Kuwait has no VAT and no e-invoicing mandate as of 2026, so the key cross-border document is the commercial (customs) invoice used to clear goods; only foreign-owned companies face income tax.
Kuwait has not implemented VAT (the GCC framework was signed in 2017 but Parliament has repeatedly blocked it, and it is not in the current government plan) and has no e-invoicing mandate. There is therefore no domestic VAT invoice to issue: the document that matters for trade is the commercial (customs) invoice, which must identify the seller and buyer, describe each item with its HS code, and state quantity, unit price, total value, currency, country of origin and Incoterms. Corporate income tax (15%) applies only to foreign-owned businesses, and a 15% domestic minimum top-up tax applies to large multinational groups from 2025. Invoices may be in English or Arabic; keep commercial records for at least 5 years.
At minimum, an invoice issued in Kuwait should carry these fields:
Last reviewed June 9, 2026
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