Last updated: 11 May 2026
Tax litigation in Indonesia has entered a new phase. PMK‑1/2026, effective 22 January 2026, overhauled audit procedures, tightened reporting expectations and recalibrated the relationship between the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) and corporate taxpayers. Simultaneously, the consolidation of the Government’s Tax Crime Investigation Programme (GPTP) has lowered the threshold at which audit findings can trigger criminal referrals, while a series of mid‑2026 Tax Court rulings have reshaped the burden of proof in transfer‑pricing and restructuring disputes. For in‑house tax directors, general counsels and finance managers, the practical question is no longer whether to prepare for a dispute but how to mount a methodical tax audit defence from the moment a notice arrives.
This playbook maps out the entire lifecycle of tax litigation Indonesia, from initial audit response through objection, Tax Court appeal and criminal‑exposure mitigation, with actionable checklists at every stage.
When a company receives an audit notification or a tax assessment under the post‑PMK‑1/2026 regime, the first 72 hours are decisive. The following five steps should be executed immediately:
Tax litigation in Indonesia cannot be understood in isolation from the regulatory instruments that frame it. Sengketa pajak, the Indonesian term for tax disputes, encompasses objections filed with DGT, appeals heard by the Tax Court (Pengadilan Pajak), and cassation petitions to the Supreme Court. PMK‑1/2026, issued by the Ministry of Finance (Kementerian Keuangan) and effective from 22 January 2026, introduced several changes that materially alter how companies defend against audits.
First, PMK‑1/2026 compressed the document‑production timeline during audits, requiring taxpayers to furnish requested records within a shorter window or face adverse inferences. Second, the regulation formalised new disclosure requirements for related‑party transactions, demanding contemporaneous transfer‑pricing documentation at the time of the audit rather than allowing post‑hoc compilation. Third, PMK‑1/2026 aligned procedural language with the GPTP consolidation guidance issued earlier in 2026, creating a more explicit pathway for DGT auditors to refer findings to criminal investigators when indicators of deliberate evasion are present.
In parallel, a set of Tax Court rulings handed down in early‑to‑mid 2026 have shifted the practical landscape. Industry observers note that the Tax Court has increasingly scrutinised the economic substance of restructuring transactions and placed a heavier evidentiary burden on taxpayers to demonstrate arm’s‑length pricing in intercompany arrangements. The likely practical effect is that companies can no longer rely on formalistic compliance alone; substance‑over‑form arguments are now central to successful tax audit defence.
| Date | Instrument / Ruling | Practical Effect for Companies |
|---|---|---|
| 22 January 2026 | PMK‑1/2026 (effective) | Compressed audit‑response timelines; contemporaneous TP documentation required; formalised criminal‑referral pathway |
| Q1–Q2 2026 | Tax Court rulings on restructuring and TP | Heightened burden of proof on taxpayers for substance and arm’s‑length pricing; precedent now supports DGT adjustments where economic substance is weak |
| 2026 (ongoing) | GPTP consolidation guidance | Lower threshold for criminal referrals; DGT audit teams now operate under consolidated procedures that fast‑track fraud indicators to investigators |
A successful tax audit defence in Indonesia begins well before DGT arrives on‑site. The post‑PMK‑1/2026 environment rewards companies that maintain audit‑ready records year‑round and treat the audit as a structured litigation exercise from day one.
Upon receiving a formal audit notification (Surat Perintah Pemeriksaan), the following actions should be completed within the first five business days:
Indonesia’s legal privilege framework differs significantly from common‑law jurisdictions. Attorney–client privilege is not absolute in tax matters, and DGT has broad powers to request documents. Companies should:
Every interaction with the DGT audit team should be documented. Respond to oral requests with a follow‑up email confirming the request in writing. When DGT issues a findings letter (Surat Pemberitahuan Hasil Pemeriksaan, or SPHP), the response window is tightly defined. Under the post‑PMK‑1/2026 procedure, companies must submit a formal written response within the prescribed period, supported by complete evidence. Missing this window or providing incomplete responses can result in DGT adopting its proposed adjustments in the final assessment.
| Audit Stage | Key Action | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Notification received | Assemble defence team; issue litigation hold | Within 5 business days |
| Document requests | Produce records; log all requests | Per DGT‑specified period (shortened under PMK‑1/2026) |
| SPHP issued | Submit detailed written response with evidence | Statutory response window from SPHP receipt date |
| Closing conference | Present counter‑arguments; note areas of disagreement | Scheduled by DGT |
| Tax assessment issued | Calendar objection deadline immediately | Three months from assessment receipt |
The tax objection procedure is the first formal litigation step in the Indonesian tax dispute system. Under the General Tax Provisions and Procedures Law (Undang‑Undang Ketentuan Umum dan Tata Cara Perpajakan, or KUP Law), a taxpayer has three months from the date of receipt of the tax assessment to file a written objection with DGT. This deadline is strict: there is no extension mechanism, and a late filing will be dismissed on procedural grounds.
