• 27 Nopember 2025 - The Importance of PBK: A Real Case Study of Unrecognised Tax Credits • 24 Nopember 2025 - “Affirming the Legal Standing of Article 25 Income Tax Installments in the Self-Assessment System: A Formal Review of PUT-011550.99/2024/PP/M.IXA Year 2025” • 24 Nopember 2025 - HGU Documents Are Not Always Proof: This Ruling Voids Rp12.7 Billion Non-Operating Income Correction! • 24 Nopember 2025 - Shareholder Debt During Liquidation Considered Profit? Tax Court Annuls a Rp. 10 Billion Correction • 24 Nopember 2025 - National Tax Revenue Faces Peak Year-End Challenges • 24 Nopember 2025 - National News Narrative: Policy Consolidation and Energy Transition Challenges • 21 Nopember 2025 - Issues of Integrity and Tax Compliance: Corruption, Tax Amnesty, and Excise Performance • 21 Nopember 2025 - Slowing Liquidity and Business Security Threats: A Spotlight on Capital Outflow and Purchasing Power • 20 Nopember 2025 - Indonesia's Fiscal Pressure and External Deficit: Spotlight on Slow Government Spending and Nickel Investment • 19 Nopember 2025 - NPWP Branch vs. NPWP Head Office Dispute: The Story of PT BB's Final Income Tax PPh • 19 Nopember 2025 - Indonesia's Monetary and Fiscal Policy Direction: Anticipating Global Uncertainty and Strengthening Digital Transactions • 19 Nopember 2025 - Fiscal Dynamics and Legal Reform: The Challenge of Tax Revenue and Strengthening Indonesia's Investment Climate • 18 Nopember 2025 - Rupiah Anomaly and Under-Invoicing Cost State; BI Projected to Hold Interest Rate, 6% Flat KUR Boosts MSMEs • 18 Nopember 2025 - Carbon Tax Threatens Energy Prices; Government Strengthens Law (Common Law) and Coal Export Duty Amidst Permanent 0.5% MSME Tax • 17 Nopember 2025 - Key Developments: Increased KUR Disbursement, BUMN Investment Expansion, and Strategic Energy Policy • 17 Nopember 2025 - Strengthening State Revenue: From Internal Sanctions to Artificial Intelligence Weaponry • 16 Nopember 2025 - Strength of Transactional Evidence: Analysis of PT HI's Decision on the Cancellation of the VAT Taxable Income Tax (DPP) Correction Due to Equalization and Cash Flow Testing • 13 Nopember 2025 - Strengthening Investment, Risk of Losing Rp1,300 T in Tax Revenue • 12 Nopember 2025 - Tax Data Reform, BI Strategic Agenda, and Vape Regulation • 11 Nopember 2025 - Losing the Proof, Winning Partially: PERUM B’s Crucial Lesson in PPh 22 Dispute Arising from VAT Data Discrepancy • 11 Nopember 2025 - Reimbursement Costs Rejected by DJP but Accepted by the Tax Court: The Key to Proving Business Relevance • 11 Nopember 2025 - Consumption Tax Declines, DJP Prepares Single Profile with Customs; Retail Sales Predicted to Rise • 10 Nopember 2025 - Tax Reform and Redenomination Issues Color Economic Optimism • 07 Nopember 2025 - Crypto Tax Rises, Government Reviews Diaper Excise Amidst Stimulus Push • 06 Nopember 2025 - Global Tax Targets E-Money, Regions Ramp Up Tax Digitalization • 05 Nopember 2025 - The Court Cancels the Rp112 Billion Correction: The Directorate General of Taxes Inconsistency in Rejecting the Comparable Companies is Deemed Unfounded • 05 Nopember 2025 - VAT Dispute on Fixed Asset Disposal (Article 16 D) • 05 Nopember 2025 - Taxpayer Wins Against Customs: Full Acceptance of Customs Value, Import Duty Declared Zero. The Key to Successfully Defending the Transaction Value Method. • 05 Nopember 2025 - Zero Tax for PBG: Determination of Withholding Agents for Income Tax Article 23 in Freight Forwarder Transactions • 05 Nopember 2025 - SPPTDLN System Prepared, Featuring Blocking Option and Tax Incentives • 04 Nopember 2025 - Train Subsidies for Farmers & Discussing Trump Tariffs, Indonesian Inflation Declines • 03 Nopember 2025 - Final Income Tax for MSMEs Made Permanent, Finance Minister Prepares Illegal Cigarette Excise Amidst Gen Z Consumption Shift • 31 Oktober 2025 - Issuing Tax Invoices Based on BAPPB (Berita Acara Pemeriksaan dan Penerimaan Barang) Dates? PT FI Loses VAT Penalty Lawsuit Against the DGT, Dominance of VAT Laws Lex Generalis • 31 Oktober 2025 - Regional