In the tax reform marked by the implementation of the Coretax System, the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) is moving towards more efficient and data-driven supervision. One crucial element in this new paradigm is the concept of "Concrete Data" (Data Konkret). Concrete Data is not just ordinary data; it is data possessing such evidentiary strength that it can be directly used to calculate tax liabilities without the need for convoluted testing.
Under the regime of MoF Regulation (PMK) Number 15 of 2025 and its implementing regulation PER-18/PJ/2025, Concrete Data becomes the primary basis for Specific Audit (Pemeriksaan Spesifik), a new type of audit designed for speed and legal certainty. This article will dissect the definition, scope, follow-up mechanisms, and examples of Concrete Data application.
Philosophically, Concrete Data is mature data. Unlike trigger data (such as ratio analysis or IDLP) which still requires deep clarification and validity testing, Concrete Data is considered to represent the facts of actual economic events.
Legal Definition: Based on PMK Number 15 of 2025, Concrete Data is data obtained or possessed by the Directorate General of Taxes in the form of Tax Invoices, withholding/collection slips, or other tax data that can be directly used to calculate tax obligations [PMK 15 Year 2025, Article 1 number 12].
The main characteristics of Concrete Data are:
Referring to Article 2 of PER-18/PJ/2025 and PMK 15 of 2025, the classification of Concrete Data has been simplified and clarified into the following categories:
This covers Output Tax Invoices that have received approval from the DGT information system (e-Faktur) but have not been or are not reported by the Taxpayer in the VAT Period Return. Since the e-Faktur system is online and real-time, the DGT has definite data that the Taxpayer has issued an invoice, so if it is not in the Tax Return, it is a concrete deviation.
Data in the form of Income Tax withholding/collection slips issued by the tax withholder (Taxpayer) but not reported in the Income Tax Period Return. For example, a company issues Article 21 Income Tax withholding slips for employees or Article 23 for vendors, the data enters the DGT system, but the Taxpayer does not file their Income Tax Period Return.
This is tax data related to Taxpayers who do not submit Tax Returns (Period or Annual) within the specified time, and after being warned in writing, the Taxpayer still does not submit them. In this context, transaction data held by the DGT (e.g., from counterparties) is considered concrete for calculating tax ex-officio.
Other data that can be directly used to calculate tax liabilities, such as data that has been clarified through SP2DK (Request for Explanation on Data and/or Information) and the Taxpayer admits its truth but does not correct the Tax Return [PER-18/PJ/2025; SE-9/PJ/2023].
The specialty of Concrete Data lies in its audit procedure. In PMK 15 of 2025, Concrete Data is followed up through Specific Audit (Pemeriksaan Spesifik).
Here are illustrations of how Concrete Data works in practice:
Situation: PT "Konstruksi Jaya" issued an Output Tax Invoice with VAT of IDR 50 Million to PT "B". The invoice was successfully uploaded and received a QR Code from DGT. However, PT "Konstruksi Jaya's" tax staff forgot to input the invoice into the VAT Period Return.
Concrete Data Analysis: The DGT system detects an anomaly: Approved invoice in e-Faktur vs Absence in Period Return. This is Concrete Data.
Follow-up: Tax Examiner issues specific audit instructions. Within less than 20 working days, an SKPKB is issued for IDR 50 Million plus sanctions.
Situation: PT "Jasa Mandiri" paid dividends and issued Article 23 slips but did not report the Article 23 Period Return.
Follow-up: The withholding slip data in e-Bupot allows DGT to determine tax payable directly as the rate and base (DPP) are already clearly stated.
If DGT finds unreported land ownership or bank accounts not in the Tax Return or SPH post-Amnesty, it can be directly calculated for Final Income Tax as concrete data per SE-15/PJ/2018.
With the enactment of PER-18/PJ/2025 and the Coretax system, the room to "hide" formal transactions is narrowing. Taxpayers must:
Concrete Data is an instrument of efficiency in Indonesian tax law. It cuts audit bureaucracy for cases where the facts are crystal clear. For the DGT, this is a revenue optimization tool. For Taxpayers, this is a stern warning that administrative non-compliance (such as forgetting to report invoices) will have direct and rapid financial consequences under the umbrella of PMK 15 of 2025.