In the Indonesian tax ecosystem, a Tax Assessment Letter (SKP) resulting from an audit is often seen as a "final verdict" at the first level, possessing executorial power. However, the rule of law guarantees the protection of Taxpayer rights through the principle of due process. A fundamental question often asked by Taxpayers is: "Can audit results that have become an SKP be cancelled?"
The answer is Yes, but under very specific terms and conditions. This cancellation does not mean automatic tax debt forgiveness, but rather a correction of the violated legal procedure. Entering the era of Minister of Finance Regulation Number 15 of 2025 (PMK 15/2025) and PMK Number 118 of 2024, this cancellation mechanism is regulated more strictly and has follow-up consequences that must be understood so that Taxpayers do not fall into false euphoria. This article will comprehensively dissect the audit result cancellation mechanism, ranging from legal grounds and procedures to post-cancellation implications.
Hierarchically, the right to request cancellation of audit results stems from Article 36 paragraph (1) letter d of the Law on General Provisions and Tax Procedures (UU KUP). This article grants the Director General of Taxes the authority to cancel tax audit results or tax assessment letters from audits carried out without:
This provision is further reinforced in PMK Number 118 of 2024 concerning Procedures for Rectification, Objection, Reduction, Elimination, and Cancellation in Taxation, as well as Article 21 of PMK 15 of 2025 concerning Tax Audit.
The heart of an SKP's legality lies in transparency and participation. If the Tax Examiner ignores these two crucial stages, the resulting legal product (SKP) is considered procedurally defective.
The SPHP is a mandatory document containing the list of examiner findings. Based on Article 18 paragraph (1) of PMK 15 of 2025, audit results must be notified to the Taxpayer via SPHP. If the examiner issues an SKP without ever sending an SPHP, the Taxpayer's right to know the basis of the correction has been amputated. This becomes a strong basis for filing a cancellation request [PMK 118 Year 2024, Article 21 letter d].
Even if the SPHP has been sent, the Tax Examiner remains obliged to grant the Taxpayer the right to attend the Final Discussion of Audit Results [PMK 15 Year 2025, Article 18 paragraph 5].
Based on PMK 118 of 2024, the procedure for filing a cancellation is as follows:
This is the most critical part often misunderstood. If the SKP is cancelled, is the Taxpayer free from tax? The answer is: NO.
Based on Article 18 of Government Regulation (PP) Number 50 of 2022 and Article 21 of PMK 15 of 2025, in the event that an SKP is cancelled because the SPHP or PAHP procedures were not carried out, the audit process is continued by executing the procedures that were previously missed.
Post-Cancellation Follow-up Flow (Article 21 PMK 15/2025):
Thus, this cancellation essentially only "repeats the procedure," not erasing the tax findings. However, it gives the Taxpayer a second chance to argue and submit evidence in the final discussion that was previously missed.
In addition to result cancellation (SKP), there is also a mechanism for Cancellation of Audit Assignment (Pembatalan Penugasan Pemeriksaan) which occurs while the audit process is still ongoing. Based on SE-15/PJ/2018, an audit assignment can be cancelled if:
If the assignment is cancelled, the Taxpayer's Tax Return status reverts to "unaudited," and the Taxpayer can still perform tax return rectifications [SE-15/PJ/2018, Attachment II.17].
In certain conditions, an audit does not result in an SKP but is terminated through a Summary Audit Result Report (LHP Sumir). This is not cancellation, but a termination of the process.
Based on Article 20 paragraph 9 of PMK 15 of 2025, LHP Sumir is created if:
Facing potential cancellation, Taxpayers are advised to:
Audit results in the form of an SKP can be cancelled if there is a fatal procedural violation: lack of SPHP or Final Discussion. The latest regulations in PMK 15 of 2025 and PMK 118 of 2024 guarantee this right. However, such cancellation does not erase tax obligations but merely resets the process to the correct procedural stage. Taxpayers must wisely use this right as a tool to ensure material justice, not just a formality loophole.
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