[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":533},["ShallowReactive",2],{"guide-facebook-ads-self-billed-e-invoice-malaysia":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"answer":6,"authorId":7,"body":8,"category":448,"ctaVariant":449,"description":450,"examples":451,"extension":452,"faqs":453,"heroImage":478,"intro":479,"meta":480,"navigation":482,"path":483,"publishedAt":484,"seo":485,"sources":486,"stats":507,"stem":531,"updatedAt":484,"__hash__":532},"blog\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-ads-self-billed-e-invoice-malaysia.md","Self-Billed e-Invoice for Facebook Ads (Malaysia)","Because Meta Platforms Ireland Limited invoices Malaysian advertisers from Ireland and is not on MyInvois, LHDN's e-Invoice Specific Guideline v4.7 (published 20 April 2026) requires the Malaysian buyer to issue a self-billed e-Invoice to itself for that ad spend. Under s.8.3(b) foreign suppliers are a listed self-billed circumstance, and for imported services you must issue it by the end of the month following whichever came first, your payment to Meta or Meta's invoice. That validated, QR-coded document is your proof of expense for income tax.","likit-sae-lee",{"type":9,"value":10,"toc":433},"minimark",[11,15,18,23,26,29,33,36,39,42,45,49,52,66,69,72,149,153,156,159,162,166,169,177,180,184,187,190,193,200,204,207,210,213,217,220,223,226,229,233,236,308,311,314,318,321,402,414,418,421,424,427,430],[12,13,14],"p",{},"Facebook and Instagram ads are one of the few business expenses where the supplier never sends you a Malaysian tax invoice. Meta charges your card or bank, adds a service tax line, and emails a receipt from an Irish company. There is no local invoice because there is no local seller. That single fact is why Malaysia's e-Invoice rules ask you to do something that feels backwards at first: issue an invoice to yourself. This guide explains the rule plainly, in ringgit, and gives you a monthly routine so it stops feeling like a mystery.",[12,16,17],{},"To be clear up front, this is a process description, not tax advice. Thresholds, deadlines, grace periods and the withholding-tax angle have all been revised recently and can differ for your specific business. Use this to understand the shape of the obligation, then confirm the exact details with your own licensed tax agent.",[19,20,22],"h2",{"id":21},"the-short-answer","The short answer",[12,24,25],{},"Meta bills Malaysian advertisers through Meta Platforms Ireland Limited, an Ireland tax resident. That entity is a foreign supplier and is not on MyInvois, so it does not issue a Malaysian e-Invoice. Under LHDN's e-Invoice Specific Guideline (Version 4.7, published 20 April 2026 under section 134A of the Income Tax Act 1967), a purchase from a foreign supplier is a listed circumstance that requires a self-billed e-Invoice. It sits at s.8.3(b): \"Goods sold or services rendered by foreign suppliers.\" The mechanics are spelled out in Section 10.4.",[12,27,28],{},"In a normal transaction the seller issues the invoice. In a self-billed e-Invoice, the roles flip: you, the Malaysian purchaser, assume the supplier role and issue the document to yourself. You then submit it to IRBM for validation through MyInvois. Once validated, that QR-coded e-Invoice is your proof of expense for corporate income tax. Without it, your ad spend is harder to defend as a deduction. That is the whole reason the rule exists: to keep a paper trail on money that leaves Malaysia to a supplier who will never invoice you locally.",[19,30,32],{"id":31},"why-a-foreign-supplier-triggers-self-billing","Why a foreign supplier triggers self-billing",[12,34,35],{},"Self-billing is not unique to Facebook ads. The Specific Guideline lists a range of circumstances where the buyer, not the seller, issues the e-Invoice. The full set in Table 8.1 covers payments to agents, dealers or distributors; goods or services from foreign suppliers; profit or dividend distribution; e-commerce transactions; pay-outs to betting or gaming winners; transactions with individuals not conducting a business; and interest payments, with some exceptions. It also extends to certain insurance claim, compensation or benefit payments and capital-reduction or redemption pay-outs.",[12,37,38],{},"Facebook and Instagram advertising falls squarely into the foreign-supplier bucket. As the Guideline puts it at s.10.4.3, \"Given that the Foreign Seller is not mandated to implement e-Invoice,\" the obligation shifts to you. And s.10.4.6 confirms the payoff: \"The validated self-billed e-Invoice will serve as proof of expense for Malaysian Purchaser.