15 March 2025"

✨ Tip: Always include the date, quantity and nature of the supply.

3.4 Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Missing invoice number
  • Wrong VAT rate applied
  • No description of goods or services
  • Missing VAT registration number (for VAT-registered businesses)
  • No date of supply
  • Incorrect net or gross totals
  • Missing CRO details (for limited companies)
  • Multiple VAT rates not separately broken out

✨ Tip: Always review your invoice before sending it.

3.5 Correcting an Invoice

Mistakes happen. If you need to correct an invoice, do it properly so both your customer and Revenue can follow the audit trail.

The correct approach:

  • Issue a credit note: This cancels the original invoice. Always reference the original invoice number.
  • Issue a new, corrected invoice: Use a new sequential invoice number. Mark it clearly as a correction, e.g. "Replaces Invoice 2025-004".

✨ Tip: Never simply overwrite or delete the original invoice. Both the original and the correction must be kept in your records.

4. Below the VAT Threshold: Invoicing Without VAT

If you are a sole trader, freelancer or small business, you may be able to trade without charging VAT — depending on your annual turnover.

4.1 The VAT Registration Thresholds

In Ireland, you must register for VAT with Revenue if your annual taxable turnover exceeds:

  • €42,500 for the supply of services
  • €85,000 for the supply of goods

These thresholds were most recently increased effective 1 January 2025. Below these thresholds, VAT registration is optional.

  • Benefits of not registering: simpler invoicing, no VAT returns to file, lower prices for private customers.
  • Drawbacks: you cannot reclaim VAT on business purchases; if your customers are VAT-registered businesses, they may prefer VAT-registered suppliers so they can reclaim input VAT.

Key points for invoices when not VAT-registered:

  • Do not charge VAT and do not show a VAT amount on your invoice.
  • You may add a note such as: "Not registered for VAT."
  • All other good-practice fields still apply: invoice number, date, description, amount, payment terms.
  • Warning: If your turnover exceeds the relevant threshold, you must register for VAT. Failing to register on time can result in penalties and interest from Revenue.
  • Monitor your turnover regularly — the obligation to register arises as soon as you exceed the threshold.

✨ Tip: The thresholds apply to taxable turnover. Some supplies (such as certain financial and educational services) are exempt and do not count towards the threshold. When in doubt, check with an accountant or consult Revenue directly.

4.2 What Goes on a Non-VAT Invoice?

Almost everything in a standard invoice — the main difference is no VAT. A well-structured non-VAT invoice includes:

  • The word "invoice"
  • Invoice number and date
  • Your name/business name and address
  • Customer's name and address
  • Date of supply
  • Clear description of goods or services
  • Total amount due (no net/VAT/gross split needed)
  • Payment terms and bank details (IBAN/BIC)
  • A note: "Not registered for VAT."

4.3 Example Invoice (Non-VAT-Registered)

  • Service: Copywriting, 10 February 2025, 2 hours
  • Rate: 2 × €60 = €120 (total amount due)
  • Note: "Not registered for VAT."
  • Payment terms: Payment due within 14 days.

4.4 Common Mistakes

  1. Accidentally charging VAT when not registered — this is not permitted and must be corrected
  2. Failing to register once you exceed the relevant threshold
  3. Using a VAT invoice template without removing the VAT fields
  4. Not using sequential invoice numbers

✨ Tip: If you are approaching the threshold, plan ahead. VAT registration with Revenue can take several weeks and you are liable to account for VAT from the date you became obliged to register.

4.5 When Is Voluntary VAT Registration Worth It?

Makes sense when:

  • Most of your customers are VAT-registered businesses (they can reclaim the VAT)
  • You have significant VAT costs on purchases you want to reclaim
  • You want to appear more established or are growing quickly

Less suitable when:

  • You mainly serve private consumers (who cannot reclaim VAT)
  • Your VAT-able costs are very low
  • Administrative simplicity is a priority

✨ Remember: Voluntary registration means you must file VAT returns (typically bi-monthly) and keep full VAT records. Factor in the administrative overhead before deciding.

5. E-Invoicing in Ireland

Ireland is moving towards greater digitisation of invoicing and tax reporting. The most significant current requirement affects suppliers to public sector bodies, who must use PEPPOL-compliant e-invoices. Revenue is also actively consulting on broader digital reporting requirements for the future.

