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Contact Us WhatsApp UsLHDN e-Invoice Guideline (2026): Validation, Cancellation & Penalties Explained
Quick answer: LHDN’s e-Invoice guideline covers how invoices are validated (usually within seconds), a 72-hour window to cancel a validated e-invoice, and penalties under the Income Tax Act 1967 for businesses that fail to comply once they’re within scope.
How e-Invoice Validation Works

Once an e-invoice is submitted, whether through the MyInvois Portal or via API, LHDN validates it in near real time, typically within a couple of seconds. A successfully validated e-invoice is assigned a Unique Identifier Number, which becomes the reference for that transaction going forward. If validation fails, the submitter needs to correct and resubmit rather than treat the invoice as issued.
The 72-Hour Cancellation Window
After an e-invoice is validated, there’s a 72-hour window during which it can still be cancelled if something was wrong, a duplicate entry, an incorrect amount, or a transaction that didn’t go through. Once that window closes, cancellation is no longer available. Corrections after that point need to be handled through debit notes, credit notes, or refund notes instead, which is a different process from cancelling the original document outright.This is one of the more common points of confusion for businesses new to e-Invoice, so it’s worth building the 72-hour window into your internal review process, rather than assuming there’s unlimited time to catch mistakes.
What Happens If You Don't Comply
Failing to issue an e-invoice when required is an offence under Section 120(1)(d) of the Income Tax Act 1967. The penalty is a fine of between RM200 and RM20,000, imprisonment of up to 6 months, or both, and this applies per instance of non-compliance rather than as a single blanket penalty. This is a meaningful reason to treat e-Invoice obligations as a standard part of your compliance calendar rather than something to catch up on later.
e-Invoice vs Traditional Invoices and Receipts
Where e-Invoice applies, it’s meant to replace the traditional invoice or receipt for that transaction, not sit alongside it as an extra document. Businesses still within earlier stages of the rollout, or currently exempt under the turnover threshold, can continue with their existing invoicing and receipting practices until their obligations change.
How SASCO Can Help
Keeping track of validation status, cancellation deadlines, and which of your transactions actually require an e-invoice is easier to manage as part of a regular bookkeeping routine than as a one-off task each month. Our accounting and compliance services fold e-Invoice compliance into your existing accounting process, so nothing slips through simply because nobody was watching the clock.
Related Reading
- What Is e-Invoice in Malaysia? (Complete Overview)
- Panduan e-Invois Malaysia (Full Guide)
- e-Invoice Implementation Timeline in Malaysia (2026): Phases, Deadlines & Exemptions
- Consolidated e-Invoice in Malaysia (2026): What It Is and When You Can Use It
- Self-Billed e-Invoice in Malaysia (2026): When You Must Issue One
- e-Invoice Software vs Manual Portal (2026): Which Should Your Business Use
