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E-Invoice for F&B Malaysia: Restaurant Guide 2026

Malaysian restaurants and food businesses above the LHDN revenue threshold must issue e-invoices — but the rules are more nuanced than most business owners realise. GrabFood and Foodpanda revenue is handled by the platform, not the restaurant. Dine-in and catering transactions are the owner’s responsibility. And consolidated e-invoice is the practical solution for high-volume cash businesses that can’t issue individual receipts for every customer. This guide covers everything F&B operators need to know for 2026 compliance.
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E-invoice for F&B Malaysia — restaurant and cafe e-invoice compliance guide for 2026
TL;DR
Malaysian restaurants and food businesses above the LHDN (Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia) revenue threshold must issue e-invoices — but only for transactions they process directly (dine-in, takeaway, catering). GrabFood, Foodpanda, and ShopeeFood delivery revenue is handled by the platform operator, not the restaurant. For high-volume B2C cash sales, F&B businesses can use consolidated e-invoice — batching all eligible transactions monthly with a 7-calendar-day submission deadline after month-end.

The LHDN e-invoice mandate covers F&B businesses the same way it covers any other Malaysian business — based on revenue, not industry type. But food and beverage businesses have specific operating patterns — high volumes of small cash transactions, delivery platform revenue, and peak-season catering — that require a different operational approach to compliance compared to, say, a corporate services firm. This guide explains what F&B operators are actually obligated to do, what the delivery platforms handle on your behalf, and how the consolidated e-invoice makes compliance practical for restaurants and cafés.


Does My Restaurant Need to Issue E-Invoices?

The e-invoice obligation is determined by your annual revenue — not your industry. F&B businesses are subject to the same phase thresholds as all other Malaysian businesses.

Annual Revenue (FY2022 Audited)PhaseMandatory StartPenalty Enforcement
Above RM100 millionPhase 11 Aug 2024 — ActiveActive
RM25M – RM100MPhase 21 Jan 2025 — ActiveActive
RM5M – RM25MPhase 31 Jul 2025 — ActiveActive
RM1M – RM5MPhase 4A1 Jan 2026 — Mandatory1 Jan 2027
RM1M+ (new businesses 2023–2025)Phase 4B1 Jul 20261 Jan 2027
Below RM1MPhase 5Exempted

Revenue threshold basis: FY2022 audited financial statements. For the official e-invoice phase rollout and mandate details, refer to myinvois.hasil.gov.my. For a full breakdown of the Phase 4 obligations and exemption caveats, see our Phase 4 e-invoice guide for SMEs.

MSME Exemption Caveat: Even if your restaurant’s own annual revenue is below RM1M, you may still be mandated if: (a) you are a subsidiary of a holding company with RM1M+ turnover, or (b) a non-individual shareholder of your business has RM1M+ annual turnover. Being below RM1M is not automatically exempt in these cases.

What About GrabFood, Foodpanda and ShopeeFood Revenue?

This is the question that confuses most F&B owners. You do not need to issue LHDN e-invoices for delivery orders processed through GrabFood, Foodpanda, ShopeeFood, or any other marketplace delivery platform.

Under LHDN’s e-invoice framework, marketplace platform operators — not the individual merchants on the platform — are responsible for e-invoicing the revenue they facilitate. This applies to:

  • GrabFood restaurant orders
  • Foodpanda restaurant orders
  • ShopeeFood restaurant orders
  • Any other delivery aggregator platform where the platform collects payment on your behalf
What this means in practice: The platform operator (Grab, Foodpanda, etc.) issues e-invoices for the sales revenue they process on your behalf. Your obligation as the restaurant covers your direct transactions only — dine-in, takeaway collected at the counter, and catering invoiced directly to customers.
Important distinction — self-billed e-invoice: The marketplace rule does not mean you issue a self-billed e-invoice to the platform. It means the platform handles the e-invoice obligation for those transactions entirely. You do not need to take any additional e-invoicing action for platform-mediated delivery revenue.

This distinction is one of the most misunderstood aspects of the e-invoice mandate for F&B businesses. If you have a separate direct-delivery operation (your own website, phone orders, or in-house delivery not through a third-party platform), those transactions fall under your direct e-invoice obligation.


