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Top 5 Things Foreigners Must Prepare Before Filing Taxes in Indonesia

Filing taxes in Indonesia is straightforward when you’re prepared and risky when you’re not. For foreigners who invest, run businesses, work, or retire in Indonesia, a few proactive steps remove most compliance headaches and keep your visas, bank accounts, and investments running smoothly. This practical guide grounded in Indonesian tax rules and recent administrative updates walks you through the top five things to prepare before you file your Indonesian tax return (SPT Tahunan) so you can file accurately and confidently.

1 — Confirm your tax residency and document your days in Indonesia

Why it matters: tax residency determines whether you must declare worldwide income (tax resident) or only Indonesia-source income (non-resident). Indonesia generally treats a person as a tax resident if they stay more than 183 days within a 12-month period or show an intention to reside. Keep a simple travel log (dates in/out, accommodation evidence) to prove your day count or intentions if questioned.

Practical steps:

  • Start a calendar or spreadsheet noting arrival/departure dates and night counts.
  • Keep rental agreements, boarding passes or accommodation receipts to support your presence if needed.
  • If you plan longer stays, consulting early residency can change your tax base drastically.

2 — Get an NPWP (personal tax ID) and set up e-registration

Why it matters: an NPWP is the legal identifier for all tax filings in Indonesia. Foreigners with a KITAS/KITAP or who receive Indonesian income typically must register for an NPWP before filing and to benefit from standard withholding rates (otherwise higher default rates may apply). The Directorate General of Taxes supports online registration and provides the required document lists.

Practical steps:

  • Apply for your NPWP online via the DGT portal or visit the local KPP (tax office) with passport + KITAS/KITAP and supporting documents (employment letter or company deed where relevant).
  • Obtain E-FIN access if you’ll file online. Many foreigners engage a local tax representative for registration and e-filing.

3 — Collect income evidence and withholding receipts (PPh 21 / PPh 26 / e-bupot)

Why it matters: your SPT needs proof of income and credits for taxes already withheld. This includes payroll withholding (PPh 21), withholding on services (PPh 23), and Article 26 withholding for many payments to non-residents (default 20% unless a treaty applies). Gather payslips, employer withholding receipts, dividend advice, and any e-bupot certificates the payer issued these documents reduce tax uncertainty and support credit claims.

Practical steps:

  • Request e-bupot / withholding receipts from employers, payers or your company treasury.
  • For dividends or cross-border fees, ensure the payer followed Article 26 or applied treaty relief correctly (they should have your tax residency certificate and used e-SKD/e-bupot).
  • Keep bank statements and contract copies to reconcile amounts if paperwork is incomplete.

4 — Prepare company documents (if you’re a director/shareholder) — financials, invoices, and LKPM for PT PMA

Why it matters: if you are a director/owner in a PT PMA, personal filings often link to corporate activity (director fees, dividends). BKPM/LKPM reporting for PMAs is also under closer scrutiny, mismatches between LKPM, payroll and tax filings are major red flags. Make sure company NPWP, financial statements, VAT invoices (faktur), withholding records and LKPM (if the company is required to file) are ready.

Practical steps:

  • Ask your finance team for a tidy packet: audited or management financials, trial balance, VAT invoices, payroll register, board minutes for dividends, and e-bupot receipts.
  • Confirm LKPM status (if your PMA has an NIB / investment license) and reconcile workforce and investment realisation figures before submission. BKPM has recently tightened LKPM enforcement to show alignment with tax records.

5 — Know the deadlines, the portal you’ll use, and whether you need a tax representative

Why it matters: missing deadlines triggers fines and interest. For individual annual returns, the deadline is no later than 3 months after the tax year ends (31 March) corporate returns have different deadlines (30 April). Indonesia’s tax authority has been modernising filing tools (Coretax and e-filing), so confirm which portal to use and whether your NPWP/EFIN is ready. If you’re unsure, appoint a trusted local tax representative.

Practical steps:

  • Mark 31 March (individual SPT) and 30 April (corporate SPT) in your calendar.
  • Register for Coretax/e-file or confirm your tax agent’s portal access (Coretax has rolled out as the DJP’s new filing environment).
  • If you expect tax due you cannot pay in full, negotiate an installment plan with your tax representative before filing where possible.

Common mistakes foreigners make

  • Assuming KITAS means non-resident: track days and intention to reside; residency changes tax scope.
  • No NPWP, then surprised by higher withholding: register early or ask payers to withhold at standard rates.
  • Missing Article 26 formalities: if you expect treaty relief on dividends/fees, submit a tax residence certificate and follow DGT e-SKD steps before payment.
  • Poor documentation for directors/shareholders: collect board minutes, dividend resolutions and withholding receipts to support declarations.

Quick pre-filing checklist

  • Day-count sheet for the last 12 months (arrival/departure evidence).
  • Personal NPWP and E-FIN (or tax agent contact).
  • Payslips, e-bupot/pemotongan receipts (PPh 21/23) and any Article 26 receipts for cross-border payments.
  • Bank statements, dividend advice, contracts and company financials (if shareholder/director).
  • Confirmed filing portal (Coretax/e-file), deadlines marked (31 March for individual SPT) and a contingency plan for tax payment.

Conclusion

  • Keep everything digital & searchable (PDF invoices, e-bupot receipts).
  • If you have cross-border income, securing a certificate of tax residence from your home country when needed is essential to claim treaty relief in Indonesia.
  • Use a local tax adviser for first filing or if you have complex flows (dividends, multiple income sources, property rental). Voluntary disclosure early is usually better than waiting for an audit.

Filing your Indonesian taxes doesn’t have to be stressful, it just needs the right preparation. Indoned Consultancy specialises in helping foreigners and PT PMA investors get tax-ready: NPWP registration, residency assessment, e-filing (Coretax) setup, Article 26 treaty claims, LKPM reconciliation, and full SPT preparation.

Contact Indoned Consultancy for a free consultation. We’ll review your files, highlight the five highest-risk items, and give you a simple, step-by-step plan to file accurately and on time.

 

Disclaimer

The information provided here is based on our long experience. The process or requirement may vary depending on the specific facts and conditions. Besides, the law and regulations in Indonesia subject to frequent changes. Please contact us as your consultant to get an up to date information and accurate advice. More Information click here and You can also follow our social media accounts to see the latest information posts. please click on the following links: Facebook, Instagram, Linkedin, and Twitter.

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