Taxation
"Taxation is a major subject in the CPA board exam! Master the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC), TRAIN Law, CREATE Law, and tax compliance procedures. Ang buwis ay para sa bayan - pero kailangan mo munang matutunan para makapasa ka! Laban, future CPA!"
1. General Principles of Taxation 📚
Understanding the fundamental concepts of taxation is essential for every CPA:
A. Definition and Purpose
Taxation - The inherent power of the sovereign state to demand enforced contributions for public purposes.
Purpose: Revenue generation, regulation, redistribution of wealth, and encouragement/discouragement of activities.
B. Inherent Powers of the State
| Power | Purpose | Effect | Compensation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taxation | Raise revenue | Money from citizen to government | Protection and public services |
| Eminent Domain | Public use/benefit | Property from owner to government | Just compensation required |
| Police Power | Public welfare, order, safety | Restriction on rights/property | None (intangible: healthy society) |
C. Constitutional Limitations on Taxation
- Due process - Taxes must be imposed through valid law
- Equal protection - Similar treatment for those similarly situated
- Uniformity and equity - Same tax for same class of taxpayers
- Non-impairment of contracts - Cannot impair existing contracts
- Religious exemption - No tax on religious activities
- Non-imprisonment for non-payment - Except for tax evasion (fraud)
2. Individual Income Tax (TRAIN Law) 📊
The Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law simplified individual income taxation:
A. Graduated Tax Rates (2023 onwards)
| Taxable Income (Annual) | Tax Rate | Tax Due |
|---|---|---|
| ₱0 - ₱250,000 | 0% | EXEMPT |
| ₱250,001 - ₱400,000 | 15% | 15% of excess over ₱250,000 |
| ₱400,001 - ₱800,000 | 20% | ₱22,500 + 20% of excess over ₱400,000 |
| ₱800,001 - ₱2,000,000 | 25% | ₱102,500 + 25% of excess over ₱800,000 |
| ₱2,000,001 - ₱8,000,000 | 30% | ₱402,500 + 30% of excess over ₱2,000,000 |
| Over ₱8,000,000 | 35% | ₱2,202,500 + 35% of excess over ₱8,000,000 |
B. Self-Employed & Professionals (8% Option)
8% Flat Rate Option Requirements:
- Gross sales/receipts ≤ ₱3,000,000 annually
- Non-VAT registered
- In lieu of graduated rates AND Percentage Tax
- Tax = 8% × (Gross Sales - ₱250,000)
C. Withholding Tax on Compensation
Key Points:
- Employer withholds tax from employee's salary
- Based on graduated rates above
- 13th month pay and other benefits ≤ ₱90,000 = EXEMPT
- De minimis benefits = EXEMPT (within limits)
3. Corporate Income Tax (CREATE Law) 🏢
The Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) Act reduced corporate tax rates:
A. Regular Corporate Income Tax (RCIT)
| Corporation Type | RCIT Rate | Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Regular Corporations | 25% | Net taxable income |
| Domestic Corporations & REFs (Small) | 20% | Taxable income ≤ ₱5M AND Total assets ≤ ₱100M |
| Proprietary Educational Institutions & Hospitals | 10% | If non-profit (1% if income ≤ ₱1M during pandemic) |
B. Minimum Corporate Income Tax (MCIT)
MCIT = 2% of Gross Income
Imposed beginning 4th taxable year
Whichever is HIGHER: RCIT or MCIT
Excess MCIT over RCIT:
- Can be carried forward
- Credited against RCIT due
- For next 3 succeeding years
C. Improperly Accumulated Earnings Tax (IAET)
IAET = 10% of improperly accumulated taxable income
Applies to domestic corporations that accumulate earnings beyond reasonable business needs to avoid dividend tax.
Exempt: Banks, insurance companies, publicly-held corporations, taxable partnerships.
4. Value Added Tax (VAT) 🛒
VAT is an indirect tax on consumption. Know this inside out - it's a board exam favorite!
