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E-Invoice for Freelancers & Self-Employed: Mandatory?

Many self-employed people wonder whether the e-invoice mandate even applies to them. The clear answer: yes. Freelancers and the self-employed are perfectly ordinary businesses for VAT purposes.

You are a business within the meaning of the UStG

Whether you’re a developer, copywriter, designer or consultant — for VAT there is no special status for the self-employed. The same rules therefore apply as to any other business:

You’ll find the full timeline under E-invoice deadlines.

The exception: small businesses

If you are also a small business under § 19 UStG (prior year ≤ €25,000, current year ≤ €100,000), you may under § 34a UStDV issue your invoices permanently as a PDF or on paper. You still have to be able to receive e-invoices, however. Details under E-invoice for small businesses.

How to switch over as a freelancer

  1. Ensure receiving: an email inbox is enough. Incoming XML can be opened and checked in your browser.
  2. Choose a format: XRechnung for pure data invoices, ZUGFeRD if the customer also wants to see the invoice as a PDF. The comparison helps with the choice.
  3. Prepare sending: you don’t need expensive accounting software. An e-invoice can be created for free.

No need to panic

For freelancers, the switch is usually straightforward: few invoices, simple structures. Try the entire workflow — creating, checking, exporting — directly in your browser. No sign-up, no upload.

Frequently asked questions

Does the e-invoice mandate apply to the self-employed?

Yes. For VAT purposes, the self-employed are ordinary businesses and are therefore fully covered by the e-invoice mandate — unless they are also a small business under § 19 UStG.

When do freelancers have to write e-invoices?

From 2027 if prior-year turnover exceeds €800,000, otherwise from 2028. Anyone who qualifies as a small business may permanently continue issuing PDF or paper invoices.