- Flat 5% GST Rate:
- Applies to most goods and services, including electricity
- Zero-rated or exempt: Rice, salt, cooking oil, sanitary pads, wheelchairs, health, education, financial services, and exports
- Digital Services Tax:
- Foreign providers of digital services must register and charge GST on sales to Bhutanese consumers
- Registration Threshold:
- Businesses with annual turnover above BTN 5 million must register for GST
- Input Tax Credit:
- Businesses can deduct input GST paid on purchases, improving tax neutrality
- Failed Tech Platform Replaced:
- Original Bhutan Integrated Taxation System (BITS) was scrapped after delays and cost overruns
- A new system, BITS 2, is being developed by a New Zealand firm with a budget over USD 12 million
- Legislative Approval:
- The GST (Amendment) Bill 2025 was passed by Parliament and awaits Royal Assent
- Appeals & Oversight:
- Tax disputes will be handled by a Review Board under the Ministry of Finance, not an independent tribunal
- New provisions include immunity for witnesses and clearer appeal routes to the Royal Court of Justice
- Dual VAT Model:
- CBS (Contribuição sobre Bens e Serviços) – federal VAT replacing PIS and Cofins
- IBS (Imposto sobre Bens e Serviços) – state/municipal VAT replacing ICMS and ISS
- IS (Imposto Seletivo) – new excise tax replacing IPI, targeting goods harmful to health/environment
- Phased Rollout (2026–2033):
- 2026: Pilot rates of 0.9% CBS and 0.1% IBS
- 2027: PIS, Cofins, and IPI phased out
- 2029: ICMS and ISS begin phase-out
- 2033: Full implementation with combined VAT rate around 28%
- Split Payment Mechanism:
- Taxes automatically withheld and remitted at the time of transaction settlement — reducing fraud and easing compliance
- Special Regimes & Exemptions:
- Zero-rated: Basic food basket, select medicines
- Reduced rates: Education, public transport, healthcare (40% of standard rate)
- Exempt sectors: Public transport, artistic/journalistic services
- Real-Time Compliance:
- Mandatory electronic invoicing
- Tax reporting integrated with ERP systems
- Credits and refunds streamlined for excess input VAT
- Destination-Based Taxation:
- VAT applies where goods/services are consumed, aligning Brazil with global norms
- Replaces the 1994 Provisional VAT Regulations
- Introduces clearer definitions for taxable transactions, deemed sales, and non-taxable items
- Retains the three-tier VAT rate structure: 13%, 9%, and 6%
- Codifies the excess input VAT refund system
- Aligns with international standards by applying the place-of-consumption principle for services
Italy will launch a new consolidated VAT Code on January 1, 2026, streamlining decades of fragmented legislation:
- Unifies Presidential Decree No. 633/1972 and Legislative Decree No. 331/1993 into one code with 171 articles
- Aligns with EU VAT Directive (2006/112/EC) for consistency
- Digital export documentation required via AES (Automated Export System)
- E-invoicing fully integrated into VAT law, including:
- Daily receipt reporting
- Pre-filled VAT returns
- Clarifies VAT rules for digital services, including streaming events
- Simplifies deduction rules and harmonizes treatment of mixed-use goods
Kazakhstan has approved a new Tax Code that will take effect on January 1, 2026, introducing major VAT changes:
- Standard VAT rate increases from 12% to 16%
- New reduced rates:
- 5% for medicines and medical services (rising to 10% in 2027)
- 10% for printed publications
- Expanded exemptions:
- Free medical care and social health insurance
- Book publishing and archaeological services
- Lower VAT registration threshold: from 78.6 million to 15 million tenge
- Bank fees become taxable for the first time
- Stricter e-invoicing rules: tax authorities may suspend e-invoices if businesses ignore audit notices
Liberia’s Upcoming VAT Regime (2026)
- Standard VAT Rate: 18%, replacing the current 10% GST
- GST Phase-Out: The GST system, in place since 2001, will be abolished entirely
- Regional Alignment: This move fulfills Liberia’s commitment to the ECOWAS VAT Directive C/DIR.3/07/2023, which mandates VAT adoption by all member states
- Key Exemptions: Agricultural products, medical services, and educational services will be exempt from VAT, protecting vulnerable consumers
- Small Business Relief: Enterprises below a certain turnover threshold will be excluded from VAT registration, easing compliance for micro-entrepreneurs
- Implementation Roadmap:
- Draft VAT law and White Paper completed
- Public awareness campaigns underway
- IT systems and tax official training in progress