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Please click on each section to expand further:
As of 1 January 2018, amendments to the Law On Taxes and Duties came into force. With said amendments, Latvia has introduced the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) format of the transfer pricing documentation (TPD), consisting of a Master File and a Local File.
In Latvia related party transactions are regulated by Article 4 of the Latvian Corporate Income Tax Law (CIT Law), Regulation No. 667 on 'Application of norms of Corporate Income Tax' (Regulation No. 667), Article 15.2 of the Law on Taxes and Duties, and Regulation No. 802 'Transfer Pricing Documentation and Procedures for the Conclusion of an Advance Ruling for the Determination of the Arm’s Length Price (Value) for a Transaction or Type of Transactions Between a Taxpayer and the Tax Administration' (Regulation No. 802).
Article 4 of the CIT Law determines cases when the taxable income should be adjusted if related party transactions are not arm’s length. Whereas Article 15.2 of the Law on Taxes and Duties defines when full TPD should be prepared in order to justify the prices applied in transactions.
In accordance with the regulations mentioned, transactions of Latvian companies with the following entities should be arm’s length:
- Foreign related entities
- Related natural persons (in accordance with Article 1, Paragraph 18 of the Law on Taxes and Duties)
- Companies that are located, created, or established in low-tax or tax-free jurisdictions or territories (full list of tax havens is prescribed by Regulations No. 665)
- Other related Latvian taxpayers, if the transaction takes place within a single supply chain with another related foreign company or companies/persons located in offshores.
Latvia has been a member country of the OECD since 1 July 2016.
Regulation No. 667 specify that OECD TP Guidelines might be used for the needs of TP analysis as long as it does not contradict the local TP legislative acts. In most cases, the State Revenue Service (the SRS) accepts the principles stipulated in the OECD TP Guidelines regarding the structure of the TPD.
The principle of supremacy of laws does not provide the application of the OECD TP Guidelines directly. However. The SRS is following the recommendations of the Council of the OECD (C(95)126/Final), which was a base in the drafting of current legislation.
Regulation No. 667 prescribe five methods for determining an appropriate transfer price between related companies and specify that OECD TP Guidelines might be used for the needs of TP analysis. As such, the following methods can be used:
Traditional transaction methods
- Comparable uncontrolled price (CUP) method
- Resale price (RP) method
- Cost plus (CP) method.
Transactional profit methods
- Transactional net margin method (TNMM)
- Profit split method (PSM).
There is no hierarchy between the available TP methods in Latvian legislation and the applicability (for both international and domestic transactions) is present. Domestic legislation indicates that the most appropriate method should be used. However, in practice, traditional transaction methods are favoured by the SRS, with CUP method being the most favoured.
Notwithstanding to the fact that local legislation directly does not allow to use unspecified methods, in practice valuation techniques/methods, eg discounted cash-flow based methods, may be used in cases when intangibles are transferred.
Local legislation does not mandate the use of more than one TP method to test the arm’s length nature of a specific controlled transaction.
There is no specific TP declaration in Latvia. However, the total volume of related party transactions (aggregated volume of services received/provided to related parties and goods sold/bought from related parties) for a given year needs to be disclosed in the CIT return for the specific year (Row 6.5.1. of CIT return).
Additionally, in case of a TP audit, tax authorities would usually inquire about (i) description and quantification of the transaction cost base for each transaction (including information on full cost (direct costs and overheads) base using actual costs in the specific year); (ii) availability of agreements with related parties; (iii) analysis that determines the arm’s length price for a given transaction.
As stated above, as of 1 January 2018 came into force amendments to the Law On Taxes and Duties. With said amendments, Latvia has introduced the OECD format of the TPD, consisting of a Master File and a Local File (see graph below).
Compulsory annual preparation of Master File and Local File within 12 months after the end of the specific fiscal year, and submission within 1 month upon a request from the Latvian tax authority, if:
- Master File, where the total value of related party transactions in the specific year exceeds EUR 5 million
- Local File, where the total value of related party transactions in the specific year exceeds EUR 250 thousand.
Obligatory annual submission of Master File and Local File to the Latvian tax authority within 12 months after the end of the specific fiscal year, if:
- Master File, where (i) annual turnover in the specific year exceeds EUR 50 million and the total value of related party transactions exceeds EUR 5 million or (ii) the total value of related party transactions in the specific year exceeds EUR 15 million
- Local File, where related party transactions exceed EUR 5 million.
Article 8, Paragraph 4 of the Official Language Law states that statistical summaries, annual accounts, accounting documents and other documents which are to be submitted to State or local government institutions on the basis of laws or other regulatory enactments, shall be drawn up in the official language. As such, generally all TP related documents need to be submitted to the tax authority in Latvian language. However, the Master File can be submitted in English language.
