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Colombia's Tax Modernisation in 2026: Reading the Regional Shift Toward Broader, Digital-era Rules

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: July 1, 2026

Colombia’s tax modernisation in 2026 is unfolding against a backdrop of regional disruption that no in-house counsel or cross-border investor can afford to ignore. Brazil’s landmark consumption-tax overhaul has reset expectations across Latin America, demonstrating that broad-base, digitally aware tax design is now politically achievable in the region’s largest economies. Colombia, facing its own fiscal pressures, has responded with a mix of executive decrees, including an extension of the wealth tax to legal entities, and a reform bill that proposes surtaxes, revised withholding rules and expanded digital-economy provisions.

For multinational groups, private equity sponsors and local enterprises alike, the question is no longer whether Colombia will modernise its tax framework but how far the changes will reach, and how quickly businesses must adapt their structures and compliance processes to keep pace.

Executive Summary, What Readers Must Know Now

The measures already enacted and the proposals still moving through Congress create a dual-track planning challenge. Businesses need to act on what is certain while preparing for what is probable. The following key takeaways frame the analysis that follows.

  • Regional benchmark shift. Brazil’s VAT reform has created a new standard for consumption-tax design in Latin America, putting pressure on Colombia to broaden its own tax base and close digital-economy gaps. Industry observers expect this peer-pressure dynamic to accelerate legislative timelines in Bogotá.
  • Wealth and net-wealth tax expansion. Colombia’s extension of the wealth tax (impuesto al patrimonio) to legal entities, with assessments based on net-wealth thresholds, is already in force for 2026. Affected companies and permanent establishments must ensure immediate compliance with DIAN filing obligations.
  • Reform bill in progress. The executive branch has submitted a 2026 tax reform bill to Congress proposing surtaxes on certain income brackets, adjustments to dividend withholding for non-residents, and broader indirect-tax collection on digital services. Legislative debate is ongoing.
  • Practical action required. In-house teams should begin modelling their Colombian tax exposure under multiple reform scenarios now, mapping VAT, withholding, transfer-pricing and permanent-establishment risk, rather than waiting for final legislative text.

Regional Benchmark, Why Brazil’s VAT Move Matters for Colombia’s Tax Modernisation

Understanding Colombia’s trajectory requires understanding the regional shift that Brazil has set in motion. When Latin America’s largest economy enacts a comprehensive consumption-tax reform, every neighbouring jurisdiction recalibrates its own political calculus. For Colombia, the implications are both competitive and structural.

Brazil VAT Reform, Key Features to Note

Brazil’s reform consolidates multiple cascading state and federal taxes into a dual-VAT structure. The key features most relevant to the Colombian debate include a broadened tax base that captures services and digital supplies on equal footing with goods, explicit rules for marketplace and platform collection obligations, a simplified credit mechanism designed to reduce cascading effects, and transition periods that allow businesses to adapt over several years. These features represent the kind of base-broadening architecture that the OECD has long recommended for Colombia as well, arguing that the country’s existing system relies too heavily on a narrow VAT base riddled with exemptions.

How Regional Benchmarks Influence Domestic Politics and Investor Expectations

The practical effect of Brazil’s move on Colombia operates through two channels. First, investors, particularly multinational groups allocating capital across Latin America, now benchmark Colombian tax policy against a neighbour that has demonstrated the political will to modernise. This creates implicit pressure on Bogotá to close competitiveness gaps or risk capital diversion. Second, domestic policy-makers gain a ready-made template. Elements of Brazil’s design, especially digital-economy collection rules and simplified VAT credits, become easier to propose in Colombia when a regional peer has already absorbed the political cost of adoption.

Early indications suggest that both channels are active. The Colombian reform bill’s provisions on digital services and platform withholding echo concepts already enacted in Brazil, and the OECD’s published recommendations for Colombia explicitly reference regional best practice as a driver for reform.

Colombia Tax Reform 2026, Measures and Legislative Status

Colombia’s 2025–2026 fiscal response has taken two distinct forms: executive action through decrees already in force, and a comprehensive reform bill submitted to Congress. Understanding both tracks is essential for accurate exposure modelling.