Tax Digitalization and TPT Industry Protection Become Government Focus • 30 Oktober 2025 - BI Launches QRIS Tap-In-Out & Prepares Digital Rupiah Amidst US-Indonesia Negotiations and “Warung Madura” Issue • 29 Oktober 2025 - Reviewing VAT & Tourism Incentives, Government Urged to Ease Regional Loans • 28 Oktober 2025 - Fitch Maintains Indonesia's BBB, Finance Minister Wary of VAT Impact and Customs Issue • 27 Oktober 2025 - Purbaya's Tax Optimism Tested, PPh 21 TER Triggers Chaos • 25 Oktober 2025 - The Key to Saving a Subsidiary Company from the Trap of Permanent Establishment Income Tax: How a Foreign Subsidiarys Back Office Functions Annulled Millions of Dollars in Tax Adjustments Based on the Arms Length Principle • 24 Oktober 2025 - Ministry of Finance Uncovers Gold Tax Evasion Scheme, Core Tax Being Fixed Amidst Global Pressure • 23 Oktober 2025 - An Arm’s Length TPD Isn't Enough: PT BTCI Loses at Tax Court, IDR 46 Billion Dispute Proves Service Existence and Benefit Tests are the Ultimate Key • 23 Oktober 2025 - DGT Evaluates PPh 21, Mitigates DHE Risk Amidst 8% Target • 22 Oktober 2025 - Government Regulation (PP) 43/2025: Government Affirms that PBPK and Financial Statement Standardization Become the Foundation for Cooperative Compliance of Business Actors • 22 Oktober 2025 - Ministry of Finance Guarantees No BPJS Premium Hike in 2026 and Prepares AI for Customs; DGT Warns Final Income Tax MSMEs, BI Claims DHE Effective for Monetary Stabilization • 21 Oktober 2025 - Finance Minister Haunted by Tax Shortfall Amidst Consumption Optimism; RI Prepares Common Law for Family Office and LNSW Intelligence • 20 Oktober 2025 - E-commerce Tax Delayed for 6% Economic Target, Amidst Tax Shortfall Worries and Declining Tax Return Compliance Due to Layoffs • 17 Oktober 2025 - Finance Minister Imposes Cocoa Export Levy and VAT Discount on Tickets; Amidst The Fed Rate Hike and Export Optimism from Indonesia-EAEU FTA • 16 Oktober 2025 - Finance Minister Faces VAT Dilemma Amidst Potential Tax Loss of Rp530 Trillion; Family Office 0% Tax Scheme and Low Corporate Compliance • 15 Oktober 2025 - Third Quarter Economy Predicted Lowest, Ministry of Finance Responds with 'Lapor Pak Purbaya', Intensified Tax Compliance, and Logistics Efficiency • 14 Oktober 2025 - A Shortfall of Rp781.6 Trillion: A Heavy Projection for the Ministry of Finance to Meet the Tax Target Amidst an APBN Deficit of 1.56% • 14 Oktober 2025 - Coretax Readiness Amidst Plummeting Tax Revenue and Optimism Over Foreign Investment • 13 Oktober 2025 - Three Pressing Economic Issues: From High-Speed Rail Debt, Depressed Non-Tax State Revenue (PNBP), to the Threat of Deindustrialization. • 13 Oktober 2025 - Finance Minister Tightens SME Tax Rules Amid Bali Family Office Dispute • 11 Oktober 2025 - Minister Purbaya's Breakthrough: Pursuing IDR60T in Tax Arrears, Rejecting KCIC Debt Bailout, and Targeting Evasive Final Income Tax Schemes • 11 Oktober 2025 - Tax Authoritys Three New Strategies: Synergy in Financial Intelligence, Strong Warning for "Non-Compliant" Businesses, and Overhaul of Beneficial Owner Data. • 11 Oktober 2025 - The Obligation for Risk Assessment and Corresponding Adjustment in the Domestic Transfer Pricing Dispute of PT MHP • 11 Oktober 2025 - Natura versus Reasonable Operational Costs: Upholding the Deductibility of KITAS Fees, Vehicle Rental Costs, and Industrial Plantation Forest (HTI) Fire Costs • 10 Oktober 2025 - Finance Minister Guarantees Stable Cigarette Excise, DGT Prepares Coretax 2026; Experts Warn of Risks in Instantly Hiking Tax Ratio • 09 Oktober 2025 - Scrap Income Must Be Included in TNMM Operating Profit for PT. UMSI • 09 Oktober 2025 - DGT Collects Rp18 Trillion from Tax Delinquents Using PPATK Data, Amid E-commerce Tax Delay and Demand for MSME Debt Write-Off Extension • 08 Oktober 2025 - Cost of Goods Sold Dispute of PT AT: When Accounting Evidence Is Not Convincing Enough for the Tax Judge • 08 Oktober 2025 - PT AT's "Other" Business Expenses: An Expensive Lesson from the "Trash Can" Account in Tax