With more than 8,000 businesses across New Zealand registered to receive eInvoices and this number growing daily,
eInvoicing is fast becoming the new norm.
Importantly, the list of large businesses leading the way is growing. Big players, including the likes of Robert
Walters, KPMG, Office Max and Xero are already, or are close to being, able to send eInvoices to their business
customers.
The question for businesses now is, are you ready to receive eInvoices and experience the benefits?
eInvoicing is a simple method of invoicing involving the secure digital exchange of invoice information between
suppliers’ and buyers’ accounting systems. It continues to roll out across New Zealand, driving efficiency and
delivering savings to businesses and the economy.
With over 280 million business-to-business invoices exchanged in New Zealand annually, the efficiency and faster payment
capability eInvoicing provides will be worth billions to businesses and the New Zealand economy.
Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment Deputy Secretary Finance and Performance, Michael Alp, says many
government agencies have updated their contract and procurement documents to include eInvoicing as a preference, instead
of PDF invoices.
“Over time, eInvoicing will become the only way government agencies accept invoices,” says Mr Alp.
eInvoicing is an easy efficiency gain. No more PDFs, less manual data entry, and less chasing up unpaid or lost
invoices. eInvoicing can enable businesses to get paid faster, and provide cost savings, reduced admin, increased
accuracy and security.
Mr Alp says businesses are increasingly wanting to find out if their trading partners are on board with eInvoicing. They
can do so by checking the list of all registered businesses on the eInvoicing website here.
“We encourage businesses to get registered to receive eInvoices so they’re on the list and can begin experiencing the
easy efficiency gains.”
Setting up eInvoicing is simple and free for most businesses. For example, Xero and MYOB offer this capability free as
part of their usual subscription and many major providers are now eInvoice-ready. Businesses can check if their provider
is ready here.
“It’s exciting that eInvoicing is now more real and relevant with multiple major buyers coming on board. This will help
to exponentially increase the volumes of eInvoices being exchanged.
“eInvoicing is a smarter way to invoice, it’s the next step for New Zealand businesses. The more that exchange
eInvoices, the more they, and the economy, will benefit – growing Aotearoa New Zealand for all” says Mr Alp.
To find out more check out eInvoicing at einvoicing.govt.nz or talk to your business advisor or accountant.