Successfully Overturning a IDR 3 Billion Input Tax Adjustment: The Key to Taxpayer Victory Through Proving Substantive Transactions

Tax Court Appeal Decision | PPN | Fully Granted

PUT-002979.162022PPM.IVB Year 2025

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Successfully Overturning a IDR 3 Billion Input Tax Adjustment: The Key to Taxpayer Victory Through Proving Substantive Transactions

In the implementation of the Value Added Tax (VAT) Law, the statutory right to claim Input Tax credits frequently serves as a critical flashpoint in tax disputes, particularly when the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) identifies indications of Incorrect or Fictitious Tax Invoices.

Tax Court Decision Number PUT-002979.16/2022/PP/M.IVB serves as an essential case study regarding an Input Tax adjustment valued at IDR 3,193,300,994.00 for the October 2018 VAT tax period. This litigation involved PT KEF, which filed an appeal against an Input Tax correction executed because the Respondent deemed that the transactions failed to satisfy material requirements. This dispute ultimately resulted in an absolute victory for the Taxpayer, with the Panel of Judges issuing a "Fully Granted" verdict.

The core conflict within this dispute centered upon the interpretation and application of Article 9 paragraph (8) letter b of the VAT Law.

The DGT, acting as the Respondent, argued that the Taxpayer, in its capacity as the buyer, forfeited its legal right to credit the corresponding Input Tax because the invoices originated from a non-compliant, untraceable, or allegedly fictitious counterparty, thereby rendering the underlying transactions invalid. This line of argument was reinforced by the premise that the material truth of a transaction must be comprehensively substantiated, a threshold which, in the Respondent's view, the Taxpayer failed to meet.

The Appellant, PT KEF, forcefully countered this adjustment.

They presented an exhaustive package of empirical evidence, encompassing original Purchase Orders, Invoices, Official Goods/Services Handover Certificates (BAST), and definitive banking payment slips. The Taxpayer firmly maintained its position that they had transacted in absolute good faith and had actively utilized the acquired Taxable Goods or Services (BKP/JKP) within their core business operations. They argued that any tax non-compliance or administrative irregularities occurring on the vendor's side constitute an independent regulatory matter that should not penalize an innocent buyer who has fully satisfied all statutory documentation and tax administration requirements.

In its legal considerations, the Tax Court Panel of Judges consistently highlighted the foundational principles governing the burden of proof as stipulated under the Tax Court Law.

The Panel opined that the factual basis of any adjustment executed by the Respondent must be conclusively proven by the tax authority. Upon meticulously reviewing the entire body of documentation submitted by the Appellant, the Panel concluded that the Appellant had successfully demonstrated the physical reality of the delivery of goods or services as well as the execution of actual payments. The Respondent's findings regarding the administrative irregularities of the vendor were deemed by the Panel to be insufficient to invalidate the legitimacy of the Appellant's Input Tax credits, given that the Appellant had completely fulfilled all formal prerequisites and conclusively proven its good faith.

The broader implications of this ruling reinforce the vital necessity for purchasing Taxpayers to diligently maintain the completeness and cross-document consistency of their transaction records (including POs, BASTs, and payment receipts).

This landmark decision provides solid legal protection, establishing that as long as a Taxpayer can verify the substantive delivery of BKP/JKP and demonstrate clear good faith, an Input Tax credit cannot be structurally overturned merely based on the fiscal non-compliance of a counterparty. This case serves as a powerful judicial precedent in fictitious invoice disputes, clarifying that the Respondent's burden of proof to disallow Input Tax credits must extend beyond identifying mere administrative irregularities on the seller's side.

A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here'


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Article More Details
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