TaxesWhat is the BIR Authority to Print for Business in the Philippines?

March 18, 2026
Home » What is the BIR Authority to Print for Business in the Philippines?

In the Philippines, every legitimate business must issue officially recognized receipts and invoices for its sales, services, and other taxable transactions. The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) does not allow companies to print or use generic, unapproved forms directly from local stationery shops. Before a printer can produce your Official Receipts (ORs), Sales Invoices, or official billing documents, your business must first obtain a formal authority to print (ATP) from the BIR. This ATP is a critical compliance milestone that ensures your commercial documents are tax‑valid and audit‑ready.

Without a valid ATP, the BIR can treat your ORs and invoices as unauthorized, which may disqualify input VAT claims, trigger penalties for non‑compliant receipts, and even void critical supplier or bank documentation in the eyes of the tax authorities. Treating ATP as anything less than a core compliance requirement can quickly expose a company to serious financial and operational risks.

What Is the BIR Authority to Print?

The term authority to print refers to the BIR’s formal approval for a taxpayer—or its accredited printer—to produce Official Receipts (ORs), Sales Invoices, and other official commercial documents. This approval is anchored in Section 237 of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) and implemented through Revenue Regulations (RR No. 18‑2012 and subsequent amendments), which replaced the old “Permit to Print” system with the current ATP framework.

Every booklet of ORs or invoices must display the BIR‑issued ATP number, issuance date, and validity period at the bottom of each leaf. This pre‑printed ATP detail is what the BIR uses to trace who authorized the document, which printer produced it, and whether it falls within the taxpayer’s approved printing cycle.

The authority to print is not a one‑time, “set‑and‑forget” item. The BIR generally issues an ATP valid for five years for a given set of ORs and invoices. After that, the taxpayer must apply for renewal, reflecting any changes in layout, format, or volume requirements.

Why the Authority to Print Matters to Your Business

At first glance, the authority to print may appear to be a purely administrative step. In practice, it is a powerful compliance and financial‑control mechanism for your business. The BIR treats correctly issued ATP‑linked ORs and invoices as the only valid documentation for proving tax‑able transactions, whether those are sales, leases, professional fees, or service contracts.

Key reasons why the ATP matters:

  • Input‑VAT Recovery: If your business is VAT‑registered, the BIR allows you to claim input VAT on purchases only if the supplier’s invoice is duly issued under a valid ATP. Non‑BIR‑approved receipts can be rejected, leaving you with disallowed deductions and higher effective tax rates.
  • Bank and Loan Compliance: Many banks and financing institutions require borrowers to present ATP‑backed invoices and ORs when validating revenue for loans, credit lines, and corporate cards. Without ATP‑compliant documents, your business can be treated as having “informal” income, which weakens your financial profile.
  • Audit and Penalty Protection: During a BIR audit, the absence of valid ATP‑linked receipts and invoices is a red‑flag finding. The BIR may reconstruct sales based on third‑party information, propose additional assessments, and impose penalties for non‑filing or non‑use of duly authorized receipts under Section 237 of the NIRC.
  • Brand and Process Consistency: Once you secure an ATP, you also lock in an approved layout—font size, logo placement, and mandatory fields—for your ORs and invoices. This ensures that all printed documents you distribute are fully compliant while still reflecting your brand identity.

For any business that plans to grow, the authority to print is not optional—it is one of the first operational cornerstones you must secure after registering with the BIR.

Who Needs an Authority to Print?

Under the NIRC and BIR rules, any person or entity engaged in business that issues official receipts or sales invoices must obtain an authority to print before a printer can produce those documents. This includes:

  • Sole proprietors and self‑employed individuals
  • Partnerships and corporations (domestic and foreign‑owned)
  • Cooperatives and other juridical entities engaged in selling goods or rendering services

Even non‑profit organizations that derive income from business‑type activities (e.g., schools, foundations, or NGOs that sell goods or services) are subject to the same ATP requirement if they issue ORs or invoices.​

The key trigger is not volume or profit level; it is the very act of issuing ORs or invoices in the ordinary course of business. That is why, after you complete your initial BIR registration and receive your Certificate of Registration (Form 2303), the logical next step is to prepare and file for your ATP.

The Step‑by‑Step Process to Secure an Authority to Print

The BIR authority to print process is standardized but requires careful attention to forms, samples, and documentation. The central document in this workflow is BIR Form 1906 (Application for Authority to Print Receipts and Invoices).

Typical ATP workflow for a new taxpayer:

  1. Ensure BIR Registration Is Active: Before filing for ATP, make sure your BIR Certificate of Registration (Form 2303) is valid and your annual registration fee for the current year is paid (Form 0605).
  2. Complete BIR Form 1906: The taxpayer fills out BIR Form 1906, stating the kind of receipts and invoices required (e.g., official receipt, sales invoice, debit/credit memo, and the number of booklets and copies per booklet). For manual filing, the form is typically submitted in multiple copies (e.g., triplicate or quintuplicate, depending on the guidance of the Revenue District Office).
  3. Prepare the Final, Clear Sample: The BIR requires a “final and clear sample” of the OR or invoice that your chosen printer will produce. This sample must be machine‑printed (not hand‑written), and must include all mandatory fields:
  • Business name, address, and TIN
  • Principal line of business
  • Serial number, date, and buyer information
  • Description of goods or services, prices, and applicable taxes

The layout must comply with the BIR’s prescribed information requirements under RR No. 18‑2012 and related circulars.