In this section you will learn:

  • What an e-invoice actually is
  • Who currently needs to use them in Ireland
  • Which formats are used
  • How to create and archive them correctly

5.1 What Is an E-Invoice?

An e-invoice is not just a PDF sent by email. It contains structured data (typically XML) that can be read and processed automatically by accounting software — without manual data entry.

How to recognise a true e-invoice:

  • Contains structured XML data
  • Can be automatically processed by accounting software
  • Conforms to a recognised standard (such as EN 16931 or PEPPOL BIS Billing)
  • Can be imported directly into bookkeeping systems

These are NOT e-invoices:

  • Standard PDF files (even if sent by email)
  • Scanned paper invoices
  • Word or Excel files
  • Paper invoices

5.2 Who Must Use E-Invoices in Ireland?

Public sector / government contracts (B2G):

  • Ireland transposed EU Directive 2014/55/EU on electronic invoicing in public procurement via S.I. No. 286 of 2019.
  • Central government departments and other contracting authorities must be capable of receiving PEPPOL e-invoices. If you supply goods or services to Irish public bodies, check whether they require structured e-invoices via the PEPPOL network.
  • The requirement applies to contracts above the EU public procurement thresholds.

Business-to-business (B2B):

  • There is currently no mandatory B2B e-invoice requirement in Ireland. Standard PDF invoices remain fully valid for B2B and B2C transactions.
  • Revenue has been consulting on mandatory real-time digital reporting for VAT transactions, which may lead to future e-invoicing obligations. Check Revenue's website for the latest updates.
  • Many larger businesses already prefer or require structured e-invoices from their suppliers — it is worth checking with each customer.

Note for small businesses and sole traders: For now, standard PDF invoices remain fully valid for all B2B and B2C transactions. You must still file VAT returns through Revenue Online Service (ROS) if you are VAT-registered.

5.3 PEPPOL — The Irish Public Sector Standard

PEPPOL (Pan-European Public Procurement On-Line) is the network used for e-invoicing in Irish public sector procurement. It uses a standardised format (PEPPOL BIS Billing 3.0, based on UBL XML) that can be automatically processed.

  • Structured XML file
  • Transmitted via the secure PEPPOL network
  • Required for public sector (B2G) e-invoicing in Ireland
  • High data quality and automatic processing

How to send a PEPPOL e-invoice:

  • Use accounting software with PEPPOL connectivity (e.g. Xero, Sage, Coupa, Basware)
  • Via a certified PEPPOL Access Point provider
  • Check with your public sector customer whether they require PEPPOL, and obtain their PEPPOL ID

⚡ Important: A standard PDF cannot simply be converted into a PEPPOL e-invoice. The invoice data must be generated in a structured format from the outset.

5.4 Software and Tools for E-Invoicing

  • PEPPOL-enabled accounting platforms for public sector contracts
  • Cloud accounting tools with e-invoice export capabilities
  • Revenue Online Service (ROS) for VAT return filing

5.5 Which Format Is Right for Me?

  • Public sector contracts: PEPPOL e-invoice (check requirements with the contracting authority)
  • B2B with larger businesses: Structured e-invoice increasingly preferred; check with each customer
  • B2B and B2C (general): PDF invoice fully valid for now

📝 Note: This is an overview of e-invoicing in Ireland. Requirements may change as Revenue's digital reporting consultation progresses. This does not replace professional tax or accounting advice. Consult a qualified adviser for complex situations.

6. Templates & Tools: Invoices for Every Business Type

You don't need to design an invoice from scratch. With the right template or online tool you can save time, avoid mistakes and stay professional. Whether Word, Excel or PDF — here are practical options you can use straight away.

6.1 Online & PDF Templates

6.2 Word & Excel Templates

  • Word (Online): Flexible and great for individual branding and layout adjustments. Open Word Online
  • Excel (Online): Perfect for invoices with multiple line items, tax calculations, or automatic totals. Open Excel Online

6.3 Which Template Is Right for Me?

It depends on your needs. Here is a quick guide:

Quick and simple

If you want a finished, professional-looking invoice without any software setup:

  • Use Canva or Adobe Express.
  • Templates are ready to go — just enter your details.
  • Ideal for one-off invoices or occasional use.

Flexibility and recurring customisation

  • Word templates (Word Online) are ideal.
  • Customise layout, colours, fonts and logo to match your branding.
  • Good if you regularly invoice different clients with varying details.

Automatic calculations and complex invoices

  • Excel templates help when you have multiple line items, discounts or different VAT rates.
  • Totals and formulae update automatically.
  • Great for tradespeople or freelancers with detailed billing.

