E-invoicing in the United States is still more complex than it should be. Many businesses are dealing with fragmented tax rules, disconnected platforms, one-off integrations, and too much manual work. It slows things down, increases costs, and makes scaling harder than it needs to be.
At the same time, interoperable e-invoicing networks have already transformed how businesses exchange invoices across Europe and parts of Asia. Now, that same shift is starting to take shape in the U.S., and the market is reaching a turning point.
On April 22 in New York City, the DBNAlliance is bringing together leaders from procurement, finance, tax, and IT for the first official U.S. E-Invoicing Conference. The focus is clear: how to move from fragmentation to a connect once, connect to all model with the new U.S. e-invoicing network that reduces complexity, cuts down integrations, and enables seamless exchange of invoices and B2B documents.
You will hear directly from organizations like Microsoft, GEP, MBIE New Zealand and Halliburton who are already testing and shaping interoperable e-invoicing in the U.S. This is a chance to understand what is actually happening in the market and what it means for your business.
If your organization is looking to modernize invoice exchange, reduce manual effort, and stay ahead as the U.S. moves toward interoperability, this is a conversation you do not want to miss.
Join the experts in New York on April 22 and be part of what comes next.
Secure your tickets on the officiel event page [↗︎] and visit the DBNAlliance page to learn more information about the U.S. Open Exchange Network.


