VAT news [April 2026]
The General Financial Directorate disagrees with a judgment of the General Court of the Court of Justice of the European Union concerning the tax period in which the right to deduct VAT may be exercised. The Co…
On 5 January 2026, the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework BEPS approved and published a political-technical agreement on a package of changes that is conceived as an amendment to the existing Pillar II rules (i.e. administrative guidance to be incorporated into the Commentary to the GloBE Model Rules). In essence, the package is intended to enable the "Side-by-Side" functioning of the global minimum tax (the so-called Pillar II), reduce the administrative burden of Top-up Taxes and at the same time protect the tax interests of individual jurisdictions. Below, we briefly summarize what the proposal brings, among other things.
The OECD acknowledges that tax incentives are a common tool of economic policy and do not have to constitute a harmful tax practice in themselves. That is why it is introducing a safe harbour (“Substance-based Tax Incentive Safe Harbour”), the aim of which is to enable the maintenance of the effect of selected incentives strongly linked to the real economic activity of the group in a given jurisdiction. This approach defines the so-called Qualified Tax Incentives, the part of which can – up to a limit derived from various criteria, such as payroll costs, depreciation of selected tangible assets or, alternatively, their book value in the jurisdiction (“Substance Cap”) – increase the Adjusted Covered Taxes and thus reduce (or eliminate) the Top-up Tax. This mechanism may also potentially be relevant for the assessment of certain tax incentives in the Czech Republic.
The newly introduced concept of the Side-by-Side System aims to coordinate a situation where some jurisdictions do not apply the rules of Pillar II (GloBE), but at the same time apply their own minimum tax regimes with a comparable effect to the global minimum tax. The OECD therefore proposes two further safe harbours:
Thus, it can be said that “Side-by-Side” is by its nature a coordination setting to avoid overlapping Pillar II rules in situations where some jurisdictions apply an eligible domectictax regime with a comparable effect, which is crucial especially for US groups.
Although the “Side-by-Side Package” is conceived as an amendment to the existing rules, it will be crucial for practice how quickly, to what extent and with what effectiveness it will be reflected in local implementations and in the interpretative practice of tax administrators.
New safe harbours have the potential to reduce administrative burdens (in particular when calculating the jurisdictional effective tax rate), but will also bring new choices, conditions and the need for robust documentation, including an assessment of their eligibility. The real impact on everyday practice will therefore only become apparent gradually.
Even when using Safe Harbour SbS/UPE, the Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Taxes (QDMTT) remains relevant in individual jurisdictions, which – for example in the Czech Republic – can be comparable in terms of the complexity of the calculation as the calculation of the attributable Top-up Tax according to GloBE.
For more information, we recommend other articles and webcasts that we offer at Deloitte on this topic:
- Article on our platform Tax@hand (authors: Alison Lobb, Ryan Bowen and Roberta Poza)
- S. Tax News & Views webcast on January 14, 2026. Register here.
- EMEA Dbriefs webcast, taking place on January 15, 2026. Register here.
Seminars, webcasts, business breakfasts and other events organized by Deloitte.