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What is Tax Point? Determining When VAT Becomes Due

Raj Roy Toksabam

April 14, 2026

30 second summary | The tax point determines when VAT becomes due in the UAE and is generally the earliest of the invoice date, payment receipt or completion of supply. UAE VAT time of supply rules cover standard sales, advance payments, continuous supplies and imports. Accurate tax point accounting in the UAE VAT is essential for correct VAT return filing and avoiding FTA penalties.

The tax point, or time of supply, determines when VAT becomes due and reportable to the Federal Tax Authority (FTA). Under the UAE VAT time of supply rules, VAT is not always due when goods are delivered or a service is completed. It is triggered by whichever of the following occurs first: 

  • Date of supply (delivery of goods or completion of services)
  • Date of tax invoice issuance, if issued within 14 days of supply
  • Date of payment receipt, whether full or partial

Getting this wrong risks penalties and incorrect VAT returns. Getting it right makes compliance straightforward.

UAE VAT time of supply rules by transaction type

The tax point is determined by specific trigger events defined under the UAE VAT law, and identifying the earliest of these is essential for accurate VAT reporting.

Supply of goods

The tax point for goods is triggered when goods are delivered, made available to the customer or installation is completed, whichever comes first. If a valid tax invoice is issued within 14 days of delivery, or payment is received earlier, that earlier event becomes the tax point.

Supply of services

For services, the tax point is the date the service is completed. If a tax invoice is issued within 14 days of completion, or payment is received before that, the earliest of these events applies.

Invoice vs tax point in UAE VAT

A tax invoice triggers the tax point only if issued within the legally prescribed timeframe. If issued before the supply is complete, the invoice date may become the tax point. If issued after the allowed period, it does not override a tax point already triggered by supply or payment. This makes invoicing timing a direct compliance variable, not just an administrative task.

Advance payments

When a UAE business receives an advance payment, VAT becomes due immediately on the amount received. The tax point is triggered at the point of payment, even if goods or services are delivered later.

Continuous supplies

For ongoing or periodic supplies, such as rentals or annual contracts, VAT becomes due at the earliest of the invoice date, the contractual payment due date or the date payment is received. If no invoice is issued and no payment is received, a tax point is deemed to occur at least once every 12 months.

Tax point accounting in the UAE VAT: Practical examples

Let’s take three different scenarios to determine their tax point:

Example 1: Early Invoice

  • Goods delivered: 15 March
  • Invoice issued: 10 March
  • Tax point: 10 March (invoice date, as it precedes delivery)

Example 2: Advance Payment

  • Advance payment received: 5 April
  • Service completed: 20 April
  • Tax point: 5 April (payment date triggers VAT on the amount received)

Example 3: Standard Case

  • Service completed: 25 May
  • Invoice issued: 28 May
  • Payment received: 10 June
  • Tax point: 25 May (earliest event — completion of service)

Special Cases Under UAE VAT Time of Supply Rules

Certain transactions follow modified time of supply rules, requiring businesses to apply VAT differently to ensure accurate compliance.

  • Partial payments

VAT becomes due only on the amount received. The remaining VAT is triggered at the earliest of further payment, invoice issuance or supply completion.

  • Imports

For imported goods, VAT becomes due at the time of customs clearance. VAT-registered UAE businesses typically account for this VAT using the reverse charge mechanism in their VAT return, while unregistered businesses pay VAT at the time of import.

  • Deemed supplies

VAT may apply even without payment in specific cases defined under UAE VAT law, including gifts exceeding AED 500 per recipient in a 12-month period, business goods or services applied to non-business purposes and certain transfers made without consideration. Time of supply rules still apply to determine the tax point.

Conclusion

Tax point accounting in the UAE VAT requires tracking three triggers: invoice date, payment receipt and supply completion, across every transaction type. The complexity increases with advance payments, recurring contracts and deemed supplies, where manual tracking creates room for error.

TallyPrime helps UAE businesses automatically track invoice dates, payments and supply events, generate FTA-aligned VAT reports and reduce errors in tax point determination.

FAQs

No. Once triggered by the earliest qualifying event, the tax point is fixed and subsequent events do not alter it.

If the invoice created a valid tax point, VAT liability may already have arisen. Adjustments must be handled through a properly issued credit note; the original tax point is not reversed.

The tax point is determined the same way, but VAT must be calculated using the exchange rate applicable on the tax point date.

No. Proforma invoices are not tax invoices and do not trigger VAT liability unless a payment is received against them.

The original tax point remains unchanged. A credit note is issued to adjust the VAT, but it does not alter when the original liability arose.

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