VAT disputes regarding the reimbursement of smallholder plantation operational costs have resurfaced in Tax Court Decision Number PUT-012776.16/2021/PP/M.XIIA Year 2024. The crucial issue lies in the fulfillment of cumulative criteria so that cost recovery is not categorized as a delivery of Taxable Services (JKP) pursuant to the Director General of Taxes' Confirmation Letter Number S-144/PJ.02/2021.
The dispute began when PT AS (the Petitioner) provided fund advancements for harvesting and plantation maintenance costs belonging to smallholder farmers. The Petitioner argued that re-billing these costs to the farmers was a pure reimbursement (cost recovery) without a profit margin, and therefore not subject to VAT. However, the Respondent (DGT) insisted that the transaction constituted a delivery of taxable services because it failed to meet the administrative and substantive requirements in the nucleus company's bookkeeping.
The Respondent emphasized that based on audit results, the Petitioner could not provide evidence that these costs were recorded in a pure accounts receivable account. Instead, indications suggested the costs were managed through a mechanism resembling "other income." Conversely, PT AS maintained that the obligation to advance operational costs was a mandate from the nucleus-plasma partnership agreement, where the funds would later be deducted from the farmers' Fresh Fruit Bunch (FFB) sales, resulting in no economic value-add for the company.
In its considerations, the Board of Judges strictly referred to Confirmation Letter S-144/PJ.02/2021, which regulates three conditions for VAT-free reimbursement: the acquisition document must be in the name of the party being advanced the funds, there must be a written agreement, and the transaction must not be recorded as income by the advancing party. The Board found that the Petitioner failed to prove materially through the general ledger that the account was not credited as income. Due to this administrative evidentiary failure, the Board upheld the Respondent's correction.
This decision reaffirms that in formal tax law, economic substance must be supported by precise bookkeeping validity. For plantation companies, the management of reimbursement accounts must be strictly separated from income accounts to avoid the risk of reclassification as a VAT object. In conclusion, the Board of Judges rejected PT AS's entire appeal and maintained the VAT base correction for the service delivery.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here