Are Foreign Legal Entities Obliged to Pay Corporate Income Tax in Serbia?

Are Foreign Legal Entities Obliged to Pay Corporate Income Tax in Serbia?

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Bearing in mind the increasingly frequent engagement of foreign legal entities on various projects in Serbia, as well as the fact that during the last year the practice of direct investments by non-residents in Serbia significantly expanded, it is only natural that each transaction in which a legal entity acquires a certain income, raises numerous questions, such as: do non-residents pay income tax in Serbia, in which cases are they obliged to do so, how high is the tax rate, is there an international agreement on avoiding double taxation?

When it comes to regulations that stipulate the rights and obligations of foreign legal entities based on the realized income from business in Serbia, the domestic legislator regulated this matter by the Law on Corporate Income Tax (“the Law”).

The Law stipulates that a foreign legal entity, i.e. a non-resident, is subject to taxation of profits generated on the territory of Serbia, but only those profits generated by operating through a permanent business unit located on the territory of Serbia, and only if an international agreement on avoidance of double taxation does not prescribe otherwise.

What does the term permanent business unit refer to?

In terms of the Law, a permanent business unit means any permanent place of business through which a non-resident conducts its business, in particular:

  1. Branch;
  2. Plant;
  3. Representative office;
  4. Place of production, factory or workshop;
  5. Mine, quarry or other site of exploitation of natural resources.

Also, bearing in mind that foreign legal entities have been frequently engaged to conduct the construction works on the territory of Serbia, it is very important to point out that a permanent business unit may also refer to a permanent or movable site, construction and mounting works, if they last more than six months, including:

  1. a) One or several construction or mounting projects executed concurrently, or
  2. b) Several construction or mounting projects executed one after the other without interruption.

Tax Rate

The withholding tax rate is 20%, unless otherwise prescribed by an international agreement on the avoidance of double taxation.

Types of income to be taxed and how the tax is paid

The withholding income tax is paid on income generated by a non-resident legal entity from a resident legal entity on the basis of:

  1. Dividends and profit share in a legal entity;
  2. Compensation from copyrights and related rights and industrial property rights;
  3. Interest;
  4. Compensation from lease and sublease of real estate and movables on the territory of the Serbia;
  5. Fees from market research services, accounting and auditing services and other services in the field of legal and business consulting, regardless of the place of their provision or use, or the place where they will be provided or used.

On the other side, if a non-resident legal entity realizes capital gain, i.e. any other income for the purpose of settling its claim, it is obliged to hire a tax representative who will, within 30 days from the day of income realization, submit a tax return to the competent tax authority, and this tax will be payable upon receiving the relevant tax decision. Therefore, as far as filing a tax return is concerned, unlike residents who can file a return themselves or through a tax representative, foreign legal entities in Serbia must have their own tax representative who will file a tax return.

International agreements on avoidance of double taxation

International agreements on the avoidance of double taxation that Serbia has concluded with other countries have the priority in defining and determining which tax is paid in a specific case of a legal transaction, when the participants in the legal transaction are residents of the contracting states.

When calculating the withholding tax on the income of a non-resident, the payer of income shall apply the provisions of the agreement on the avoidance of double taxation, on condition that the non-resident concerned can prove its status of a resident of the state with which the Serbia has concluded an agreement on the avoidance of double taxation and that the non-resident is the actual owner of income.

International agreements mostly provide certain benefits for the contracting states, such as a lower tax rate, exemption from taxation for a resident of a contracting state on the territory of another contracting state with income tax, so that a non-resident in Serbia, consequently, does not pay tax on certain income.

By Milinko Mijatovic, Senior Counsel, and Jelena Jankovic, Senior Associate, Milosevic Law Firm