Global Law Experts Logo
how to implement transfer pricing adjustments in Italy (OIC 34)

How to Implement Transfer Pricing Adjustments in Italy (OIC 34): Step‑by‑step 2026 Compliance Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 10 minutes ago

Last reviewed: July 19, 2026

Understanding how to implement transfer pricing adjustments in Italy (OIC 34) is now operationally urgent for every Italian entity, and every foreign group with an Italian permanent establishment, that engages in controlled cross‑border transactions. OIC 34, the Italian accounting standard governing revenue from contracts with customers, has reshaped the way variable consideration is recognised at year‑end, directly affecting the timing and measurement of transfer‑pricing (TP) adjustments in the financial statements. At the same time, the Legge di Bilancio 2026 (2026 Budget Law) has introduced changes to the tax treatment of TP adjustments, including provisions governing post‑filing upward adjustments and penalty‑relief mechanics.

This guide provides a practitioner‑ready, stepwise procedure, complete with timeline tables, required documents, sample accounting entries and an audit‑defence checklist, so that CFOs, group tax leaders, accounting managers and external advisors can execute the year‑end TP adjustment procedure with confidence.

Overview of the Year‑End TP Adjustment Process and Who It Applies To

A year‑end transfer pricing adjustment aligns the prices actually charged in controlled intra‑group transactions with arm’s‑length outcomes. Under Italian law, entities must ensure their intercompany pricing conforms to the arm’s‑length principle established in the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines and transposed into Italian tax provisions by the Agenzia delle Entrate. When actual transaction values deviate from the arm’s‑length range, the entity records an upward or downward adjustment at year‑end.

OIC 34 adds a financial‑reporting dimension: variable consideration, including retrospective price adjustments arising from TP policies, must be recognised only to the extent that it is highly probable a significant reversal will not occur. This standard governs the accounting recognition side, while the Legge di Bilancio 2026 governs the tax deductibility and filing mechanics.

The process applies to:

  • Italian-resident companies (S.p.A., S.r.l., or other forms) that engage in cross‑border controlled transactions with related parties.
  • Italian permanent establishments (PEs) of foreign enterprises.
  • Transactions in scope: sales and purchases of goods, provision and receipt of services, financing arrangements (interest), royalties and licence fees, cost‑contribution arrangements.
  • Materiality threshold: while no statutory de minimis exemption exists for TP compliance, entities should apply professional judgement on practical significance, adjustments that are individually or collectively material to the financial statements or tax base must be recorded.

Preparing proper TP documentation (Master File and Local File) is directly linked to penalty relief under Italian law. Entities that maintain qualifying documentation may benefit from reduced penalties in the event of a transfer pricing audit by the Agenzia delle Entrate.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for the Year‑End TP Adjustment Procedure

Before entering the stepwise procedure, confirm that the entity meets the eligibility criteria and that prerequisite documentation is in place.

Transactions in scope include any controlled cross‑border transaction between associated enterprises as defined by Italian tax law. Typical categories are:

  • Intra‑group sales and purchases of tangible goods
  • Management fees, technical services and shared‑service charges
  • Intra‑group financing (loans, guarantees, cash pooling)
  • Royalties and intellectual property licence fees
  • Cost‑contribution and cost‑sharing arrangements

Prerequisite documentation that must be available before calculations begin:

  • Master File, a group‑level document describing the multinational’s global business, TP policies, and allocation of income and economic activity.
  • Local File, an entity‑level document detailing the Italian entity’s controlled transactions, financial data, and the TP methods applied.
  • Country‑by‑Country Report (CbCR), required where the group meets the applicable revenue threshold.
  • Intercompany agreements, signed contracts governing each controlled transaction, specifying pricing mechanisms and adjustment clauses.

