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The Car Ownership Program (COP) is one of the most popular remuneration strategies for retaining a company's top talent. In a general COP scheme, the company provides a car for the employee to use for a certain period (e.g., 4 years), and at the end of the period, the ownership of the car is transferred to the employee.
However, following the issuance of Minister of Finance Regulation Number 66 of 2023 (PMK 66/2023), the tax treatment of COP has fundamentally changed. Facilities that were once considered non-taxable company expenses for the employee have now become objects of Income Tax (PPh) Article 21 under the category of Benefit in Kind (Natura) and Benefit in Usage (Kenikmatan). The key determinant lies in the asset ownership status during the installment period.
Below is an in-depth analysis of two main COP scenarios and their tax implications.
In this scenario, the car is purchased in the company's name and recorded as a company asset during the program period (4 years). The employee only holds usage rights. Only after 4 years is the ownership title transferred to the employee.
As long as the car belongs to the company, the facility received by the employee is categorized as Benefit in Usage/Kenikmatan (Vehicle Facility).
When the car is handed over to the employee at the end of the 4th year, the form of compensation changes from "Benefit in Usage" to Benefit in Kind/Natura (Goods).
PT Maju provides a COP facility to Mr. A (Manager, not a shareholder). Mr. A's salary is IDR 40,000,000/month.
In this scenario, the car is purchased directly in the employee's name (credit agreement/fiduciary in the employee's name) from the start, but the company helps pay the installments or down payment.
Mr. B (Staff) joins a COP. The car is bought in Mr. B's name, but PT Maju pays the installment to the leasing company amounting to IDR 5,000,000/month.
Treatment: Every month, Mr. B's gross salary must be increased by IDR 5,000,000 as a taxable income component. PT Maju is required to withhold PPh 21 on this total. When paid off in the 4th year, there is no additional tax impact because the asset has belonged to Mr. B from the start.
HR and Tax divisions must review COP agreements. If the asset is recorded as the company's, ensure monitoring of the IDR 100 million salary threshold. If the asset is recorded in the employee's name from the start, ensure the installment subsidy is taxed immediately in the monthly payroll. Accurate valuation—both market value at transfer and depreciation costs—is key to compliance to avoid fiscal corrections.