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EMPLOYER GUIDE · TAX & COMPLIANCE TRAINING

e-Invoice Malaysia 2026: the employer guide to the LHDN MyInvois mandate

What every Malaysian employer must know — and train their finance team for — as the phased e-Invoice rollout reaches the RM1 million threshold.

By Steph Eng · Carriera·Updated 17 June 2026
The short answer

This e-Invoice Malaysia 2026 employer guide covers the LHDN MyInvois mandate. As of 1 January 2026, every business with annual turnover above RM1 million must issue e-Invoices; turnover below RM1 million is exempt. Phase 4 firms have a penalty-free relaxation until 31 December 2027, with full enforcement from 1 January 2028.

If you run a Malaysian company, e-Invoice (e-Invois) is no longer a future project — it is a live compliance obligation for most employers in 2026. The Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia (LHDN / HASiL) has rolled out mandatory electronic invoicing through its MyInvois system in phases by annual turnover, and the final mandated band took effect on 1 January 2026. This employer guide explains who is affected, by when, what concretely changes for your finance and accounts staff, and why HRD-Corp-claimable e-Invoice and tax training is the practical way to get a team ready before enforcement bites.

Carriera works with employers across logistics, manufacturing, professional services and retail — and the single most common question we hear is simply: "Does this apply to us yet, and what do we actually have to do?" The numbers below are checked against LHDN's own published timeline and other named authorities, with every figure sourced inline.

§ 01
The mandate

Is e-Invoice mandatory for my business in Malaysia in 2026?

e-Invoice is mandatory in 2026 for any Malaysian business with annual turnover or revenue above RM1 million. Because the phased rollout reached its final mandated band on 1 January 2026, every turnover tier above RM1 million is now inside the mandate. Businesses below RM1 million are exempt.

According to the official HASiL e-Invoice Implementation Timeline, the rollout ran in four phases: large corporations first, then progressively smaller turnover bands. The page states plainly that "taxpayers with an annual turnover or revenue of less than RM1,000,000 are exempted from e-Invoice implementation."

What are the e-Invoice rollout phases and turnover thresholds?

The LHDN e-Invoice rollout has four implementation phases keyed to annual turnover, starting 1 August 2024 for the largest companies and reaching businesses up to RM5 million turnover on 1 January 2026. The table below shows each phase exactly as published, plus the current relaxation position.

PhaseAnnual turnoverMandatory fromPenalty-free relaxation
Phase 1More than RM100 million1 August 2024Ended
Phase 2RM25 million – RM100 million1 January 2025Ended
Phase 3RM5 million – RM25 million1 July 2025Ended
Phase 4Up to RM5 million (above RM1m)1 January 2026Until 31 December 2027
ExemptBelow RM1 millionNot required

Phases and thresholds: HASiL e-Invoice Implementation Timeline (updated 7 December 2025). Phase 4 relaxation extension: VATupdate — Specific Guideline v4.7, 20 April 2026.

What is the e-Invoice exemption threshold — RM500,000 or RM1 million?

The current e-Invoice exemption threshold is annual turnover below RM1,000,000. The threshold was raised from RM500,000 to RM1 million, announced in December 2025, which means many micro and small businesses that were originally scheduled to onboard are now fully exempt.

As tax-technology authority Sovos reports, the exemption threshold was lifted from RM500,000 to RM1 million (announced 8 December 2025), and the previously planned phase for businesses with turnover up to RM1 million — once slated for 1 July 2026 — was cancelled. The practical takeaway for owners near that line: confirm your own audited turnover, because it determines whether the mandate touches you at all.

If your turnover crosses RM1 million, the question is no longer whether e-Invoice applies — only how ready your accounts team is for it.
§ 02
What changes

What changes for my finance and accounts team under e-Invoice?

Under e-Invoice, your finance team stops issuing free-form invoices and instead submits structured invoices to MyInvois for near real-time validation. Each document must carry up to 55 standardised data fields and both parties' Tax Identification Numbers (TIN), and — once validated by MyInvois — it returns with a validated QR code before it is treated as a complete e-Invoice.

This is a workflow change, not just a software change — which is exactly why staff capability matters. Per ClearTax's field guidance, an e-Invoice must include buyer and seller details, TINs, item descriptions, tax and SST data, classification codes and totals across 55 fields. LHDN's own e-Invoice portal describes the system as enabling "near real-time validation and storage of transactions" — the validation step, including the returned QR code, is what makes a document a live e-Invoice rather than a plain PDF. The table below maps the old habit to the new requirement.

AreaBefore e-InvoiceUnder MyInvois (2026)
Invoice formatFree-form PDF / WordStructured submission with up to 55 data fields
Buyer identityName & addressValidated TIN (and SST/registration data) required
ValidationNone — issued directlyNear real-time validation by MyInvois; QR code returned
CorrectionsCancel & reissue any timeShort post-validation window to reject / cancel, per LHDN guidelines
High-value salesCould be consolidatedSingle transaction above RM10,000 must be an individual e-Invoice (from 1 Jan 2026)

55 mandatory data fields: ClearTax — data fields for e-Invoicing. RM10,000 individual-invoice rule (effective 1 January 2026): ClearTax — e-Invoice phases & rules. Validation and QR-code mechanics: LHDN / HASiL e-Invoice. Always confirm rejection/cancellation timing against the current LHDN e-Invoice guideline.