Not every assessment warrants a full objection. Companies should evaluate settlement when:
Conversely, a formal objection is appropriate when the assessment rests on an incorrect legal interpretation, DGT has applied sampling or estimates without adequate basis, or the disputed amount is material enough to justify the investment in litigation.
In complex disputes, particularly those involving transfer pricing, valuations and restructuring, expert reports can be decisive. Engage independent economists, valuers or industry specialists early. Their reports should be completed and attached to the objection filing, not introduced as an afterthought at the Tax Court stage. DGT’s own internal guidelines give weight to contemporaneous expert analysis, and early production signals the seriousness of the taxpayer’s position.
If DGT’s decision on objection is adverse, either by outright rejection or an insufficient reduction, the taxpayer’s next recourse is a tax court appeal to the Pengadilan Pajak. This is the central forum for resolving tax litigation in Indonesia, and the stakes are high: the Tax Court’s decision is binding unless overturned on cassation by the Supreme Court.
Under the KUP Law, a taxpayer must file a Tax Court appeal within three months of receiving the objection decision. The appeal is submitted in writing to the Tax Court Secretariat, accompanied by a copy of the objection decision, the original assessment and all supporting evidence. Companies should treat this window as non‑negotiable: calendar the deadline on the day the objection decision arrives and work backwards to set internal milestones for drafting the appeal submission.
The Tax Court conducts a de novo review of the facts and the law. This means the court is not limited to the record compiled during the objection phase, it can receive new evidence and hear witnesses. Companies should:
Early indications suggest that the 2026 Tax Court rulings on transfer pricing and restructuring provide both opportunities and risks. Where the rulings favour substance‑over‑form analysis, companies with genuine economic substance can cite them as authority. Conversely, companies with thin‑substance arrangements should expect DGT to invoke the same rulings in support of its adjustments. Tax counsel should track and cite specific 2026 decisions by case number in appeal submissions.
| Forum | Standard of Review | Available Remedies |
|---|---|---|
| Objection (DGT) | Administrative review, DGT re‑examines facts and law internally | Uphold, reduce or cancel the assessment; issue a revised assessment |
| Tax Court (Pengadilan Pajak) | De novo, court independently reviews all facts and law | Uphold, amend or cancel the objection decision; order refund or credit |
| Supreme Court (Cassation) | Legal error only, no re‑examination of facts | Uphold or reverse the Tax Court decision on points of law |
The most significant, and under‑discussed, risk facing companies in 2026 is the expanded pathway from tax audit to criminal investigation. The GPTP consolidation has unified criminal referral procedures across DGT offices, making it easier for an audit team to escalate findings to the Directorate of Tax Crime Investigation (Direktorat Penegakan Hukum) when certain indicators are present.
Tax criminal exposure arises when DGT identifies conduct that crosses the line from negligence or error into deliberate evasion. Common triggers include:
The right to correct tax assessment is the single most important tool for reducing criminal exposure. Under the KUP Law, a taxpayer may voluntarily amend a return to correct errors. When used proactively, before DGT issues a formal assessment or initiates a criminal investigation, voluntary correction can transform potential criminal liability into an administrative penalty (surcharge plus interest). The key conditions are:
Companies should also consider voluntary disclosure programmes when they discover historic non‑compliance. Early engagement with DGT, before an audit is formally initiated, significantly improves the prospects of resolving the matter administratively.
If any of the criminal‑referral triggers above are present, specialist criminal defence counsel should be engaged immediately, ideally before the first audit meeting. Criminal tax cases in Indonesia carry penalties including imprisonment for responsible officers and substantial monetary fines for the corporate entity. Dual representation, tax litigation counsel plus criminal defence counsel, ensures that audit responses do not inadvertently create admissions usable in a criminal proceeding.
Corporate restructuring transactions, mergers, demergers, share‑for‑share exchanges and intra‑group asset transfers, are among the highest‑risk areas for corporate restructuring tax disputes in Indonesia. Before and during a restructuring, companies should:
Indonesia has an extensive network of double tax agreements (P3Bs). When a DGT audit involves cross‑border transactions, the relevant P3B may provide relief from double taxation or limit DGT’s taxing rights. Companies should evaluate Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) provisions early and coordinate with tax advisers in the counterparty jurisdiction to ensure consistent positions are taken in both countries.
Practical tools accelerate defence preparation and reduce the risk of missed steps. The following templates are designed to complement this tax litigation Indonesia playbook:
These templates should be reviewed by qualified Indonesian tax litigation counsel before use. Procedural rules are strictly enforced, and a defective filing can forfeit your right to challenge the assessment.
The 2026 regulatory and judicial environment demands a proactive, litigation‑ready posture from every company operating in Indonesia. PMK‑1/2026 has compressed timelines, the GPTP consolidation has raised the stakes, and recent court rulings have placed a premium on economic substance. Companies that wait until an assessment arrives to begin preparing are already behind. Build audit‑readiness into annual compliance; engage experienced tax litigation counsel early; and treat every DGT audit as the beginning of a potential Tax Court case. To connect with a qualified Indonesian tax litigation practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter by Indonesia and Tax Litigation.
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.
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