Taxpayers (WP) must understand that non-creditable Input VAT (Pajak Masukan) holds a statutory privilege to be deducted as an expense reducing gross income under Article 6 paragraph (1) letter a of the Income Tax Law (UU PPh); however, this right can be immediately nullified if it conflicts with specific provisions, as experienced by PT LTJLI in their Corporate Income Tax (PPh Badan) dispute for the 2016 Tax Year. The dispute centers on a positive fiscal correction of VAT expenses amounting to IDR 224,778,325.00 claimed by the WP in its financial statements. The Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) rejected the expense deduction, arguing a lack of proper legal basis and supporting evidence, specifically the detailed Input VAT invoices proving non-creditability.
The core conflict in this ruling is split into two distinct legal issues. For the component of VAT amounting to IDR 106,737,518.00, which represented the underpaid VAT for December 2016, the Tax Court Panel upheld the expense deduction. The Panel consistently affirmed the principle that non-creditable Input VAT can be expensed as long as it is incurred for the 3M activities (obtaining, collecting, and maintaining income), a criterion deemed fulfilled in this part of the case.
However, the Panel's resolution dramatically shifted for the component valued at IDR 118,040,807.00, which originated from a VAT Overpayment compensation from the 2015 Tax Year. By verifying that PT LTJLI participated in the Tax Amnesty Program, the Panel rigorously applied Article 16 paragraph (1) letter d of Law Number 11 of 2016 concerning Tax Amnesty. This regulation explicitly prohibits participating Taxpayers from making amendments to tax returns (including VAT SPTs) for tax periods up to the Last Tax Year (2015). Since the VAT Overpayment compensated to 2016 resulted from an amendment to the July 2015 VAT SPT, the Taxpayer’s right to compensate and deduct this amount was forfeited.
The Analysis and Impact of this decision provide a crucial lesson for all Indonesian Taxpayers. It highlights that compliance with general PPh norms (the 3M expense deduction) will not salvage a Taxpayer if there is a violation of specific, binding norms such as those stipulated in the Tax Amnesty Law. The implication of this ruling solidifies the legal power of Article 16 of the Tax Amnesty Law as a decisive factor in tax disputes, even affecting transactions executed a year after the program concluded. This decision necessitates heightened post-Tax Amnesty vigilance from Taxpayers, ensuring that no historical transactions are executed through prohibited tax return amendments.
The Conclusion is that the Tax Court's decision to partially grant the appeal reflects a necessary balance: enforcing the PPh deductibility principle on one hand, and rigorously enforcing compliance with the anti-amendment norm following the Tax Amnesty program on the other. Taxpayers must be cautious when utilizing non-creditable Input VAT as an expense and must absolutely adhere to all limitations arising from participation in any tax amnesty program.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here