CFE’s Tax Top 5 – 24 November 2025

BRUSSELS | 24 NOVEMBER 2025

2025 Update to the OECD Model Tax Convention


Last week, the OECD published the 2025 Update to the OECD Model Tax Convention, introducing changes to reflect modern cross-border working arrangements and to clarify the taxation of income from the extraction of natural resources. The update will be incorporated into the revised condensed and full editions of the Model, to be released in 2026.

Cross-Border Working Arrangements
The update clarifies when short-term cross-border remote work, including work performed from a home office in another jurisdiction, constitutes a fixed place of business permanent establishment for treaty purposes. The revised Commentary on Article 5 provides a structured framework for assessing permanence, the proportion of time spent working in the other State, and whether the individual’s presence there serves a commercial purpose for the enterprise. It confirms that most employee-driven remote-working arrangements will not create a taxable presence unless the facts indicate that the enterprise benefits from or requires activities to be performed in that jurisdiction.

Transfer Pricing Issues Arising from Financial Transactions & Interest Deductibility
The update amends the Commentary on Article 9 to address transfer pricing issues arising from financial transactions and to clarify the interaction between Article 9 and domestic rules on interest deductibility, including those developed under BEPS Action 4. Related adjustments are made to the Commentaries on Articles 7 and 24. Further changes to Article 25 highlight language relevant to Amount B, ensuring that non-adopting jurisdictions retain full optionality across dispute-resolution mechanisms. The Commentary on Article 26 is expanded to confirm that exchanged information may be used for tax matters involving persons other than those initially covered, and to reflect agreed guidance on taxpayer access and non-taxpayer-specific information derived from exchanged data.

Taxation of Exploitation of Natural Resources
A new optional provision is introduced to govern the taxation of activities connected with the exploration and exploitation of extractible natural resources. This provision establishes a lower permanent establishment threshold—triggered once a non-resident enterprise carries out relevant activities in a State for more than a bilaterally agreed period—and includes source-country taxing rights over gains associated with natural-resource assets. The accompanying Commentary offers detailed guidance, reflecting common treaty practice and the policy interest of resource-endowed countries.

The 2025 Update also includes a broad set of additions and revisions to OECD Member and non-Member reservations and observations, reflecting diverse policy positions across provisions dealing with residence, fiscal transparency, royalties, capital gains, employment income and administrative cooperation.

webinar will be held by the OECD on 10 December from 16:00 – 17:00 CET, in which the changes to the Model Tax Convention will be explained and discussed by Manal Corwin, Director of the OECD Centre for Tax Policy and Administration, and other members of the Tax Treaty Team at the OECD.

Evaluation of the EU Directive on Administrative Cooperation in Taxation (DAC)


The European Commission has published the 2018-2023 evaluation on the Directive on Administrative Cooperation (DAC), with the report setting out that the Directive has significantly strengthened Member States’ ability to address tax fraud, evasion and avoidance, particularly through the expansion of automatic exchange of information.

The report finds that DAC mechanisms are effective and increasingly used, with timely and generally high-quality data under DAC1 and DAC2 supporting both risk assessment and voluntary compliance. However, gaps remain for DAC3, DAC4 and DAC6, where incomplete information, such as missing taxpayer identification numbers and insufficient detail in rulings or free-text disclosures, continues to limit usability and matching rates. Despite these issues, the DAC delivers substantial financial benefits, estimated at EUR 6.8 billion per year, compared to annual costs of around EUR 646 million, most of which fall on reporting entities under DAC2.

The framework is found to be broadly coherent with EU anti-money-laundering and VAT administrative cooperation rules and aligned with international standards, providing clear EU added value by harmonising reporting requirements, minimising bilateral fragmentation and enabling exchanges through common secure IT systems. The DAC remains highly relevant as tax administrations confront new challenges linked to digital platforms, mobile taxpayers and crypto-assets, with DAC7 and DAC8 expected to play a growing role as new data becomes available.

Implementation lessons highlight that repeated amendments have made the legal framework increasingly complex, particularly with respect to DAC6, where broadly drafted hallmarks and divergent national interpretations drive legal uncertainty, inconsistent application and increased administrative burden. Penalties for non-compliance differ widely between Member States, raising concerns about deterrence and the level playing field. While data quality has improved, especially for DAC1 and DAC2, persistent mismatches still require resource-intensive manual corrections, and use of exchanged data varies, with limited transparency on outcomes.