Court • 08 Oktober 2025 - Regional Tax Hikes Loom and Severance Tax Sued at Constitutional Court: Coordinating Ministry and Economists Urge Governance Improvement Amid Weakening Consumption • 07 Oktober 2025 - E-Faktur Data Alone Is Not Enough: Tax Court Annuls PPh 23 Correction Based on Third-Party Data in the Case of PT PL • 07 Oktober 2025 - Differing Functions of Comparable Companies: Tax Court Annuls DJP's Transfer Pricing Correction • 07 Oktober 2025 - Threat of Tax Shortfall Amid Record Economic Uncertainty; Ministry of Finance Secures Revenue Through Stable Excise and Data-Based Tax Audits • 06 Oktober 2025 - Sales Incentive is Not an Award: Tax Court Annuls PPh Article 23 Correction on Volume Discounts PT PL • 06 Oktober 2025 - Goods or Services Transaction? PPh Article 23 Risk on PT PL's Custom Label Sticker Procurement PT PL • 06 Oktober 2025 - Tax Oversight Intensifies Amid Economic Uncertainty • 02 Oktober 2025 - Fiscal Focus on Investment and Tourism Amid Digital Tax and Rupiah Challenges • 01 Oktober 2025 - Early October 2025 Dynamics: From Dollar Strength and Tax Rates to Regional Vehicle Tax Incentives • 30 September 2025 - Fiscal Strategy and Tax Compliance Dynamics Ahead of 2026 • 29 September 2025 - Finance Minister Freezes 2026 Tobacco Excise and E-commerce Tax While Chasing Massive Tax Arrears • 27 September 2025 - Tax for the Super-Rich in Europe • 26 September 2025 - Freeport Crisis Response: Tax Office Tightens Mining Oversight and Prepares 100% VAT DTP for Property • 25 September 2025 - Rupiah Falls Under Fiscal Pressure; Government Extends Housing VAT Discount While Reviewing Tobacco Excise • 24 September 2025 - IEU-CEPA Becomes a New Growth Engine Amid Tax Shortfall Risks • 23 September 2025 - Facing Tax Deficit, Government Prioritizes Capital Repatriation and DJP Quality Reform • 22 September 2025 - Fiscal Dynamics: Rejection of Tax Amnesty, Excise Oversight, and Industry Challenges • 19 September 2025 - Government Raises 2026 State Budget Deficit, Prepares Inheritance Tax and Reviews Tobacco Excise • 18 September 2025 - Government’s Economic Response: BI Cuts Interest Rate and Indonesia Signs Trade Deal with the EU • 17 September 2025 - Economic Target Revision and Fiscal Reform: Early Signals from Prabowo’s Administration • 15 September 2025 - Government Confident in Meeting Tax Target, Prepares to End EV Incentives and Faces Global Minimum Tax Dilemma • 12 September 2025 - Amid Economic Slowdown, Government Confirms Global Minimum Tax Implementation • 11 September 2025 - Tax Revenue Drops, Government Prepares Stimulus and Electric Motorcycle Incentives • 10 September 2025 - Investment in SEZs Soars, Government Reviews GloBE Tax and Develops ZNT for Revenue Optimization • 09 September 2025 - Market Response to Cabinet Reshuffle and Tax Complexity: Between Digitalization and Regional Innovation • 08 September 2025 - Employee Income Tax Proposed to Change: Between Equity and the Risk of Job Discrimination • 04 September 2025 - Amidst Public Protests, the Government Guarantees No Tax Hike Until 2026 • 04 September 2025 - Taxation and Inequality: Why a Wealth Tax is Considered Important Amidst Excise and Law Enforcement Issues • 02 September 2025 - Three Sides of Indonesian Tax: Crypto Tightened, UMKM Waiting, and Legitimacy Questioned • 01 September 2025 - Synergy of Fiscal and Monetary Policy: Addressing Indonesia's Economic Challenges • 01 September 2025 - Social Turmoil and Economic Threat: How Demonstrations Affect Investor Confidence and Fiscal Stability • 29 Agustus 2025 - Behind Economic Optimism: Inflow of Foreign Capital and Caution over Household Consumption Slowdown • 27 Agustus 2025 - Indonesia's Economic Dilemma: Rising Rice Prices and Debt Burden Overshadow US Trade Deal • 26 Agustus 2025 - National Economic Struggle: Government Boosts Property, Manufacturing Sluggish, Regions Achieve Fiscal Autonomy • 08 Agustus 2025 - PER-15/PJ/2025: Analyzing the New Tax Regulations for Digital Commerce in Indonesia
Indonesia Inggris
EN Pelaporan Pajak (SPT)

