The article examines how transfer pricing adjustments can trigger VAT when they are considered payment for goods or services, citing the recent Stellantis Portugal Advocate General opinion. It highlights the need for multinationals to conduct structured reviews, document economic rationale, and maintain evidence to mitigate VAT risks, especially in finance and insurance sectors.
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Meridian Global Services · 2 days ago
The CJEU ruled that year‑end transfer‑pricing adjustments are not automatically considered VAT‑relevant unless they are directly linked to a specific supply. The decision clarifies that only adjustments that represent additional consideration for a particular taxable transaction trigger VAT adjustments, and businesses must assess the economic and contractual context of each adjustment to determine VAT exposure.
Bloomberg Tax · 5 days ago
The Court of Justice of the European Union ruled on 13 May 2026 that transfer‑pricing adjustments do not automatically trigger VAT unless a direct link exists between an identifiable supply and the payment received. The decision clarifies that such adjustments may still be subject to VAT if they qualify as price adjustments affecting the taxable amount, and it requires companies to perform a case‑by‑case assessment of their intragroup agreements and documentation.
Bloomberg Law · 6 days ago
The Court of Justice of the European Union ruled that a transfer pricing adjustment does not automatically trigger VAT unless a direct link exists between an identifiable supply and the payment received. The decision underscores the need for companies to assess each adjustment case‑by‑case, draft clear intragroup agreements, and maintain robust documentation to secure the intended VAT treatment.
LinkedIn · 25 days ago
The CJEU ruled that profit margin adjustments in transfer pricing mechanisms do not automatically constitute consideration for a VATable service. The ruling clarifies that such adjustments may be treated as retroactive purchase price adjustments if not remuneration for a service, affecting the taxable amount of the original supply. This decision provides guidance for intra‑group arrangements and the need for a direct link between services and consideration.
Bloomberg Tax · 26 days ago
The EU Court ruled that Stellantis’s price adjustments with local dealers are not taxable services, meaning the automaker does not owe VAT on those adjustments. The case involved agreements between Stellantis’s Portuguese unit and dealers that included price adjustments based on dealers’ expenditures to ensure a fixed margin. Portugal’s tax authority had challenged the arrangement.
LinkedIn · 2 months ago
The post outlines Portugal’s VAT framework, highlighting the 23% domestic rate, the 0% international regime for services to non‑EU clients, and the reverse‑charge rule within the EU. It also discusses exempt sectors under Article 9, the 6% reduced rate for affordable housing, and the digitised 2026 recovery process for VAT credits.
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Key Takeaways
It concerns whether transfer pricing adjustments are considered consideration for a separate supply of services, affecting whether VAT applies.
If they represent consideration for a supply of goods or services, a direct link must exist for VAT to apply.
Implement a structured review process, document the economic rationale, align contracts, and maintain evidence of intragroup services.
Finance and insurance sectors may experience restricted VAT recovery on their costs.
Adjustments may be linked to bundled services or intangibles, potentially subject to VAT if a direct link to a supply exists.
Primary source
Read the full article at Bloomberg TaxThis summary was published on VATfaqs.com on 20 February 2026. It relates to VAT developments in Portugal. The original source is Bloomberg Tax.