Notwithstanding to the above, in practice, all TP related documents can be submitted to the tax authority in English language, and tax authorities tend to review TPD in English. However, if the SRS has a feeling that the taxpayer will challenge its findings in a court, the tax authority will ask for all relevant documents to be translated into Latvian language, as courts would only look at documents in Latvia. Generally, 30 days are given for translation of all relevant TP documents into Latvian language.
Following the activities carried out by the OECD within the base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) project, and the updated OECD TP Guidelines, there have been major changes with respect to the TP documentation preparation / content in Latvian legislation, the most significant of which is the introduction of the three tier approach for TP documentation, which consists of the following:
- Country-by-country report (CbCr) that provides general overview of financial results of each jurisdiction where the group does business (turnover threshold applies, i.e. EUR 750 million turnover for the previous financial year required for CbCr to be mandatory)
- Master File contains information on the entire group, including the nature of business activities, overall TP policy, revenue placement etc. The information to be included in the Master File may be categorised as follows - group organisational structure, description of lines of business, intangible assets, financial transactions, financial and tax liabilities
- Local File contains detailed information on the transactions controlled by the local company. The information included in the document supplements the Master File and is presented to support the assumption that the price in the controlled transaction corresponds to the market price. The Local File contains TP analysis for the transactions controlled by the local company, the underlying financial information, reasoning behind the selected TP method, a benchmarking analysis etc.
As per the content of TPD, Latvia follows the standard Master File and Local File content requirements per OECD, with a small addition that the taxpayer should provide screenshots with fixed date and downloads from databases with fixed dates for acceptation or rejection reasons of comparables.
Regulation No. 802 prescribes the information to be included in both the Master File and Local File, note situations in which simplified documentation can be prepared, and prescribe what information should be included in said simplified documentation, as well as prescribe the procedure for concluding an APA with the tax administration.
Regulation No. 677 prescribes five methods for determining an appropriate transfer price between related companies and provides guidelines for preparing a functional analysis and benchmarking study. Furthermore, Regulation No. 677 specifies that OECD TP Guidelines might be used for the needs of TP analysis.
Small taxpayers in Latvia have usually a medium risk that they will be subject to a general tax audit, while medium-sized and large multi-national taxpayers have a high risk of audit. Based on the tax audit practice, there is a medium risk for all taxpayers that if TPD is reviewed as a part of the audit, the TP methodology will be challenged. Additionally, there is a medium to high risk for all taxpayers of an adjustment if the TP methodology is challenged.
Another aspect that could be of the SRS interest:
- Persistent losses for local entity
- Licensing (also other/any type) payments to low tax jurisdictions
- Business restructurings, or changes in TP model, can also trigger a challenge.
According to Article 23, Paragraph 1.1 of the Law on Taxes and Duties, the SRS has the right to assess whether controlled transaction pricing was arm’s length within five years after the tax becomes due. As such, the relevant records need to be kept for at least five years following the submission deadline of the CIT return for the specific period.
A penalty for non-compliance with TP legislation requirements of up to 1% (but not exceeding EUR 100,000) from the controlled transaction amount for which the documentation had to be prepared has been introduced into local legislation as of 1 January 2018. The penalty will apply in situations when the taxpayer does not comply with either the submission deadline or the content requirements due to which it becomes impossible to make sure that the arm’s length principle is followed.
TP adjustments are also subject to CIT at 25% instead of the standard CIT rate of 20%.
Additionally, according to (i) Article 32, Paragraphs 4 and 5 of the Law on Taxes and Duties, if a TP adjustment is made that results in additional payable tax, then a penalty of 20% or 30% (with the possibility to reduce said penalty by 50%, if the taxpayer cooperates with the tax administration) on the additional payable CIT would apply; (ii) Article 29, Paragraph 2 of the Law on Taxes and Duties, if a TP adjustment is made, a late-payment penalty of 0.05% per each day would also apply to the additionally payable CIT.
For transactions carried out until 31 December 2017, there is no specific penalty for not having TPD. When the prices applied in transactions between related parties are not arm’s length, the taxable income of the taxpayer may be adjusted upward, and the of 20% - 30% and the late payment penalty (annual rate of 18.25%) on the additionally payable CIT may be applied. For recurring TP adjustments, the penalty rates are doubled (ie 40% - 60%).
Latvian law requires related-party transactions to be at arm’s length. In other words, the conditions made or imposed between two related enterprises in their commercial or financial relations must not differ from those that would be agreed upon between independent enterprises engaging in similar transactions under similar circumstances.
Generally, local comparables are preferred by the Latvian tax authorities. As such, initially, the taxpayer would try to find comparables in the Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania). If not enough comparables are located in the Baltic States, the search can be expanded to include companies from Central and Eastern European countries as these countries are economically similar to the Baltic States, ie Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia. If not enough comparables are located in Central and Eastern Europe, EU28 would be used.