Rectification & Extension

Taxindo Prime Consulting • 23 September 2025

Rectification/Correction

Tax rectification is the right of a Taxpayer to make amendments to their Tax Return (SPT) due to errors or incompleteness of data, to ensure that the reported tax data is correct and in accordance with the actual conditions. The errors referred to may include:

  • Clerical errors: including errors in writing the name, address, Taxpayer Identification Number (NPWP), object tax number, location of the tax object, tax object sector, tax object sub-sector, decree or assessment number, type of tax, tax period, part of the tax year, tax year, due date, or other clerical errors that do not affect the amount of tax payable;

  • Calculation errors: errors resulting from addition, subtraction, multiplication, and/or division of a number; or calculation errors resulting from the issuance of a Tax Assessment Letter, Tax Collection Letter, Decree, or a decision related to the tax field; and/or

  • Mistakes in the application of certain provisions in tax regulations which include:

    • Mistakes in applying the tariff;

    • Mistakes in applying the percentage of the net income calculation norm;

    • Mistakes in applying administrative sanctions or administrative fines;

    • Mistakes regarding non-taxable income;

    • Mistakes in the calculation of income tax in the current year;

    • Mistakes in tax crediting;

    • Mistakes in applying the exchange rate;

    • Mistakes in applying the percentage of the taxable sales value;

    • Mistakes in applying the non-taxable sales value of the tax object; or

    • Mistakes in granting a reduction in the principal of land and building tax.

The objects of Rectification are:

  • Notice of Tax Underpayment Assessment (SKPKB);

  • Notice of Additional Tax Underpayment Assessment (SKPKBT);

  • Notice of Nil Tax Assessment (SKPN);

  • Notice of Tax Overpayment Assessment (SKPLB);

  • Tax Collection Letter;

  • Rectification Decree;

  • Objection Decree;

  • Decree on Reduction of Administrative Sanctions;

  • Decree on Elimination of Administrative Sanctions;

  • Decree on Reduction of Tax Assessment;

  • Decree on Cancellation of Tax Assessment;

  • Decree on Preliminary Refund of Tax Overpayment;

  • Decree on Granting Interest Compensation;

  • Tax Payable Notice (SPPT);

  • Land and Building Tax Assessment Letter (Surat Ketetapan Pajak Pajak Bumi dan Bangunan);

  • Land and Building Tax Collection Letter (Surat Tagihan Pajak Pajak Bumi dan Bangunan);

  • Decree on Granting a Reduction in Land and Building Tax;

  • Decree on Reduction of Land and Building Tax Administrative Fine; or

  • Mutual Agreement Procedure Decree (Surat Keputusan Persetujuan Bersama).

For the aforementioned letters, Taxpayers may submit an application to the Director General of Taxes for rectification, the provisions of which are regulated in Article 8 of Law Number 6 of 1983 (UU KUP) as updated by Law Number 7 of 2021 (UU HPP). This is intended to grant the Taxpayer the right to correct an already submitted Tax Return (SPT).