E-Invoice for Dine-In, Takeaway and Catering Orders

The transactions you are responsible for e-invoicing are those processed directly by your business:

  • Dine-in orders — customers paying at the table or counter
  • Takeaway / counter sales — walk-in purchases collected and paid directly to you
  • Catering — events, corporate lunches, and food supply contracts invoiced directly to clients
  • Direct online orders — orders through your own website, app, or WhatsApp (not through a delivery platform)

For most F&B businesses, the majority of direct sales are B2C — individual customers who are not requesting a formal invoice for business purposes. In this case, you do not need to issue individual e-invoices for every receipt. The consolidated e-invoice is designed exactly for this scenario.

For B2B catering or corporate F&B contracts — where the buyer is a registered business and requests a formal invoice — you must issue an individual e-invoice per transaction, validated through LHDN’s MyInvois system. See our guide on e-invoicing for retail and high-volume businesses in Malaysia for context on B2C vs. B2B transaction handling.


Consolidated E-Invoice: The Practical Solution for High-Volume F&B Transactions

Issuing an individual LHDN e-invoice for every dine-in customer is operationally impossible for most restaurants — especially during peak hours. The consolidated e-invoice exists specifically to solve this.

A consolidated e-invoice allows you to batch all eligible B2C transactions from a given period into a single e-invoice submitted to LHDN. Instead of 300 individual receipts from Monday’s dinner service, you submit one consolidated e-invoice for the total value of those B2C transactions at month-end.

How Consolidated E-Invoice Works for F&B

  1. Continue issuing regular receipts to customers as normal (cash register receipts, card payment receipts)
  2. At the end of each month, collect the total value of all eligible B2C transactions
  3. Submit a single consolidated e-invoice to LHDN’s MyInvois system using the general public Tax Identification Number (TIN) EI00000000010 for the consolidated amount
  4. Submit within 7 calendar days after month-end — for example, transactions in January must be consolidated and submitted by February 7
RM10,000 Rule — Cannot Consolidate: Any single transaction of RM10,000 or more requires an individual LHDN e-invoice — it cannot be included in a consolidated batch. For F&B businesses, this typically applies to large corporate catering orders or event food supply contracts. Issue these as individual e-invoices at the time of the transaction. For a full breakdown, read our RM10,000 e-invoice rule guide.
Transaction TypeE-Invoice Required?Type
Individual dine-in / takeaway receipt (B2C, below RM10,000)✅ Yes — include in consolidated batchConsolidated e-invoice (monthly)
Corporate catering invoice, RM10,000 or more✅ Yes — individual e-invoice requiredIndividual e-invoice (at time of transaction)
B2B food supply contract (buyer requests e-invoice)✅ Yes — individual e-invoice requiredIndividual e-invoice (at time of transaction)
GrabFood / Foodpanda / ShopeeFood delivery orders❌ Not your obligation — platform handles itPlatform operator’s responsibility

For a full explanation of the consolidated e-invoice process, deadlines, and eligibility, read our complete consolidated e-invoice guide for Malaysia.


POS System Integration: How to Automate E-Invoice for F&B

The consolidated e-invoice solves the volume problem, but compiling monthly transaction totals manually is still time-consuming — especially for restaurants with multiple POS terminals or high daily transaction counts.

The practical solution is integrating your POS system with an e-invoice middleware that connects to the LHDN MyInvois system. Here is how it works:

  • Your POS system continues handling daily transactions as normal
  • At month-end, the middleware pulls the eligible B2C transaction data from your POS
  • The consolidated e-invoice is generated and submitted to MyInvois automatically — no manual batching
  • For individual B2B or RM10,000+ transactions, the middleware submits them in real-time at point of sale

If your current POS system does not support e-invoice integration, you have two options: upgrade to a POS that includes MyInvois connectivity, or use middleware that bridges your existing POS to MyInvois. For a comparison of options, read our guide on what to do if your POS system doesn’t support e-invoicing.