Executive Decrees, What Is Already in Force

The most consequential decree-level measure for 2026 is the extension of the wealth tax to legal entities. Prior to this expansion, the impuesto al patrimonio applied primarily to individuals. The 2026 extension brings companies and permanent establishments within scope, with the tax assessed on net equity exceeding defined thresholds expressed in UVT (Unidad de Valor Tributario). According to analysis published by Baker McKenzie, the net-wealth tax for entities applies where net worth exceeds a threshold broadly understood to be in the range of 200,000 UVT, though practitioners should confirm the precise figure against the published decree text.

Holland & Knight’s analysis further clarifies that this extension captures foreign entities with permanent establishments in Colombia, creating a new compliance obligation for groups that previously managed their Colombian presence below the wealth-tax radar.

The 2026 Tax Reform Bill

Separately, the executive branch submitted a tax reform bill to Congress that proposes several significant changes. As summarised by EY’s Global Tax News service, the bill’s headline provisions include surtaxes on income above defined thresholds, revised withholding rates on dividends paid to non-resident shareholders, expanded indirect-tax obligations for digital services provided from outside Colombia, and enhanced DIAN enforcement powers, including broader information-exchange mandates aligned with OECD frameworks. The bill’s progress through Congress remains subject to political negotiation, and the final text may differ materially from the submitted version. However, the direction of travel, toward base broadening in Latin America and stronger digital-economy rules, is consistent across all published drafts and commentary.

Timeline of Key Legislative Dates

Date / Period Event Status
2025 Executive branch submits tax reform bill to Congress Submitted; under committee debate
January 1, 2026 Net-wealth tax for legal entities takes effect In force
H1 2026 Congressional committee debates on reform bill Ongoing
H2 2026 (projected) Plenary votes on reform bill provisions Pending

What a Modernised Colombian Tax Code Is Likely to Include

Whether the current bill passes in full, in part, or is replaced by a subsequent proposal, Colombia’s tax modernisation is converging around a set of identifiable policy levers. Understanding these levers helps businesses prepare even before final legislation is enacted.

Base Broadening, Fewer Exemptions, Wider Reach

The OECD has repeatedly recommended that Colombia reduce its extensive catalogue of VAT exemptions and exclusions. The current system applies a standard VAT rate but carves out numerous product categories and service types, eroding the effective tax base. A modernised code is likely to narrow these exemptions, potentially folding certain exempt categories into the standard or a reduced rate. This aligns with the broader trajectory of base broadening in Latin America that Brazil’s reform has accelerated.

Digital Services Tax Colombia, Closing the Online Gap

Colombia already applies VAT to certain digital services provided by non-resident suppliers, but enforcement gaps and threshold limitations have constrained effective collection. The reform bill’s digital-economy provisions aim to strengthen this framework by lowering de minimis thresholds for non-resident digital suppliers, introducing or expanding marketplace collection obligations, requiring platforms to withhold and remit VAT on behalf of third-party sellers, and aligning Colombia’s approach with OECD recommended practice on the taxation of the digital economy. The likely practical effect will be that businesses providing streaming services, SaaS products, digital advertising, or marketplace intermediation into Colombia will face clearer, and higher, indirect-tax obligations.

Net Wealth Tax Colombia 2026, From Temporary to Structural?

The extension of the wealth tax to legal entities was enacted as a fiscal response to budgetary pressures, but industry observers expect the measure could evolve from a temporary emergency levy into a more permanent fixture of the Colombian tax code. Companies with significant Colombian-situs assets, real estate, subsidiaries, financial investments, need to model the annual carrying cost of a recurring wealth tax when evaluating long-term investment returns.

Transfer Pricing and Anti-Avoidance

Strengthened transfer-pricing rules and broader anti-avoidance provisions are a consistent theme across both the reform bill and the OECD’s recommendations for Colombia. Practical implications include expanded documentation requirements, lower thresholds for country-by-country reporting, and enhanced DIAN audit capacity supported by cross-border information exchange agreements.

Cross-Border Impact, Stress-Testing Structures and Modelling Exposure

For multinational groups, the combined effect of enacted decrees and probable legislative changes creates a planning imperative that extends well beyond compliance. Cross-border tax planning in Colombia now requires scenario modelling against a range of plausible outcomes. The following four-step framework provides a structured approach.

