Employee health is a priority, but the company's method of covering medical costs—whether through reimbursement or direct payment to health facilities—determines the different Income Tax Article 21 (PPh 21) treatments. Since the enactment of Minister of Finance Regulation Number 66 of 2023 (PMK 66/2023), the rules regarding non-cash remuneration or benefits in kind have changed significantly, especially for the treatment of diseases that are not occupational diseases (such as flu, fever, or other general illnesses).
Here is an in-depth review of the tax implications.
Following the Harmonization of Tax Regulations Law (UU HPP), the general tax principle for employee remuneration shifted to Taxable-Deductible. This means costs incurred by the company for employee health can now be deducted from the company's gross income (deductible), but on the other hand, they potentially become taxable objects for the employee (taxable) depending on the method of provision and the type of illness.
In this scenario, the employee pays for treatment first using personal funds for general illnesses (e.g., toothache or fever), then exchanges the receipt with the company for cash replacement.
In this scenario, the company cooperates with a clinic or hospital. Employees with general illnesses seek treatment there, and the bill is paid directly by the company to the clinic (the employee receives no cash). This is categorized as a Benefit in Kind (Kenikmatan).
Mrs. B (administrative staff) suffers from gastritis (general illness, not work-related). She goes to a clinic that cooperates with the company. The treatment cost of Rp500,000 is paid directly by the company to the clinic.
Analysis: Since gastritis is not an occupational disease or a life-saving emergency, the facility worth Rp500,000 is considered Mrs. B's income (benefit in kind) and is subject to PPh 21 withholding in that month.
Regardless of whether the cost is provided through reimbursement or direct payment to health facilities, all medical costs incurred by the company in connection with employment are now deductible expenses from the company's gross income when calculating Corporate Income Tax. This differs from the old rule where benefit-in-kind costs were often fiscally corrected.
Companies must separate records between treatment for occupational diseases (tax-free for employees) and general illnesses. For general illnesses, both reimbursement and direct payment methods to hospitals now become components adding to the employee's gross income subject to PPh 21.