In the Indonesian tax system, which adheres to the self-assessment principle, full trust is granted to Taxpayers to calculate, pay, and report their taxes. However, to ensure fairness and compliance, the state possesses a law enforcement instrument known as Tax Audit. An audit is not merely an activity to find faults but a series of activities to collect and process data, information, and evidence carried out objectively and professionally based on audit standards.
The heart of this audit process lies in one fundamental concept: Competent Evidence. Without competent evidence, a tax correction is merely a fragile assumption lacking a strong legal foundation. This article will dissect the anatomy of competent evidence, its relationship with management assertions, and how such evidence leads to valid fiscal corrections under the latest regulatory umbrella, including MoF Regulation (PMK) Number 15 of 2025 and PER-23/PJ/2013.
Based on PER-23/PJ/2013 concerning Audit Standards, it is emphasized that audit findings must be based on sufficient competent evidence. The term "competent" here has two main dimensions:
Beyond competence, the aspect of sufficiency is also key. Sufficiency relates to the quantity of evidence adequate to support findings. The measure of "sufficient" is subjective and relies heavily on the professional judgment of the Tax Examiner [PER-23/PJ/2013; Teaching Materials on Audit Methods, Techniques, and Procedures, 2016].
In-depth audit practice requires examiners not only to look at physical documents but to test what are known as Management Assertions. Tax auditors seek evidence to test the following assertions in Taxpayer financial statements:
To obtain competent evidence, tax authorities use various techniques as regulated in SE-65/PJ/2013.
The latest regulations, PMK Number 15 of 2025 and PER-18/PJ/2025, introduce a classification of evidence called Concrete Data. This is a type of evidence with a very high degree of certainty, allowing it to be directly used to calculate tax due without the need for convoluted testing.
Examples of Concrete Data include:
The distinct feature of concrete data is that it triggers a Specific Audit with a super-fast testing period (maximum 10 working days), reaffirming that this type of evidence is considered to have met the requirements of validity and relevance primarily.
A tax correction (audit finding) is the final result of a legal syllogism:
Fact (Evidence) + Legal Basis = Correction
If examiners find a turnover discrepancy, they cannot immediately assess tax. They must show evidence (e.g., double sales invoices or bank statements), pair it with regulations (e.g., Article 4 paragraph 1 of the Income Tax Law regarding the definition of income), and only then calculate the correction.
In SE-28/PJ/2017 concerning Guidelines for Drafting Audit Reports (LHP), it is emphasized that every correction item must contain "Source of Testing," "Testing Performed," and "Conclusion." If the Taxpayer rejects the correction, the process continues to the Closing Conference. This is where the "battle" of evidence occurs. The Taxpayer has the right to refute with counter-evidence. If there is still no agreement, the Taxpayer may request a discussion with the Quality Assurance (QA) Team to review the legal basis and the strength of the correction evidence [PMK 15 of 2025].
Competent evidence is the currency that holds value in the tax audit ecosystem. For tax authorities, the ability to collect valid and relevant evidence is a reflection of the professionalism mandated by law. For Taxpayers, organized documentation and an understanding of management assertions are the best shields against corrections. In the era of information transparency and the Coretax System, the room for arguing without a data basis is narrowing. Therefore, the principle of audit readiness—the availability of competent evidence at all times—is no longer a choice, but a business necessity.