This morning, my mom texted me: "Check out that rice cooker fast before it gets taxed!"
I laughed. Not because of a flash sale discount, but because of a misconception that almost always resurfaces whenever there's a new tax regulation. Let me be blunt: the buzz is about the PPh 22 marketplace tax, and this is a seller's income tax that's automatically collected by the platform, not a new charge in a buyer's shopping cart. The DGT itself confirms that designated marketplaces collect 0.5% of the turnover stated on the seller's invoice (excluding VAT), and that invoice serves as proof of withholding—it's practical for administration and not a charge for consumers.
If we break it down, PMK 37/2025 designates PMSE operators—based domestically or abroad—as a 'third party' to withhold PPh 22, with certain prerequisites (including an escrow account). The goal is quite logical: to standardize the tax treatment for online and offline sellers while simplifying compliance (withholding at the platform).
The state will surely feel the benefits of this new regulation as it extends the digital tax base without burdening small taxpayers, provides more detailed transaction data, and creates a level playing field between physical and digital channels. However, the main challenge lies in orchestrating the appointments (including for foreign platforms) and ensuring the consistency of data reporting.
There's no new "PPh 22" line in your checkout. Policy-wise, this is not an additional consumption tax but a method of collecting a seller's income tax via the platform (whether it's the green, orange, or other platforms). Could prices go up because sellers adjust their margins? That's an individual merchant's business decision, not a regulatory mandate. A message to mom: the rice cooker is safe—at least from the 'buyer's tax' perspective. (The official policy clearly states this is not a new tax for consumers.)
This is the heart of the matter. The 0.5% PPh 22 is withheld from the gross turnover listed on the seller's invoice. It becomes a tax credit for non-final income. If the income type is final—for example, room rental—then the 0.5% deduction is just a part of the payment.
There's an important safety net for MSMEs with a turnover of up to IDR 500 million per year: they are not subject to withholding as long as they submit a declaration letter to the marketplace. Once their turnover exceeds IDR 500 million mid-year, they are obligated to report it by the end of that month, and the 0.5% withholding begins the following month.
Designated platforms must withhold 0.5%, deposit it monthly, report it in the Unified Periodic Tax Return (SPT Masa Unifikasi), and store transaction data (for both sellers and buyers). Plus, they need a data flow for the IDR 500 million declaration letter and logic for store couriers vs. third-party logistics. This isn't just about creating a new column on a dashboard; it's an architectural change to ensure taxes are collected correctly, on time, and documented neatly.
Because PMK 37/2025 targets two things at once: certainty and simplicity. The 0.5% rate reduces resistance, non-final income can be credited, final income is paid in stages, and MSMEs with turnover ≤ IDR 500 million are protected as long as they comply administratively. In essence, the government is shifting the compliance burden from millions of sellers to dozens of platforms that (a) have the data, (b) have the payment system, and (c) are auditable by design. Fair enough.
Sellers / Merchants: Send a declaration letter if your turnover is ≤ IDR 500 million; once you pass that, report it by the end of the month; reconcile invoices (proof of withholding) with your bookkeeping and SPT.
Marketplaces: Prepare the systematic process for withholding PPh 22 at a 0.5% rate, official exceptions, the start-of-month cut-off after the threshold is met, and the data schema for the Unified Tax Return. (Getting this wrong has a long domino effect.)
The Public / Buyers: Relax. This isn't a new tax line in your shopping cart. If prices change, that's a seller's pricing strategy, not us being charged PPh 22.
In my opinion, this PPh 22 marketplace policy is headed in the right direction. It brings order to the income tax of digital sellers without creating a "new cost" for buyers, protects small MSMEs, and provides administrative certainty by using the invoice as proof of withholding.
Will everything go smoothly? Of course not—the execution risk lies in the data discipline of sellers (especially at the IDR 500 million turning point) and the readiness of marketplace systems. But, with a friction-light 0.5% design and clear administrative failsafes, I see this as an example of a pro-compliance, data-driven, and minimally distortive tax regulation.
If all parties play their part, the state gains compliance, marketplaces remain user-friendly, and sellers don't feel "punished" just for selling online. It's a win-win—and yes, mom can still order her favorite rice cooker without any tax drama in the cart.