In a bid to go fully paperless, the UAE Government is digitising transactions and documents by accepting ePayments and digital invoicing.
The UAE recognises the use of electronic and/or digital invoicing. Federal Decree Law No. 8 of 2017 on VAT (PDF, 1 MB) recognises tax invoice in both forms: written and/or electronic.
Ministry of Finance (MoF) uses the eProcurement system which automates the whole purchase cycle until the completion of fees payment process. The system enables suppliers to participate online in tenders and auctions submitted by the UAE’s ministries and federal entities. It allows suppliers to follow up on purchase orders and submit digital invoices.
Similarly, the electronic invoicing system of Telecommunications and Digital Government Regulatory Authority allows the contracted suppliers to submit invoices electronically and follow-up financial dues, purchase orders, contracts, and awarding notifications via electronic alerts.
Read about the UAE's Electronic Transactions and Trust Services law.
In 2021, Dubai Digital government will go completely paper-free, eliminating more than 1 billion pieces of paper used for government transactions every year, saving time, resources and the environment. As a fully paperless government, 100 per cent of internal and customer transactions will be digitised from 2021. That means the Government will no longer issue or ask for paper documents across all of its operations. Digital Dubai is focusing on implementing the necessary technology to enable paper-free transactions and a legal framework to address digital procedures.
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Watch a video about Digital Dubai Paperless Strategy.
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