\" So the self-bill is not busywork. It is the substitute for the local invoice you will never receive, and it is what lets your accountant book the spend cleanly.",[12,40,41],{},"There is a logic to putting the obligation on the buyer rather than the seller. Malaysia's e-Invoice mandate reaches taxpayers here, not a company in Ireland, so LHDN cannot compel Meta Platforms Ireland Limited to raise a Malaysian document. The one party it can realistically hold to the record is the Malaysian business claiming the deduction. Seen that way, the self-bill is less a quirk and more the only workable way to keep money that leaves the country inside the same reporting net as a purely local purchase. It is your deduction, so it becomes your document to produce, and that is why building a dependable monthly habit matters more than understanding every clause of the Guideline.",[12,43,44],{},"If you also buy from other overseas platforms, the same logic applies to them. The Meta case is just the most common one for Malaysian advertisers, which is why it is worth building a repeatable habit rather than treating each foreign charge as a one-off scramble.",[19,46,48],{"id":47},"two-taxes-one-document-keeping-sst-and-e-invoice-separate","Two taxes, one document: keeping SST and e-Invoice separate",[12,50,51],{},"The single biggest source of confusion here is mixing up two different taxes. Keep them apart.",[12,53,54,55,60,61,65],{},"The first is Sales and Service Tax. Since 1 March 2024, Meta adds 8% service tax on digital services to ad charges for Malaysian accounts, up from the previous 6%. It is applied automatically based on your Malaysia business country. In practice, RM1,000 of ad spend is billed as RM1,080. That 8% is a consumption tax collected for the Royal Malaysian Customs Department. If you want the fuller picture of how that surcharge behaves on your bill, our guide on ",[56,57,59],"a",{"href":58},"\u002Fblog\u002Fsst-on-facebook-ads-malaysia","SST on Facebook ads in Malaysia"," walks through it, and the way that surcharge sits inside your true cost per result is covered in ",[56,62,64],{"href":63},"\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-ads-cost-malaysia","Facebook ads cost in Malaysia",".",[12,67,68],{},"The second is the self-billed e-Invoice, which is LHDN income-tax documentation, not a tax you pay. These are separate obligations to separate agencies.",[12,70,71],{},"They meet at exactly one point. Section 10.4.7 states that \"where service tax on imported taxable service is applicable in accordance with the relevant SST legislation, taxpayer is required to include the service tax amount in the said self-billed e-Invoice.\" In other words, the SST figure that Meta already charged you gets recorded inside the self-billed e-Invoice. The document captures the spend and the tax on it in one place. It does not create a new tax; it documents what already happened.",[73,74,75,91],"table",{},[76,77,78],"thead",{},[79,80,81,85,88],"tr",{},[82,83,84],"th",{},"Item",[82,86,87],{},"Sales and Service Tax (8%)",[82,89,90],{},"Self-billed e-Invoice",[92,93,94,106,117,128,139],"tbody",{},[79,95,96,100,103],{},[97,98,99],"td",{},"What it is",[97,101,102],{},"Consumption tax on imported digital services",[97,104,105],{},"Income-tax expense documentation",[79,107,108,111,114],{},[97,109,110],{},"Who it goes to",[97,112,113],{},"Royal Malaysian Customs Department",[97,115,116],{},"LHDN \u002F IRBM via MyInvois",[79,118,119,122,125],{},[97,120,121],{},"Who acts",[97,123,124],{},"Meta charges it automatically",[97,126,127],{},"You issue it to yourself",[79,129,130,133,136],{},[97,131,132],{},"Since \u002F basis",[97,134,135],{},"8% since 1 March 2024",[97,137,138],{},"Specific Guideline v4.7, s.8.3(b) and 10.4",[79,140,141,144,147],{},[97,142,143],{},"How they connect",[97,145,146],{},"The SST amount is included inside the self-billed e-Invoice (s.10.4.7)",[97,148],{},[19,150,152],{"id":151},"the-deadline-that-actually-applies-to-ad-spend","The deadline that actually applies to ad spend",[12,154,155],{},"Advertising is treated as an imported service, and imported services get their own timing rule that is more relaxed than the general one. Section 10.4.9 says the self-billed e-Invoice for imported services should be issued no later than the end of the month following the month of, whichever is earlier, (1) payment made by the Malaysian purchaser, or (2) receipt of the invoice from the foreign supplier.",[12,157,158],{},"Read that carefully because the \"whichever is earlier\" matters. If you paid Meta in March and Meta's invoice also lands in March, your self-bill is due by the end of April. If Meta invoiced you