Responsibilities Matrix, Who Signs Off

Role Primary responsibility
CFO / Finance Director Final approval of adjustments; sign‑off on financial statements and disclosure notes
Group Tax Director Oversight of TP policy; approval of methodology; coordination with foreign group entities
TP Desk / Economist Benchmarking, calculation of arm’s‑length range, preparation of working papers
External TP Advisor Independent benchmark studies; review of documentation for penalty‑relief eligibility
Tax Counsel Review of post‑filing adjustment rules under the 2026 Budget Law; penalty analysis
External Auditor Audit of adjustment entries and disclosure wording; assessment of OIC 34 compliance

How to Implement Transfer Pricing Adjustments in Italy (OIC 34): Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following six steps form the core year‑end TP adjustment procedure. Each step identifies the responsible team, the key actions and the expected outputs. The timeline table below summarises durations; detailed instructions follow.

Step Who does it Typical duration
1. Scope and extract related‑party trial balance items Accounting close team + TP desk 1–3 business days
2. Gather TP documentation and benchmark data (Master/Local File) TP economist / external advisor 3–10 business days
3. Compute arm’s‑length adjustment and prepare rationale TP desk (with economist) 2–7 business days
4. Consult tax counsel on post‑filing and upward‑adjustment rules Tax counsel 1–3 business days
5. Draft accounting entries and FS disclosure wording Accounting + external auditor 1–3 business days
6. Approvals, posting, reconciliation and disclosures CFO / Accounting / Audit 1–5 business days

Step 1, Identify Related‑Party Exposures and Extract Trial Balance Lines

The accounting close team, working with the TP desk, must identify every controlled cross‑border transaction recorded during the fiscal year. Begin by extracting all trial balance lines tagged with related‑party counterparties. Cross‑reference the general ledger with the group’s intercompany agreement register to ensure completeness.

Key actions:

  1. Run a trial balance report filtered by related‑party account codes.
  2. Reconcile extracted balances to intercompany confirmation statements received from counterparty entities.
  3. Flag any new transaction types not covered by existing intercompany agreements, these require separate TP analysis.
  4. Prepare a transaction map showing each related‑party flow, its nature (goods, services, financing, royalties), currency, and year‑to‑date value.

Output: A complete related‑party transaction map and reconciled trial balance extract, ready for the TP economist.

Step 2, Collect TP Schedules and Benchmarking Outputs

The TP economist or external advisor gathers the benchmarking data needed to determine the arm’s‑length range for each transaction category. This step draws on the Master File and Local File documentation and, where fresh benchmarking is required, on commercial databases.

Key actions:

  1. Retrieve the current Master File and Local File, confirm they are updated for the current fiscal year.
  2. Identify the TP method selected for each transaction type. Common methods accepted by the Agenzia delle Entrate and aligned with the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines include the Comparable Uncontrolled Price method (CUP), the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM), and the Cost Plus and Resale Price methods.
  3. Obtain or refresh the benchmark study, extract comparable company data and compute the interquartile range.
  4. Document the search strategy, rejection log, and comparability adjustments in the working papers.

Output: A benchmark report showing the arm’s‑length range for each transaction category and the tested party’s actual result.

Step 3, Calculate the Adjustment (Upward or Downward)

Using the benchmark output, the TP desk calculates the required adjustment for each transaction category. The calculation compares the tested party’s actual financial indicator (e.g., net margin, gross margin, or price) against the arm’s‑length range.

Calculation framework:

  1. If the tested party’s result falls within the arm’s‑length interquartile range, no adjustment is required.
  2. If the result falls below the lower quartile (or above the upper quartile for a cost‑based test), compute the adjustment needed to bring the result to the median or appropriate point within the range, consistent with the entity’s TP policy.
  3. For CUP‑based adjustments, calculate the price differential directly.
  4. For TNMM‑based adjustments, compute the margin shortfall or excess and translate it into a revenue or cost adjustment amount.

Working paper requirements: Retain the Excel model with all formulae visible, source data references, and a written rationale explaining the adjustment point selected (median, lower quartile, or other). This working paper is a critical audit‑defence document.

Output: A signed calculation schedule showing the adjustment amount (positive or negative) per transaction category, with supporting rationale.

Step 4, Tax Review and Post‑Filing Adjustment Rules

Tax counsel must review the calculated adjustment for its tax implications before accounting entries are posted. This step is particularly important in 2026 because the Legge di Bilancio 2026 has introduced provisions affecting how upward TP adjustments interact with tax filings.