Step 1, Inventory Taxable Events and Current Treatment

Begin by mapping every transaction type that touches Colombia: product sales, digital service delivery, royalties, management fees, intercompany loans, and equity returns. For each, document the current tax treatment, applicable VAT rate or exemption, withholding tax Colombia 2026 rate on cross-border payments, and any treaty benefits claimed. This inventory becomes the baseline against which reform scenarios are tested.

Step 2, Model Three Reform Scenarios

Construct three scenarios that bracket the range of plausible outcomes:

  • Low reform. Only currently enacted measures apply (wealth tax extension, existing digital-services VAT). No new legislation passes in 2026.
  • Medium reform. The reform bill passes with modifications, surtaxes apply to high-income brackets, dividend withholding increases by a moderate margin, digital-services collection obligations expand to cover marketplace intermediation.
  • High reform. Full bill adoption plus additional base-broadening measures, significant reduction in VAT exemptions, introduction of mandatory platform withholding, and permanent codification of the entity-level wealth tax.

Step 3, Estimate Tax Cost and Compliance Friction

For each scenario, calculate the incremental tax cost (direct tax increase, lost exemptions, higher withholding rates) and the collateral compliance costs (new filings, system changes, registration requirements). The compliance friction component is often underestimated: expanding VAT to digital services, for example, may require non-resident suppliers to register with DIAN, maintain Colombian-format electronic invoicing, and file periodic returns, operational costs that compound across multiple jurisdictions.

Step 4, Revisit Contractual Allocation, Pricing and PE Risk

Higher withholding taxes and expanded indirect-tax obligations directly affect contractual economics. Clauses that allocate tax risk (“tax gross-up” provisions, indemnification for new taxes, price-adjustment mechanisms) need to be reviewed under each scenario. Separately, expanded digital-services rules and lower PE thresholds may create taxable presence where none existed before, requiring a fundamental reassessment of how services are delivered into Colombia.

Cross-Border Risk Matrix

Entity Type Typical Obligations Today Risk Under Base-Broadening / Digital Tax
Non-resident digital supplier (SaaS, streaming) Simplified VAT registration; limited withholding Lower thresholds; mandatory marketplace withholding; full electronic invoicing
Foreign parent receiving dividends Withholding at current treaty / statutory rate Increased statutory rate under reform bill; treaty override risk if domestic law changes
PE of foreign entity (services / construction) Corporate income tax; transfer-pricing filings Net-wealth tax exposure; expanded documentation; enhanced DIAN audit risk
Marketplace / platform intermediary Limited direct tax obligations if no PE Collection and remittance obligation for VAT on third-party sales; potential PE assertion

Practical Planning and Sequencing, What Businesses Should Do Now

Waiting for legislative certainty before acting is a mistake in the current environment. The enacted measures already demand compliance, and the probable direction of reform is clear enough to inform planning. The recommended sequencing balances urgency against the risk of premature restructuring.

Immediate Actions (0–3 Months)

  • Model exposure. Complete the four-step scenario analysis described above. Quantify the tax-cost range across all three scenarios for board or investment-committee reporting.
  • Verify wealth-tax compliance. Confirm whether any group entity or permanent establishment exceeds the net-wealth threshold and ensure timely DIAN compliance changes 2026 filing.
  • Audit VAT registration. Review whether current registration status (or non-registration) remains defensible under expanded digital-services rules.
  • Review withholding clauses. Identify contracts that allocate Colombian withholding risk and flag those that lack adjustment mechanisms.

Near-Term Actions (3–9 Months)

  • Adapt contracts. Negotiate tax gross-up clauses, price-adjustment triggers and indemnification provisions into new and renewed agreements.
  • Adjust transfer-pricing policies. Ensure intercompany pricing and documentation reflect heightened scrutiny and any new documentation thresholds.
  • Build compliance infrastructure. Prepare electronic-invoicing systems, reporting templates and internal workflows for expanded filing obligations.

Red Flags for In-House Counsel

  • Any irreversible corporate restructuring (mergers, liquidations, IP migrations) undertaken before the final legislative text is known carries the risk of being overtaken by enacted law.
  • Legacy tax rulings or advance-pricing agreements obtained under current law may not survive a reform that alters the underlying statutory framework.
  • Passive reliance on treaty benefits without reviewing the interaction between new domestic provisions and existing double-tax agreements is a significant audit risk.

