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印尼2026全球最低税实施:QDMTT与CTAS合规指南

来源:DJP · DJP Indonesia生效日期:2026-01-01

作者:东南亚合规中心编辑团队

TL;DR · 核心要点

本文解读印尼在OECD支柱二全球最低税(15%)全面生效背景下的关键税务转型。核心合规要点包括:① 所有适用IIR的跨国企业(年合并收入≥7.5亿欧元)须按GloBE规则计算有效税率;② 印尼将实施合格国内最低补足税(QDMTT),确保15%税款留存在本国;③ 核心税务系统(CTAS)已上线,强制纳税人使用Taxpayer Account Management(TAM)实现透明化申报;④ 税收优惠(如免税期)对大型MNE失效,政策重心转向法律确定性与行政效率。对企业实际影响:外资不能再依赖印尼低税率获利,必须重新评估合规成本、审计风险与系统适配性;未及时完成CTAS注册或GloBE报告的企业将面临补税、滞纳金及声誉风险。

✅ 合规行动清单 · Compliance Checklist

  • 立即识别集团内是否属于GloBE规则适用范围(年合并营收≥7.5亿欧元),并向印尼税务局(DJP)备案关联企业结构
  • 2026年第二季度前完成Core Tax Administration System(CTAS)纳税人账户注册,并启用Taxpayer Account Management(TAM)功能
  • 聘请本地税务顾问开展首年度GloBE计算与QDMTT申报准备,确保2026财年所得税申报同步提交补足税计算表
  • Determine GloBE in-scope status (consolidated revenue ≥€750M) and file jurisdictional notification with DJP by Q2 2026
  • Complete mandatory CTAS registration and activate Taxpayer Account Management (TAM) by 30 June 2026
  • Engage Indonesian tax advisors to prepare first-year GloBE calculation and QDMTT return aligned with corporate income tax filing deadline

English Summary

Effective 2026, Indonesia implements the OECD Pillar Two Global Minimum Tax (GMT) framework, mandating a 15% effective tax rate (ETR) for MNEs with consolidated revenue ≥€750 million. The Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) triggers top-up tax in parent jurisdictions if local ETR falls below 15%. To retain revenue, Indonesia will enforce a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT), requiring in-scope MNEs to calculate and pay top-up tax locally before foreign IIR application. Concurrently, the Core Tax Administration System (CTAS) — live as of February 2026 — mandates real-time taxpayer account management (TAM) and digital compliance. Affected MNEs must prepare GloBE reporting, reconcile incentives against QDMTT calculations, and ensure CTAS integration by Q2 2026. Failure risks double taxation, penalties, and loss of investment credibility. Legal certainty, audit predictability, and administrative efficiency now outweigh tax rate differentials in investor decision-making.

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常见问题解答

我的公司年营收不到7.5亿欧元,是否需要关注印尼QDMTT?+
不需要。QDMTT仅适用于OECD GloBE规则覆盖的跨国企业集团(年合并营收≥7.5亿欧元)。但若贵司享受印尼税收优惠(如免税期),且母公司所在国已实施IIR,则可能被其追溯征税,建议仍做初步评估。
印尼QDMTT税率是多少?是否叠加现有企业所得税?+
QDMTT不是新税种,而是补足税机制:当企业有效税率(ETR)低于15%时,就差额部分补缴至15%。它不叠加22%标准企业所得税,而是替代性征收——即实缴总额不超过15%,且优先由印尼征收。
CTAS系统上线后,纸质报税是否还被接受?+
否。自2026年2月起,所有企业所得税申报、预缴、退税及附表(含QDMTT计算表)必须通过CTAS在线提交。纸质或邮件申报视为无效,将导致滞纳金及稽查风险。
如果已在印尼享受10年免税期,现在是否要补税?+
不追溯补税,但自2026年起,免税期不再降低GloBE有效税率。例如原免税期为0%,则需按QDMTT补足至15%。已获批的税收优惠资格依然有效,但财政收益实质转移至QDMTT缴纳。
QDMTT申报周期和截止日期是什么?+
QDMTT按纳税年度申报,与印尼企业所得税申报同步:每年4月30日前提交上一年度GloBE信息表及QDMTT计算表。首次申报须在2026年4月30日前完成2025年度数据(过渡期允许合理估算)。

