Qatar has no VAT yet, so the cross-border artifact is the commercial invoice; its Cabinet approved a draft e-invoicing law in May 2026, with a Peppol-based rollout expected to begin around 2027.
Qatar has not yet implemented VAT under the GCC framework, so there is no domestic VAT invoice to issue today; the document that matters for trade is the commercial (customs) invoice with the usual particulars — parties, HS codes, quantities, values, currency, country of origin and Incoterms. Corporate income tax (generally 10%) applies mainly to foreign-owned profit. In May 2026 Qatar's Cabinet approved a draft e-invoicing law and implementing regulations, prepared by the Ministry of Finance with the General Tax Authority (GTA); industry guidance expects a phased, Peppol-based rollout starting around 2027 for large taxpayers, but no official timeline, format or scope has been published. Invoices may be in Arabic or English; keep records for at least 10 years.
At minimum, an invoice issued in Qatar should carry these fields:
Last reviewed June 9, 2026
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