Yakuma in Panama
Enterprise POS built for Panama's SFEP electronic invoicing, PAC validation, ITBMS and ISC taxes, and a USD-based, Yappy-driven payments market. Local fiscal compliance, payments, hardware, and deployment for Panama.
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Yakuma delivers enterprise POS designed for the operational reality of the Panamanian market: mandatory SFEP electronic invoicing validated through qualified PAC providers, CAFE issuance with DGI verification, layered ITBMS and ISC taxation, and a USD-based economy where Yappy, Clave, and cash all meet at the lane. From Panama City shopping centers to restaurant chains nationwide, Yakuma keeps execution fast, compliant, and consistent across every location.
Regulatory compliance
- SFEP electronic invoicing (factura electrónica) end to end
- Qualified PAC (Proveedor Autorizado Calificado) integration and routing
- January 2026 PAC mandate readiness for high-volume taxpayers
- CAFE (comprobante auxiliar) with SFEP authorization number and QR
- Contingency-mode issuance and post-reconnect validation
- ITBMS at 7%, 10%, and 15% by product category
- ISC (selective consumption tax) handling on applicable goods
- DGI tax reporting and fiscal document traceability
Payment integrations
- Yappy (Banco General) wallet acceptance
- Clave debit network and ACH transfers
- Visa and Mastercard, integrated and semi-integrated terminals
- USD cash handling controls (Balboa pegged 1:1)
- Tender-to-factura reconciliation for DGI reporting
Local integrations
- Panamanian accounting software and DGI reporting
- Latin American delivery apps (PedidosYa, Uber Eats)
- Multi-location chain management
- Inventory control and local supplier networks
Supporting Panamanian chains and franchises with SFEP-compliant, PAC-validated POS across retail and hospitality, from single shopping-center stores to nationwide restaurant estates.
Local terminology:
The challenges of running a retail or hospitality chain in Panama
Mandatory PAC electronic invoicing under SFEP
Under the Sistema de Facturación Electrónica de Panamá (SFEP), chains must issue every sale as a factura electrónica validated by a Proveedor Autorizado Calificado (PAC). As of January 1, 2026, any taxpayer above 100 monthly invoices or B/.36,000 in annual income must route documents through a qualified PAC rather than the free DGI facturador, so high-volume locations cannot rely on the basic option.
CAFE issuance and contingency at the register
Each transaction must produce a CAFE (Comprobante Auxiliar de Factura Electrónica) carrying the SFEP authorization number and a QR code for DGI verification. When connectivity to the PAC drops, the POS must keep selling in contingency mode and reconcile and validate documents once the link is restored, without losing fiscal traceability across busy stores.
Layered ITBMS and ISC tax rules
ITBMS (VAT) is 7% standard, but 10% applies to alcoholic beverages and lodging and 15% to tobacco, while the selective consumption tax (ISC) adds further charges on items such as alcohol, tobacco, and sugary drinks. Mixed retail and restaurant baskets must apply the correct rate per product line and surface it cleanly on the factura electrónica.
Yappy and local payment fragmentation
Yappy, Banco General's wallet, processes tens of millions of transactions monthly and is now expected at checkout, alongside the Clave debit network, ACH transfers, and international Visa and Mastercard. Chains need every tender reconciled back to the matching factura electrónica without manual workarounds at the lane.
USD-cash operations and reconciliation
Panama uses the US dollar as legal tender with the Balboa pegged 1:1, so there is no FX exposure but heavy cash handling. Tight cash control, shift-level variance tracking, and store-by-store reconciliation are essential to contain shrink across a cash-intensive estate.
Spanish-first compliance and local integrations
Fiscal documents, terminology, and DGI reporting are Spanish-primary even when staff and tourists are bilingual. The POS must speak the local fiscal language (factura, comprobante, ITBMS) and connect to Panamanian accounting tools and Latin American delivery apps like PedidosYa and Uber Eats.
How Yakuma solves Panamanian retail and hospitality challenges
Native SFEP factura electrónica with PAC routing
Built-in integration to qualified PAC providers so every sale is issued and validated under SFEP. Chains stay compliant with the January 2026 PAC mandate without per-store fiscal hardware, and the basic-to-PAC transition is handled in the platform.
CAFE generation and contingency-safe selling
Automatic CAFE output with SFEP authorization number and verification QR, plus contingency mode that keeps lanes open when the PAC connection drops and validates queued documents on reconnect. No lost sales, no broken traceability.
ITBMS and ISC tax engine
Centralized, product-level tax rules apply the right ITBMS rate (7%, 10%, or 15%) and layer ISC where it is due, then reflect it correctly on the factura electrónica. Mixed retail and restaurant baskets are taxed accurately without per-store configuration.
Yappy, Clave, and card payments unified
Accept Yappy, Clave debit, Visa and Mastercard, and USD cash through integrated and semi-integrated terminals, with every tender reconciled to its matching factura electrónica for clean end-of-day and DGI reporting.
Cash-control tooling for a USD economy
Role-based permissions, audit trails, and variance tracking by store and shift bring discipline to high-volume USD cash operations, surfacing discrepancies quickly across the chain.
Spanish-first fiscal UX and local integrations
Spanish-primary fiscal terminology and DGI-aligned documents, connected to Panamanian accounting platforms and Latin American delivery apps such as PedidosYa and Uber Eats for one operational truth across channels.
Yakuma handles Panama's fiscal, tax, and e-invoicing requirements natively. See the full multi-country compliance breakdown on our Trust & Compliance page.
Scaling a chain in Panama?
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