Every real business expense, once approved, directly reduces your profit—and therefore your corporate income tax.
That’s why tax authorities enforce a core principle:The invoice, payer/payee, consignor/consignee, and contract parties must all match.
Even without a formal contract, the invoice, payment parties, and delivery parties should be consistent.This is the golden rule of invoice compliance.
Invoices You Should Reject
A. Third-party invoices
Example: Company A provides the service, but another company issues the invoice.
B. Mislabeled invoices
Example: Advertising services are invoiced as “consulting fees” to fit a company’s registered scope or save on tax.
C. Other common red flags
1. Missing or incorrect tax info (e.g., no tax ID, wrong coding)
2. Invoices that don’t match actual business activity
3. Expired invoices (e.g., last year’s cost with this year’s date)
Invoices You Can Safely Accept
? Real business, matching documents – The invoice reflects an actual transaction with a valid business purpose.
? Four-part consistency – Payment flow, invoice flow, goods/services flow, and (if applicable) contract flow all align.
? Properly issued – Complete, accurate, stamped, and legally compliant.
?? One final reminder for finance teams:
Even compliant invoices may still trigger personal income tax withholding obligations (e.g., gifts, benefits). Don’t overlook that step.
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Set up in 2009
Focus on Tax& Accoounting
+86 189 16298482
wcx@ruanyinchina.com
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