Why Accurate Bookkeeping, VAT Compliance & E-Invoicing Readiness Are Non-Negotiable for UAE Businesses in 2026

Why Accurate Bookkeeping, VAT Compliance & E-Invoicing Readiness Are Non-Negotiable for UAE Businesses in 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Accurate bookkeeping is the foundation of compliance β€” incomplete or inaccurate financial records can lead to reporting errors, audit issues, and regulatory penalties.
  • VAT compliance requires ongoing monitoring β€” timely filings, proper documentation, and regular reconciliations are essential to avoid FTA scrutiny and penalty exposure.
  • E-invoicing readiness is becoming a business priority β€” organizations should start preparing systems, processes, and data structures well before mandatory implementation requirements take effect.
  • Bookkeeping, VAT, and e-invoicing are interconnected β€” weaknesses in one area often create compliance risks across the entire finance function.
  • Audit-ready records reduce business risk β€” maintaining clear documentation and supporting evidence helps businesses respond efficiently to FTA reviews and audits.

➀ Introduction

A few years ago, bookkeeping was a back-office function. VAT compliance was a periodic filing exercise. Most UAE businesses kept financial records to satisfy their bank, their auditor, or a year-end requirement β€” and little more.

That reality has fundamentally changed.

The UAE now operates one of the most rapidly maturing tax and financial reporting environments in the region. Since the introduction of VAT in January 2018, followed by the Federal Corporate Tax (CT) effective June 2023, and now a full e-invoicing mandate rolling out through 2026 and 2027, the compliance workload on UAE businesses has grown substantially β€” and so have the consequences of getting it wrong.

In 2026, organisations that continue treating bookkeeping as a back-office chore, or VAT compliance as a box-ticking exercise, are increasingly exposed to financial penalties, FTA audit risk, and missed tax optimisation opportunities.

This guide covers three interconnected areas every UAE business must address:

  •  Accurate bookkeeping β€” the legal requirements, common failure points, and what good looks like
  •  VAT compliance β€” what it actually covers beyond return filing, with the updated 2026 penalty framework
  •  E-invoicing readiness β€” the official phased mandate, technical requirements, and what businesses must do now

 

➀ The UAE Compliance Landscape in 2026: What Has Changed

To understand why financial governance has become so critical, it helps to step back and look at the full picture of what UAE businesses are now managing.

AreaSummaryLegal Basis
VAT (since Jan 2018)Standard rate 5%; quarterly or monthly FTA filingFederal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017
Corporate Tax (since Jun 2023)9% on taxable income above AED 375,000Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022
Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (2025)15% minimum ETR for MNEs with €750M+ revenueFederal Decree-Law No. 60 of 2023
E-Invoicing (phased 2026–2027)Mandatory B2B/B2G XML invoicing via Peppol/ASPMinisterial Decision No. 244 of 2025
Record Retention (VAT)Minimum 5 years from end of relevant tax periodCabinet Decision No. 74 of 2023
Record Retention (Corporate Tax)Minimum 7 years from end of relevant tax periodArticle 56, Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022
Updated VAT Penalty RegimeNew framework replacing Cabinet Decision No. 40 of 2017Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 (eff. 14 Apr 2026)

 

The key point here is that these frameworks are not independent. They are all underpinned by the same foundation: accurate, complete, and timely financial records. A weakness in bookkeeping flows through to errors in VAT returns, incorrect corporate tax calculations, and an inability to comply with e-invoicing data requirements.

 

➀ Accurate Bookkeeping: Legal Requirements and What They Mean in Practice

Bookkeeping is no longer just good practice in the UAE β€” it is a legal obligation under multiple regulatory frameworks.

 

What the Law Requires

Under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 (Corporate Tax Law), Article 56 requires all taxable persons to maintain adequate financial records and accounting books that enable the FTA to verify the accuracy of tax returns. These records must be:

  • Retained for a minimum of seven years from the end of the relevant tax period
  • Prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) or other FTA-accepted accounting standards
  • Available for inspection by the FTA at any time

Under VAT law (Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017 and Cabinet Decision No. 74 of 2023), all taxable persons must maintain supporting documentation β€” including profit and loss accounts, balance sheets, inventory records, wage registers, contracts, and invoices β€” for a minimum of five years from the end of the relevant tax period.