in late March but the payment cleared in early April, the earlier event is March, so the deadline is still the end of April. The trigger is whichever comes first.",[12,160,161],{},"The practical takeaway is comforting: you do not need to self-bill the instant a charge hits your card. You have until the end of the following month, which means you can batch a whole month of Meta charges into one clean task. Most advertisers who run ads continuously will find a single monthly self-bill for the month's total Meta spend is the natural rhythm.",[19,163,165],{"id":164},"where-metas-billing-history-and-receipts-live","Where Meta's billing history and receipts live",[12,167,168],{},"You cannot fill in a self-billed e-Invoice without the numbers, and those numbers live inside Meta's billing tools. In Ads Manager, open the billing area for your ad account, typically found under Billing and payments or Payment activity. There you will see each transaction with its date, the amount charged, and the payment method. Open any transaction to view and download its receipt, which itemises the spend and the service tax line.",[12,170,171,172,176],{},"Those receipts are your raw material. For each month you need three things: the ad spend amount, the date that anchors your deadline (payment or invoice, whichever is earlier), and the SST amount that must be included per s.10.4.7. Download the receipts monthly and file them alongside your other records. If your Business Manager and ad accounts are set up cleanly, this is quick; if they are tangled, our ",[56,173,175],{"href":174},"\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-business-manager-setup","Facebook Business Manager setup guide"," covers getting the billing structure in order so receipts are easy to find at month-end.",[12,178,179],{},"A small discipline pays off here. Reconciling one tidy month of receipts against one self-billed e-Invoice is easy. Reconstructing scattered charges across two months, after the deadline has crept up, is not. Make the download a fixed monthly step.",[19,181,183],{"id":182},"the-fields-to-fill-in-and-the-odd-bits","The fields to fill in, and the odd bits",[12,185,186],{},"A self-billed e-Invoice uses the same standard e-Invoice data fields as any other, set out in Appendices 1 and 2 of the Guideline (referenced at s.10.4.10). The wrinkle is that the supplier and buyer roles are reversed, and the supplier is a foreign company with no Malaysian identifiers.",[12,188,189],{},"For Meta as the supplier, the Guideline gives you the fallback values. Where the supplier's TIN is not available, input the general TIN \"EI00000000030\". Where the business registration number is not available, input \"NA\". Your own company details, TIN and registration number go in the buyer fields. The spend amount and the included SST complete the tax picture.",[12,191,192],{},"It is worth remembering that swapping in those fallback identifiers does not shrink the rest of the document. A Meta self-bill still carries the full standard data set from Appendices 1 and 2: the line item, the amount charged, the applicable tax and your own particulars. Only the supplier's identifier fields fall back to the general values, so treat everything else as you would on any ordinary e-Invoice. A small habit helps too. Describe the line clearly as Facebook and Instagram advertising for the relevant month, so that when you or your accountant look back, the expense reads plainly rather than as an anonymous foreign charge with a placeholder TIN attached.",[12,194,195,196,65],{},"Because the same foreign-supplier values recur every month for Meta, the smartest move is to build a reusable template with \"EI00000000030\" and \"NA\" already in place. That removes the most common data-entry mistake, mistyping the general TIN, and makes each month a matter of updating the amount and dates. Treating your monthly compliance like a repeatable checklist is the same mindset that makes running ads in-house manageable, which we cover in ",[56,197,199],{"href":198},"\u002Fblog\u002Fagency-grade-facebook-ads-yourself-malaysia","running agency-grade Facebook ads yourself in Malaysia",[19,201,203],{"id":202},"getting-it-validated-through-myinvois","Getting it validated through MyInvois",[12,205,206],{},"Preparing the document is only half the job. A self-billed e-Invoice has to be submitted to IRBM and validated before it counts. e-Invoices are transmitted in XML or JSON. Once IRBM validates the submission, it returns a validated e-Invoice with a unique identifier and a QR code, delivered through the MyInvois Portal or via API.",[12,208,209],{},"You have two