In some cases, an indirect-charge method may be necessary due to the nature of the service being provided. One example is where the proportion of the value of the services rendered to the various relevant entities cannot be quantified except on an approximate or estimated basis. This problem may occur, for example, where sales promotion activities carried on centrally (e.g. at international fairs, in the international press, or through other centralised advertising campaigns) may affect the quantity of goods manufactured or sold by a number of affiliates. Another case is where a separate recording and analysis of the relevant services for each beneficiary would involve a burden of administrative work that would be disproportionately heavy in relation to the activities themselves. In such cases, the charge could be determined by reference to an allocation among all potential beneficiaries of the costs that cannot be allocated directly, i.e. costs that cannot be specifically assigned to the actual beneficiaries of the various services. To satisfy the arm’s length principle, the allocation method chosen must lead to a result that is consistent with what comparable independent enterprises would have been prepared to accept.
TPG2022 Chapter VII paragraph 7.24
Category: B. Main issues | Tag: Administrative-/compliance burden, Indirect-charge method, Intra-group services, Service fee, Services
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- TPG2022 Chapter VII paragraph 7.37While as a matter of principle tax administrations and taxpayers should try to establish the proper arm’s length pricing, it should not be overlooked that there may be practical reasons why a tax administration in its discretion exceptionally might be willing to forgo...
- TPG2022 Chapter VII paragraph 7.26When an indirect-charge method is used, the relationship between the charge and the services provided may be obscured and it may become difficult to evaluate the benefit provided. Indeed, it may mean that the enterprise being charged for a service itself has not...
- TPG2022 Chapter VII paragraph 7.23A direct-charge method for charging for intra-group services can be difficult to apply in practice. Consequently, some MNE groups have developed other methods for charging for services provided by parent companies or group service centres. In such cases, MNE groups may find they...
- TPG2022 Chapter VII paragraph 7.25The allocation should be based on an appropriate measure of the usage of the service that is also easy to verify, for example turnover, staff employed, or an activity based key such as orders processed. Whether the allocation method is appropriate may depend...
- TPG2022 Chapter VII paragraph 7.17These services may be available on call and they may vary in amount and importance from year to year. It is unlikely that an independent enterprise would incur stand-by charges where the potential need for the service was remote, where the advantage of...
- TPG2022 Chapter VII paragraph 7.16Another issue arises with respect to services provided “on call”. The question is whether the availability of such services is itself a separate service for which an arm’s length charge (in addition to any charge for services actually rendered) should be determined. A...
Related Case Law
- Peru vs “Copper Corporation S.A.”, July 2011, Tax Tribunal, Case No 12609-8-2011“Copper Corporation S.A.” had deducted intra-group service payments in it’s taxable income. The Peruvian tax authorities determined that the documentation provided by the company did not sufficiently support the actual provision of these services. Hence, tax deductions for the expenses was denied. The...
- Peru vs “Airline S.A.”, September 2024, Tax Court, Case No 08970-8-2024The case concerns a number of expenses claimed by “Airline S.A.” as deductible payments for intra-group services, in particular aircraft leasing and related costs, which the company argued should be deductible under the transfer pricing rules. “Airline S.A.” claimed that these costs were...
- Peru vs “Airline S.A.”, March 2025, Tax Court, Case No 02374-4-2025“Airline S.A.” claimed various expenses as deductible payments for intra-group services, arguing that these costs were essential and necessary within the corporate group. However, the tax authorities determined that “Airline S.A.” had not provided sufficient documentation to demonstrate that the services were actually...
- Peru vs “Metal S.A.”, February 2023, Tax Court, Case No 01428-1-2023Following an audit, the tax authorities found that “Metal S.A.” had not been remunerated at arm’s length for its distribution activities. In addition, the intra-group services received by “Metal S.A.” were considered to be low value-added services for which the margin could not...
- Italy vs KAI S.r.l. (Shell Italia Aviazione), March 2026, Supreme Court, Case No 5753/2026KAI S.r.l. (formerly Shell Italia Aviazione s.r.l.) is an Italian company operating in the oil sector, specifically in the marketing of aviation fuel (jet fuel) for the Shell Italia group. It was wholly owned by Shell Italia Holding S.p.A. The dispute concerned the...