Key actions:

  1. Determine whether the adjustment increases or decreases the Italian entity’s taxable base for IRES (corporate income tax) and IRAP (regional production tax).
  2. If the adjustment is an upward adjustment that increases taxable income, confirm whether it can be reflected in the original tax return or whether a post‑filing amendment is required under the 2026 Budget Law provisions.
  3. Evaluate penalty‑relief eligibility, confirm that qualifying TP documentation (Master File and Local File) is in place, which is the prerequisite for reduced penalties under Italian law.
  4. Calculate the tax cash cost: apply the applicable IRES and IRAP rates to the adjustment amount and determine any interest due if payments are made after original filing deadlines.

Output: A tax impact memorandum covering tax base effect, payment obligations (including F24 settlement), and penalty‑relief confirmation.

Step 5, Prepare Accounting Entries and Financial Statement Disclosure Wording

This step translates the calculated adjustment into accounting journal entries compliant with OIC 34 and Italian civil law financial statement requirements under Articles 2423–2427 of the Codice Civile. The external auditor should be consulted at this stage to confirm the entries and disclosure language.

Sample Accounting Entries for Transfer Pricing Adjustments

Adjustment type Example journal entry (debit / credit) Notes
Upward TP adjustment (increase revenue of tested party) Dr Receivable from related party, Cr Revenue Recognise additional revenue where the tested party is the seller; disclose as “variable consideration, transfer pricing adjustment (OIC 34).” Show the counterparty name and settlement method.
Downward TP adjustment (reduce revenue or increase expense) Dr Revenue (contra), Cr Payable to related party Reduce previously recognised revenue or increase cost; reflect the tax base effect. If the adjustment relates to prior‑period sales, apply OIC 34 guidance on variable consideration constraints.
Cash settlement of the adjustment Dr Payable to related party, Cr Bank Post when the intercompany balance is settled; reconcile to tax return adjustments and F24 payments where applicable.
Tax provision impact Dr Current tax expense (or Deferred tax asset/liability), Cr Tax payable (or Deferred tax liability/asset) Compute the IRES and IRAP effect of the TP adjustment; recognise any timing differences as deferred tax per OIC accounting standards.

Model Disclosure Note for Financial Statements

The notes to the financial statements should include language along the following lines, adapted to the entity’s specific circumstances:

“During the year ended [date], the Company recognised transfer pricing adjustments totalling €[amount] in respect of controlled transactions with [related party name(s)]. These adjustments represent variable consideration under OIC 34 and have been measured on the basis of [TP method, e.g., TNMM] applied to [transaction type]. Supporting documentation is maintained in the Company’s Local File. The tax effect of these adjustments has been reflected in the current tax provision.”

Output: Posted journal entries with approval stamps and a draft disclosure note for auditor review.

Step 6, Final Approvals, Posting, and Reconciliation

The final step brings together accounting, tax and audit streams for sign‑off.

  1. The CFO reviews the adjustment entries, the tax impact memorandum, and the draft disclosure note.
  2. Board approval is obtained where the adjustment is material (refer to the entity’s delegation‑of‑authority matrix).
  3. Entries are posted to the general ledger at the financial statement close date.
  4. The accounting team reconciles the TP adjustment entries to the tax computation and confirms consistency between the financial statements and the tax return.
  5. The external auditor performs final audit procedures on the TP entries and disclosure.
  6. All working papers, approvals and supporting documentation are filed in the TP package for retention.

Output: Final financial statements with TP adjustments posted and disclosed; a reconciliation schedule linking accounting entries to the tax base; and a complete, indexed TP documentation package.

Required Documents for Transfer Pricing Documentation in Italy

The following table lists every document needed to support the year‑end TP adjustment procedure, achieve penalty‑relief eligibility, and withstand a transfer pricing audit by the Agenzia delle Entrate. Entities should treat this as a mandatory checklist.

