Indonesia has introduced a temporary relaxation on personal income tax reporting, allowing individual taxpayers to submit their 2025 Annual Tax Return (SPT Tahunan PPh Orang Pribadi) without administrative penalties until 30 April 2026.
The measure, announced on 25 March, reflects a policy response to operational pressures during this year’s reporting cycle, including technical constraints linked to the government’s CoreTax system rollout and reduced working days during the Idul Fitri holiday period.
While the statutory filing deadline remains unchanged at 31 March 2026, the government will waive the standard late filing penalty of IDR 100,000 for submissions made within the extended tolerance window.
SPT Penalty Waiver to Adjust with Idul Fitri and System Maintenance
The Directorate General of Taxes (DJP) has pointed to two primary factors behind the decision. First, the overlap between the tax reporting period and Idul Fitri significantly compressed the effective timeframe available for compliance.
Second, the phased implementation of the CoreTax Administration System has introduced transitional inefficiencies. Taxpayers have reported system access limitations, delays in data processing, and technical barriers affecting submission timelines.
These challenges are reflected in compliance data. As of 24 March 2026, approximately 8.87 million tax returns had been filed, way below the government’s target of 15 million. Of these, more than 7.8 million were submitted by salaried individuals, indicating slower uptake among non-salaried and more complex taxpayer segments.
Despite public perception, the policy does not constitute a legal extension of the filing deadline.
Under Article 3 of Indonesia’s General Tax Provisions and Procedures Law (UU KUP), individual taxpayers remain obligated to submit their annual tax returns within three months after the fiscal year-end, effectively by 31 March.
Extensions, under the same legal framework, must be requested individually and cannot be applied universally. Instead, the government is exercising its authority under Article 36 of the UU KUP to remove administrative sanctions.
As a result, tax returns submitted after 31 March will still be recorded as late in the system, even though financial penalties are waived. This distinction will carry potential implications for taxpayer compliance profiles.
Compliance Implications and Risk Considerations
The policy signals a more flexible, discretionary approach to tax administration during periods of systemic transition. However, it also introduces an added layer of complexity for taxpayers.
While the immediate cost of late filing is eliminated, the “late” status may still be reflected in taxpayer records. Over time, this could influence audit risk assessments or compliance ratings, particularly for individuals with more complex financial structures or cross-border obligations.
For expatriates and foreign-owned entities operating in Indonesia, this nuance is particularly relevant. Tax compliance is increasingly data-driven, with authorities placing greater emphasis on transparency across assets, liabilities, and financial disclosures.
A Transitional Phase for Indonesia’s Tax System
The introduction of CoreTax represents a structural shift in Indonesia’s tax administration, aimed at improving integration, reporting accuracy, and long-term compliance monitoring.
However, as with any large-scale digital transformation, the transition phase has introduced short-term friction. Combined with seasonal disruptions, this has resulted in a more demanding reporting environment for 2026.
The government’s penalty relaxation can therefore be viewed as a pragmatic adjustment—balancing enforcement with the realities of implementation.
Nonetheless, authorities continue to emphasise the importance of timely and accurate reporting, encouraging taxpayers to meet the original March deadline wherever possible.
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