broad routes. The MyInvois Portal lets you enter fields manually in a browser, which suits low-volume advertisers or businesses just starting out. The API route lets your accounting or ERP software submit automatically, which suits higher volumes where manually keying a Meta self-bill every month becomes tedious. Many businesses use a service provider or middleware that sits between their books and MyInvois.",[12,211,212],{},"Whichever route you choose, the validated, QR-coded version is the artefact you keep. Store it with the matching Meta receipts so the expense, the tax, and the validation all live together. That bundle is what supports the deduction if anyone ever asks. Keeping research, spend records and documentation organised in one place is generally what separates a calm month-end from a stressful one, and a platform like AdPlay.ai keeps research, creative and launch together, though your e-Invoicing itself runs through MyInvois and your accounting system.",[19,214,216],{"id":215},"a-worked-example-one-month-of-meta-ad-spend","A worked example: one month of Meta ad spend",[12,218,219],{},"Numbers make the routine concrete, so it helps to walk a single month through from end to end. Say your business is inside a mandatory phase and spends RM1,000 on Facebook and Instagram ads across March. Because the 8% service tax on digital services applies, Meta bills you RM1,080, and the receipt waiting in Ads Manager shows the RM1,000 charge and the RM80 tax line as separate figures. That receipt is Meta's own record of a charge raised from Ireland; it is not a Malaysian e-Invoice, which is precisely why the next steps fall to you.",[12,221,222],{},"Your deadline comes from s.10.4.9. If both your payment and Meta's invoice land in March, the earlier of the two events is in March, so the self-billed e-Invoice is due by the end of April. You have the whole of April to prepare it, which is why a single pass shortly after month-end sits comfortably inside the window rather than forcing same-day paperwork.",[12,224,225],{},"When you build the document, the roles reverse. Meta sits in the supplier fields with \"EI00000000030\" as the TIN and \"NA\" as the business registration number, because it carries no Malaysian identifiers. Your own company, with its real TIN and registration number, goes in the buyer fields. The value recorded is the RM1,000 of spend, and under s.10.4.7 the RM80 of service tax is included on the same document, so the self-bill totals RM1,080. You are not paying that RM80 again; it was already charged by Meta and is simply captured here for the record.",[12,227,228],{},"You then submit it to IRBM through the MyInvois Portal or an API. Once validated, it returns with a unique identifier and a QR code. That validated version, filed beside the Meta receipt it matches, is what s.10.4.6 treats as your proof of expense. If anyone later asks why RM1,080 left the business, the answer is one tidy, validated bundle instead of a hunt through card statements.",[19,230,232],{"id":231},"does-the-rule-even-apply-to-you-yet-the-phases-and-exemption","Does the rule even apply to you yet? The phases and exemption",[12,234,235],{},"Not every Malaysian advertiser is inside the mandate today. The rollout is staged by annual turnover, and the smallest businesses are exempt.",[73,237,238,251],{},[76,239,240],{},[79,241,242,245,248],{},[82,243,244],{},"Phase",[82,246,247],{},"Annual turnover",[82,249,250],{},"Mandatory from",[92,252,253,264,275,286,297],{},[79,254,255,258,261],{},[97,256,257],{},"Phase 1",[97,259,260],{},"Above RM100 million",[97,262,263],{},"1 August 2024",[79,265,266,269,272],{},[97,267,268],{},"Phase 2",[97,270,271],{},"RM25m to RM100m",[97,273,274],{},"1 January 2025",[79,276,277,280,283],{},[97,278,279],{},"Phase 3",[97,281,282],{},"RM5m to RM25m",[97,284,285],{},"1 July 2025",[79,287,288,291,294],{},[97,289,290],{},"Phase 4",[97,292,293],{},"Up to RM5 million",[97,295,296],{},"1 January 2026",[79,298,299,302,305],{},[97,300,301],{},"Exempt",[97,303,304],{},"Under RM1,000,000",[97,306,307],{},"Not required",[12,309,310],{},"The exemption floor moved recently. On 6 December 2025 the Cabinet approved raising the permanent exemption threshold from RM500,000 to RM1,000,000 in annual turnover, and the previously planned wave covering the smaller-business band was cancelled. The official timeline reflecting the RM1,000,000 exemption was updated on 7 December 2025. So if your turnover is under RM1,000,000, you are currently outside the e-Invoice mandate entirely, including the self-billing step described here.",[12,312,313],{},"There is also a grace or relaxation period