Document Notes (issuer, format, validity)
Master File Group FP&A or tax department; PDF format; covers the group’s global TP policy, organisational structure, and allocation of income; updated annually.
Local File Entity accounting team + TP economist; Excel workbook and PDF narrative; must detail the tested party’s controlled transactions, financial data, and TP method applied.
Benchmark report / econometric output External TP economist; PDF report with working data files; date‑stamped; recommended retention of at least 10 years.
Intercompany agreements / contracts Legal department; signed PDF; must specify pricing mechanism, adjustment clauses, and settlement terms; adjustments must be traceable to contract references.
Invoices and settlement documentation Accounting; scanned PDF of invoices and payment evidence (bank advices, F24 receipts where tax settlements occur).
Internal memos and board approvals CFO / Board; PDF of board minutes or written resolution; demonstrates governance over material adjustments.
Working papers of calculation TP desk; Excel with visible formulae, data sources, and full audit trail; retain original data and lookup references.
Financial statement disclosure schedule Accounting; Word or PDF; model note language referencing OIC 34 and the TP adjustment amount; reviewed by external auditor.
Tax computations and amended tax filings Tax team; PDF or XML in statutory tax return format; include F24 payment receipts where additional tax is due.
Master/Local File index and table of contents TP team; concise navigational index to accelerate auditor review; include document version numbers and dates.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for TP Adjustments in Italy

Timing is critical. TP calculations must be finalised before the draft financial statements are signed off, and the tax implications must be resolved before statutory filing deadlines. The table below provides the key milestones. Entities should insert their specific fiscal year‑end date and applicable statutory tax‑filing deadlines.

Action Deadline / trigger Who
Complete TP calculations and working papers 7–14 days before draft FS sign‑off TP desk + accounting
Post accounting entries to general ledger At financial statement close date (e.g., 31 December) or at earliest subsequent board approval if permitted by the entity’s close calendar Accounting
Prepare FS notes disclosure With draft FS, before submission to external auditors Accounting
File tax returns (IRES / IRAP) By statutory tax filing deadline (entities must verify the applicable deadline each year); if the adjustment creates additional tax owed, arrange payment via F24 Tax team
Post‑filing upward adjustment (where law permits) Follow 2026 Budget Law provisions, document the timeline, justification, and payment procedure; engage tax counsel Tax counsel
Retain all TP documentation Minimum 10 years recommended from the date of the tax return filing TP and legal teams

Industry observers note that the interaction between accounting close timelines and tax‑filing deadlines is where most coordination failures occur. Groups operating across multiple jurisdictions should build a centralised calendar that maps each entity’s close date, audit date, and statutory filing window against the TP adjustment workflow.

Costs, Fees, and Tax Considerations

Implementing the year‑end TP adjustment procedure involves both external advisory fees and internal resource costs. The table below provides indicative ranges; actual costs depend on the complexity of the group’s intercompany structure and the number of transaction categories requiring benchmarking.

Item Typical amount (indicative) Notes
TP benchmark and report (external) €6,000–€40,000+ Depends on scope: single tested party versus group‑wide study; database access costs included.
External tax counsel review €2,000–€15,000 Complexity dependent; higher where post‑filing adjustments or cross‑border issues arise.
External audit incremental cost €1,000–€10,000 Additional audit procedures required for TP adjustment entries and OIC 34 disclosure review.
Internal accounting / staff time Variable (estimated 5–40 hours) Costed at internal payroll rates; higher for first‑year implementation.
Tax cash cost (if adjustment increases taxable base) Applicable IRES/IRAP rate × adjustment amount + interest Compute the IRES and IRAP impact; check F24 payment windows and any interest charges for late settlement.

Penalty relief: Italian law provides for reduced penalties where the taxpayer has prepared qualifying transfer pricing documentation (Master File and Local File) in accordance with the requirements published by the Agenzia delle Entrate. This relief is an important incentive to maintain documentation even where the entity does not expect an immediate audit. The 2026 Budget Law may have further clarified the conditions and mechanics of this relief, entities should verify the current provisions on the Agenzia delle Entrate website and in the Gazzetta Ufficiale.

What Changes in 2026: OIC 34 and Budget Law Specifics

Two regulatory developments converge to make the 2026 compliance window distinct from prior years.