  1. Submit at the Proper RDO: The application for authority to print must be filed with the BIR Revenue District Office (RDO) that has jurisdiction over the business establishment that will use the ORs or invoices. For a corporation, this is usually the RDO where the head office or principal place of business is located.​
  2. Provide Supporting Documents: For new taxpayers, the BIR typically asks for:
  • Photocopy of the BIR Registration or Certificate of Registration (Form 2303).
  • Proof of payment of the current annual registration fee (Form 0605).
  • Job order or proof that the document will be printed by an accredited printer.
  • Government‑issued ID of the applicant or authorized representative.

For renewal or subsequent applications, the taxpayer may also need to submit the latest expiring ATP, an inventory list of unused receipts/invoices, and a copy of the printer’s current accreditation.

  1. Wait for BIR Evaluation and Issuance: The BIR evaluates the sample, checks the printer’s accreditation, and verifies that the OR/invoice layout meets all tax information requirements. Once approved, the BIR issues the ATP, and the printer can commence production. The ATP number, date, and validity range must then be printed on every booklet.

For businesses that later adopt electronic ORs or e‑invoices under the E‑OPT (E‑Official Receipt) and related digital‑receipt rules, the ATP concept is extended to the software provider, with the BOR issuing a digital ATP for the e‑receipt system instead of a physical paper‑based one.

Common Pitfalls and Compliance Risks

Many businesses that treat the authority to print lightly end up facing compliance problems down the line. The BIR takes breaches of the ATP rules seriously, and there are well‑defined consequences for using non‑approved receipts or bypassing the ATP process.

Some frequent pitfalls include:

  • Using “Generic” Receipts from Print Shops: Some entrepreneurs buy pre‑printed ORs or invoices from local print shops without securing an ATP. The BIR can treat these as unauthorized documents, which may invalidate their tax treatment and lead to assessments and penalties.
  • Ignoring ATP Renewal: When an ATP reaches its five‑year validity but the business continues printing, the BIR may consider the documents as issued without valid authorization. This is particularly risky during audits, where the BIR may disallow all input‑VAT claims tied to those invoices.
  • Mismatched Layouts: Changing the layout of the OR or invoice after the BIR has approved the sample (e.g., removing required fields, altering serial‑number format, or omitting the ATP line) can also constitute non‑compliance, even if the forms were printed by an accredited printer.
  • Unclear Assignment of Responsibility: In multi‑office businesses, some branches may believe they are covered under the head office ATP, when in fact each branch that prints its own ORs or invoices must either be included in the ATP or have its own ATP, depending on the BIR’s guidance for that RDO.

These risks underline why the authority to print must be embedded in your corporate governance and compliance framework from the outset.

Getting Ready for the Future

For growing companies, the ATP is not the end of the story but the beginning of a structured, technology‑driven approach to billing and compliance. Modern businesses integrate their ATP‑linked ORs and invoices into broader invoicing and accounting ecosystems that automatically track serial numbers, comply with e‑official‑receipt rules, and generate accurate tax returns.

Key elements of a future‑ready system include:

  • Centralized ATP and Document Management: A central compliance calendar tracks ATP issuance dates, renewal deadlines, and inventory levels of unused ORs/invoices, preventing lapses that can disrupt operations.
  • Hybrid Governance Between Local and Global Teams: For multinational corporations, the local BIR‑compliant invoicing setup is aligned with the global ERP and tax‑reporting systems, ensuring that every transaction is tagged with the correct VAT treatment and ATP information.
  • Transition to Digital ORs and E‑Invoices: Under the E‑OPT framework, many businesses are moving from physical ATP‑linked booklets to fully digital receipts and invoices. The ATP for digital systems covers the software, while the BIR requires strict technical and security standards for issuance and storage.

By partnering with specialists like BusinessRegistrationPhilippines.com, enterprises can handle ATP applications, renewals, and digital‑transition planning as part of a broader compliance and business‑registration roadmap.

Final Thoughts

The authority to print is one of the most underrated yet most consequential compliance milestones in the Philippine business lifecycle. It is the legal bridge between your BIR registration and your ability to issue valid, auditable ORs and invoices—which are, in turn, the backbone of your tax reporting, bank relationships, and supplier network.

For startups and foreign‑owned entities, delaying or mismanaging the ATP process can create hidden liabilities that surface only during an audit or due diligence review. By treating the authority to print as a core component of corporate setup, aligning it with VAT registration, and integrating it into a robust invoicing system, businesses turn a compliance requirement into a strategic advantage.

Is Assistance Available?

Yes. BusinessRegistrationPhilippines.com can help you obtain, renew, and manage your BIR authority to print for physical ORs, invoices, and, where applicable, digital receipt systems. Whether you are a new sole proprietor, a growing corporation, or a foreign‑owned business entering the Philippines, our team provides end‑to‑end support for ATP applications, sample layout review, and compliance against the latest BIR rules.

Contact us today to schedule an initial consultation with one of our corporate‑compliance specialists:

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