Looking ahead, the Commission plans to simplify and consolidate the DAC, assess the need to adjust DAC6 hallmarks, and provide more systematic EU-level guidance to improve consistency. It will also engage with Member States to strengthen penalties regimes, explore an EU-wide taxpayer identification number to enhance matching, and encourage more systematic integration of DAC data into domestic tax processes, including pre-filled returns and risk-analysis systems. The report also notes the potential benefits of a more centralised EU IT architecture to reduce costs, increase agility and improve data quality.

OECD Publications: Key International Tax Developments


OECD Secretary-General Tax Report to G20 Leaders
The OECD has published the OECD’s Secretary-General Tax Report to G20 Leaders, prepared for the  G20 Leaders’ Summit held over the weekend in Johannesburg, South Africa. The OECD’s 2025 report to G20 Leaders provides an update on global tax co-operation, highlighting advances on the Pillar Two global minimum tax, the continued roll-out of BEPS commitments and strengthened tax transparency frameworks.

The reports confirms that more than 65 jurisdictions have taken steps to implement GloBE rules, supported by new simplification measures, risk assessment tools and a multilateral exchange mechanism for GloBE information. Work continues on a potential “side-by-side” approach to address US concerns about duplicative minimum tax systems while maintaining the integrity of Pillar Two. A decade of BEPS implementation shows wide modernisation of tax systems, with most harmful regimes amended or abolished, extensive treaty updates through the BEPS MLI and significant expansion of CbCR exchanges.

The Inclusive Framework has also launched analytical work on tax, inequality and growth, and is examining tax challenges linked to global workforce mobility. On transparency, Global Forum membership now includes 172 jurisdictions, with broad uptake of CRS and the CARF, growing use of EOI in practice and notable revenue mobilisation in Africa. The OECD has also delivered a new voluntary framework for the automatic exchange of readily available information on cross-border real estate holdings.

OECD Tax Administration Series 2025
The 2025 Tax Administration Report reflects on a decade of significant digital transformation across 58 tax administrations, with sustained moves towards integrated, automated and data-driven compliance models. Online interactions have tripled since 2014 while in-person contacts have more than halved, reflecting near-universal e-filing and electronic payments across the major taxes.

Pre-filled returns are now used in almost 90% of jurisdictions, underpinned by expanded third-party reporting and advanced data analytics, though on-time filing and payment rates have remained broadly static. A rapid increase in the adoption of artificial intelligence is reshaping administrative operations, with nearly 70% of administrations using AI for risk management, fraud detection, identity verification and automation of high-volume processes.

Administrations also report wider use of e-invoicing, predictive analytics and behavioural insights, though improved upstream compliance may be contributing to declining audit yields. Persistent pressures remain in arrears management—totalling EUR 2.7 trillion in 2023—and workforce capacity, as staffing levels fall and the age profile rises, accelerating investment in automation, new skill sets and restructured operating models.

Enhancing Simplicity to Foster Tax Certainty and Growth
The OECD’s November 2025 report on “Enhancing Simplicity to Foster Tax Certainty and Growth” explores how complexity in tax rules and processes, particularly in cross-border investment contexts, can be mitigated through multilateral co-operation, clearer design of tax regimes and reducing unnecessary compliance burdens.

The report identifies drivers of complexity (such as overlapping regimes and uncertain outcomes) and proposes a “simplicity checklist” for rule-design along with further work across stakeholders to prioritise reform. The report emphasises that greater simplicity supports tax certainty, which in turn may foster growth by reducing costs for taxpayers and administrations alike.

European Commission Launches Digital-Rule Simplification Package to Boost Business Competitiveness 


    The European Commission has published a comprehensive digital simplification package aimed at reducing administrative burdens and improving legal clarity for EU businesses, while maintaining high standards of data protection, safety and fairness. The package is built around three core pillars: the Digital Omnibus Regulations, the Data Union Strategy and the European Business Wallet Regulation.