OIC 34, Variable Consideration and TP Adjustments

OIC 34, issued by the Organismo Italiano di Contabilità (OIC), governs revenue recognition for entities applying Italian GAAP. The standard introduces a constraint on the recognition of variable consideration: revenue that includes a variable element, such as a retrospective TP adjustment, may only be recognised to the extent that it is highly probable a significant reversal will not subsequently occur. For year‑end TP adjustments, this means:

  • Upward adjustments (additional revenue) can only be recognised if the entity has sufficient evidence, typically the signed TP calculation, board approval, and intercompany confirmation, that the adjustment will be settled.
  • Downward adjustments (revenue reductions) must be reflected promptly if the variable consideration constraint is no longer met.
  • Disclosure in the financial statement notes must identify the nature and amount of variable consideration arising from TP adjustments, cross‑referencing the Local File.

Legge di Bilancio 2026, Tax Filing Mechanics

The 2026 Budget Law, published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale, introduced provisions affecting the tax treatment of TP adjustments. Early indications suggest that the key operational changes include provisions governing the circumstances under which upward TP adjustments may be reflected in tax filings, including the possibility of post‑filing upward adjustments subject to specific documentation and procedural requirements. Entities should verify the exact provisions directly in the Gazzetta Ufficiale text and through guidance published by the Agenzia delle Entrate.

Practical reconciliation steps for 2026:

  1. Map each TP adjustment to its OIC 34 accounting treatment (recognition or deferral under the variable consideration constraint).
  2. Determine the tax base effect: does the accounting adjustment flow through to the tax return, or does a tax‑accounting difference arise requiring a deferred tax entry?
  3. If a post‑filing upward adjustment is contemplated, follow the procedural requirements set out in the 2026 Budget Law, document the justification, timeline, and F24 payment.
  4. Confirm penalty‑relief documentation is current and complete before filing.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

The following pitfalls recur in transfer pricing audit defence and should be addressed proactively during the year‑end TP adjustment procedure.

  • Missing or incomplete TP documentation. The most common pitfall. Penalty relief requires qualifying Master File and Local File documentation. Begin documentation early in the fiscal year, not at year‑end.
  • Late benchmarking. Commissioning a benchmark study after the financial statements have been drafted creates time pressure and risks inaccurate adjustments. Engage the TP economist at least 3–10 business days before the draft FS sign‑off.
  • Posting the adjustment to the wrong period. TP adjustments must be recorded at the financial statement close date to which they relate. Posting to a subsequent period creates an OIC 34 compliance issue and a potential tax‑year mismatch.
  • Failure to coordinate tax and accounting teams. The accounting entry and the tax return treatment of a TP adjustment must be consistent. Assign a single coordinator (typically the Group Tax Director) to ensure alignment.
  • Inconsistent intercompany agreements. If the intercompany contract does not include an adjustment clause or if pricing terms contradict the TP method applied, auditors and tax inspectors will challenge the adjustment. Review and update contracts annually.
  • No board or management approval on file. Material TP adjustments require documented governance approval. Ensure board minutes or a written CFO resolution is filed in the TP package before the external audit begins.

Audit Defence Checklist

When responding to a transfer pricing audit by the Agenzia delle Entrate or during external audit discussions, ensure the following are immediately available:

  • Name and role of the person responsible for the TP calculation
  • Data sources used in the benchmark and their date stamps
  • Comparability adjustments applied and the rationale for each
  • Board minutes or CFO resolution approving the adjustment
  • Evidence of cash settlement (bank advices, F24 receipts)
  • Cross‑reference between the accounting entry, the FS disclosure note, and the tax return line

Conclusion

Implementing transfer pricing adjustments in Italy under OIC 34 in the 2026 compliance window requires disciplined coordination between accounting, tax and TP functions. The convergence of OIC 34’s variable consideration framework with the 2026 Budget Law’s tax‑filing mechanics means that the year‑end TP adjustment procedure is more operationally demanding than in prior years. By following the six steps outlined in this guide, from scoping related‑party transactions through to final approvals, posting and audit‑ready documentation, entities can achieve compliant financial statements, defensible tax positions, and eligibility for penalty relief.

