In 2025, the Tax Court issued a noteworthy ruling, ending a long-standing dispute between PT BB (the Appellant) and the Director General of Taxes (the Respondent). This case, registered under Number PUT-003791.27/2022/PP/M.XVIB of 2025, centered on a relatively small amount with significant implications for tax administration: a correction of the Final Income Tax (PPh) Article 15 Tax Credit amounting to Rp97,163,945.00.
The story began with a Underpaid Tax Assessment Notice (SKPKB) for Final Income Tax Article 15 for the July 2017 Tax Period. Based on audit results, the DGT did not recognize the Tax Credit claimed by PT BB. The reason was clear: there was no record of payment for the Final Income Tax Article 15 for July 2017 in the DGT's Information System using the company's Head Office NPWP (Taxpayer Identification Number) (03.287.328.3-063.000).
PT BB then filed an objection, which was rejected by the DGT through Decision Number KEP-00018/KEB/PJ/WPJ.30/2022. The company insisted that it had correctly fulfilled its tax obligations, having even paid the tax of Rp97,163,945.00 on August 10, 2017, and reported it on August 14, 2017.
Before the Panel of Tax Court Judges, PT BB submitted proof of payment in the form of a Tax Payment Slip (SSP) bearing an NTPN (State Revenue Transaction Number) and Electronic Receipt Confirmation (BPE). However, this was the crux of the dispute: the SSP payment was made using the NPWP of PT BB's Branch Office (03.287.328.3-063.001), not the Head Office NPWP.
PT BB argued that the Tax Return (SPT) had been filed electronically, and mechanically, filing would not be possible without prior payment.
However, the facts revealed during the trial dealt a decisive blow:
In its legal considerations, the Tax Court firmly adhered to basic principles of tax administration. The Panel of Judges assessed that, although economically a single entity, a branch office and a head office are distinct fiscal entities in the eyes of tax law.
Citing Article 1 number 22 of the General Provisions and Tax Procedures Law (KUP), a Tax Credit is tax paid by the Taxpayer themselves. Since the payment was made using the Branch NPWP, and there was no valid transfer or centralization of obligation mechanism, that payment was not, juridically, a tax credit for the Head Office NPWP.
Consequently, the Tax Court decided to reject the Appellant's appeal. The correction of Rp97,163,945.00 was upheld in its entirety, and the amount of PPh still owed by PT BB was set at Rp143,802,639.00 (including administrative penalties).
The story of PT BB serves as a crucial reminder for the business world in Indonesia:
This ruling reaffirms that formal compliance in administration, no matter how small, is key to avoiding disputes and significant financial losses.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court's Decision on This Dispute is Available Here