 

⚠  Record Retention Quick Reference

VAT records: minimum 5 years  |  Corporate Tax records: minimum 7 years

Penalties for failure: AED 3,000 (first offence) to AED 5,000 (repeat within 24 months)

 

➀ Why Bookkeeping Failures Become Compliance Failures

The most common causes of bookkeeping breakdowns in UAE SMEs and growing businesses are not technical β€” they are process and discipline failures:

  • Unreconciled accounts β€” differences between bank statements and ledgers that accumulate over months
  • Missing or incomplete tax invoices β€” every VAT-qualifying supply must be supported by an FTA-compliant invoice
  • Duplicate transaction recording β€” especially common in businesses using multiple platforms
  • Inconsistent revenue recognition β€” particularly in businesses with subscription, retainer, or milestone-based billing
  • Lack of supporting documentation β€” contracts, purchase orders, delivery notes not filed against transactions
  • Delayed close processes β€” financial data more than 30 days old is already unreliable for tax purposes

 

These are not just administrative inconveniences. Under the revised penalty regime (Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025, effective 14 April 2026), failure to maintain required records can attract fines. More critically, poor records are the single most common trigger for deeper FTA audit activity.

 

➀ The Corporate Tax Dimension

The introduction of UAE Corporate Tax at 9% (on taxable income above AED 375,000 for financial years starting from 1 June 2023) has added a further, significant dimension to bookkeeping requirements.

Businesses can only claim legitimate deductions, apply losses forward, or benefit from the 0% Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) rate if they have the underlying records to substantiate those positions. Specific bookkeeping implications include:

  • Free Zone businesses: must maintain detailed records to evidence qualifying income and sustain the 0% CT rate on that income
  • Small Business Relief: available for businesses with annual revenue under AED 3 million (until 31 December 2026) β€” but only claimable with accurate revenue records
  • Transfer pricing: related-party transactions require documentation to demonstrate arm's-length pricing
  • nput tax and deduction claims: cannot be substantiated without properly maintained accounting records

 By September 2025, the FTA had registered over 651,000 corporate tax entities β€” a figure that underscores the scale of the compliance obligation now embedded across the UAE business community.

Related ASC Services

β†’  Accounting Outsourcing & Bookkeeping

β†’  Accounting Review Services

β†’  Financial Statement Preparation (IFRS)

 

➀ VAT Compliance in 2026: Beyond the Filing Deadline

VAT compliance in the UAE is often misunderstood as a periodic filing exercise. In practice, it is a continuous operational obligation that touches every transaction your business processes.

 

The Full Scope of VAT Compliance

The FTA's compliance expectations under UAE VAT law cover five distinct areas β€” all of which depend on accurate underlying records:

 

AreaWhat It Means
Transaction ClassificationEvery supply must be correctly identified as standard-rated (5%), zero-rated, or exempt. Misclassification β€” even unintentional β€” creates VAT liabilities and penalties.
Tax Invoice RequirementsInvoices must include: supplier name and TRN, customer details, supply date, description, unit price, VAT amount, and total payable. Non-compliant invoices are invalid for input VAT recovery.
Input VAT RecoveryBusinesses can only recover input VAT on supplies used for taxable business purposes. Blocked categories (entertainment, personal use) must be identified and excluded. Unsupported claims attract penalties.
VAT ReconciliationMonthly: VAT return figures must reconcile with the accounting ledger. Unexplained differences are a red flag during FTA audits. Annual: VAT position should be reviewed against audited financial statements.
Voluntary DisclosuresWhere errors are identified, businesses can submit voluntary disclosures. Proactive disclosure generally attracts lower penalties than errors discovered during an FTA audit.

