Permanent Establishment (PE)

A Permanent Establishment (PE) is a legal/tax concept used to decide when a foreign (non-resident) enterprise has a sufficient presence in a country such that that country can tax profits arising from activities carried on there. Typical examples of a PE are a branch, office, factory, workshop, or a place where services are provided for a prolonged period.

Core elements and common tests

  1. Fixed place of business

    • There must be a physical location (office, branch, factory, workshop, or even a construction site) that is fixed (it has a degree of permanence) and is used to carry on the business activities of the enterprise.

    • Temporary or highly mobile activities may still create PE if they meet duration/continuity tests (e.g., long-running construction projects).

  2. Degree of permanence

    • The location need not be permanent forever, but it must be more than a fleeting or occasional presence. Many jurisdictions and tax treaties use time thresholds (e.g., construction lasting more than 6–12 months) to determine permanence.

  3. Business carried on through that place

    • The enterprise must carry out its business through the fixed place. Passive activities (purely storage, display of goods, or preparatory/auxiliary activities) are often carved out or treated differently under tax treaties.

  4. Dependent agent vs. independent agent

    • A PE can be created by a person acting on behalf of the foreign enterprise. If a dependent agent (employee or agent under the firm’s control) habitually concludes contracts in the host country, that agent can create a PE.

    • By contrast, an independent agent (operating in the ordinary course of their own business, fully independent) generally does not create a PE for the foreign principal.

  5. Service PE

    • Some rules treat prolonged provision of services (e.g., consultant teams working in-country for many months) as creating a PE, even without a fixed office.

  6. Construction/site PE

    • Construction, installation or supervisory projects often generate a PE if they last beyond a treaty-specified period (commonly 6–12 months).

Attribution of profit to the PE

  • Once a PE exists, the host country may tax the profits attributable to the PE — not necessarily all of the enterprise’s worldwide profits.

  • Attribution follows the principle that the PE should be taxed as if it were a distinct and separate enterprise dealing at arm’s-length with the head office. That means:

    • Identify functions performed, assets used, and risks assumed by the PE.

    • Allocate revenue and expenses that reflect what an independent enterprise in the same situation would earn/charge.

  • Transfer pricing rules and the OECD Model Tax Convention guidance (or local rules) are commonly used to determine arm’s-length allocations.

International law / treaty context

  • Many countries base PE definitions on the OECD Model Tax Convention (and its commentary), but domestic laws and some treaties may diverge.

  • Treaties often include specific exemptions (e.g., activities that are preparatory or auxiliary are excluded), and may provide different thresholds for construction/service PEs.

  • The tie-breaker and mutual agreement procedures in treaties and advance rulings can be used to resolve PE disputes between jurisdictions.

Practical consequences for the foreign enterprise

  1. Tax liability

    • Income attributable to the PE becomes taxable in the host country; local corporate tax, withholding, and possibly payroll/social-security obligations may apply.

  2. Compliance obligations

    • Registration, filing local tax returns, maintaining local accounts, paying estimated taxes, VAT/GST registration, payroll reporting, and local employment law compliance may be required.

  3. Permanent vs. temporary effects

    • Once a PE is created, it can persist for the project’s duration and sometimes beyond (e.g., associated equipment, employees). Closing down a PE requires decommissioning the local presence and ensuring local tax authorities accept the closure.

Common risks and challenges

  • Unintended PE creation: Sales visits, short-term projects, or having a local agent can inadvertently create PE risk.

  • Double taxation: Profits may be taxed both in the home and host country — treaties and foreign tax credits typically mitigate this, but timing and characterization issues remain.

  • Transfer pricing disputes: Attribution of profits can trigger audits and transfer-pricing adjustments.

  • Different domestic rules: Domestic definitions and administrative practices vary widely, increasing compliance complexity.

Practical steps to manage PE risk

  1. Map activities and presence: Document where employees work, what agents do, and the nature/duration of local projects.

  2. Review contracts & agents: Use contract language to clarify agent independence and limit contracting authority where appropriate.

  3. Apply treaty tests: Check relevant tax treaties for PE exceptions (preparatory/auxiliary activities, independent agent carve-outs, treatment of short-term construction/service activities).

  4. Transfer pricing documentation: Maintain robust documentation showing arm’s-length attribution of functions, assets, and risks.

  5. Seek advance rulings / MAP: Consider advance pricing agreements, rulings, or Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) to obtain certainty or resolve disputes.

  6. Local compliance readiness: If PE risk cannot be eliminated, prepare to register, file, and operate with local tax, payroll, and VAT compliance in mind.

Short illustrative examples

  • A marketing rep who only takes orders in the home country and occasionally visits clients abroad — no PE in most cases.

  • A sales employee in Country B who habitually concludes contracts or negotiates essential terms — likely PE (dependent agent).

  • A 9-month building project in Country C — construction PE if the local treaty’s threshold is 6 months.

  • A remote software company sending consultants for 7 months to implement systems — may create a service PE depending on local rules/treaty.

Conclusion (summary)

A Permanent Establishment determines when a foreign company has a taxable presence in another country. Establishment depends on physical presence, duration, and the activities/authority of people acting locally. Once a PE exists, profits attributable to those local activities can be taxed by the host country — making early identification, careful contracting, transfer-pricing documentation, and proactive compliance essential to avoid disputes and double taxation.