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Last reviewed: 20 May 2026
Every company with related-party transactions in Colombia faces an immediate compliance question: does the transfer pricing Colombia deadline for 2026 apply to us, and if so, what must we file? Decree 1474/2025 (Decreto 1474 de 2025), published in the Diario Oficial in late 2025, introduced targeted changes to reporting thresholds and temporary net-wealth measures that affect who is obliged to file transfer pricing documentation for the 2026 tax year. The DIAN (Dirección de Impuestos y Aduanas Nacionales) has issued its annual tax calendar setting out staggered submission windows based on the last digits of each taxpayer’s NIT (Número de Identificación Tributaria).
Missing these windows exposes companies to escalating penalties, interest charges and potential audit action, risks that are entirely avoidable with timely preparation.
Determining whether a company is obliged to file transfer pricing documentation in Colombia requires analysis of three factors: tax residency, the existence of related-party transactions, and whether the aggregate value of those transactions exceeds the thresholds published annually by DIAN. Decree 1474/2025 refined certain aspects of these requirements, particularly around temporary reporting obligations and the treatment of net-wealth measures for entities with cross-border structures.
The following entities are generally required to prepare and submit a transfer pricing study (estudio de precios de transferencia), a local file, and, where applicable, a master file and CbCR:
Colombian tax residency for legal entities is determined by the place of effective management or incorporation. For individuals acting as controlling shareholders, the 183-day physical-presence test within a consecutive twelve-month period remains the primary marker. A company deemed tax-resident in Colombia falls within the transfer pricing regime for all its cross-border related-party dealings, regardless of where the counterparty is located.
Colombia’s definition of “related parties” (vinculados económicos) is broad. It encompasses entities under common control, shareholders holding significant equity stakes, branches and their head offices, and parties linked through management, economic dependence, or contractual arrangements that grant one party effective control over the other’s decisions. DIAN groups taxpayers by the last one or two digits of their NIT to assign staggered filing windows, a system that applies equally to income tax returns and transfer pricing documentation submissions.
Decree 1474/2025 introduced several changes relevant to the 2026 filing cycle. Industry observers expect the practical effects to include the following:
| Entity Type | Filing Obligation (2026) | Notes / Key Thresholds |
|---|---|---|
| Colombian tax-resident company | Must file TP documentation where related-party transactions exceed statutory UVT thresholds | Threshold values are updated annually by DIAN based on the applicable UVT; verify against the 2026 DIAN calendar |
| Non-resident with PE/branch in Colombia | Local file and TP study required for transactions with related parties | Documentation scope limited to transactions attributable to the PE; profits must be allocated under the arm’s-length principle |
| Foreign MNE with Colombian constituent entity | Local file + CbCR + possible master file for the MNE group | CbCR filing follows the OECD twelve-month rule; master file may be submitted in English with a certified Spanish translation |
The 2026 tax calendar Colombia follows DIAN’s established pattern of staggering filing deadlines by the last digit of the taxpayer’s NIT. Transfer pricing documentation, including the informative return (declaración informativa) and the TP study itself, must be submitted electronically through the DIAN portal within the assigned filing window. The exact dates are published each year in a DIAN resolution; taxpayers should confirm their specific deadline directly against the official 2026 calendar.
The table below illustrates the typical staggered structure used by DIAN. Exact dates for 2026 should be cross-checked against the official resolution published on the DIAN website and confirmed through sources such as the Orbitax filing-deadline tracker.
| NIT Last Digit | Income Tax Return Deadline (Indicative) | TP Informative Return and Documentation Deadline (Indicative) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Early April 2026 | Mid-July 2026 |
| 2 | Early April 2026 | Mid-July 2026 |
| 3 | Mid-April 2026 | Late July 2026 |
| 4 | Mid-April 2026 | Late July 2026 |
| 5 | Late April 2026 | Early August 2026 |
| 6 | Late April 2026 | Early August 2026 |
| 7 | Early May 2026 | Mid-August 2026 |
| 8 | Early May 2026 | Mid-August 2026 |
| 9 | Mid-May 2026 | Late August 2026 |
| 0 | Mid-May 2026 | Late August 2026 |
Note: The dates above are indicative of DIAN’s staggered calendar pattern. The official 2026 resolution sets the binding dates. Taxpayers should consult the DIAN website directly.
