In an effort to improve employee welfare and retention, many companies provide private health insurance facilities (Non-BPJS Kesehatan). Often, for cash flow efficiency or corporate discounts, companies pay these premiums in advance for a full one-year period (annual payment). However, administrative tax challenges arise when the employee resigns in the middle of the current year, where the insurance policy allows for a premium refund for the unused coverage period.
This article comprehensively explores the Income Tax Article 21 (PPh 21) implications of this scenario.
In principle, premiums for health insurance, work accident insurance, life insurance, endowment insurance, and scholarship insurance paid by the employer are PPh 21 Objects (Taxable Income) for the employee. This is affirmed in the Income Tax Law and its derivative regulations.
Unlike pension contributions or Old Age Security (JHT) contributions paid by the company (which are not taxable for employees), private health insurance premiums are considered additional economic capability or income for the employee. Therefore, the value of the premium paid by the company must be added to the employee's gross income when calculating monthly PPh 21.
When a company pays a premium for a year in advance (e.g., January 2024 for Jan-Dec 2024 coverage), generally, the entire premium value is recognized as the employee's gross income in that month (or amortized based on payroll policy, but effectively the benefit has been paid).
A problem arises if the employee resigns in the middle of the year (e.g., June 2024). Since the company reclaims (refunds) the remaining premium for July-December from the insurance provider, substantively, the employee does not receive the benefit (income) for that July-December period.
According to MoF Regulation (PMK) Number 168 of 2023, the PPh 21 calculation for permanent employees who stop working during the year is performed in the Final Tax Period (the month the employee stops working).
In this Final Tax Period, the company must recalculate the total income actually received by the employee from the beginning of the year until the last month of work:
Mr. A (Status K/0) works at PT Maju Sejahtera.
A. At Payment (January 2024)
B. At Resignation (June 2024 - Final Tax Period)
Non-BPJS health insurance premiums paid by the company are PPh 21 taxable objects. However, if a premium refund occurs due to employee resignation, the premium value recognized as income in the final withholding slip (1721-A1) is only the amount of the used (proportional) premium. The company is required to recalculate in the final tax period and return any excess tax to the employee as mandated by PMK 168/2023.