Annual bonuses, gratuities, production bonuses, and Holiday Allowances (THR) are categorized as Irregular Income. Since the implementation of the new regulations in 2024, the tax calculation on bonuses for employees has been significantly simplified using the Average Effective Rate (TER) method, but the treatment of these expenses in the company's fiscal financial statements varies crucially.
This article discusses the latest PPh 21 calculation mechanism for bonuses and the Corporate Income Tax (CIT) implications based on the source and charging method.
Based on Government Regulation (PP) No. 58 of 2023 and Minister of Finance Regulation (PMK) No. 168 of 2023, the PPh 21 calculation for tax periods other than the last tax period (January–November) no longer separates regular income (salary) and irregular income (bonus) in the calculation process.
All gross income received in one month is aggregated, then multiplied by the TER rate according to the PTKP status category (A, B, or C).
Mr. A (Status K/1, TER Category B) receives a Salary of Rp10,000,000. In March 2024, he receives an Annual Bonus of Rp20,000,000.
Later, in December, the total annual income will be recalculated using the Article 17 rate (General Rate) to determine the actual tax liability, and the taxes withheld each month (including tax on the bonus) will serve as a deduction (tax credit).
A crucial aspect for companies is whether the bonus can be deducted from the company's gross income (Deductible Expense) or not (Non-Deductible). This depends on how the bonus is charged.
This is the standard scenario. Bonuses, gratuities, and production services given to employees, directors, and commissioners are charged as salary/allowance expenses in the current year's profit and loss statement.
Often, companies provide "Tantiem" or bonuses to Directors/Commissioners and Employees where the distribution is taken from Retained Earnings or charged directly to the previous year's after-tax profit balance.
In this scenario, the company gives a "net" bonus to the employee, where the company bears/pays the tax without using the gross-up method (tax allowance) in the payslip.
New Rule (Post PMK 66/2023): Tax facilities borne by the employer are now categorized as Benefits in Kind (Kenikmatan).
Companies must be careful in recording bonus charges. If the bonus is charged as a current year operational expense, it is deductible. However, if the bonus (tantiem) is taken from the retained earnings balance, it is non-deductible (fiscal correction). Furthermore, with the enactment of the Benefit in Kind regulations, bonus taxes borne by the company are now tax objects for employees but can be deductible expenses for the company.