相关关键词

Indonesia global minimum taxPillar Two IndonesiaQDMTT IndonesiaCTAS IndonesiaOECD GloBE rules
📄 官方原文参考(英文)点击展开
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 Written by : Fatikha Faradina, Directorate General of Taxes' Employee As we navigate through February 2026, the domestic tax landscape in Indonesia is buzzing with the massive transition to the Core Tax Administration System (CTAS). The focus of the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) and taxpayers alike is understandably fixed on the migration of data, the new interface, and the procedural shifts that CTAS brings. However, amidst this domestic transformation, a seismic shift on the global stage is taking full effect one that fundamentally alters how developing nations like Indonesia compete for foreign investment. With the full implementation of the Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) under the OECD’s Pillar Two framework this year, the global tax architecture has entered a new epoch. For decades, the "race to the bottom" where nations slashed corporate tax rates to attract multinational enterprises (MNEs) defined international tax competition. In 2026, that race has effectively hit a wall. For Indonesia, a jurisdiction that has historically utilized tax incentives as a primary lever for economic development, this requires a rapid and strategic pivot in policy and perspective. The Mechanism of the Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) To understand the urgency, we must look at the mechanics of the Global Anti-Base Erosion (GloBE) Rules. The consensus reached by over 140 jurisdictions sets a global minimum effective tax rate (ETR) of 15% for MNEs with a consolidated revenue above €750 million. The IIR acts as the primary enforcement mechanism. It mandates that if an MNE subsidiary operates in a low-tax jurisdiction (paying an ETR below 15%), the Ultimate Parent Entity’s home country has the right and the obligation to impose a "top-up tax" on the parent company. This top-up tax covers the difference between the actual tax paid and the 15% minimum. This mechanism creates a zero-sum game for tax incentives. Previously, if Indonesia offered a 0% corporate income tax rate via a "Tax Holiday" scheme to a European automotive giant, that company enjoyed a genuine 25% savings (assuming a standard 25% rate). Under the IIR regime in 2026, that savings evaporates. If Indonesia collects 0%, the European tax authority will simply collect the remaining 15%. The burden on the investor remains 15%; the only difference is who collects the revenue. The Paradox of Tax Incentives This leads to a startling paradox for Indonesian policymakers, maintaining aggressive tax holidays for in-scope MNEs is no longer an act of investment promotion, but rather a donation of sovereign revenue to developed nations. From a management and public policy perspective, this is inefficient. We are foregoing revenue to subsidize an investor, only for that subsidy to be clawed back by another government. The intended "sweetener" for the investor is neutralized. Consequently, the classic argument that "high taxes scare away FDI" becomes obsolete for these large MNEs, because they cannot escape the 15% floor anywhere in the world. Therefore, Indonesia’s response must be defensive yet strategic. The implementation of a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT) is non-negotiable. QDMTT allows Indonesia to claim the top-up tax before the IIR kicks in abroad. It ensures that if a multinational is going to pay 15% anyway, that revenue stays in the Indonesian state treasury to fund our development, rather than subsidizing the budgets of G7 nations. Redefining Competitiveness: The "Non-Tax" Factor If tax rates are equalized, what becomes the differentiator? The competitive battlefield shifts from "fiscal generosity" to "ecosystem quality." This is where the intersection of Law and Management becomes critical. Investors will reallocate capital based on the ease of doing business, legal certainty, labor productivity, and infrastructure stability. In the absence of tax arbitrage, a company will choose Indonesia over Vietnam or Thailand not because we are cheaper, but because we are better. This shift elevates the importance of legal certainty. Multinational investors detest unpredictability. They fear aggressive audits without basis, prolonged dispute resolution processes, and inconsistent regulatory interpretations. In a post-Pillar Two world, a stable legal framework is more valuable than a tax holiday. The Role of Coretax in Global Competitiveness This brings us back to our current domestic milestone which is the Coretax Administration System. We must stop viewing CTAS merely as an IT project and start viewing it as our new "investment incentive." CTAS promises transparency. With features like the Taxpayer Account Management (TAM), taxpayers have a real-time, 360-degree view of their rights and obligations. This transparency reduces the compliance cost for investors. A tax administration that is seamless, digital-first, and data-driven reduces the "hidden costs" of doing business in Indonesia. If we can prove that complying with taxes in Indonesia is as frictionless as it is in Singapore or Australia, we gain a competitive edge that the IIR cannot erode. The efficiency of our bureaucracy becomes our new value proposition. Conclusion The implementation of the Income Inclusion Rule in 2026 is a wake-up call for the developing world. It signals the end of "easy" investment promotion through tax cuts. However, for Indonesia, this is an opportunity to mature. We are being forced to upgrade the fundamentals of our economy. We are moving away from the superficial allure of tax holidays toward the substantial value of legal certainty, administrative efficiency, and economic stability. By securing our revenue base through QDMTT and leveraging the administrative improvements of the Core Tax system, Indonesia can stand tall. We are no longer competing in a race to the bottom; we are competing in a race to the top where efficiency, transparency, and certainty are the new gold standards. *)This article represents the personal opinion of the author and does not reflect the official stance of the institution where the author works. The content on this page may be copied and reused for non-commercial purposes. However, we kindly ask users to credit the source by linking back to the original page. Hopefully this helps. 187 views