Article 16D of the Value Added Tax (VAT) Law regulates the imposition of VAT on the transfer of assets that were originally intended not for sale. This often triggers disputes, particularly when taxpayers (WP) write-off assets. The fundamental difference in Tax Court Decision No. PUT-004528.16/2024/PP/M.IB of 2025 is highlighted. The core of the dispute concerns the VAT Taxable Entity (DPP)'s correction of the disposal of PT LI's assets amounting to Rp 24,762,608,000, which the DGT considers a delivery of taxable goods subject to VAT under Article 16D.
The core of this dispute lies in the interpretation of the term "delivery" of taxable goods. The Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) argued that the taxpayer's disposal of the assets met the transfer criteria under Article 16D, thus requiring VAT collection. The DGT used the Audited Financial Statement (fixed asset records) document, which showed the disposal of fixed assets. The taxpayer did not clarify whether the assets were sold or destroyed, and there was no Minutes of Disposal (BA) for the disposal. Based on this, the DGT treated it as a "sale of assets not originally intended for sale" (object to Article 16D). Furthermore, the DGT presented a screenshot of an internal email stating "has been sold/scrapped earlier" to corroborate the "transfer" of assets. PT LI firmly denied this, stating that the assets in question had been written off or destroyed (scrapped) from the books. PT LI proved this in court by presenting a reversal/adjustment accounting entry for "accrued fixed assets" in 2013, which was revalued in 2020, resulting in an adjusting entry (debit accrual—other liabilities; credit plant & machinery). The taxpayer emphasized in the hearing that the factual evidence demonstrated no economic value received from another party.
The Panel of Judges held that the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) failed to present sufficient evidence to refute the Appellant's write-off. Therefore, the Panel concluded that the disposal in question did not constitute a transfer of taxable goods subject to Article 16D VAT, and therefore the correction was annulled.
The implications of this ruling for tax practice emphasize that the imposition of Article 16D VAT must be supported by substantive evidence of a transfer of ownership or a transfer that generates economic value. For taxpayers, this ruling sets an important precedent for strengthening internal documentation. Taxpayers who destroy assets must complete the disposal report, a Director's Decree, and clear accounting journal entries to avoid corrections.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here