for Phase 4 businesses that began on 1 January 2026. During it, a single monthly consolidated e-Invoice is permitted and no penalties are enforced where minimum requirements are met, although a transaction above RM10,000 still needs an individual e-Invoice. The exact end date of that grace period is genuinely unsettled: secondary sources report an extension to 31 December 2027, and some point to a further push beyond that. Because we could not confirm a single fixed end date on a primary LHDN page, do not treat any particular date as final. Check the current position with your tax agent before you rely on the relaxation.",[19,315,317],{"id":316},"a-calm-monthly-workflow","A calm monthly workflow",[12,319,320],{},"Put together, the routine is short. Here is a countdown you can run every month.",[73,322,323,336],{},[76,324,325],{},[79,326,327,330,333],{},[82,328,329],{},"Step",[82,331,332],{},"What to do",[82,334,335],{},"When",[92,337,338,349,360,370,380,391],{},[79,339,340,343,346],{},[97,341,342],{},"1",[97,344,345],{},"Download all Meta ad receipts for the month from Ads Manager billing",[97,347,348],{},"First few days after month-end",[79,350,351,354,357],{},[97,352,353],{},"2",[97,355,356],{},"Total the ad spend and note the included 8% SST",[97,358,359],{},"Same session",[79,361,362,365,368],{},[97,363,364],{},"3",[97,366,367],{},"Identify the deadline trigger: earlier of payment date or Meta invoice date",[97,369,359],{},[79,371,372,375,378],{},[97,373,374],{},"4",[97,376,377],{},"Fill your self-billed e-Invoice template (TIN EI00000000030, reg no. NA)",[97,379,359],{},[79,381,382,385,388],{},[97,383,384],{},"5",[97,386,387],{},"Submit to MyInvois and capture the validated QR-coded document",[97,389,390],{},"Before end of the following month",[79,392,393,396,399],{},[97,394,395],{},"6",[97,397,398],{},"File the validated e-Invoice with the matching receipts",[97,400,401],{},"On completion",[12,403,404,405,409,410,65],{},"That is it. One monthly pass, batched, well inside the end-of-following-month deadline. The heavier lift is not the compliance itself; it is making sure your ad account and billing are tidy enough that step one takes minutes. If you are a smaller advertiser finding your feet with the platform, ",[56,406,408],{"href":407},"\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-ads-for-small-business-malaysia","Facebook ads for small business in Malaysia"," covers the setup habits that make month-end painless, and the fundamentals of getting campaigns live are in the pillar guide on ",[56,411,413],{"href":412},"\u002Fblog\u002Fhow-to-run-a-facebook-ad","how to run a Facebook ad",[19,415,417],{"id":416},"where-the-uncertainty-really-lives","Where the uncertainty really lives",[12,419,420],{},"A few areas deserve honest flags rather than confident claims.",[12,422,423],{},"First, the withholding-tax question. Some advisers argue Facebook and Meta ad payments could attract Malaysian withholding tax if the payment is characterised as a royalty under the Malaysia-Ireland treaty, often discussed alongside obtaining a Certificate of Residence at roughly treaty rates. Whether it applies depends on how your specific payment is characterised, and it is a separate matter from the self-billed e-Invoice. We deliberately do not state it as a blanket rule. Raise it with your tax agent.",[12,425,426],{},"Second, SST accounting can differ between an SST-registered and a non-registered advertiser, and how that flows into the figure you record on the self-billed e-Invoice was not something we could verify from a primary source. Do not assume the two are handled identically.",[12,428,429],{},"Third, penalties. We did not confirm exact penalty amounts for failing to issue a required self-billed e-Invoice from a primary LHDN source, so we will not invent one. The sensible response is simply to issue the document on time rather than to gamble on the size of a fine.",[12,431,432],{},"Finally, dates and thresholds in this space keep moving. The exemption floor, the phase boundaries and the grace period have all changed in the recent past. Everything here traces to LHDN's published Guideline and timeline as they stood, but your business circumstances and the current rules are best confirmed with a licensed tax agent. Treat this guide as the map that helps you ask the right questions, not as the final word for your specific filing.",{"title":434,"searchDepth":435,"depth":435,"links":436},"",2,[437,438,439,440,441,442,443,444,445,446,447],{"id":21,"depth":435,"text":22},{"id":31,"depth":435,"text":32},{"id":47,"depth":435,"text":48},{"id":151,"depth":435,"text":152},{"id":164,"depth":435,"text":165},{"id":182,"depth":435,"text":183},{"id":202,"depth":435,"text":203},{"id":215,"depth":435,"text":216},{"id":231,"depth":435,"text":232},{"id":316,"depth":435,"text":317},{"id":416,"depth":435,"text":417},null,"local","Meta