A. Basic VAT Computation
VAT Payable = Output VAT - Input VAT
Standard Rate: 12%
B. VAT-able Transactions
| Category | Subject to VAT | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Sale of goods/properties | In the ordinary course of trade/business | 12% |
| Sale of services | For a fee, including leases | 12% |
| Importation | All imports (unless exempt) | 12% |
| Export sales | Zero-rated (no output VAT) | 0% |
C. VAT Exempt vs Zero-Rated
VAT EXEMPT
- No output VAT imposed
- No input VAT credit allowed
- Input VAT becomes cost
- Examples: Agricultural products, educational services, health services
ZERO-RATED
- Output VAT = 0%
- Input VAT credit ALLOWED
- Can claim refund of input VAT
- Examples: Export sales, sales to PEZA, diplomatic sales
D. VAT Registration Threshold
VAT Registration Required if:
Gross annual sales/receipts exceed ₱3,000,000
Below threshold: Subject to 3% Percentage Tax instead (or 8% flat rate option for self-employed)
5. Other Business Taxes 💼
A. Percentage Tax (Non-VAT)
| Type | Rate | Base |
|---|---|---|
| Non-VAT registered (below threshold) | 3% | Gross sales/receipts |
| Banks on interest income | 5% | Gross receipts from interest |
| Common carriers (land transport) | 3% | Gross quarterly receipts |
| Overseas dispatch (air/sea) | 3% | Gross receipts |
B. Withholding Tax
| Income Type | Withholding Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| Interest on bank deposits | 20% Final Tax |
| Dividends (from domestic corp) | 10% Final Tax |
| Royalties (books, literary works) | 10% Final Tax |
| Royalties (other) | 20% Final Tax |
| Capital gains on shares (not traded) | 15% Final Tax |
| Capital gains on real property | 6% Final Tax |
6. Tax Remedies & Compliance 📋
A. Prescriptive Periods
| Action | Period | From When |
|---|---|---|
| BIR Assessment (regular) | 3 years | Last day for filing or date of actual filing, whichever is later |
| BIR Assessment (false/fraudulent) | 10 years | Discovery of fraud/falsity |
| BIR Collection | 5 years | Assessment date |
| Taxpayer Claim for Refund | 2 years | Date of payment |
B. Tax Remedies
Government Remedies:
- Distraint (personal property)
- Levy (real property)
- Tax lien
- Compromise and abatement
- Civil and criminal action
Taxpayer Remedies:
- Administrative protest (BIR)
- Appeal to CTA
- Claim for refund
- Claim for tax credit
7. Practice Questions - Test Yourself! 📝
Taxation Practice Problems (Click to expand)
1. An individual with ₱300,000 taxable income will pay how much income tax?
A) ₱0
B) ₱7,500
C) ₱22,500
D) ₱45,000
Answer: B - Tax = 15% × (₱300,000 - ₱250,000) = 15% × ₱50,000 = ₱7,500
2. What is the RCIT rate for domestic corporations under CREATE Law?
A) 20%
B) 25%
C) 30%
D) 35%
Answer: B - The regular RCIT rate is 25% under CREATE Law (20% for small corporations).
3. The standard VAT rate in the Philippines is:
A) 3%
B) 8%
C) 10%
D) 12%
Answer: D - The standard VAT rate in the Philippines is 12%.
4. For VAT purposes, export sales are:
A) VAT exempt
B) Subject to 12% VAT
C) Zero-rated
D) Subject to 3% percentage tax
Answer: C - Export sales are zero-rated (0% VAT), meaning no output VAT but input VAT credits are allowed.
5. The BIR has how many years to assess a deficiency tax for a regular return?
A) 2 years
B) 3 years
C) 5 years
D) 10 years
Answer: B - Regular assessment prescribes in 3 years (10 years if fraudulent).
6. Final tax on cash dividends from a domestic corporation is:
A) 5%
B) 10%
C) 15%
D) 20%
Answer: B - Cash dividends from a domestic corporation are subject to 10% final withholding tax.
🎯 Taxation Board Exam Tips!
- Memorize the graduated tax table - compute tax manually!
- Know TRAIN Law vs CREATE Law changes
- Understand VAT mechanics: Output - Input = Payable
- Differentiate VAT exempt vs Zero-rated (input VAT treatment!)
- Remember prescriptive periods: 3 years regular, 10 years fraud
- Know final withholding tax rates: 20% interest, 10% dividends, 6% CGT on real property
Taxation is the lifeblood of the nation - pero kailangan mo munang pumasa sa board exam! Kaya mo yan, future CPA! 💪
Test Your Knowledge! 🧠
Ready ka na ba? Take the practice quiz for Taxation to reinforce what you just learned.
Start Practice Quiz 📝