The taxpayer engaged in the palm oil industry, PT DOF, had its Non-Levied Value Added Tax (VAT) facility on the delivery of Taxable Goods (BKP) worth Rp1,182,000,000.00 to a Bonded Zone revoked, a decision that reaffirms the stringent principles of Article 16B Paragraph (1) of the VAT Law and its implementing regulations regarding customs. This case highlights the complexity of VAT compliance for transactions involving entities with special facilities, where the formal aspect of customs documents, particularly the Customs Notification (BC 4.0), is positioned as an absolute requirement that cannot be overlooked by the seller from a Domestic Customs Area (TLDDP). The failure to provide valid evidence of the goods’ entry into the Bonded Zone was the crucial factor leading to the substantial VAT correction imposed by the tax authority.
The DJP maintained its correction based on the absence of primary evidence proving that the Taxable Goods, in the form of palm oil and its derivatives, had truly been physically entered into the buyer’s Bonded Zone (PT CRC). Based on data confirmation with the Directorate General of Customs and Excise (DJBC), the BC 4.0 document, which serves as the customs administration for the entry of goods, was not found or was invalid. Consequently, DJP deemed the Non-Levied VAT facility claimed through the Code 070 Tax Invoice nullified. The transaction was reverted to the default treatment of VAT payable in the TLDDP under the self-collected mechanism, resulting in a Tax Underpayment Assessment Letter (SKPKB). PT DOF, on the other hand, argued that the substance of the sale transaction had factually occurred, supported by the Invoice, Sales General Ledger, and proof of payment transfer. PT DOF contended that the administrative obligation of the BC 4.0 document rests with the Bonded Zone buyer and DJBC, not the seller, and thus, it is illogical for the seller's VAT facility right to be revoked solely due to the absence of a document outside their direct control.
The Panel of Judges rejected PT DOF’s arguments and upheld the DJP’s correction. The Panel held that the Non-Levied VAT facility is an exception that must be strictly proven by the Taxpayer claiming it. The Panel emphasized that BC 4.0 is an absolute and inseparable piece of evidence required to legalize the delivery from the TLDDP to a Bonded Zone. In addition to the lack of BC 4.0, the Panel also highlighted weaknesses in PT DOF’s internal documentation, including a sales contract signed only by one party and an inconsistency in the value between the Tax Invoice and the Sales Invoice. These comprehensive evidentiary weaknesses led the Panel to lack sufficient conviction that the requirements for obtaining the VAT facility had been fulfilled.
This decision carries significant implications, especially for suppliers or sellers in the TLDDP transacting with Bonded Zone companies. The ruling sets a legal precedent reinforcing that the burden of proving the VAT facility, including securing the necessary customs documents, lies entirely with the Taxpayer issuing the Code 070 Tax Invoice. A key lesson for taxpayers is that VAT compliance is not limited to issuing the correct Tax Invoice but also encompasses the verification and security of the BC 4.0 customs document as material proof of the goods’ entry. Periodic data reconciliation with the Bonded Zone buyer and DJBC becomes a crucial strategy to minimize the risk of disputes arising from the misalignment of customs and tax data.
The case of PT DOF confirms that the Indonesian tax legal framework, particularly concerning the Bonded Zone VAT facility, prioritizes comprehensive proof, both regarding the substance of the transaction and the formality of customs administration. To prevent similar disputes, Taxpayers must include a clause for the submission of a valid BC 4.0 in sales contracts and make the document a mandatory condition for payment finalization.