Small-Value Invoice (Kleinbetragsrechnung) Germany 2026: Rules, Limits and Examples
Up to €250 gross, German VAT law allows a simplified invoice. Here's what must be on it, who can use it, and when it's not allowed.
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A Kleinbetragsrechnung is a simplified German invoice for amounts up to €250 gross (VAT included). It is defined in § 33 UStDV and lets you skip several mandatory fields that a full invoice under § 14 UStG would require. For a business that processes lots of small transactions, that saves real admin time.
What is a Kleinbetragsrechnung?
The €250 cap is gross – VAT included. At 19% VAT that's a net of roughly €210.08; at 7% VAT roughly €233.64. One cent above €250 gross and the full § 14 UStG invoice fields apply.
Mandatory fields under § 33 UStDV
Every Kleinbetragsrechnung must contain these five items:
- Full name and address of the supplier (your business as the seller)
- Invoice date
- Quantity and type of goods, or scope and nature of the service
- Gross total in one sum (net + VAT)
- Applicable VAT rate (e.g. 19% or 7%) – or, if VAT-exempt, a note explaining why
Example café receipt: “Cappuccino €4.80, includes 7% VAT” – done. For the longer field list that applies to standard invoices, see our guide on required invoice fields in Germany.
What you can leave out
Compared to a full § 14 UStG invoice, the following fields are optional on a Kleinbetragsrechnung:
- Customer name and address
- Invoice number
- Supplier's tax number or VAT ID (USt-IdNr.)
- Service delivery date (if different from the invoice date)
- Separate net and VAT amounts
That's where the time savings come from – a bakery doesn't need to capture each customer's address at the till.
Who can issue a small-value invoice?
Any business can. The format fits best for high-volume, small-ticket sectors:
- Retail (bakeries, pharmacies, kiosks, boutiques)
- Hospitality (cafés, restaurants, take-aways, delivery)
- Services with low tickets (taxi, hairdressing, laundry, small repairs)
- Freelancers billing small material costs or short engagements
If you run a UG or GmbH and currently issue full invoices for every under-€250 sale, switching to the simplified form is pure admin savings. For broader rules around GmbH invoicing, see our guide on writing invoices as a GmbH.
When you CANNOT use it
Four scenarios force you to issue a full invoice even below €250:
- Cross-border distance sales with special EU rules (§ 3c UStG)
- Intra-community supplies to businesses in another EU country
- Reverse charge transactions under § 13b UStG (e.g. construction services)
- Other cases where the recipient is liable for the VAT
For the cross-border B2B detail, see our EU B2B invoicing guide.
Input VAT deduction from a small-value invoice
Your customer can deduct input VAT – but only if the VAT rate is shown explicitly. “VAT included” isn't enough; the invoice has to say ‘19%’ or ‘7%’.
If multiple VAT rates apply (e.g. a restaurant bill with 7% on food and 19% on drinks), the amounts must be split by rate.
A common trap: writing the customer's name on a Kleinbetragsrechnung but writing it incorrectly (wrong legal form, missing address). A half-filled customer block can void the customer's VAT deduction. Either leave it out completely or get it right in full.
Kleinbetragsrechnung as a Kleinunternehmer
Under the Kleinunternehmer scheme (§ 19 UStG) you don't charge VAT. Instead of a VAT rate, the invoice needs a note such as:
Gemäß § 19 UStG wird keine Umsatzsteuer erhoben. (No VAT charged in accordance with § 19 UStG.)
That satisfies the “tax-exemption note” requirement from § 33 UStDV. Your customer cannot deduct input VAT from a Kleinunternehmer invoice.
E-invoicing and small-value invoices in 2026
Germany's B2B e-invoicing obligation has been in force since 1 January 2025 (mandatory receipt); structured outbound e-invoices will be phased in from 2027/2028. Small-value invoices up to €250 are explicitly exempt (§ 33 UStDV combined with § 14 UStG). They can stay paper receipts or PDFs.
Capturing small receipts digitally still makes sense for GoBD-compliant retention (eight years). With Norman's free invoicing tool you can issue Kleinbetragsrechnungen as easily as full invoices – and they flow straight into your EÜR or double-entry books.
Fixing errors
For a standard invoice you'd issue a Stornorechnung. For a small-value receipt, a new corrected receipt is often enough – as long as the change is well documented. The full procedure lives in our guide on cancelling and correcting invoices in Germany.
Conclusion
The Kleinbetragsrechnung is a useful shortcut when you handle a lot of small transactions: fewer required fields, no customer name needed, no separate net and VAT split. Memorise the five mandatory items from § 33 UStDV and the four exceptions (EU B2B, reverse charge, distance sales, intra-community supplies). And remember: even with the simplified form, the 8-year GoBD retention rule still applies.
Norman handles the operational finance work behind the scenes
From invoicing to bookkeeping, Norman keeps recurring finance work organized so you can stay on top of deadlines with less manual effort.