Comparison Table, Brazil, Colombia Current and Colombia Plausible Reform

The table below places Colombia’s current position and probable reform direction alongside the Brazilian benchmark that is driving regional expectations around VAT expansion in Latin America.

Policy Feature Brazil (Reform Enacted) Colombia (Current) Colombia (Plausible Reform)
Consumption-tax base Broadened dual-VAT; goods and services equalised Standard VAT with extensive exemptions Narrowed exemptions; broader effective base
Digital-services collection Platform / marketplace withholding obligations Simplified registration for non-residents; enforcement gaps Mandatory marketplace collection; lower thresholds
Wealth / net-worth tax Limited application Extended to legal entities for 2026 (decree) Possible permanence; threshold adjustments
Dividend withholding (non-residents) Varies by treaty and domestic rate Current statutory rate with treaty relief Increased statutory rate proposed in bill
Transfer-pricing enforcement Robust; aligned with OECD BEPS Active but capacity-constrained Enhanced documentation; lower CbC thresholds

Conclusion, Reading the Regional Shift and Acting on It

Colombia’s tax modernisation in 2026 sits at the intersection of fiscal necessity, regional momentum and evolving OECD standards. Reading the regional shift means recognising that base broadening in Latin America is no longer aspirational, it is operational in Brazil and directionally committed in Colombia. The enacted wealth-tax extension, the pending reform bill, and the tightening digital-economy rules collectively demand that businesses move from monitoring to modelling.

For in-house counsel, corporate tax directors and cross-border investors, the planning imperative is clear: quantify exposure under multiple scenarios, prioritise compliance with measures already in force, and build contractual flexibility into arrangements that will be tested by whichever version of the reform ultimately passes. Firms that treat Colombia’s tax modernisation in 2026 as a reading-the-regional-shift exercise, rather than a wait-and-see problem, will be best positioned to protect returns and avoid compliance surprises as the legislative process reaches its conclusion.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. PwC, Colombian Tax Reform Unveiled
  2. OECD, Making Colombia’s Tax Policy More Efficient, Fair and Green
  3. EY Global Tax News, Colombia’s Executive Branch Submits 2026 Tax Reform Bill to Congress
  4. Baker McKenzie, Colombia: Net Worth Tax to Companies
  5. Holland & Knight, Wealth Tax for Legal Entities (2026)

FAQs

What will Colombia's 2026 tax reform change for multinationals?
The reform bill proposes surtaxes on higher income brackets, increased dividend withholding for non-resident shareholders, expanded VAT obligations on digital services, and stronger DIAN enforcement powers. Separately, decrees already in force extend the wealth tax to legal entities. The combined effect raises both direct and indirect tax costs for multinational groups with Colombian operations.
Colombia is not replicating Brazil’s dual-VAT structural reform. However, the direction of travel, narrowing exemptions, broadening the consumption-tax base, and strengthening collection on digital supplies, mirrors the objectives of the Brazilian model. Industry observers expect Colombia to pursue incremental base broadening rather than a single comprehensive overhaul.
The reform bill proposes lower registration thresholds for non-resident digital suppliers, expanded marketplace collection obligations, and mandatory electronic invoicing for digital transactions. Businesses delivering SaaS, streaming, digital advertising or platform-intermediated services into Colombia should prepare for higher compliance obligations and clearer VAT exposure.
Counsel should model tax exposure under multiple scenarios, verify wealth-tax compliance for all group entities and permanent establishments, audit VAT registration status, and review cross-border contracts for withholding-risk allocation gaps. Irreversible restructurings should be deferred until the final legislative text is known.
Groups should revisit transfer-pricing documentation, review whether expanded digital-services rules create new permanent establishment risk, and test whether current treaty benefits remain reliable under proposed domestic-law changes. A structured scenario model, as outlined in this article, provides the analytical framework for that reassessment.
Yes. The 2026 extension of the wealth tax captures legal entities including permanent establishments of foreign companies in Colombia. Entities with net worth exceeding the applicable UVT threshold must file and pay, even if they had no prior wealth-tax obligation.
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Colombia's Tax Modernisation in 2026: Reading the Regional Shift Toward Broader, Digital-era Rules

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