Rectification of Tax Return (SPT)

A Taxpayer (on their own initiative) may rectify an already submitted Tax Return (SPT) by submitting a written statement, as long as the Director General of Taxes has not yet conducted an audit and is done 2 years before the expiration of the tax assessment period for the rectification of an SPT that states a loss or overpayment (Article 8 paragraphs (1) and (1a) of the UU HPP).

However, if this results in a greater tax liability in the Annual SPT or Periodical SPT, the Taxpayer shall be subject to an administrative sanction in the form of interest at the monthly interest rate determined by the Minister of Finance (calculated from the date the submission of the Tax Return ends until the date of payment, and is imposed for a maximum of 24 months). The interest rate referred to is the rate applicable on the date the sanction calculation begins and is calculated based on the formula: $(\text{benchmark interest rate} + 5\%) \div 12$; (Article 8 paragraphs (2), (2a), and (2b) of the UU HPP).

Voluntary Disclosure by Taxpayers

In addition, Taxpayers may voluntarily disclose their tax errors by revealing the incorrectness after the DJP has taken auditing action. This step can be taken if the Taxpayer:

  • Has never reported their Tax Return (SPT); or

  • Has reported their Tax Return (SPT), but the contents are incorrect or incomplete, for example, intentionally understating income or falsifying data.

Although the Taxpayer will still be subject to a penalty of 2 times the amount of tax, by doing this, the Taxpayer can at least avoid a more serious legal process (Article 8 paragraphs (3) and (3a) of the UU HPP).

Disclosure of Errors During an Ongoing Audit

Taxpayers may also admit errors in filing the Tax Return during the ongoing tax audit process. The applicable provisions include:

  • It is done before the DJP submits the notification letter of the audit results.

  • The Taxpayer must still pay the tax underpayment before the separate report is submitted, as well as the interest sanction calculated based on the formula: $(\text{benchmark interest rate} + 10\%) \div 12$ and is calculated from:

    • the due date for the Annual SPT;

    • the due date for payment for the Periodical SPT;

    • imposed for a maximum of 24 months (Article 8 paragraphs (4), (5), and (5a) of the UU HPP).

Rectification of SPT Due to Changes in Previous Year's Data

This is done when the Taxpayer receives a tax decision from previous years that contains a difference in the amount of tax loss (fiscal loss) from what was reported by the Taxpayer. This rectification must be carried out within 3 months after the receipt of the letter or decision, provided that the DJP has not yet conducted an audit (Article 8 paragraph (6) of the UU HPP).

Objection

Tax objection is the first legal remedy that a Taxpayer can pursue if they feel there is an inconsistency or unfairness in the tax assessment. The Taxpayer can submit an application to the DJP to review the tax assessment letter (SKP) or tax withholding/collection they received (Article 25 paragraph (1) of the UU KUP).

Object of Objection

Furthermore, the objects that can be subject to an objection include:

  • Notice of Tax Underpayment Assessment (SKPKB);

  • Notice of Additional Tax Underpayment Assessment (SKPKBT);

  • Notice of Tax Overpayment Assessment (SKPLB);

  • Notice of Nil Tax Assessment (SKPN); or

  • Withholding or Collection of Tax by a Third Party deemed inappropriate.

To submit an objection, there are several requirements and procedures that the Taxpayer must meet, namely:

  • The application must be submitted in writing in Indonesian.

  • The objection letter must be submitted no later than 3 months from the date the tax assessment letter was sent, unless there are circumstances beyond the Taxpayer's control (for example, a natural disaster).

  • The Taxpayer must include clear and strong reasons for their objection.

  • One objection letter can only be submitted for one SKP.

  • Before the objection letter is submitted, the Taxpayer must first pay the amount of their tax obligations that they have agreed to in the final discussion of the audit results.

It should be noted that if the Taxpayer does not meet the above requirements, the objection letter submitted will not be considered (Article 25 paragraphs (2), (3), (3a), and (4) of the UU HPP).

Objection Settlement Process

After the submitted objection is accepted, the DJP will conduct an examination and issue a decision within a maximum period of 12 months from the date the objection letter was received. If the DJP does not issue a decision within 12 months, the Taxpayer's objection is deemed granted. Before issuing a decision, the DJP may request additional information or data from the Taxpayer (Article 26 of the UU KUP).

