Bookkeeping Audits
Surprise inspections, unrecorded receipts and book disqualification — how to prepare.
Read full article →The "Israel Invoices" model changed the rules of the game: a tax invoice above the threshold without an allocation number from the Tax Authority — your customer cannot deduct input VAT on it. And since June 1, 2026 the threshold stands at just NIS 5,000, so nearly every business-to-business transaction requires an allocation. Who is required, how it works, and what to do when an allocation is refused.
Category: VAT & Reporting | Reading time: approx. 7 minutes
The "Israel Invoices" model is one of the Tax Authority's most significant moves of the past decade, designed to fight a phenomenon that cost the state billions of shekels a year: fictitious invoices — invoices issued with no real transaction behind them, used to unlawfully deduct input VAT. The chosen solution is simple in principle and far-reaching in its consequences: above the statutory threshold, a tax invoice between dealers entitles the customer to an input VAT deduction only if it received an "allocation number" from the Tax Authority in advance.
An allocation number is a nine-digit number issued by the Tax Authority's system for each specific tax invoice, in real time, before it is issued. In practice, the process is nearly transparent for those set up correctly:
The model was applied gradually, with the threshold (invoice amount including VAT) dropping year by year:
The meaning: if at first the model touched mainly large transactions, today — with a NIS 5,000 threshold — it applies to the vast majority of business-to-business transactions in the economy. A business that has not yet prepared simply cannot function with business customers.
Here lies the model's "whip", and it is aimed at the customer: a tax invoice that requires an allocation number and lacks one — does not entitle the customer to an input VAT deduction. In other words, your business customer loses the VAT they paid you (18%!) if you fail to provide an invoice with a lawful allocation. The practical result in the field: business customers simply refuse to pay invoices without an allocation number, and an unprepared supplier finds itself with a collection and cash-flow problem. On your side as a customer — make sure every supplier invoice above the threshold carries an allocation number, or your input deduction is at risk.
This is the heart of the model from the Tax Authority's perspective: it may decline to allocate a number where there is a real concern the invoice is being issued unlawfully (suspected fictitious invoice). In such a case:
An allocation refusal is also a warning sign: it indicates the business has been flagged in the Authority's risk-analysis systems. In that situation it is worth reviewing the full picture with your CPA — before the matter rolls into a comprehensive audit.
Good to know
The allocation number is not just a regulatory duty — it is also a tool working in your favor. Verifying allocation numbers on supplier invoices protects you from deducting input VAT on a problematic invoice, which could trigger retroactive VAT charges, fines and interest. A business that routinely checks incoming invoices saves itself headaches in the next audit.
Our firm accompanies businesses in full preparation for the Israel Invoices model: connecting and configuring software with the allocation system, arranging authorizations and powers of attorney, implementing supplier-invoice checking procedures — and professional representation before the Tax Authority in cases of allocation refusal, clarification and hearing. The firm's partners — former senior officials of the Israel Tax Authority — know the control mechanisms up close. Encountered an allocation refusal, or not sure you are prepared? Talk to us.
The above article is provided for general information only and does not constitute professional advice or a substitute for specific consultation. The thresholds and rules are updated from time to time. For any question, you are welcome to contact us.
Sincerely,
Hager-Alperowitz & Co. — Certified Public Accountants
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