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Colombia’s 2026 tax reform has reshaped the withholding tax Colombia landscape, introducing permanent surtaxes on financial institutions, higher rates on several categories of cross-border payments to non‑residents, and tighter DIAN reporting timelines that take effect immediately. For multinationals operating in or paying into Colombia, the reform demands urgent updates to accounts‑payable workflows, ERP withholding matrices, intercompany agreements and supplier onboarding procedures. This guide delivers the operational detail that high‑level Big Four alerts omit: a step‑by‑step compliance checklist, worked numerical examples, a reporting‑obligations comparison table and a structured FAQ, everything a tax director or CFO needs to act now.
Withholding tax (retención en la fuente) is Colombia’s primary mechanism for collecting income tax at source. Any entity classified as a withholding agent, broadly, any legal person or permanent establishment making taxable payments, must deduct and remit the applicable percentage to the Dirección de Impuestos y Aduanas Nacionales (DIAN) before the payment reaches the recipient. For non‑resident recipients, the withholding typically functions as a final tax: no Colombian return is required unless the non‑resident elects to file. Understanding this mechanism is essential because the tax reform Colombia 2026 has altered both the rates and the administrative obligations that sit behind it.
The executive branch submitted the 2026 tax reform bill to Congress in September 2025. The reform targeted revenue shortfalls through a combination of sectoral surtaxes and broadened withholding obligations on cross‑border payments. Industry observers note that the legislative process moved rapidly, with final measures adopted and signed into law in early 2026.
| Milestone | Measure | Immediate Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| September 2025 | Executive branch submits reform bill to Congress | Begin impact assessment; flag affected payment types |
| Late 2025 – Early 2026 | Congressional debate, amendments and approval of key withholding and surtax provisions | Update withholding rate matrix; engage local counsel |
| 2026 (effective dates per published law) | New withholding rates, permanent financial‑institution surtax and revised DIAN reporting timelines take effect | Reconfigure ERP; issue supplier notices; begin DIAN filing under new schedule |
The 2026 reform touches nearly every payment category that a multinational’s Colombian subsidiary or branch routinely processes. Below is a quick‑reference comparison of withholding rates Colombia by payment type, reflecting the general statutory position before and after the reform. Multinationals should confirm treaty‑reduced rates separately, as Colombia’s bilateral tax treaties may override these domestic rates where applicable.
| Payment Type | Pre‑2026 General Rate | 2026 Rate (Post‑Reform) & Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Interest on loans (term > 1 year) | 15 % | 15 % (unchanged for long‑term loans; short‑term interest may carry a higher rate, confirm with DIAN guidance) |
| Royalties and licensing fees | 20 % | 20 % (maintained; verify treaty reductions) |
| Technical service and consultancy fees | 20 % | 20 % general; lower UVT thresholds now trigger withholding on smaller transactions |
| Dividends to non‑resident shareholders | 10 % | 10 % on taxed profits; additional layer on untaxed profits remains, reform adjustments may alter the effective combined rate |
| Branch profit remittances | 10 % | 10 % (confirm interaction with surtax for financial‑institution branches) |
| Other non‑resident income (general) | Varies (often 15–20 %) | Increased rates on certain categories, early drafts indicated a rise from 3 % to 5 % on select payment types |
Note: The rates above represent general statutory withholding. Colombia’s double‑tax treaties with countries including Spain, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Canada and others may reduce these rates. Treaty relief requires proper documentation, see the DIAN reporting section below.
The 2026 reform made the financial‑institution surtax permanent. This surtax applies on top of the standard corporate tax Colombia rate and is calculated on the entity’s taxable income base. Financial institutions, including banks, finance companies and insurance entities, must include a separate surtax schedule in their annual corporate tax return. Early indications suggest the surtax adds several percentage points to the effective rate, making international tax Colombia planning for financial‑sector groups materially more complex. Groups funding Colombian operations through intercompany lending from financial‑institution affiliates should model the combined withholding‑plus‑surtax cost against alternative structures.
| Entity Type | Withholding Agent Obligations | DIAN Filing / Record Note |
|---|---|---|
| Resident corporate payer | Withhold on payments to non‑residents at the applicable rate; issue withholding certificate to recipient | File monthly or quarterly DIAN withholding returns; retain supporting documents for a minimum of seven years |
| Financial institution (subject to surtax) | Apply standard withholding plus calculate surtax on own corporate tax base; prepare separate surtax schedule | Include surtax schedules on annual corporate return; maintain evidence of surtax calculations and collection |
| Non‑resident recipient | Subject to final withholding (no Colombian return required by default); may elect to file a Colombian return if beneficial | If filing, must register with DIAN and comply with the applicable return schedule and deadlines |
Updating withholding procedures is not solely a tax‑department exercise. It requires coordinated action across accounts payable, treasury, payroll, legal and IT. The twelve‑step checklist below assigns ownership and sets a practical sequence that multinationals can adapt to their own governance calendar. This is the core operational response to cross‑border payments tax Colombia changes in 2026.
