The Permanent Establishment (BUT) KS Ltd. filed an appeal to the Tax Court against the Value Added Tax Underpayment Assessment Letter (SKPKB PPN) for the July 2014 Tax Period, issued by the Directorate General of Taxes (DJP). This dispute, amounting to Rp. 2,336,030.00, focuses on the right to credit Input VAT (PM) incurred for operational expenses (office rent, consulting services, utilities) during a period when KS Ltd. had zero Output VAT (PK). The DJP maintained that the denial of the Input VAT and the imposition of a 100% administrative penalty, as stipulated in Article 13 Paragraph (3) of the KUP Law, was correct because the Input VAT was deemed to have no direct connection to the taxable supplies, in line with the mandate of the Elucidation of Article 9 Paragraph (8) letter b of the VAT Law.
The central difference in this conflict lies in the interpretation of the phrase "direct relationship with business activities." The DJP argued that KS Ltd., having zero sales since 2009 and operating like a liaison office, failed to meet the Input VAT crediting criteria due to the absence of Output VAT during the disputed period. Consequently, the credited Input VAT must be repaid. The DJP also suggested that the company’s status was close to "production failure" according to Article 9 Paragraph (6a) of the VAT Law.
Conversely, KS Ltd., through its Legal Counsel, strongly rebutted the correction. KS Ltd. contended that these operational costs were an integral part of maintaining the continuity of a legitimate and prospective business that would generate taxable supplies in the future. KS Ltd.'s documents and arguments demonstrated a history of taxable supplies in the past (2007-2008) and planned strategic projects (JO Metro One in 2015), proving that it was not failing production but was in a preparatory phase. According to KS Ltd., the Input VAT spent on sustaining the company to generate future Output VAT still maintained a functional and material link to the business, and thus should be creditable.
Responding to both parties' arguments, the Tax Court Panel decided to reject KS Ltd.'s appeal. The Panel's legal consideration explicitly upheld the DJP's view, prioritizing the principle of materiality in Input VAT crediting. The Panel adhered to the Elucidation of Article 9 Paragraph (8) letter b of the VAT Law, which mandates a link between Input VAT and taxable supplies. Since KS Ltd. could not convincingly prove that the credited Input VAT in July 2014 would generate Output VAT in that period or a closely proximate one, the Panel judged that the material requirements for crediting were not fulfilled. The denial of the principal tax amount automatically affirmed the 100% administrative penalty.
The implication of this Tax Court Decision is critical for foreign entities (PEs) and VAT-registered persons (PKP) in idle or pre-operating phases. The decision sets a very strict precedent, emphasizing that "direct relationship" must be interpreted as a clear, measurable correlation between the Input VAT and the outcome in the form of Output VAT, not merely a general link to management or business continuity. The key takeaway for Taxpayers is: when Output VAT is zero, the risk of bearing the Input VAT plus the 100% penalty for crediting it is extremely high, making the strategy of expensing the Input VAT (costing it) potentially safer than crediting it.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here