In general legal principles, we recognize the concept of ne bis in idem, meaning a person cannot be tried or punished twice for the same matter. In the context of taxation, this translates to legal certainty: once a Tax Assessment Letter (SKP) has been issued, the tax obligation for that year/period is considered settled. However, is this principle absolute? Can tax authorities reopen "old books" that have been closed?
The answer is: Yes, a Tax Audit can be repeated, but under very strict and specific conditions. Legally, this mechanism is called a Re-Audit (Pemeriksaan Ulang).
Entering 2025, with the enactment of Minister of Finance Regulation Number 15 of 2025 (PMK 15/2025) aligned with the Coretax System, the provisions regarding Re-Audit have been further clarified. This article will thoroughly dissect the anatomy of a Re-Audit, distinguishing it from routine audits, and highlighting the risk of severe sanctions looming over Taxpayers who conceal data.
Based on Article 1 number 41 of PMK 15 of 2025, Re-Audit (Pemeriksaan Ulang) is defined as an Audit conducted on a Taxpayer who has already been issued a Tax Assessment Letter (SKP) or Land and Building Tax SKP from the results of a previous Audit for the same tax type and tax period/year.
This means the absolute requirements for a Re-Audit to occur are:
The highest legal basis for this action is Article 15 of the KUP Law (SDSN 2023), which grants the Director General of Taxes the authority to issue an Additional Underpayment Tax Assessment Letter (SKPKBT) if new data (novum) is found.
A Re-Audit cannot be conducted arbitrarily just because the tax authorities want to "look for faults again." Article 25 paragraph (1) of PMK 15 of 2025 restricts the triggers for Re-Audit to only two conditions:
This is the most common trigger. New data or data that was originally unrevealed includes data that:
Concrete example: A company has been audited for Corporate Income Tax for 2023 and a Nil SKP was issued. Six months later, data from Exchange of Information (EoI) is found showing the company has an overseas account receiving unreported export turnover. This account data is what is called novum.
Taxpayers can trigger a Re-Audit of their own volition. According to Article 15 paragraph (3) of the KUP Law, if a Taxpayer realizes there is unreported data after the audit is completed, they can submit it in writing to the DGT.
Unlike routine audits which can be proposed by the Tax Office (KPP), Re-Audits have layered approval (control) levels to ensure fairness.
Referring to SE-15/PJ/2018, the Re-Audit proposal procedure includes:
The results of a Re-Audit carry consequences far heavier than a standard audit.
If the novum is proven to result in additional tax payable, the DGT will issue an Additional Underpayment Tax Assessment Letter (SKPKBT).
Based on Article 25 paragraph (4) of PMK 15 of 2025, if the new data does not result in additional tax, the audit is terminated with a Summary Audit Result Report (LHP Sumir).
If it only reduces loss compensation, the DGT will issue a Decision Regarding Fiscal Loss [PMK 15 Year 2025, Article 25 paragraph 5].
It is necessary to carefully distinguish between these two mechanisms:
A Tax Audit can be repeated through the Re-Audit mechanism, but the law restricts it only to conditions where new data (novum) is found. PMK 15 of 2025 regulates this procedure strictly to balance the state's right to collect actual taxes with the Taxpayer's right to legal certainty. For Taxpayers, transparency from the start is the only effective shield.