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The Directorate General of Taxes is authorized to reopen a concluded tax audit upon the discovery of new data or novum. The authority validates the legitimacy of such novum through a committee approval procedure prior to instructing the execution of a re-audit. Auditors will issue an Additional Tax Underpayment Assessment Notice (SKPKBT) along with a one hundred percent administrative surcharge penalty on the tax deficiency. Taxpayers can prevent this maximum penalty by voluntarily disclosing data omissions before the re-audit commences. Taxpayers must prioritize full transparency from the initial audit to mitigate the risk of the tax case being reopened..
In the landscape of tax law, legal certainty is a primary pillar. When a Tax Audit is completed and a Tax Assessment Letter (SKP) is issued, Taxpayers generally breathe a sigh of relief, assuming that the tax obligation for that year is final and closed. However, this assumption is not absolute. The state has extraordinary authority to reopen closed cases if Novum or New Data is discovered.
The concept of Novum in taxation is an instrument of justice to ensure that taxes paid are in accordance with the actual situation. However, for non-compliant Taxpayers, Novum is a nightmare because the consequence is not only the payment of the principal tax but also very heavy administrative sanctions. This article will dissect in depth the definition, procedures, and implications of Novum based on the latest regulations, including Minister of Finance Regulation (PMK) Number 15 of 2025 and SE-15/PJ/2018.
Etymologically, Novum means something new. In the context of the Law on General Provisions and Tax Procedures (UU KUP), specifically Article 15, Novum is translated as New Data and/or Data Originally Unrevealed.
The existence of Novum is an absolute condition (conditio sine qua non) for the Director General of Taxes to conduct a Re-Audit (Pemeriksaan Ulang) and issue an Additional Underpayment Tax Assessment Letter (SKPKBT). Without Novum, the tax authorities are prohibited from re-auditing the same tax year and type of tax that has already been audited [PMK 15 Year 2025, Article 25 paragraph 1].
What is meant by New Data and Data Originally Unrevealed?
Referring to the elucidation of Article 15 of the KUP Law and audit practice:
The discovery of Novum does not immediately become a tax bill. There must be a strict Re-Audit procedure to validate the data.
Based on Article 25 of PMK Number 15 of 2025, a Re-Audit is conducted if:
To prevent arbitrary actions by tax authorities in reopening old cases, the procedure for proposing a Re-Audit is regulated very strictly in SE-15/PJ/2018.
This is the most crucial aspect for Taxpayers. Sanctions due to the discovery of Novum through a Re-Audit are far heavier than ordinary audits.
Based on Article 15 paragraph (2) of the KUP Law jo Government Regulation (PP) Number 50 of 2022 Article 22, the amount of tax underpayment in the SKPKBT is added with an administrative sanction in the form of a 100% (one hundred percent) surcharge (increase) of the amount of such tax underpayment.
Example:
If Novum is found in the form of unreported turnover of IDR 1 Billion, and the tax rate is 22% (IDR 220 Million), then the tax bill becomes:
Sanction Exception: The 100% surcharge sanction is not imposed if the SKPKBT is issued based on a written statement from the Taxpayer of their own volition (voluntary disclosure) before the DGT takes re-audit action [SDSN UU KUP 2023, Article 15 paragraph 3].
In the Coretax and information transparency era, sources of Novum for the DGT are increasingly abundant:
To avoid the risk of SKPKBT issuance due to Novum, Taxpayers are advised to:
Novum is the key to unlocking the padlock of legal certainty (SKP) that has been locked. In the PMK 15 of 2025 regime, the procedure for determining Novum is carried out with high standards of prudence through a committee mechanism to ensure fairness. However, the risk of a 100% surcharge sanction demands Taxpayers to prioritize total transparency from the initial audit. Hiding data in the era of information openness is no longer a strategy, but a time bomb.