Numbers clarify impact faster than narrative. The three worked examples below illustrate how the withholding tax Colombia changes affect common multinational payment flows. All figures are illustrative and use general statutory rates, multinationals should substitute their treaty‑specific rates and actual payment amounts.
A Colombian subsidiary pays USD 1,000,000 in annual interest to its US parent under a five‑year intercompany loan. At the general withholding rate of 15 %, the withholding amounts to USD 150,000. The subsidiary remits USD 850,000 to the parent and deposits USD 150,000 with DIAN. If the Colombia–US treaty provides a reduced rate, the subsidiary must hold a valid tax residency certificate from the IRS and file the appropriate treaty‑benefit claim with DIAN before applying the lower rate.
A Colombian entity engages a UK‑based consulting firm for a strategy project. The invoice totals COP 200,000,000. Under the 2026 rules, the general withholding rate for technical services to non‑residents is 20 %, producing a withholding of COP 40,000,000. With the reform’s lower UVT thresholds, this transaction now falls within the withholding net even if similar smaller invoices were previously exempt. The payer must issue a withholding certificate and retain the consultant’s UK tax residency certificate in its DIAN withholding compliance file.
A Colombian subsidiary distributes COP 5,000,000,000 in dividends from previously taxed profits to its Spanish parent. The general withholding rate on dividends from taxed profits is 10 %, yielding a withholding of COP 500,000,000. If any portion of the distributed profits was not fully taxed at the corporate level, an additional withholding layer applies to that portion. The interaction between the dividend withholding and the corporate tax credit mechanism should be modelled carefully, industry observers expect DIAN to scrutinise dividend characterisation closely in the current audit cycle.
A downloadable Excel‑based withholding calculator allows finance teams to input payment type, amount, recipient jurisdiction and treaty status, then automatically compute the withholding amount, net remittance and DIAN deposit. Teams should update the calculator’s rate table whenever DIAN publishes revised UVT values or regulatory guidance.
DIAN withholding compliance extends well beyond deducting the correct percentage. Withholding agents must register with DIAN, file periodic withholding returns, issue certificates to recipients and maintain an audit‑ready evidence pack. The 2026 reform tightened reporting timelines, and early indications suggest DIAN is increasing automated cross‑referencing of withholding returns against foreign‑exchange reports filed with the Banco de la República.
Typical DIAN audit triggers include large year‑on‑year increases in cross‑border payments, inconsistencies between withholding returns and corporate income tax returns, and claims for treaty‑reduced rates without adequate supporting documentation.
A phased 90‑day roadmap ensures that no workstream falls through the gaps. The table below assigns milestones across the five key functional owners.
| Milestone | Days 1–30 | Days 31–60 | Days 61–90 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tax | Complete payment mapping; update rate matrix | File corrective returns (if needed); train teams | First quarterly reconciliation and sign‑off |
| Treasury | Model cash‑flow and FX impact | Adjust liquidity forecasts | Confirm hedging adjustments |
| AP / Procurement | Update vendor master data; revise onboarding forms | Issue supplier notices | Validate first full payment cycle under new rates |
| Legal | Engage local counsel; begin treaty‑eligibility review | Amend intercompany agreements | Finalise supplier notice templates |
| HR / Payroll | Flag cross‑border payroll items | Update payroll system withholding codes | Confirm expatriate compliance |
Sample supplier notice language: “Effective [date], withholding tax on payments from [Entity Name] to non‑resident suppliers will be applied at revised rates in accordance with Colombia’s 2026 tax reform. Please provide an updated tax residency certificate to enable us to apply any applicable treaty‑reduced rate. Net payment amounts will be adjusted accordingly.”
The 2026 withholding tax Colombia reform demands immediate, cross‑functional action from every multinational with payment flows into or out of Colombia. The three highest‑priority tasks are: update your withholding rate matrix and ERP configuration, issue supplier and intercompany notices reflecting new net amounts, and establish a seven‑year DIAN evidence pack for every cross‑border payment. Multinationals that act now will avoid corrective filings, penalties and audit exposure. Those that delay risk compounding under‑withholding liabilities across every payment cycle until systems are brought into line.
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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