If you’re running finance, tax, procurement, or any part of the invoice-to-pay process in a US organization, you’ve probably felt it: compliance is getting harder, messier, and more expensive to ignore. And now, the new Basware US Compliance Report confirms it.
The findings make one thing very clear, compliance isn’t just a regulatory chore anymore. It’s quietly becoming one of the biggest factors influencing financial performance, operational resilience, and the ability to grow globally.
Consider this your quick, conversational walk‑through of what’s happening, why it matters, and where smart companies go from here.
US organizations are seeing more fines, more fraud, and more audit findings than their European counterparts. This isn’t hypothetical risk, the financial leakage is happening right now.
According to the report:
US firms are significantly more likely to pay recurring fines and uncover non-compliance in audits
Fragmented ownership means problems surface late, often only during audits
In plain terms: these aren’t “process nuisances.” They’re hits to cash flow, credibility, and governance.
More than 50 countries already have e‑invoicing mandates, with many more on the way. If your company is operating internationally — or wants to — compliance readiness is quickly becoming a gatekeeper.
Key findings show:
If your compliance model doesn’t scale, your growth model won’t either.
US companies overwhelmingly agree that compliance technology saves time and money. yet many still rely on spreadsheets or outdated scanning tools.
The report highlights:
25 percent still use spreadsheets, and 45 percent depend on aging OCR tools
Only 29 percent have fully embedded e‑invoicing platforms
Technology alone, however, won’t solve the problem. True improvement demands integration across ERP, AP, tax, and procurement, and the right governance to tie it all together.
This one is big:
Only 13 percent of US companies have cross‑functional compliance ownership.
That means tax, finance, IT, and AP are often making separate decisions with separate tools, processes, and priorities. The consequence? Blind spots. Duplicate systems. Late‑caught errors. Higher operational costs. You can’t manage what you can’t see, and right now visibility is missing in many organizations.
E‑invoicing and real‑time reporting are becoming the global norm. The European Union, Latin America, and parts of APAC are moving fast, and the shift isn’t slowing down.
What's at stake is that non‑compliant invoices may be rejected, market access may be restricted
and companies that aren’t prepared face emergency remediation costs and delayed revenues
This is infrastructure‑level change, not a niche regulatory update. So, what does all this mean for US businesses?
Across all the findings, a single story emerges:
The risk is already happening.
It’s affecting growth.
Fragmentation and low visibility are at the core.
Technology + governance = the winning formula.
And global mandates are raising the stakes for everyone.
The winners are treating compliance as infrastructure, something foundational, scalable, and central to how the business operates.
Want the full picture? Download the US Compliance Report