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Key take-aways
- New VAT rates: The Romanian Prime Minister has reintroduced legislation raising the standard VAT rate from 19% to 21% and replacing the existing 5% and 9% VAT rates by a new reduced rate of 11% with effect from 1 August 2025 (supply date driven).
 - Scope: The higher rates apply to all supplies currently taxed at the standard rate or reduced rates, including imports and cross-border B2C services.
 - Alignment with other reforms: The change coincides with mandatory B2C e-invoicing and the roll-out of SAF-T for small and non-resident taxpayers from January 2025.
 
What changes—and when
| 
 Timeline  | 
 Milestone  | 
 Practical impact  | 
| 
 1 Jan 2025  | 
 Mandatory B2C e-invoicing & SAF-T phase-in  | 
 System upgrades and data extraction already required—rate change must be built into the same project plan.  | 
| 
 2 Jul 2025  | 
 Official announcement  | 
 Businesses need to start preparing for the new VAT rates  | 
| 
 1 Aug 2025  | 
 21% and 11% VAT rates become effective  | 
 ERP/tax engines must apply 21% to supplies with a supply date on/after 1 Aug 2025—even if the invoice is dated earlier/later.  | 
Impact analysis
For businesses issuing Romanian VAT invoices
- ERP & tax engine updates – Add new 21% and 11% codes, map correct GL accounts, test cut-off logic.
 - Cut-off rules – Automate supply-date checks to prevent old-rate application to post-1 Aug 2025 supplies.
 - Contract & pricing review – Re-price gross B2C contracts or amend net-price clauses in B2B contracts where VAT is seller's cost.
 - Master data clean-up – Align customer tax categories, especially for distance-selling and OSS reporting.
 - Governance – Ensure Account Receivables and Order to Cash (O2C) are aware of the incoming VAT rate change.
 - External communication – Align with key customers and/or wider base to ensure a smooth transition with the new VAT rate, reduce potential invoice rejection and communicate chosen pricing strategy.
 
For businesses receiving Romanian VAT invoices
- Invoice validation – Update three-way match rules to accept 21% and 11% for supplies dated 1 Aug 2025 or later.
 - Input VAT deduction timing – Ensure AP teams recognise the correct tax point to avoid under- or over-claiming.
 - Budgeting & cash-flow – Factor in the increased VAT rate when modelling Romanian cost bases for H2 2025.
 - Governance – Ensure Account Payables (AP) & Procure to Pay (P2P) are aware of the incoming VAT rate change.
 - External communication – Align with key
suppliers and/or wider base to reduce potential invoice rejection
and de-risk vendor relationship potential challenges.
 
Beyond the headline rate
| 
 Area  | 
 Why it matters  | 
 Action  | 
| 
 E-Invoicing  | 
 B2C invoices must be issued via the RO e-Factura platform from 1 Jan 2025.  | 
 Ensure e-Factura integration supports the 21% rate code.  | 
| 
 SAF-T  | 
 First SAF-T returns for small/non-resident businesses due in July 2025 (June period).  | 
 Map the new VAT code to the correct SAF-T boxes.  | 
| 
 Pricing strategy  | 
 Consumer sensitivity to price increases is high.  | 
 Decide whether to absorb, partially pass on, or fully pass on the VAT rate increases.  | 
| 
 Systems testing  | 
 Dual-rate period risk between approval and go-live.  | 
 Run parallel invoicing tests covering Jul/Aug supplies.  | 
| 
 Technology Vendors  | 
 Ensure appropriate system updates are being passed through to 3rd party systems such ERP, Tax engine and VAT return platforms.  | 
 Contact vendors to understand rate change plan and align with internal IT team if needed to de-risk potential gap in tax rate accuracy being applied.  | 
A&M viewpoint
The VAT rate rise may look modest for most products and services, but the combination of rate change, e-invoicing, and SAF-T makes 2025 the most complex VAT year in Romania since 2016. Early alignment across IT, Tax, Finance, Sales, and Procurement is essential to avoid pricing errors, non-compliant invoices, and blocked input VAT.
Originally published 3 July 2025
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.