Three new Minister of Finance Regulations, PMK‑1/2026 on corporate restructurings, PMK‑1121 on tax‑treaty implementation procedures, and PMK No. 28/2026 on restitution and administrative penalties, have fundamentally altered the landscape of Indonesia tax litigation PMK 2026 compliance. Coupled with the extension of the 2026 corporate tax filing deadline to 30 May 2026, these regulations create immediate audit exposure, new penalty calculations and fresh procedural hurdles for every taxpayer engaged in cross‑border transactions, group reorganisations or overpayment claims. In‑house tax teams, CFOs and external litigation advisers need to act within the next 30 to 60 days to preserve appeal rights, quantify restitution risk and align documentation with the Directorate General of Taxes (DJP) enforcement priorities that these PMKs signal.
This article provides a step‑by‑step litigation strategy, from triage through Tax Court appeal, together with actionable templates and checklists designed for immediate deployment.
TL;DR, key actions:
The convergence of three new PMKs and an extended filing deadline creates a compressed window of high‑value action. Prioritise ruthlessly. The checklist below sequences tasks by legal deadline sensitivity and financial exposure.
The 2026 tax filing deadline for corporate taxpayers (Badan) has been extended to 30 May 2026. This is an administrative extension, it grants additional time to file or amend annual returns and may reduce exposure to late‑filing penalties under Article 7 of the General Tax Provisions (KUP) law. However, the extension does not change statutory deadlines for filing an objection (Keberatan), an appeal (Banding) or a lawsuit (Gugatan) against existing assessments. Those deadlines run from the date on the relevant tax assessment notice.
Each of the new PMKs raises the DJP’s evidentiary expectations. Issue a litigation‑hold notice to finance, legal, corporate‑secretarial and treasury teams covering all restructuring board minutes, transfer‑pricing documentation, treaty‑residence certificates, and restitution calculation workpapers. Treat this as equivalent to a document‑preservation order in civil litigation, destruction or loss of key records after a PMK takes effect will significantly weaken any future Tax Court defence.
If your organisation has received, or expects to receive, a tax assessment notice (Surat Ketetapan Pajak, or SKP) touching on restructuring, cross‑border or overpayment issues, engage specialist tax litigation counsel immediately. The statutory three‑month deadline for Keberatan begins on the date the SKP is issued, and preparation of a strong objection letter requires time to gather evidence, model financial exposure and draft legal arguments aligned with the new PMK framework.
PMK‑1/2026 revises the regulatory framework governing tax treatment of corporate restructurings, including mergers, demergers, asset transfers and share‑for‑share swaps. The regulation tightens the conditions under which taxpayers may claim tax‑neutral treatment (book‑value transfer) for reorganisation transactions and expands the documentation required to substantiate a “valid business purpose.” Industry observers expect this to significantly increase audit activity targeting group restructurings completed in recent fiscal years.
Based on emerging enforcement patterns and early indications from DJP audit guidance, the following adjustments are the most likely points of contention in tax dispute resolution in Indonesia under the new regime:
Defending a restructuring assessment requires demonstrating both legal compliance and commercial substance. The practical litigation strategy should focus on three pillars:
When drafting a Keberatan against a PMK‑1/2026‑based assessment, the objection letter should include the following core assertion (adapt to specific facts):
“The Taxpayer respectfully submits that the restructuring transaction dated [DATE] satisfies all conditions for book‑value transfer treatment under PMK‑1/2026, including the valid‑business‑purpose requirement. The enclosed contemporaneous documentation, including board resolutions, independent valuation, and regulatory filings, demonstrates that the transaction was undertaken for genuine commercial reasons. The DJP’s reclassification to fair‑market‑value treatment is not supported by the facts or applicable law, and the resulting assessment should be cancelled in full.”
PMK‑1121 overhauls the administrative procedures for implementing Indonesia’s tax treaties (Perjanjian Penghindaran Pajak Berganda, or P3B). For in‑house tax teams at multinational groups, this regulation changes the documentary burden for claiming treaty benefits and alters the procedural sequencing between domestic appeals and the Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP).
The practical effect of PMK‑1121 on tax dispute resolution in Indonesia includes several critical shifts:
One of the most strategically important aspects of PMK‑1121 for Indonesia tax litigation PMK 2026 planning is the interaction between domestic appeals and MAP. Under the updated procedures, commencing a Banding appeal at the Tax Court does not automatically preclude simultaneous MAP proceedings, but the evidentiary record shared through MAP may be introduced in Tax Court proceedings and vice versa. Taxpayers and their advisers must therefore coordinate domestic and international dispute resolution strategies from the outset, rather than treating them as sequential options.
PMK No.28/2026 revises the rules governing tax restitution (pengembalian kelebihan pembayaran pajak) and recalibrates the administrative penalty regime applied by the DJP during assessments, objections and collections. For businesses that have claimed or expect to claim overpayment refunds, this regulation changes both the calculation methodology and the litigation dynamics of restitution disputes.