bills you from Ireland, so LHDN needs you to self-bill an e-Invoice for your Facebook and Instagram ad spend. Here is the calm monthly workflow.",[],"md",[454,457,460,463,466,469,472,475],{"question":455,"answer":456},"Do I really need to issue an e-Invoice to myself for Facebook ads?","If your business is inside a mandatory e-Invoice phase, yes. Meta bills you from Meta Platforms Ireland Limited, a foreign entity that does not issue Malaysian e-Invoices. LHDN's Specific Guideline v4.7 lists goods or services from foreign suppliers at s.8.3(b) as a circumstance where the Malaysian buyer must self-bill. You assume the supplier role and create the document yourself so the ad spend is properly recorded as a deductible expense. If your annual turnover is under RM1,000,000 you are currently exempt from e-Invoicing altogether. Thresholds and phases have changed more than once, so confirm your own status with a licensed tax agent rather than assuming.",{"question":458,"answer":459},"When is the self-billed e-Invoice due for ad spend?","Facebook and Instagram advertising counts as an imported service. Under s.10.4.9 of the Specific Guideline, you issue the self-billed e-Invoice no later than the end of the month following whichever happened first: the month you paid Meta, or the month you received Meta's invoice. So if you paid in March, the document is due by the end of April. This is more forgiving than same-day billing, and it lets you batch a full month of ad charges into one routine. Set a recurring reminder near month-end so the paperwork never slips past the deadline window.",{"question":461,"answer":462},"What TIN do I use for Meta as the supplier?","In a self-billed e-Invoice the roles flip. You, the Malaysian purchaser, take the supplier role and fill in Meta's details as the seller. Foreign suppliers like Meta Platforms Ireland Limited usually have no Malaysian Tax Identification Number, so the Specific Guideline tells you to input the general TIN 'EI00000000030' where a supplier TIN is not available. Where the business registration number is missing, input 'NA'. Your own company details go in the buyer fields. Because this is unusual, it is worth saving a template with these values pre-filled so every month's Meta self-bill is consistent and you are not hunting for the correct code each time.",{"question":464,"answer":465},"Is the self-billed e-Invoice the same as the 8% SST Meta charges me?","No, and it helps to keep them separate in your head. The 8% is Sales and Service Tax, a consumption tax on imported digital services that Meta adds automatically, collected for the Royal Malaysian Customs Department. It has applied at 8% since 1 March 2024. The self-billed e-Invoice is separate LHDN income-tax documentation that proves your expense. They connect at one point: s.10.4.7 says that where imported-service service tax applies, that tax amount must be included inside the self-billed e-Invoice. So the two are distinct obligations, but the SST figure lands on the same document.",{"question":467,"answer":468},"How do I actually create and validate the document?","A self-billed e-Invoice follows the same standard data fields as any e-Invoice, set out in Appendices 1 and 2 of the Guideline. You prepare it in XML or JSON, then submit it to IRBM for validation through the MyInvois Portal or via an API, often through an accounting system or service provider. Once IRBM validates it, the document is returned with a unique identifier and a QR code. That validated version is what you keep. Smaller businesses often start with the free MyInvois Portal and enter the fields manually, while higher-volume advertisers integrate their accounting software so monthly Meta self-bills are generated with less manual effort.",{"question":470,"answer":471},"Where do I find Meta's billing history and receipts?","Meta's charges and receipts live in the billing section of Ads Manager, usually under Billing and payments or Payment activity for your ad account. From there you can open each transaction and download a receipt showing the amount charged, the date, and the service tax line. Those receipts are the raw data you transcribe into the self-billed e-Invoice: the spend amount, the date of payment or invoice, and the SST. Keep a habit of downloading them monthly, because it is far easier to reconcile a full month at once than to reconstruct scattered charges later