 

➀ Updated VAT Penalty Framework β€” Effective 14 April 2026

Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 replaced the previous penalty regime (Cabinet Decision No. 40 of 2017) with a revised framework, effective from 14 April 2026. Key penalty categories include:

 

ViolationPenaltyNotes
Failure to maintain required recordsAED 3,000 (first offence)AED 5,000 (repeat within 24 months)
Late VAT registrationAED 10,000β€”
Late VAT return filingAED 1,000 (first offence)AED 2,000 (repeat within 24 months)
Late payment of VAT2% of unpaid tax immediately+ 4% if unpaid after 7 days
Incorrect tax invoiceAED 5,000 per invoiceβ€”
Input VAT claimed incorrectly100% of the incorrectly claimed amountβ€”
Tax evasionUp to 5x the unpaid taxCriminal referral possible
E-Invoicing non-compliance (from 2027)AED 5,000 per monthPer Cabinet Resolution No. 106 of 2025

β›”  Important: VAT Penalty Changes from 14 April 2026

Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 revised the administrative penalty regime across VAT and Excise Tax, effective 14 April 2026. The changes harmonise penalties and aim to encourage voluntary correction rather than repeated fines. Businesses should review their existing compliance processes against the new framework.

 

VAT Health Check: What It Involves

A structured VAT health check reviews the end-to-end VAT position of a business, typically covering:

  • Review of VAT registration status and treatment of all revenue streams
  • Transaction testing β€” sample review of supplies and purchases for correct VAT classification
  • Input VAT recovery rate validation β€” including partial exemption calculations where applicable
  • Tax invoice review β€” compliance against FTA requirements
  • VAT return reconciliation β€” matching returns to accounting records for the review period
  • Assessment of voluntary disclosure exposure β€” identifying potential errors before FTA detection

A VAT health check is particularly important when a business changes its business model, expands into new Emirates or free zones, introduces new products or services, or undergoes a corporate restructuring.

Related ASC Services

β†’  VAT Advisory Services

β†’  Corporate Tax Advisory

β†’  IFRS Implementation

 

➀ UAE E-Invoicing 2026–2027: The Official Mandate, Timeline, and What Businesses Must Do

E-invoicing is the most significant compliance development in the UAE since VAT was introduced in January 2018. The mandate is not a future possibility β€” it is a confirmed, phased regulatory requirement backed by two federal decrees, two ministerial decisions, and an official penalty schedule.

 

The Legal Framework

The UAE e-invoicing mandate is underpinned by the following legislation:

 

DocumentKey Content
Federal Decree-Law No. 16 of 2024Amended the UAE VAT Law to formally define electronic invoicing
Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2024Amended the Tax Procedures Law to define the role of Accredited Service Providers (ASPs)
Ministerial Decision No. 243 of 2025Sets exclusions from the mandate (B2C transactions, sovereign government acts)
Ministerial Decision No. 244 of 2025Sets the operational rules, scope, and phased implementation dates
Cabinet Resolution No. 106 of 2025Establishes the official penalty schedule for e-invoicing violations
FTA Technical Guidance (Feb 2026)16-page publication defining all mandatory data fields, PINT AE XML structure, and code lists

 

➀ The Phased Implementation Timeline

DateMilestoneWho It Affects
1 July 2026Voluntary pilot phase beginsOpen to businesses meeting FTA technical requirements
31 July 2026ASP appointment deadline β€” Wave 1Mandatory for businesses with revenue β‰₯ AED 50 million
1 January 2027Mandatory e-invoicing β€” Wave 1Businesses with revenue β‰₯ AED 50 million (B2B and B2G)
31 March 2027ASP appointment deadline β€” Wave 2Businesses with revenue < AED 50 million
1 July 2027Mandatory e-invoicing β€” Wave 2Businesses with revenue < AED 50 million (B2B and B2G)
1 July 2027Mandatory e-invoicing β€” Wave 2Businesses with revenue < AED 50 million (B2B and B2G)
1 October 2027Mandatory e-invoicing β€” Government entitiesGovernment bodies follow third

 

B2C transactions (sales to end consumers) are currently excluded from the mandate. The mandate covers all businesses β€” whether VAT-registered or not β€” conducting B2B and B2G transactions in the UAE, including free zone businesses unless specifically excluded.

