The Director General of Taxes (DGT) imposed a VAT Base (DPP) correction on the utilization of Intangible Taxable Goods (BKP) from outside the customs area amounting to IDR 7,575,791,356 against PT SI for the December 2019 tax period. This dispute originated from an equalization method between the Accounts Payable ledger and the VAT returns performed by tax auditors. The DGT argued that the identified discrepancy constituted uncollected VAT objects, asserting that PT SI failed to provide adequate source documents to break down the discrepancy components during the objection phase.
PT SI filed a strong rebuttal by presenting a detailed reconciliation showing that the discrepancy was not a taxable object. The company explained that the majority of the difference arose from Credit Memos or transaction cancellations totaling IDR 14.3 billion, which were debited from the accounts payable but ignored by the Respondent. Furthermore, PT SI proved double VAT payments on the same invoices, domestic transactions with PT Microsoft Indonesia that were not foreign VAT objects, and exchange rate differences between internal accounting systems and the Ministry of Finance rates.
The Board of Judges, in its consideration, stated that the Respondent's correction lacked a solid factual basis as it failed to present detailed source data in the Audit Working Papers (KKP). Conversely, the Board was convinced by PT SI’s evidence, supported by complete transaction documents and financial statements audited with an Unqualified Opinion (WTP). The evidentiary trial confirmed that the entire equalization discrepancy could be detailed as non-taxable transactions or previously reported transactions.
The Board of Judges' decision to fully grant PT SI's appeal underscores the vital importance of data accuracy in equalization tests by tax authorities. This ruling provides a valuable lesson for Taxpayers to consistently document every transaction cancellation (Credit Memo) and currency reconciliation. For tax practitioners, this case reinforces the principle that equalization is merely an indirect tool, and material truth based on primary source documents remains the highest law in tax dispute evidence.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here