when you are up against the end-of-following-month deadline.",{"question":473,"answer":474},"Does my business turnover change whether this applies to me?","Yes. The mandate rolls out in phases by annual turnover: above RM100m from 1 August 2024, RM25m to RM100m from 1 January 2025, RM5m to RM25m from 1 July 2025, and up to RM5m from 1 January 2026. Businesses with annual turnover under RM1,000,000 are currently exempt, after the Cabinet raised the permanent exemption threshold from RM500,000 to RM1,000,000 on 6 December 2025 and cancelled the planned smaller-business wave. Because these numbers were revised recently and can be read differently for your situation, treat this as a starting map and confirm your exact obligation with a licensed tax agent.",{"question":476,"answer":477},"Is there withholding tax on Facebook ad payments too?","This is a separate and genuinely debated question, and it is not the same as the self-billed e-Invoice. Some advisers argue Meta ad payments could attract Malaysian withholding tax if the payment is characterised as a royalty under the Malaysia-Ireland tax treaty, often discussed alongside obtaining a Certificate of Residence. Whether it applies depends on how your specific arrangement is characterised, and reasonable practitioners disagree. Because of that, we deliberately do not state it as a blanket rule here. Treat it as a distinct item to raise with your own tax agent, who can look at your contracts and payment flow and give you an answer grounded in your facts rather than a general assumption.","\u002Fimages\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-ads-self-billed-e-invoice-malaysia-hero.webp","If you run Facebook or Instagram ads for a Malaysian business, you have probably noticed Meta charges you from an Irish entity and never sends a local tax invoice. That gap is exactly what the self-billed e-Invoice rule closes. This guide walks through why LHDN asks you to invoice yourself, the deadlines that actually apply to ad spend, and a practical monthly routine you can follow without panic.",{"reviewedAt":481},"2026-07-07",true,"\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-ads-self-billed-e-invoice-malaysia","2026-07-15",{"title":5,"description":450},[487,491,494,497,501,504],{"label":488,"url":489,"year":490},"LHDN IRBM - e-Invoice Specific Guideline v4.7 (self-billed circumstances, foreign suppliers, TIN, timing, fields)","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.hasil.gov.my\u002Fmedia\u002Fuwwehxwq\u002Firbm-e-invoice-specific-guideline.pdf","2026",{"label":492,"url":493,"year":490},"LHDN - e-Invoice Implementation Timeline (phases and RM1m exemption)","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.hasil.gov.my\u002Fen\u002Fe-invoice\u002Fimplementation-of-e-invoicing-in-malaysia\u002Fe-invoice-implementation-timeline\u002F",{"label":495,"url":496,"year":490},"LHDN - e-Invoice General FAQs","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.hasil.gov.my\u002Fmedia\u002F0xqitc2t\u002Flhdnm-e-invoice-general-faqs.pdf",{"label":498,"url":499,"year":500},"RTC Suite - Malaysia's RM1 million e-invoicing threshold update","https:\u002F\u002Frtcsuite.com\u002Fmalaysias-new-rm1-million-e-invoicing-threshold-a-focused-update\u002F","2025",{"label":502,"url":503,"year":500},"Silver Mouse - Meta\u002FGoogle Certificate of Residence (Meta Platforms Ireland billing entity)","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.silvermouse.com.my\u002Fblog\u002Fgoogle-facebook-certificate-of-residence\u002F",{"label":505,"url":506,"year":490},"Zenweb - Meta Ads billing Malaysia (8% service tax since 1 March 2024)","https:\u002F\u002Fzenweb.my\u002Fblog\u002Fmeta-ads-billing-malaysia-sst\u002F",[508,512,515,517,521,524,527],{"label":509,"value":510,"source":511},"Meta service tax on ad charges since 1 March 2024","8%","Zenweb, 2026",{"label":513,"value":304,"source":514},"e-Invoice exemption floor (annual turnover)","LHDN, 2026",{"label":516,"value":296,"source":514},"Phase 4 mandatory start (turnover up to RM5m)",{"label":518,"value":519,"source":520},"Self-billed circumstance for foreign suppliers","s.8.3(b)","LHDN Specific Guideline v4.7, 2026",{"label":522,"value":523,"source":520},"Deadline to issue self-billed e-Invoice for imported services","End of following month",{"label":525,"value":526,"source":520},"Foreign supplier TIN when none is available","EI00000000030",{"label":528,"value":529,"source":530},"Cabinet decision raising exemption threshold","6 December 2025","RTC Suite, 2025","blog\u002Ffacebook-ads-self-billed-e-invoice-malaysia","gSQiSH_8LPBRHsf80NYMkGujPShAd9rUwjkmcDdVjoc",1784077338719]