As the budget year draws to a close, national tax revenue performance shows complex dynamics, reflecting the significant challenges that must be overcome by the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT). Realization figures up to October reveal a contrast between positive signals from the labor market and heavy pressure stemming from the remaining targets, high restitution, and contraction in certain net tax types.
The Directorate General of Taxes must optimize all collection strategies to secure state finances. The DGT faces the heavy task of collecting the remaining tax revenue amounting to Rp 617.9 trillion within the last two months of the budget year. This massive amount demands extraordinary optimization of performance to ensure the APBN revenue target can be met. Proactively, the DGT has shown seriousness in enforcing compliance; through intensive debt collection measures, the DGT successfully collected Rp 11,48 trillion from 104 delinquent Taxpayers (WP). The DGT's success in achieving this remaining target is crucial for the stability of the State Budget (APBN).
Despite facing target pressure, the labor sector provides positive news. The increase in the number of working residents in Indonesia successfully boosted the realization of gross Income Tax (PPh) Article 21 revenue until October. This tax revenue on employment income indicates an expansion in the labor market, sending positive signals for increased purchasing power and overall economic activity.
However, net PPh performance is constrained by several factors. The realization of net Individual Income Tax (PPh OP) and PPh Article 21 experienced a contraction. The DGT explained that this decrease was caused by high restitution and an increase in the utilization of tax facilities or incentives, which reduce the tax base. Furthermore, the main factor suppressing the net achievement is the surge in tax refunds, where the cumulative tax revenue realization until October 2025 recorded a significant decline after being reduced by restitution. The 36.4% increase in tax restitution is the primary factor driving down the net revenue achievement, requiring in-depth analysis to avoid disrupting the fiscal cash flow.
The dynamics of national tax revenue illustrate a complexity where the DGT's efforts to chase urgent targets and conduct intensive collection must contend with structural factors like the restitution surge and the impact of incentive policies. Business actors and investors must understand the challenge of the large remaining target and the seriousness of compliance enforcement. Understanding the prevailing market dynamics and tax regulations is absolutely necessary for making accurate strategic decisions.