BRUSSELS | 22 DECEMBER 2025
EU Commission Opens Consultation on Recast of the Directive on Administrative Cooperation
The European Commission has launched a call for evidence and public consultation on a recast of the Directive on Administrative Cooperation in the field of direct taxation (DAC), as part of its REFIT agenda and broader efforts to simplify EU law and reduce administrative burdens.
The initiative follows on from the Commission’s evaluation of DAC1–DAC6 published in June 2025, which concluded that the DAC framework has significantly strengthened Member States’ ability to combat tax fraud, evasion and avoidance, generating estimated net benefits of EUR 6.8 billion per year, but also highlighted growing complexity, fragmented implementation and persistent data-quality and compliance challenges, particularly under DAC3, DAC4 and DAC6.
Against this background, the Commission is consulting concerning a consolidation of DAC1–DAC9 into a single legal instrument, alongside targeted reform measures to streamline overlapping and duplicative reporting obligations (notably between DAC4 and DAC9 in the context of Pillar Two), improve the functioning and proportionality of DAC6, revisit thresholds under DAC7, enhance taxpayer identification and IT interoperability, and improve the completeness of information exchange. An impact assessment is planned, with a legislative proposal currently envisaged for Q2 2026.
CFE Tax Advisers Europe will contribute to the ongoing consultation and has already submitted an Opinion Statement in 2025 welcoming consolidation and simplification of the DAC framework, while calling for targeted rationalisation of DAC6 hallmarks, clearer sequencing rules to avoid duplicative reporting, alignment of DAC4 and DAC9 notifications, harmonised penalties and clearer treatment of legal professional privilege.
OECD Consultation on the Global Mobility of Individuals
Today marked the submission deadline of the OECD public consultation examining the tax challenges arising from the increasing global mobility of individuals, including cross-border remote working, short-term assignments and highly mobile professionals. The consultation sought stakeholder input on how existing international tax rules apply in these contexts, and whether further clarification, coordination or reform is needed to ensure tax certainty, fairness and administrability in a post-pandemic environment.
CFE Tax Advisers Europe published an Opinion Statement responding to the consultation, drawing on the practical experience of European tax advisers supporting individuals and employers engaged in cross-border mobility. The Statement observes that global mobility has intensified significantly, placing strain on domestic residence rules, tax treaty concepts and employment income provisions that were developed for more static working patterns. The Statement highlights that in practice, inconsistent interpretation of residence tests, days-count thresholds, permanent establishment concepts and employer obligations across jurisdictions can give rise to uncertainty, double taxation risks and disproportionate compliance burdens, particularly for remote workers and short-term assignees.
CFE calls on the OECD to provide clearer and more coherent guidance on the application of existing international tax rules to mobile individuals, with a focus on residence determination, remote working arrangements and employer compliance responsibilities. The Statement emphasises proportionality and administrability, especially in low-risk or short-term mobility scenarios, and highlights the importance of improved coordination between tax authorities, including effective dispute prevention and resolution mechanisms, to enhance tax certainty for taxpayers acting in good faith.
Separately, the Global Tax Advisers Platform, of which CFE is a founding member, has also submitted a detailed response to the same OECD consultation, reflecting the collective experience of tax advisers across multiple regions. The GTAP submission identifies persistent uncertainty around tax residence, employment income sourcing, employer withholding obligations and permanent establishment risk, as well as misalignment between tax, social security, company law and immigration frameworks. GTAP emphasises the need for internationally aligned safe harbours, clearer residence tie-breaker guidance, proportionate compliance thresholds and stronger coordination between tax authorities to reduce double taxation risks and administrative friction for mobile individuals and their employers.
Both submissions underline that while existing international tax principles remain broadly relevant, their application to modern mobility patterns is often unclear and inconsistent. They encourage the OECD to develop pragmatic, coherent and administrable guidance that reflects real-world working arrangements and supports tax certainty for taxpayers acting in good faith.
BEPS Action 5 Peer Review Reports on the Exchange of Information on Tax Rulings
