The application of final Income Tax (PPh) on income derived from construction services, as stipulated in Article 4 paragraph (2) of the Income Tax Law and further regulated in Government Regulation Number 51 of 2008, mandates that the work must result in a structure that is substantially integrated with the land or its place of location. The dispute between PT GTI and the Directorate General of Taxes (DJP) at the Tax Court, resulting in this Tax Court decision sets a significant precedent that definitively limits the scope of Final PPh for Construction Services, particularly within the maritime and offshore industries.
The core conflict in this case centered on the DJP's correction of the Final PPh Tax Base (DPP) amounting to IDR 152,241,327,630.00, which was believed to originate from the service of fabricating a jack up rig. The DJP argued that the rig constitutes an engineering construction permanently affixed to the waters when operational, thus obligating it to Final PPh for Construction Services. This argument was based on an extensive interpretation of the Land and Building Tax (PBB) regulations and BPS classification. However, PT GTI, strongly rebutted this, asserting that the corrected value represented the consignment goods' value belonging to the customer (materials) that were re-exported, and not PT GTI’s service income. Furthermore, on a juridical basis, PT GTI clarified that the jack up rig is a floating platform that can be relocated (a movable asset), and the lowering of its legs is only temporary for operational stability, failing to meet the "integrated with land" requirement stipulated in Government Regulation No. 22 of 2020 concerning the Implementation of the Construction Services Law.
The Tax Court Panel, in its legal considerations, comprehensively supported PT GTI's rebuttal on both aspects of the dispute. On the issue of value verification, the Panel deemed the DJP to have failed to prove that the export declaration value (PEB) was PT GTI's service DPP, and also found an inconsistency in the corrected data with PT GTI's Corporate Income Tax return. On the issue of service qualification, the Panel explicitly rejected the DJP’s argument by stating that the jack up rig cannot be categorized as a structure integrated with the land. Since this fundamental juridical element was not satisfied, the fabrication service for the rig was automatically excluded from the scope of Final PPh for Construction Services.
This decision carries significant implications for tax practices, especially for Taxpayers operating in the maritime manufacturing and energy sectors. The Panel's ruling affirms that substance over form must be upheld, where the technical characteristics of the asset (movable vs. permanent) determine its tax qualification. Consequently, this decision sets a precedent directing the DJP to exercise greater caution in interpreting Final PPh Construction Services regulations, particularly by aligning them with sectoral regulations that strictly define what constitutes Construction Work. For Taxpayers, this ruling underscores the critical importance of documentation that clearly separates service income from the value of consignment goods to prevent disputes arising from external customs data.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here