Does the relaxation period mean my team can wait?

No. The relaxation period delays penalties, not the obligation to start. Phase 4 businesses (turnover up to RM5 million) were still required to implement e-Invoice from 1 January 2026; the interim period only removes penalties for certain compliance gaps while teams adjust.

The interim penalty-free relaxation for Phase 4 was extended to 31 December 2027 under e-Invoice Specific Guideline Version 4.7, with full enforcement — including penalties under the Income Tax Act 1967 — beginning 1 January 2028, as reported by VATupdate. Even during this window, any single transaction above RM10,000 must be issued as an individual e-Invoice. Treat the relaxation as time to train and test — not a reason to defer.

§ 03
Getting ready

How does HRD-Corp-claimable training help employers prepare for e-Invoice?

HRD-Corp-claimable training lets employers fund e-Invoice and tax upskilling from the levy they already pay, rather than out of pocket. Under the PSMB Act 2001, employers with 10 or more Malaysian employees pay a 1% levy and can reclaim approved training costs through the SBL-Khas scheme.

Per the official HRD Corp registered-employers page, registration is compulsory for employers with 10 or more Malaysian employees (levy of 1% of monthly wages) and optional for those with 5 to 9 employees (0.5%). Through the HRD Corp Claimable Courses (SBL-Khas) scheme, registered employers can send staff to an HRD Corp Approved Training Provider and have the course fee debited from their levy account — so e-Invoice readiness is, for most employers, a budget you have already funded (SBL-Khas scheme). Our HRD Corp claim guide walks through the mechanics step by step.

1

Confirm your phase

Check your audited annual turnover against the RM1 million exemption line and the RM5 million Phase 4 ceiling to know exactly which obligations apply.

2

Map the workflow

Identify where TINs, MyInvois submission, QR validation and the RM10,000 rule slot into your current billing process and ERP.

3

Train the team

Upskill finance, accounts and sales-admin staff on the 55 fields, the validation flow and consolidation rules through SBL-Khas claimable training.

4

Test before enforcement

Use the relaxation window to run live submissions, fix rejections, and embed the new habits before penalties start on 1 January 2028.

Carriera Academy is an HRD Corp Approved Training Provider, and our tax-compliance programmes — covering e-Invoice, SST, and LHDN obligations — are delivered by experienced trainers and are SBL-Khas claimable. We have supported 50+ companies across Malaysia with their people and compliance needs. You can browse current sessions on our training page, since live programmes are pulled in real time rather than fixed here.

§ 04
Questions

Frequently asked questions

Is e-Invoice mandatory for my business in Malaysia in 2026?
e-Invoice is mandatory in 2026 for businesses with annual turnover above RM1 million. Under the LHDN timeline, Phase 4 (turnover up to RM5 million) began on 1 January 2026, so all bands above RM1 million are now inside the mandate. Businesses with turnover below RM1 million are exempt.
What is the e-Invoice exemption threshold in Malaysia?
The e-Invoice exemption threshold is annual turnover or revenue below RM1,000,000, per the official HASiL timeline. The threshold was raised from RM500,000 to RM1 million, announced in December 2025, and the previously planned phase for businesses with turnover up to RM1 million was cancelled.
When does full e-Invoice enforcement begin for small businesses?
For Phase 4 taxpayers (turnover up to RM5 million), the interim penalty-free relaxation period was extended to 31 December 2027 under e-Invoice Specific Guideline Version 4.7. Full enforcement, including penalties under the Income Tax Act 1967, begins on 1 January 2028 for these businesses.
Can e-Invoice and tax training be claimed under HRD Corp?
Yes. Approved e-Invoice and tax training can be funded through an employer's HRD Corp levy under the SBL-Khas scheme. Employers with 10 or more Malaysian employees pay a 1% levy under the PSMB Act 2001. Carriera Academy is an HRD Corp Approved Training Provider whose programmes are SBL-Khas claimable.
What changes for my accounts team under e-Invoice?
Accounts and finance teams must capture buyer and seller Tax Identification Numbers (TIN), submit invoices to MyInvois for near real-time validation, and work with the validated document it returns. From 1 January 2026, any single transaction above RM10,000 must be issued as an individual e-Invoice rather than consolidated.

This guide is general information, not tax or legal advice. Always verify your specific obligations against the latest LHDN / HASiL guidance or your tax agent. Figures here are current as of 17 June 2026.

Get your team e-Invoice-ready — claimable under HRD Corp

Carriera Academy runs HRD-Corp-claimable e-Invoice, SST and tax-compliance training for Malaysian employers. Tell us your turnover band and team size, and we will point you to the right programme and the SBL-Khas claim path.