Branding & PDF export

  • Canva is best if you want your logo, colours and fonts applied consistently.
  • Export directly as a print-ready PDF.
  • Alternatively, export your Word or Excel invoice as a PDF before sending.

6.4 Tips & Checklist for Using Templates

To keep your invoices correct and professional, check the following:

Required fields to check

  • Invoice number (sequential)
  • Invoice date and date of supply
  • Your name/business name and address
  • Customer's name and address
  • Description of goods or services
  • Amounts (net, VAT, gross — or just total if not VAT-registered)
  • VAT registration number (if applicable)
  • CRO details (if a limited company)
  • VAT note if not registered: "Not registered for VAT"

Adapting templates

  • Fill in all fields correctly (client details, amounts, description).
  • For recurring invoices: save a master template and only change the variable data each time.

PDF export & archiving

  • Save completed invoices as PDF or PDF/A.
  • This makes them tamper-evident and suitable for long-term storage.

7. Creating Invoices Automatically: Software & Tools

Writing invoices manually takes time and leaves room for errors. The right software makes it faster, more reliable and often free. With invoicing software you can:

  • Create invoices in seconds
  • Avoid calculation mistakes
  • Automatically prepare data for your bookkeeping
  • File VAT returns through Revenue Online Service (ROS)
  • Send e-invoices or structured formats where required

There are suitable solutions for sole traders, freelancers, tradespeople and limited companies of all sizes.

7.1 Free Tools

Perfect if you only invoice occasionally or are just starting out.

What they offer:

  • Ready-made templates
  • Store customer details
  • Automatically assign invoice numbers
  • Save invoices as PDF

Advantages:

  • No cost
  • Easy to use
  • Ideal for one-off jobs or side work

Limitations:

  • Less automation
  • Usually no PEPPOL or structured e-invoice export
  • Limited features for growing businesses

7.2 Professional Accounting Software

If you send many invoices or need to stay on top of VAT returns and bookkeeping, professional software pays for itself quickly.

What you can do:

  • Create recurring invoices automatically
  • Manage quotes and purchase orders
  • Send automated payment reminders
  • Prepare and file VAT returns via Revenue Online Service (ROS)
  • Connect to your bank account for automatic reconciliation
  • Track time and projects
  • Run reports on outstanding invoices and cash flow
  • Access everything via mobile app

Popular options used in Ireland include: Xero, QuickBooks, Sage, Surf Accounts, Relate Accounts, Wave (free), Zoho Invoice.

Advantages: Saves time, reduces errors, keeps all records in one place — and ROS integration for VAT filing is built in on many platforms.

7.3 Software for Tradespeople

Tradespeople often need specialist features. Purpose-built trade software can:

  • Record materials and labour as separate line items
  • Capture site measurements and job notes
  • Manage quotes, jobs and invoices in one place
  • Track parts and inventory
  • Handle service contracts and scheduled maintenance
  • Generate invoices automatically when a job is completed

Advantages: Less admin, faster quoting, cleaner records on site and in the office.

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7.4 Online Invoice Generators

For single invoices, an online generator is a quick solution.

  • Create a PDF directly in your browser
  • Use templates for VAT or non-VAT invoices
  • Save customer details for next time

Best for:

  • One-off jobs
  • Private individuals
  • Small side projects

For regular invoicing or VAT returns, full accounting software is a better long-term choice.

🔍 Search for: free invoice generator Ireland, create invoice online Ireland

7.5 Benefits of Automated Invoicing

  • Save time: less manual work per invoice
  • Avoid errors: totals and VAT calculated automatically
  • Stay compliant: required fields populated correctly
  • Get paid faster: digital invoices reach clients instantly
  • Stay organised: all invoices stored and searchable in one place
  • Ready for e-invoicing: leading tools already support structured formats

Summary: Automated invoicing makes life easier for everyone — whether you use a free online generator, a dedicated app or full accounting software. Pick the tool that fits your workload and grow it with your business.

8. Payment, Reminders & Late Payment

Writing an invoice is only the first step. To make sure you actually get paid on time, you need clear payment terms, polite reminders and a process for chasing late payers. Here is how it works in practice.

8.1 Payment Terms: When Must the Customer Pay?

Common payment terms in Ireland:

  • 14 days
  • 30 days
  • Immediate / on receipt
  • 7 days (for small amounts or consumer clients)

⚡ Important: Under the European Communities (Late Payment in Commercial Transactions) Regulations 2012 (S.I. No. 580 of 2012), if no payment term is agreed, the statutory default is 30 days from receipt of invoice or delivery of goods/services (whichever is later) for B2B transactions. For public authority contracts, the maximum statutory payment period is 30 days.