Under the updated tax restitution rules in Indonesia, the DJP’s restitution audit process now operates under tighter procedural timelines and expanded documentation requirements. Key changes include:
PMK No.28/2026 adjusts the administrative penalty framework under the KUP for several common assessment scenarios. The table below illustrates a simplified restitution‑clawback calculation example:
| Item | Amount (IDR millions) | Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Preliminary restitution received | 5,000 | PMK No.28/2026 preliminary track |
| Correct restitution (per full audit) | 3,200 | Full‑audit determination |
| Excess restitution to return | 1,800 | 5,000 – 3,200 |
| Administrative penalty (underpayment surcharge) | Calculated per KUP rate (updated by PMK No.28/2026) | Applied to the 1,800 excess |
| Total exposure | 1,800 + penalty | Subject to Keberatan / Banding challenge |
Not every restitution dispute should proceed to the Tax Court. Where the excess amount is modest and the penalty calculation is straightforward, early negotiation with the DJP during the objection (Keberatan) phase may produce a faster and less expensive resolution. However, where the DJP’s restitution audit methodology is disputed, or where penalty calculations under PMK No.28/2026 are applied retroactively or incorrectly, litigation through Banding offers the opportunity to establish favourable precedent and recover the full claimed amount.
The three‑stage dispute resolution pathway, Keberatan (objection to DJP), Banding (appeal to the Tax Court) and Gugatan (lawsuit for procedural or collection disputes), remains the structural backbone of tax dispute resolution in Indonesia. What changes under the 2026 PMK framework is the content, evidence and strategic timing of each stage.
Understanding the non‑negotiable statutory deadlines is critical. The DJP’s procedural guidance confirms the following framework:
Tax Court proceedings are document‑heavy. Under the new PMK environment, the following evidentiary strategies strengthen a Tax Court appeal strategy:
Industry observers note that the Pengadilan Pajak’s anticipated institutional transition, moving from its current position under the Ministry of Finance to the Supreme Court (Mahkamah Agung) structure, may affect case processing timelines and judicial appointment patterns. While the transition has been discussed extensively in regulatory commentary, the precise timeline and procedural implications remain subject to implementing legislation. Taxpayers should monitor developments closely. In the interim, the standard route for appealing an unfavourable Banding decision remains a Peninjauan Kembali (judicial review) petition to the MA, subject to strict procedural requirements and limited grounds for review.
| Factor | Local PT (Perseroan Terbatas) | Foreign Branch | Representative Office |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filing obligation (30 May 2026) | Full corporate income tax return | Full return (branch‑profit allocation) | Limited reporting; generally no CIT return |
| Restructuring audit exposure (PMK‑1/2026) | High, mergers, demergers, share swaps | Moderate, asset reallocation between branch and head office | Low, limited taxable transactions |
| Treaty exposure (PMK‑1121) | Applicable where paying PPh 26 to non‑residents | High, head‑office charges, profit attribution, treaty application on branch profits | Low, generally not making taxable payments |
| Restitution risk (PMK No.28/2026) | High, VAT and CIT overpayment claims | Moderate, branch‑level overpayment claims | Minimal |
The highest combined exposure sits with local PTs engaged in restructurings and cross‑border transactions, and with foreign branches claiming treaty benefits on inbound or outbound payments. Representative offices have limited direct exposure but should verify that their activities have not inadvertently created a permanent establishment that would change this analysis.
The following templates are designed for immediate adaptation by in‑house tax teams. Each should be tailored to specific facts before use and reviewed by qualified Indonesian tax litigation counsel.
Template 1: Audit Response Checklist
Template 2: Keberatan (Objection) Skeleton
Template 3: Banding Filing Checklist
Template 4: Restitution Negotiation Email
“Dear [DJP Officer], We refer to the preliminary restitution issued under [reference number] for fiscal year [YEAR]. Following review of the full‑audit findings, we respectfully submit that the restitution amount of IDR [X] is correct as originally claimed. The enclosed workpapers and supporting documentation demonstrate [brief factual basis]. We request a meeting to discuss the remaining adjustments before formal assessment is issued, and we reserve all rights to file Keberatan and Banding in the event agreement cannot be reached.”
Tax litigation risk under the 2026 PMKs should be escalated to board level where the combined exposure, across restructurings, treaty positions and restitution claims, exceeds a material threshold. The communication to senior management should follow this structure:
The 2026 PMK changes represent the most significant shift in Indonesia’s tax dispute environment in recent years. Businesses that act decisively in the next 30 to 60 days will be materially better positioned, both to defend against DJP assessments and to preserve appeal rights. The following six steps should be treated as non‑negotiable priorities:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mulyono at Mul & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 2 minutes ago
posted 24 minutes ago
posted 48 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message