Under both OECD guidance and Colombia’s domestic implementation, the Country-by-Country Report must be filed within twelve months of the last day of the MNE group’s reporting fiscal year. For groups with a calendar fiscal year ending 31 December 2025, the CbCR for that period is due by 31 December 2026. Colombian constituent entities of foreign MNE groups must verify whether a surrogate filing arrangement exists or whether they are required to file locally with DIAN. The OECD Transfer Pricing Country Profile for Colombia confirms this twelve-month window and notes that Colombia follows the OECD’s standardised filing format.
Colombia’s transfer pricing documentation requirements follow the three-tier structure recommended by the OECD under BEPS Action 13: a master file, a local file and, for qualifying MNE groups, a Country-by-Country Report. The local transfer pricing study (estudio de precios de transferencia) is the centrepiece of the compliance obligation and must demonstrate that each related-party transaction was conducted at arm’s length.
The specific contents of a compliant transfer pricing study in Colombia, the local file component, should include the following elements at a minimum:
DIAN expects transfer pricing documentation Colombia filings to use recognised commercial databases (such as Bureau van Dijk’s Orbis or TP Catalyst) when conducting benchmarking analyses. The selection of comparables must follow a documented, replicable screening process: geographic filters, industry classification (CIIU codes in Colombia), financial size criteria and independence criteria should all be recorded. Where local comparables are insufficient, regional Latin American comparables may be accepted, provided the taxpayer documents the reasons for the geographic expansion and applies appropriate adjustments.
Colombian tax law imposes a graduated penalty regime for transfer pricing non-compliance. Penalties apply for late filing, failure to file, submission of inaccurate or incomplete documentation, and failure to provide information requested during a DIAN audit. Understanding how transfer pricing penalties Colombia are calculated is essential for risk management.
The penalty framework operates on several tiers:
The general statute of limitations for transfer pricing assessments is five years from the filing deadline, giving DIAN a substantial window to review and challenge filings.
DIAN’s transfer pricing audit programme has become increasingly sophisticated. Common triggers for closer scrutiny include:
If a company has missed its filing window, the priority is to mitigate penalty exposure as rapidly as possible. The following steps are advisable:
Proactive preparation is the most effective way to meet the transfer pricing Colombia 2026 deadline without risk. The timeline below outlines two planning tracks depending on the company’s readiness level.
For companies that already have a prior-year TP study and need to update it for the 2026 filing cycle:
For first-time filers or companies with complex multi-jurisdictional structures:
Companies that engage external transfer pricing advisors should establish clear deliverables and timelines from the outset. The responsibilities matrix should specify who is responsible for data collection (typically the company), who performs the analysis (the advisor), and who signs and files (the legal representative). Coordination with statutory auditors is important because DIAN may cross-reference the transfer pricing study with audited financial statements. Early engagement, ideally before the fiscal year-end, allows advisors to recommend pricing adjustments in real time rather than documenting non-arm’s-length outcomes after the fact. For companies exploring how automatic exchange of information affects their cross-border reporting obligations, integrated planning across transfer pricing and CRS/AEOI compliance is advisable.
Colombia’s tax authority has steadily increased its enforcement focus on transfer pricing over the past several years. DIAN has invested in specialised audit teams and data analytics tools that allow cross-referencing of informative returns, income tax filings and CbCR data submitted by MNE groups globally. Recent enforcement trends indicate a particular focus on management fees, royalty payments and intercompany financing arrangements, transaction types where DIAN has historically identified significant arm’s-length deviations. Companies should also be aware that Colombian GAAP-to-tax adjustments can create reconciliation issues in the transfer pricing study if not handled carefully.
Ensuring that the financial data used in the benchmarking analysis is presented on a consistent accounting basis, and that any GAAP-to-IFRS or GAAP-to-tax differences are clearly documented, reduces the risk of audit queries. Practitioners who advise on cross-border tax obligations emphasise that early documentation is always less costly than reactive compliance.
The transfer pricing Colombia deadline for 2026 is not a distant administrative formality, it is an active compliance obligation with real financial consequences for companies that delay or overlook it. Decree 1474/2025 has widened the net of entities that may be obliged to file, and DIAN’s enforcement capabilities continue to expand. Companies with related-party transactions in Colombia should confirm their filing obligation now, verify their NIT-based deadline against the official 2026 tax calendar, and begin assembling documentation without delay. For organisations seeking structured guidance, the Transfer Pricing Documentation Checklist, Colombia 2026 (PDF) provides a one-page filing roadmap. Companies requiring tailored advice can connect with qualified Colombian tax practitioners through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jose Eduardo Jimenez at Ruiz Consultora Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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