Examples of payment term wording:

  • "Payment due within 14 days of invoice date."
  • "Payment due on receipt."
  • "Net 30 — payment due 30 days from the invoice date."

🔍 Search for: invoice payment terms Ireland, Irish invoice due date

8.2 Tracking Payments

Always keep an eye on what has been paid and what is outstanding:

  • Check invoice number and amount against your bank statement
  • Record payment in your accounting software or bookkeeping records
  • Note any partial payments
  • Watch for late payments and send a reminder promptly

✨ Tip: Most accounting software can reconcile payments automatically against open invoices.

8.3 Writing a Payment Reminder

When an invoice is overdue, start gently. A reminder is not a formal demand — it is a friendly nudge.

  • Quote the invoice number and date
  • State the outstanding amount
  • Set a new payment date
  • Keep the tone polite and professional

💡 Example:

"Just a gentle reminder that invoice 2025-014, dated 2 March 2025, for €350 remains unpaid. Please could you arrange payment within the next 7 days? If you have already done so, please disregard this message."

🔍 Search for: payment reminder template Ireland

8.4 Writing a Formal Demand Letter

If reminders are ignored, escalate with a formal letter before action. This should be clear, factual and firm.

Structure of a formal demand:

  • Subject line: "Formal Demand for Payment — Invoice 2025-014"
  • Invoice number, date and outstanding amount
  • Reference any earlier reminders sent
  • Set a final payment deadline (e.g. 7 days)
  • State your intention to add statutory interest and compensation under the Late Payment Regulations if unpaid
  • Mention potential referral to a debt collection agency or the courts if necessary

💡 Example:

"Despite our previous reminders, invoice 2025-014 for €350 remains outstanding. We require payment in full within 7 days. Should this not be received, we reserve the right to add statutory interest and compensation under the European Communities (Late Payment in Commercial Transactions) Regulations 2012, and to pursue recovery through the courts."

🔍 Search for: letter before action template Ireland, late payment demand letter Ireland

8.5 Late Payment Interest and Compensation

Under the European Communities (Late Payment in Commercial Transactions) Regulations 2012 (which apply to B2B and B2G transactions):

  • Statutory interest: 8% above the European Central Bank (ECB) main refinancing rate per year on the outstanding amount.
  • Fixed compensation for recovery costs:
    • €40 for debts under €1,000
    • €70 for debts between €1,000 and €9,999
    • €100 for debts of €10,000 or more
  • You may also claim reasonable additional recovery costs where they exceed the fixed sum.

✨ Tip: Mention these rights in your terms and conditions and on your formal demand letters. Many late payers will settle promptly once they understand what you are legally entitled to claim.

8.6 Debt Recovery: Step by Step

  1. Payment reminder — friendly, informative
  2. Second reminder — more direct, shorter deadline
  3. Formal demand letter — reference Late Payment Regulations, final deadline
  4. Small Claims Court — for consumer debts up to €2,000; or the District Court for commercial debts up to €15,000
  5. Debt collection agency — as a last resort for larger or contested debts

✨ Tip: Many accounting tools can send automated payment reminders and track outstanding invoices, so you never miss a follow-up.

Summary: Clear payment terms, polite reminders and knowing your rights under Irish late payment law are the best tools for getting paid on time without damaging client relationships.

9. Record Keeping & Legal Requirements

Invoices, contracts and accounting records do more than fill filing cabinets — they protect you in any Revenue audit or dispute. Keeping them correctly means you are always prepared.

In this section:

  • Which documents you must keep
  • How long Revenue requires you to keep them
  • What digital record-keeping means in practice
  • A summary of the required fields on an Irish invoice

9.1 How Long Must You Keep Records?

6 Years (standard)

  • All invoices you send and receive
  • Bank statements and receipts
  • VAT records
  • All business accounting records

Under Section 886 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997, records must be kept for 6 years from the end of the accounting period or tax year to which they relate.
💡 Example: Invoice dated 12 March 2025 → keep until at least 31 December 2031.

Self-Employed / Sole Traders

  • Revenue requires records to be kept for 6 years from the end of the tax year to which they relate.
  • This includes receipts, invoices, bank statements, and any other documents supporting your Income Tax return.

Limited Companies

  • The Companies Act 2014 requires accounting records to be kept for 6 years from the date they are made.

