After paying for fuel with your Soldo card, it's important to request an electronic invoice from the fuel station. You'll need to provide the right details to make sure the invoice is issued and sent correctly.
Why this matters
Since 1 January, Italian regulations require a digital invoice for every fuel purchase. This applies to all suppliers in Italy — not just fuel — and ensures that each transaction is properly recorded for tax and accounting purposes.
What the supplier needs from you
- Your company details: Company name, VAT number, tax code, and billing address
- Your electronic invoicing address (PEC or SDI): This is where the supplier will send the invoice via the Italian Revenue Agency’s digital exchange system (Sistema di Interscambio)
How to share your invoicing details
Most fuel stations — including self-service pumps — now have QR code readers. You can show your Soldo-generated QR code, which contains all your company details and your invoicing address, so the system can read them instantly.
Which invoicing address should you use?
For fuel purchases under €300 made with a Soldo card, we recommend using Soldo’s invoicing address: fatture@pec.soldo.com.
If you’ve already set a different default invoicing address with the Italian Revenue Agency, don’t worry — using the Soldo address in your QR code won’t affect delivery. You’ll continue to receive invoices at your default address, while Soldo’s address helps identify which invoices relate to Soldo card payments.
More about the QR code
Soldo provides a QR code containing your full company details and Soldo’s invoicing address. This can be printed from the Soldo web app and used at any supplier who supports QR scanning.
You can also generate a QR code via the Italian Revenue Agency portal — but that version will contain your company’s own invoicing address, not Soldo’s.