The decision referred to may be in the form of:

  • Granting part or all of the Taxpayer's objection;

  • Rejecting the Taxpayer's objection; or

  • Increasing the amount of tax payable.

If the objection is granted, the Taxpayer will receive a refund of administrative sanctions (fines or interest) previously paid. In addition, if the granted objection results in a tax overpayment, the DJP is obliged to refund the excess amount plus interest compensation of 2% per month for a maximum of 24 months if the refund is delayed (Article 27a of the UU KUP).

The refund referred to is calculated from:

  • the payment date that caused the tax overpayment until the issuance of the Objection Decree for SKPKB and SKPKBT; or

  • the tax assessment letter issuance date until the issuance of the Objection Decree for SKPN and SKPLB.

Conversely, if the objection is rejected or even causes the amount of tax payable to increase, the Taxpayer may continue the legal remedy by filing an appeal with the Tax Court.

Administrative Sanctions related to Objection Submission

If the submitted objection is rejected or partially granted, the Taxpayer will be subject to an administrative sanction in the form of a fine of 30% of the amount of tax based on the objection decision reduced by the tax that has been paid previously (Article 25 paragraph (9) of the UU HPP).

The amount of tax previously paid before the objection submission includes payments for amounts agreed upon and not agreed upon in the Final Discussion of Audit Results (PAHP). This administrative sanction is also imposed on the Taxpayer in the event that the Objection Decree:

  • increases the amount of tax still payable;

  • is appealed with a non-admissible appeal decision; or

  • is appealed but then withdrawn.

However, the fine will not be imposed if:

  • The Taxpayer withdraws the objection submission;

  • The objection submission is not considered because it does not meet the formal requirements for submission (late submission of the letter) even though the material requirements are met; or

  • The Taxpayer files an appeal against the Objection Decree.

Reduction, Elimination, and Cancellation of Administrative Sanctions or Tax Assessment Letters (SKP)

The DJP may reduce or eliminate administrative sanctions (interest, fines, or increases payable) and reduce or cancel incorrect Tax Assessment Letters (SKP) if the sanctions are imposed due to the Taxpayer's oversight or not due to their fault. Furthermore, this provision can also be applied due to the lack of thoroughness of the tax officer or the rejection of an objection submitted by the Taxpayer merely because it does not meet formal requirements (late submission of the letter) even though the material requirements are met (Article 36 paragraph (1) letters a and b of the UU KUP).

Furthermore, the DJP may also cancel the audit results or the tax assessment letter issued based on the audit or verification results carried out without:

  • submitting the Notification Letter of Audit Results (SPHP) or Notification of Verification Results (PHV) to the Taxpayer; or

  • the final discussion of the audit results or verification results with the Taxpayer (Article 36 paragraph (1) letter c of the UU KUP).

These provisions are intended to review the sanctions imposed on Taxpayers, especially if there are strong reasons that are not intentional faults of the Taxpayer. These provisions aim to ensure that the audit process is carried out procedurally and transparently.

Taxindo Prime Consulting (TPC) is a firm specializing in tax, accounting, business, and business law consulting.
Taxindo Prime Consulting (TPC) is a firm specializing in tax, accounting, business, and business law consulting. We offer a comprehensive range of advisory services that provide objective, in-depth, and independent education, advice, and solutions for all tax, accounting, and business issues.
Our services cover various aspects of taxation, accounting, and business law. These include, but are not limited to, domestic tax consulting, international tax consulting, transfer pricing documentation, tax audit assistance, tax dispute resolution (litigation), tax planning and tax management, tax due diligence, transaction structuring, tax review for planned transactions, customs services, business and accounting consulting, and legal advisory services.
OFFICE
Mega Plaza Building 12th Floor
Jl. H.R. Rasuna Said Kav C-3 Jakarta 12940

Phone :
+62 21 521 2686
+62 817 001 3303

Email :
info@taxindo.co.id
Copyright © 2025 Taxindo Prime Consulting
All content on this website is provided solely for general informational and educational purposes. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional tax advice or consultation specific to your situation. We strongly encourage you to contact our team of consultants directly to receive appropriate guidance and advice.
Taxindo Prime Consulting
Tax Calendar
×
Newsletter