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LEI vs VAT / EORI / BIC

This guide explains LEI vs VAT / EORI / BIC in plain English. You will learn what each identifier is for, how formats differ, and when companies must use them. Moreover, you will find quick tables, examples, and links to deep dives so your team can act with confidence.

At a glance: key differences

IdentifierPurposeWho/What it identifiesFormatIssued byWhere usedRenewal
LEIGlobal entity ID for finance and reportingLegal entities (companies, funds, etc.)20 alphanumeric (ISO 17442)Accredited LOUs (under GLEIF)Markets, banking KYC/KYB, trade reportingAnnual data renewal
VATIndirect tax registrationTaxable businessesCountry‑specific patternNational tax authorityInvoicing, tax returns, complianceOngoing while active
EORICustoms identification in the EUEconomic operators/tradersMember‑state based; EU‑wide recognitionEU customs authorityImport/export declarationsStays valid; details must stay current
BICFinancial institution routingBanks/payment institutions8 or 11 characters (SWIFT)SWIFTCross‑border payments, messagingNo annual renewal

In short, these identifiers solve different problems. Therefore, you often need more than one: an LEI for global entity identity, a VAT number for tax, an EORI for customs, and your bank’s BIC for payments.

LEI — Legal Entity Identifier

The LEI is a 20‑character code that uniquely identifies legal entities worldwide. It supports transparency and speeds up KYC/KYB. Consequently, banks and regulators can reliably match the right company across systems.

New to the format? See our explainer: LEI code format (ISO 17442). Need the basics first? Read What is an LEI? To pick a provider, compare roles in Who issues LEIs.

VAT — Value Added Tax number

A VAT number registers a business for indirect tax. It appears on invoices and returns, and it follows national rules. While it identifies a taxpayer in the tax domain, it is not designed for global financial reporting. Therefore, it complements rather than replaces an LEI.

EORI — EU customs identifier

The EORI identifies traders for EU customs. You use it on import and export declarations. Formats reflect the member state of registration, yet the number is valid EU‑wide. Because it serves customs flows, you still need an LEI for market reporting or bank onboarding.

BIC — Bank Identifier Code (SWIFT)

A BIC (sometimes called a SWIFT code) identifies a financial institution in payment networks. It has 8 or 11 characters and routes cross‑border transfers. However, it does not identify your company; instead, it identifies your bank. Hence, you may provide both your LEI (entity) and your bank’s BIC (routing) in documentation.

FAQ

Do I need an LEI if I already have a VAT number?

Yes, if you operate in regulated markets or your bank requires it. The VAT number covers tax; the LEI covers global entity identity for finance.

Does EORI replace the LEI for trading?

No. EORI is for customs declarations. LEI is used for financial reporting and onboarding. Many traders will need both.

Is a BIC the same as an IBAN?

No. An IBAN identifies a bank account; a BIC identifies the financial institution. For international transfers you often provide both.

Authoritative reference used: GLEIF — LEI Basics.