 

➀ How the UAE E-Invoicing System Works: The 5-Corner Peppol Model

The UAE has adopted a Decentralised Continuous Transaction Control and Exchange (DCTCE) model based on the international Peppol network and the PINT AE (UAE Peppol specification) standard. The 5-corner model works as follows:

 

StepFunction
Corner 1 β€” Seller (Your Business)Your ERP generates the invoice in PINT AE XML format
Corner 2 β€” Seller's ASPYour Accredited Service Provider validates the invoice and transmits it
Corner 3 β€” Buyer's ASPThe buyer's ASP receives and delivers the invoice to the buyer
Corner 4 β€” BuyerThe buyer's accounting system receives the structured XML invoice
Corner 5 β€” FTATax data is reported to the FTA's e-Billing system in near-real time

⚠  Critical: What Does NOT Qualify as an E-Invoice

PDF invoices sent by email, Word documents, scanned copies, and images do NOT qualify as e-invoices under the UAE mandate. Only invoices generated in structured XML format (PINT AE specification) and transmitted through an FTA-accredited ASP comply with the requirement.

 

➀ Technical Requirements: What Your Business Must Have

To comply with the UAE e-invoicing mandate, businesses must ensure:

β€’      ERP/accounting system capability: the system must be able to generate invoices in PINT AE XML format (not PDF conversion)

β€’      ASP appointment: businesses must appoint and integrate with an FTA-approved Accredited Service Provider

β€’      TIN registration: the participant identifier is the business's TIN β€” the first 10 digits of the corporate tax registration number

β€’      50 mandatory data fields: invoices must include all required fields per the FTA's February 2026 technical guidance, including TRNs, supply dates, VAT amounts, and product/service descriptions

β€’      10-year archiving: all e-invoices must be stored within the UAE for a minimum of 10 years

β€’      Credit and debit note alignment: adjustments must follow the same XML structure and reference the original e-invoice ID

 

Businesses not required to register for corporate tax must still register with the FTA to obtain a TIN for e-invoicing purposes.

 

➀ E-Invoicing Readiness: Five Areas to Assess Now

For most UAE businesses, e-invoicing readiness is not a technology project alone β€” it is a business process review. The five areas that most commonly require attention are:

 

1.    Data Quality β€” Are your invoice fields complete, accurate, and standardised across all entities and systems? Missing or inconsistent data in supplier/customer master records is one of the most common blockers.

2.    ERP Capability Assessment β€” Can your current accounting or ERP system generate PINT AE XML invoices natively, or will it require an upgrade, plugin, or middleware layer?

3.    ASP Selection and Integration β€” Identifying and integrating with an FTA-accredited ASP takes time. The ASP appointment deadline for Wave 1 businesses (AED 50M+ revenue) is 31 July 2026.

4.    VAT Treatment Alignment β€” VAT determinations must be embedded correctly in your transaction processes. Manual VAT application at the point of invoicing is not compatible with an automated XML workflow.

5.    Internal Controls and Governance β€” Clear ownership of the invoice lifecycle (creation, validation, transmission, archiving) must exist, with documented procedures and exception-handling protocols.

βœ“  Why Early Preparation Matters

Based on regional experience from Saudi Arabia's Fatoora mandate, businesses that began preparation 9-12 months before their mandatory date had significantly smoother go-lives. Those that waited until 60-90 days before faced ERP integration delays, data quality failures, and rushed ASP procurement. The July 2026 voluntary pilot is the right time to begin β€” even for Wave 2 businesses.

Related ASC Services

β†’  Accounting & Assurance Services

β†’  VAT Advisory Services

β†’  Risk Advisory Services

 

➀ The CFO Perspective: Compliance as a Business Enabler

For finance leaders in UAE businesses, the question is no longer whether to invest in financial governance β€” it is how to sequence the investment to get the most value.

Businesses that approach compliance strategically β€” rather than reactively β€” consistently report a range of operational benefits beyond pure risk reduction:

 

BenefitPractical Impact
Faster financial closeClean, reconciled records enable monthly close within 10–15 business days
Better FTA audit outcomesOrganised, complete documentation reduces audit duration and penalty exposure
Stronger access to creditBanks and lenders require reliable financial statements; quality records reduce diligence friction
Corporate tax optimisationProperly structured records support legitimate deduction claims and Free Zone benefit qualification
Investor and acquirer readinessM&A due diligence is significantly smoother with well-maintained financial records
E-invoicing go-live confidenceBusinesses with clean data and standardised processes take weeks, not months, to implement e-invoicing

 

The FTA has also deployed AI-driven analytics to cross-check financial records, e-invoicing data, and VAT positions. In this environment, the quality of financial records is no longer a matter of auditor preference β€” it is a live compliance variable.