Business Correspondence

  • Contracts, quotes, email correspondence, payment demands: keep for 6 years as they may be needed to support the underlying transactions.

9.2 Paper or Digital — Both Acceptable

Revenue accepts records kept on paper or digitally. Key principles for all businesses:

  • Legible: records must be readable at any time, by you and Revenue.
  • Unaltered: once issued, invoices should not be edited. Corrections must be made via credit note and a new invoice.
  • Complete: every transaction must be recorded and traceable.
  • Accessible: retrievable at any time, including years later, and available to Revenue on request.

✨ Practical tips:

  • Save PDF invoices without alteration.
  • For e-invoices, keep the original structured file (XML or PEPPOL format) alongside any PDF version.
  • Scans of paper records are acceptable if they are clear, complete and stored securely.
  • Use cloud accounting software to automate record-keeping.
  • Keep a record of your invoicing process — this is useful in any Revenue audit.

Legal framework: The record-keeping requirements for businesses in Ireland are set out primarily in Section 886 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997, the Value Added Tax Consolidation Act 2010 (for VAT records), and the Companies Act 2014 (for limited companies). Records must be kept safely, accurately and be available for inspection if Revenue requests them.

9.3 Required Fields on Every Irish Invoice

Summary checklist for a full VAT invoice (Revenue / VATCA 2010):

  • The word "invoice"
  • Unique, sequential invoice number
  • Invoice date
  • Date of supply if different from invoice date
  • Supplier name, address and VAT registration number
  • Customer name and address
  • Description of goods or services
  • Net unit price per item
  • Quantity
  • VAT rate per line
  • Total net amount
  • Total VAT amount
  • Total gross amount
  • Payment terms and bank details (IBAN/BIC)
  • CRO details (limited companies)

9.4 Non-VAT-Registered Businesses

  • Do not charge or show VAT
  • Add the note: "Not registered for VAT"
  • All other good-practice fields remain important (invoice number, date, description, total, payment terms)

9.5 Correcting Invoices

  • Issue a credit note: Formally cancels the original invoice. Always reference the original invoice number.
  • Issue a new, correct invoice: Use the next sequential invoice number. Mark it as a correction — e.g. "Replaces Invoice 2025-004".

✨ Tip: Never simply delete or overwrite the original invoice. Both the original and the correction must be retained in your records for the full six-year retention period.

9.6 Payment Demands and Reminders

Payment reminders and formal demand letters are also business records — keep them for 6 years. They document outstanding payments and support any legal action you may need to take.

✨ Tip: Accounting software can automate reminders and log all correspondence against each invoice, keeping your records clean automatically.

10. Summary — Invoicing Made Simple

Writing invoices doesn't have to be complicated. With a few simple rules, good templates and the right software, you can stay on top of your invoicing, save time and get paid promptly.

Key takeaways:

  • Include all required fields: Your name and address, customer details, unique invoice number, description of supply, amounts and VAT rate — or a "not registered for VAT" note if applicable.
  • Know your VAT status: Below €42,500 (services) or €85,000 (goods) in annual turnover you do not have to register for VAT. Above the relevant threshold, you must charge VAT and issue proper VAT invoices including your VAT number.
  • Limited companies: Must include your registered company name, CRO number and registered office address on every invoice.
  • Public sector suppliers: Central government contracts may require PEPPOL-compliant e-invoices. Check with each contracting authority.
  • Templates and tools save time: Word, PDF or an online generator works for occasional use. For regular invoicing, dedicated accounting software pays for itself quickly.
  • Clear terms and follow-up: State payment terms on every invoice. Remind politely, escalate firmly, and know your rights under the Late Payment Regulations — statutory interest at 8% above the ECB rate plus fixed compensation.
  • Keep records for 6 years: Invoices, VAT records and business correspondence must all be retained under the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 and the Companies Act 2014.
  • Automate where you can: Accounting software handles numbering, totals, VAT return preparation and payment chasing — leaving you free to focus on your work.

📌 Remember: These tips make invoicing faster, cleaner and more professional — but they are no substitute for personalised advice from an accountant or tax adviser for your specific situation.

11. Disclaimer — Important Notice

This article is for general information purposes only.

  • It does not constitute legal, tax or accounting advice.
  • For questions specific to your business, please consult a qualified professional (e.g. a chartered accountant or tax adviser registered in Ireland).

✨ Tip: Print out the key points as a checklist or save a template ready to go. That makes invoicing even faster and more reliable every time.


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