Withholding tax disputes under Income Tax Article 26 often emerge as a consequence of transfer pricing adjustments in Corporate Income Tax, particularly through secondary adjustment mechanisms and the recharacterization of intra-group service fees into constructive dividends as per Article 4 paragraph (1) letter g of the Income Tax Law. In this case, PT. FI faced a correction of the Tax Base (DPP) for Article 26 Income Tax amounting to IDR 866,410,331.00. This correction stemmed from two primary items: a revenue adjustment deemed as hidden dividends and consultancy service fees paid to Vesuvius Management Services Limited (VMSL), which the tax authority claimed lacked economic benefit and failed the Arm’s Length Principle (ALP).
The core conflict began when the Respondent applied the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM) and concluded that the Petitioner's profitability fell below the arm’s length range, thus treating the deficiency as an indirect profit distribution. Furthermore, the Respondent rejected the deduction of consultancy fees, arguing they were stewardship activities or duplicative, subsequently recharacterizing them as objects of Article 26 Income Tax. Conversely, the Petitioner argumentatively proved that they operate as a limited-risk distributor and contract manufacturer, asserting that the independent comparables used by the Respondent—which were fully-fledged entities—were not comparable on an "apple-to-apple" basis. The Petitioner also provided concrete evidence, including email correspondence and technical reports, to substantiate the existence and economic benefits of the services received.
The Board of Judges, in their legal consideration, provided a crucial resolution by referring to the primary Corporate Income Tax decision number PUT-010767.15/2023/PP/M.VB Year 2024. The Board opined that the secondary adjustment correction lacked a solid foundation because the Respondent failed to conduct a deep tax avoidance risk analysis and neglected functional profile differences in selecting comparables. Regarding the consultancy services, the Board deemed the Petitioner's need for external services commercially logical, given the limited internal organizational structure for IT, Legal, and R&D functions.
The analysis and impact of this decision emphasize the vital importance of robust Transfer Pricing Documentation (TP Doc), especially in proving the "benefit test" for intra-group services. This victory implies that tax authorities cannot arbitrarily recharacterize costs into dividends without a comprehensive functional analysis and undeniable evidence regarding the absence of economic benefit. In conclusion, the Board of Judges overturned all of the Respondent's corrections and determined that the remaining tax payable by PT. FI is Nil.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here