 

➀ Warning Signs Your Finance Function Needs Attention

Businesses should review their current position honestly against these indicators:

 

Warning SignWhat It May Indicate
Monthly accounts available 30+ days after month endSuggests manual processes, unreconciled items, or understaffed finance function
VAT returns not fully reconciled to accounting recordsHigh audit risk; common source of FTA queries
Tax invoices not meeting all FTA requirementsInvalid for input VAT recovery; creates counterparty compliance issues
Records held in spreadsheets, email chains, or paper filesNot scalable; incompatible with e-invoicing data requirements
Corporate tax position calculated at year-end from scratchIndicates no ongoing tax accounting through the year
No formal VAT classification review in the past 24 monthsBusiness changes may have created unaddressed VAT exposures
Difficulty producing records for a specific transaction on requestWill be a significant problem during an FTA audit
ERP system cannot generate XML invoicesWill require urgent action before mandatory e-invoicing dates

 

➀ UAE Finance & Compliance Readiness Checklist 2026

Use this checklist to assess your organisation's current position across the three key areas.

 

BOOKKEEPING & ACCOUNTING

βœ“    Monthly accounts are prepared and reconciled within 15 business days of month end

βœ“    Financial statements are prepared in accordance with IFRS

βœ“    Bank accounts, intercompany balances, and VAT control accounts are reconciled monthly

βœ“    All transactions are supported by compliant source documentation

βœ“    Records are retained for 7 years (corporate tax) and 5 years (VAT)

βœ“    The chart of accounts supports both management reporting and FTA tax return preparation

 

VAT COMPLIANCE

βœ“    All revenue streams have been reviewed and assigned correct VAT treatment

βœ“    Tax invoices issued to customers comply with all FTA field requirements

βœ“    Input VAT recovery procedures are documented and reviewed regularly

βœ“    VAT returns are reconciled to accounting ledgers before submission

βœ“    Voluntary disclosure exposure has been assessed in the past 12 months

βœ“    VAT compliance procedures have been reviewed following any change to business model or operations

 

CORPORATE TAX

βœ“    Business is registered for UAE Corporate Tax (651,000+ entities registered by Sep 2025)

βœ“    Taxable income calculation is prepared on an ongoing basis, not just at year-end

βœ“    Free Zone businesses have assessed and documented qualifying income status

βœ“    Transfer pricing documentation is in place for all related-party transactions

βœ“    Small Business Relief eligibility has been reviewed (available until 31 Dec 2026 for revenue ≀ AED 3M)

 

E-INVOICING READINESS

βœ“    Business has assessed which implementation wave it falls into (Wave 1: AED 50M+ revenue from 1 Jan 2027)

βœ“    ERP/accounting system has been assessed for PINT AE XML generation capability

βœ“    Customer and supplier master data has been reviewed for completeness and accuracy

βœ“    An Accredited Service Provider (ASP) has been identified and appointment process started

βœ“    TIN has been obtained or confirmed for e-invoicing participant identifier purposes

βœ“    Internal controls and governance for the invoice lifecycle have been documented

 

➀ How ASC Group UAE Can Help

ASC Group UAE is a multi-disciplinary advisory firm headquartered in Dubai (Business Bay), with over three decades of experience and a team of 300+ professionals across 14+ global locations.

Our Accounting and VAT Advisory teams support UAE businesses across the full compliance lifecycle:

 

ServiceWhat We Do
Accounting OutsourcingFull-cycle bookkeeping, monthly close, and management reporting
Accounting Review ServicesDiagnostic review of existing records and reconciliations
Financial Statement PreparationIFRS-compliant financial statements for audit, banking, and tax purposes
VAT Advisory & Health ChecksFull VAT compliance review, transaction testing, and voluntary disclosure assessment
Corporate Tax AdvisoryCT impact assessment, registration, return preparation, and QFZP qualification
Transfer Pricing AdvisoryDocumentation and benchmarking for related-party transactions
E-Invoicing Readiness AssessmentGap analysis, ERP assessment, ASP selection support, and data quality review
Risk Advisory & Internal ControlsProcess documentation, control design, and compliance monitoring frameworks
IFRS ImplementationTransition to IFRS from local standards, with ongoing technical support
M&A Due DiligenceFinancial due diligence for acquisitions, disposals, and investment rounds

 

➀Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: How long must UAE businesses retain financial records?