JomeInvoice for F&B and Retail POS

JomeInvoice is a LHDN-compliant e-invoice middleware designed for businesses with existing POS or accounting systems — including F&B operators using Loyverse, SalesPlay, and other retail POS platforms.

For F&B businesses, JomeInvoice handles:

  • Consolidated e-invoice automation — pulls your monthly B2C transaction data from your POS and submits the consolidated e-invoice to MyInvois by the 7-day deadline, without manual batching
  • Individual e-invoice for B2B and RM10,000+ catering orders — real-time submission at point of invoice, returning a validated e-invoice with QR code for the buyer
  • Multi-terminal / multi-outlet support — for restaurant chains with multiple locations, JomeInvoice consolidates across outlets before MyInvois submission
  • No POS replacement required — connects alongside your existing POS system via API, preserving your current workflow

JomeInvoice is ISO 9001, ISO 20001, and ISO 27001 certified, and PDPA and MySTI compliant — relevant for F&B businesses handling customer transaction data across high-volume POS environments.

Book a free demo to see how the POS integration works for your specific F&B setup — whether you operate a single café or a multi-outlet restaurant chain.


Frequently Asked Questions — E-Invoice for F&B Malaysia

Do Malaysian restaurants need to issue e-invoices?

Yes — if their annual revenue meets the LHDN phase threshold. Phase 4 covers F&B businesses with RM1M–RM5M annual revenue (FY2022 basis), mandatory from 1 January 2026 with penalty enforcement from 1 January 2027. Restaurants below RM1M are currently exempt, subject to MSME exemption caveats.

Do I need to issue an e-invoice for GrabFood or Foodpanda orders?

No. For delivery orders processed through marketplace platforms (GrabFood, Foodpanda, ShopeeFood), the platform operator handles the e-invoice obligation — not the restaurant. You only need to issue e-invoices for transactions you process directly: dine-in, counter takeaway, catering, and direct online orders not through a third-party platform.

How does consolidated e-invoicing work for F&B businesses?

Instead of issuing one e-invoice per customer receipt, F&B businesses batch all eligible B2C transactions for the month into a single consolidated e-invoice and submit it to LHDN’s MyInvois system within 7 calendar days after month-end. Transactions of RM10,000 or more cannot be consolidated — those require individual e-invoices at the time of the transaction.

What POS system supports e-invoicing for restaurants in Malaysia?

Several POS systems now offer MyInvois integration including Loyverse and SalesPlay (both supported by JomeInvoice middleware). If your current POS does not have built-in e-invoice support, middleware can bridge the gap without requiring you to replace your POS entirely. Check with your POS provider or a middleware vendor for compatibility.

What is the e-invoice deadline for small F&B businesses?

F&B businesses with RM1M–RM5M revenue must comply from 1 January 2026 (Phase 4). Penalty enforcement begins 1 January 2027, giving a 12-month relaxation window. For consolidated e-invoices, the submission deadline is 7 calendar days after the end of each month. Businesses below RM1M are exempt for now.

Can a restaurant use consolidated e-invoice instead of individual receipts?

Yes — for B2C transactions below RM10,000. Restaurants can continue issuing regular customer receipts as normal and submit a single consolidated e-invoice to LHDN for the total monthly B2C value. Individual e-invoices are required only for B2B transactions, transactions of RM10,000 or more, or when a customer specifically requests a formal e-invoice.

Do delivery platforms like GrabFood handle e-invoice for the restaurant?

Yes. Under the LHDN e-invoice framework, marketplace platform operators handle the e-invoice obligation for revenue they facilitate on behalf of merchants. GrabFood, Foodpanda, and ShopeeFood are responsible for e-invoicing the orders processed through their platforms — not the individual restaurant. Your obligation covers direct transactions only.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. LHDN guidelines are subject to updates. Always refer to the latest official LHDN e-Invoice Guidelines at myinvois.hasil.gov.my and consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your business.
Source: e-Invoice Specific Guideline v4.6 (5 Jan 2026); LHDN e-Invoice FAQs (5 Jan 2026)

Last updated: March 2026 | Written by the JomeInvoice Compliance Team

To learn more about how JomeInvoice can transform your e-invoicing processes, check out JomeInvoice’s website or book a demo.

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