For entities seeking specialist support with accounting services or looking to find an accounting and tax adviser in Italy, early engagement with qualified professionals is the single most effective step to ensure a smooth year‑end close.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Franco Alessio at STUDIO ALESSIO, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Organismo Italiano di Contabilità (OIC), OIC 34 official text and guidance
  2. Gazzetta Ufficiale della Repubblica Italiana, Legge di Bilancio 2026
  3. Agenzia delle Entrate, official circulars and guidance on transfer pricing
  4. OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines
  5. Normattiva, Codice Civile (Articles 2423–2427 on financial statements)
  6. Ministero dell’Economia e delle Finanze (MEF), official publications

FAQs

How do you calculate and book year‑end TP adjustments under OIC 34 in Italy?
Apply the agreed TP method, such as CUP, TNMM, Cost Plus, or Resale Price, to compare the tested party’s actual results against the arm’s‑length interquartile range. Calculate the difference between the actual amount and the target point within the range. Prepare working papers documenting the calculation, then post the accounting journal entries at year‑end. Under OIC 34, recognise the adjustment as variable consideration only when it is highly probable a significant reversal will not occur. Cross‑check the tax impact (IRES and IRAP) and disclose the adjustment in the financial statement notes.
A complete transfer pricing documentation package for Italy includes: the Master File (group‑level), the Local File (entity‑level with transaction detail and benchmarking), the benchmark report with working data files, intercompany agreements, invoices and settlement documentation, internal memos and board approvals, calculation working papers (Excel with visible formulae), a financial statement disclosure schedule referencing OIC 34, tax computations, and an index with table of contents for auditor navigation. Maintain all documents for a minimum recommended period of 10 years.
Disclose the nature and amount of the TP adjustment in the notes to the financial statements before FS sign‑off. Reference OIC 34 variable consideration treatment and cross‑reference the Local File. For tax purposes, the adjustment must be reflected in the IRES/IRAP return. If the 2026 Budget Law permits post‑filing upward adjustments, follow the specific procedural and documentation requirements set out in the legislation. Consult tax counsel to confirm the applicable filing and amendment procedures.
Prepare a single, indexed TP package containing the Master File, Local File, benchmark report, calculation working papers, internal approvals, and settlement evidence. Perform an internal pre‑audit review: verify that the documentation is complete, that the intercompany agreements are consistent with the TP methods applied, and that the financial statement entries reconcile to the tax return. Designate a team lead to handle inspector queries and ensure availability of the TP economist who prepared the benchmark study.
Under certain provisions introduced by the Legge di Bilancio 2026, post‑filing upward TP adjustments may be permissible, subject to formal documentation requirements and potentially amended filings and additional F24 payments. The exact conditions, deadlines, and procedural steps should be verified against the current text of the Budget Law (published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale) and any implementing guidance from the Agenzia delle Entrate. Tax counsel should be engaged before initiating any post‑filing adjustment.
Engage TP economists and tax counsel early in the close cycle, ideally before the draft financial statements are prepared, if material related‑party adjustments are expected or if fresh benchmarking is required. This typically means initiating the engagement 3–10 business days before the draft FS sign‑off target date. External auditors should be notified at the draft stage so they can plan their procedures around the TP adjustment entries and disclosure review. Delaying engagement to after the FS draft risks timeline compression, incomplete working papers, and audit complications.
Italian law provides for reduced penalties in the event of a TP adjustment by the Agenzia delle Entrate, provided the taxpayer has prepared qualifying Master File and Local File documentation that meets the requirements specified by the tax authority. The documentation must be contemporaneous, prepared before the tax return filing deadline, and must adequately describe the TP methods, comparables, and rationale. Entities should verify the current penalty‑relief conditions on the Agenzia delle Entrate website.

Find the right Advisory Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading advisory professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
ADVISORS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF ADVISORS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory 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.

About Us

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 App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GAE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to Implement Transfer Pricing Adjustments in Italy (OIC 34): Step‑by‑step 2026 Compliance Guide

Send welcome message

Custom Message