A1: VAT records must be retained for a minimum of 5 years from the end of the relevant tax period (Cabinet Decision No. 74 of 2023). Corporate Tax records must be retained for a minimum of 7 years, as required under Article 56 of Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022. In some cases (e.g., real estate transactions), longer retention may be required.

 

Q2: What is the new VAT penalty framework in 2026?

A2: Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 replaced the previous penalty regime effective 14 April 2026. Key penalties include: AED 3,000 for first-time failure to maintain records (AED 5,000 for repeat offence within 24 months), AED 10,000 for late VAT registration, AED 5,000 per non-compliant invoice, and up to 5x the unpaid tax for evasion. Late payment penalties begin at 2% immediately and escalate to 4% monthly.

 

Q3: Is e-invoicing mandatory for all UAE businesses?

A3: E-invoicing is mandatory for all persons conducting B2B and B2G transactions in the UAE, whether VAT-registered or not β€” including free zone businesses (unless specifically excluded). B2C transactions are currently out of scope. Wave 1 (AED 50M+ revenue) becomes mandatory from 1 January 2027; Wave 2 (all other businesses) from 1 July 2027.

 

Q4: What is the difference between a PDF invoice and a UAE e-invoice?

A4: A PDF invoice β€” even if emailed or generated from accounting software β€” does NOT qualify as a UAE e-invoice. A valid UAE e-invoice must be generated in structured PINT AE XML format, transmitted through an FTA-accredited Accredited Service Provider (ASP) via the Peppol network, and reported to the FTA in near-real time. The penalty for non-compliance after the mandatory date is AED 5,000 per month.

 

Q5: What is the UAE Corporate Tax rate, and who pays it?

A5: UAE Corporate Tax applies at 9% on taxable income exceeding AED 375,000, for financial years beginning on or after 1 June 2023. Taxable income up to AED 375,000 is taxed at 0%. Free Zone businesses can qualify for a 0% rate on qualifying income (QFZP status) but must maintain detailed records to sustain this. From 1 January 2025, large multinationals with consolidated global revenues of EUR 750 million or more are subject to a 15% Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax.

 

Q6: How often should businesses conduct a VAT health check?

A6: ASC Group recommends a formal VAT health check at least annually, and additionally when: the business model changes, new products or services are introduced, the business expands into new Emirates or free zones, a corporate restructuring occurs, or when preparing for the transition to e-invoicing. A health check is also advisable before a corporate tax filing period to ensure VAT and CT positions are aligned.

 

Q7: What does a UAE e-invoicing readiness assessment involve?

A7: An e-invoicing readiness assessment typically covers: (1) determining which implementation wave and deadline applies to the business; (2) reviewing current ERP/accounting system capability for PINT AE XML generation; (3) assessing data quality in customer and supplier master records; (4) reviewing VAT treatment logic embedded in current invoicing processes; (5) identifying and beginning ASP selection; and (6) documenting the invoice lifecycle governance framework.

 

Q8: Can a small business with revenue under AED 3 million claim Corporate Tax relief?

A8: Yes. Small Business Relief is available for businesses with annual revenue at or below AED 3 million, effectively treating taxable income as zero for the relevant tax period. This relief is available for financial years ending on or before 31 December 2026. Businesses must elect for the relief and maintain accurate revenue records β€” the relief cannot be claimed without proper bookkeeping.

 

Is Your Finance Function Ready for the Next Phase of UAE Compliance?

VAT, Corporate Tax, and e-invoicing compliance is tightening β€” and the penalty framework has been revised as of April 2026. Businesses that build robust financial governance now will be better positioned for every regulatory change that follows.

Speak with an ASC specialist:  Request a Consultation β†’

πŸ’¬  WhatsApp us: Chat on WhatsApp   |   🏒  Office: One by Omniyat, Business Bay, Dubai

 

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