Both single-year and multi-year analysis are acceptable, the choice of using one of them should be justified. In case when the relevant fact pattern and the conditions of the controlled transactions have remained unchanged, a new benchmarking study has to be prepared once in three years and financials of comparables have to be updated each year for consecutive two years after a new benchmarking study is performed. As stated before, the taxpayer should provide screenshots with fixed date and downloads from databases with fixed dates for acceptance or rejection reasons of comparables.
For transactions involving sale/purchase of goods and receipt/provision of services, TP Catalyst database is the preferred source for comparable data. For transactions involving intangibles (eg licensing of trademark), the preferred source of comparable data is RoyaltyStat and ktMine database.
There is no specific legal requirement on the use of the interquartile range. The SRS accepts the application of the interquartile range.
For loan transactions, statistical data on loans issued by Latvian Monetary and Financial Institutions to resident non-financial companies compiled by the Bank of Latvia is generally used. However, during the proceeding year, the Latvian tax authority acquired a Bloomberg terminal and moving forward plans to use data from Bloomberg or Eikon database for loan transaction pricing. In practice, data from Bloomberg and Eikon databases were already used for high volume loan transactions.
APAs are regulated by Article 16.1 of the Law on Taxes and Duties and Regulations No. 802.
An APA can be requested by the taxpayer if the yearly volume of controlled transactions for which an APA will be concluded exceeds (or is planned to exceed) EUR 1.43 million, and a state duty of EUR 7,114 will need to be paid by the taxpayer.
APAs can be concluded for a period of up to 5 years (Clause 5.5 of Regulation No. 802), and a rollback of up to 5 previous years is also possible (Clause 5.6 of Regulation No. 802). In case the APA roll back option is chosen by the taxpayer, still the total period of 5 years for an APA cannot be exceeded (e.g. the taxpayer may ask that the APA covers the 2 previous years and 3 following years).
Latvia can only initiate unilateral APAs; however, if a tax authority from a different jurisdiction initiates a bilateral or multilateral APA, Latvian tax authorities would participate in said APA.
It takes a maximum of 14 months to conclude an APA; however, tax authorities have taken it upon themselves to shorten this period to around 6 months.
There are generally 5 stages for concluding an APA in Latvia: (i) pre-filing conference stage; (ii) submission of APA request; (iii) evaluation and negotiations stage; (iv) reporting / monitoring stage; and (v) renewal / updating / adjusting stage.
There are no TP related exemptions for SMEs. However, according to Article 15.2 of the Law on Taxes and Duties, related party transactions with a volume of less than EUR 20,000 per annum can be excluded from the TPD.
Local government has announced and shows intentions to implement digital service tax (DST) as Latvian government commissioned a study to determine the increase of tax revenue based on the assumption that the country levies a 3% DST.
In recent years Latvian tax authorities have become more active in carrying out TP related audits, with companies (i) with losses in previous years, (ii) extensive dealings with related foreign companies, (iii) carrying out non-standard transactions (e.g. sale / transfer of intellectual property) facing increased scrutiny from the tax authorities.
Additionally, during the last two years, the concept of 'Consult Before' has been introduced by the Latvian tax authorities. This concept entails that in case that tax authorities have identified particular risks related to controlled transaction pricing for a specific taxpayer, instead of initiating a formal audit procedure, they will reach out to said taxpayer with questions on the applied pricing, and provide their guidance/recommendations on how to bring the pricing of controlled transactions in line with the arm’s length principle.
If following this process (dialog) the tax authorities and taxpayer can come to an agreement, no audit is initiated, and the taxpayer is not fined. However, if during this procedure an agreement is not reached, a formal audit shall be initiated.
Given the recent OECD publication on financial transaction pricing, Latvian tax authorities are becoming more interested in controlled financing transactions carried out between a Latvian company and a foreign-related company. Especially if the volume of said transactions is rather high.
The economic fallout of COVID-19 is likely to have widespread impact and an increase in TP and CIT enquiries globally is expected. All MNEs should be reviewing their potential exposure to TP enquiries and updating documentation accordingly.
Entities should (i) identify where the key business impacts affect their TP policy; (ii) think strategically how crisis responses can be supported by the TP function; and (iii) start with internal document by adjusting agreements, and include robust and contemporaneous audit files to support TP policy amendments.
The TP concept assesses the business as a whole rather than individual figures, and also takes into account market conditions, macroeconomic developments and their impact on the company's financial performance. Therefore, for companies for which the issue of TP is relevant, it is recommended to gather and document the objective evidence that affected their performance and that could help to justify the compliance of the prices of controlled transactions with the market level.
For further information on transfer pricing in Latvia please contact:
Dmitrijs Korovackis |