    The Digital Omnibus proposes targeted amendments across the EU’s digital acquis, including rules on data protection, cybersecurity and platform governance. It introduces a single entry-point for digital incident reporting, aiming to eliminate duplicative submissions. The proposal also updates cookie consent rules to allow users to set preferences once and enable automated signals, reducing repeated banner interactions. It clarifies several GDPR concepts, including the definition of personal data in line with recent Court of Justice case-law, and expressly recognises the development and operation of AI systems as a legitimate interest for processing.

    A separate AI-specific Omnibus adjusts the implementation of the AI Act to facilitate compliance, particularly for SMEs. The proposal delays certain high-risk AI obligations until relevant standards are finalised, expands national and cross-border sandboxes and introduces an EU-level sandbox from 2028 for SMEs and small mid-caps. It provides simplified technical documentation requirements expected to save approximately €225 million annually, and consolidates oversight of general-purpose AI models within the AI Office to streamline governance.

    The Data Union Strategy seeks to expand access to high-quality data for AI development and responsible innovation. It includes new model contractual terms and standard contractual clauses for data access and cloud computing to reduce negotiation complexity and promote interoperability. The strategy also establishes a Data Act Legal Helpdesk to support businesses, and sets out a toolbox to reinforce EU data sovereignty, including safeguards aimed at preventing the leakage of sensitive non-personal data to third countries.

    The proposed European Business Wallet Regulation introduces a secure, interoperable digital identity enabling companies and public bodies to authenticate, sign, seal and exchange verified documents across Member States. The Wallet is intended to simplify cross-border administrative interactions, including tax and VAT registration, procurement processes and regulatory filings. The Commission estimates that widespread adoption could generate up to €150 billion in annual savings for businesses.

    Across the package, the Commission estimates that the various simplification measures could collectively save up to €5 billion in administrative burdens by 2029. All proposals will proceed through the ordinary legislative procedure in the European Parliament and Council. In parallel, the Commission has launched a two-year Digital Fitness Check consultation, running until March 2026, to assess the coherence, competitiveness and cumulative impact of the EU’s digital regulatory framework.

    EU Cross-Border VAT Fraud Evaluation & Reform Proposal


      The European Commission’s latest evaluation of the EU framework for VAT administrative cooperation reports on both clear progress and persistent gaps in the fight against cross-border VAT fraud. The report identifies that while tools such as the Eurofisc network and the VAT Information Exchange System (VIES) continue to underpin Member States’ efforts, substantial improvements remain necessary.

      The evaluation covers the period 2018-2024 and assesses the framework against five criteria: effectiveness, efficiency, relevance, coherence and EU added value.  Key findings show that intra-EU trade in goods increased by 37 % between 2018 and 2023, from EUR 3 018 billion to EUR 4 134 billion, thereby raising stakes for VAT compliance.  The estimated VAT compliance gap for 2022 stood at EUR 89 billion or 7.0 % of the total VAT liability in the EU.

      On effectiveness, the report acknowledges that the legal basis enables Member States to access a broad toolbox of cooperation means, but usage and timeliness remain issues. For example, the number of information-exchange requests exchanged on request has fallen by almost 25 % over the preceding six years, stabilising at around 30 000 in 2023, yet nearly 28 % of replies arrive after the 30-day deadline.  Eurofisc is identified as the most effective cooperation tool, with some EUR 14.8 billion of suspicious transactions uncovered in 2024, though this represents only about 24 % of the estimated minimum level of missing-trader intra-Community (MTIC) fraud.

      The report also flags that the framework is still not fully geared to the multidisciplinary, law-enforcement-and-administration style of fraud networks: additional data sources (such as bank-transaction data or beneficiary-ownership registers) could improve detection of more complex fraud chains.

      In tandem with the evaluation, the Commission has put forward a proposal for a Regulation to strengthen the access of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) and the European Anti‑Fraud Office (OLAF) to VAT information at Union level. The explanatory memorandum emphasises that MTIC fraud in 2023 was estimated at between EUR 12.5 billion and EUR 32.8 billion, and that current legal arrangements hamper EPPO and OLAF investigations by requiring reliance on national authorities for access.

      The proposed amendment seeks to enhance the legal basis for EPPO and OLAF to access centralised data in order to accelerate investigations and improve the dismantling of organised-fraud networks. In this way it seeks to increase inter-agency coordination, improve the timeliness of data exchanges, and ensure deeper scrutiny of cross-border supply chains. This reflects the Commission’s intention to modernise VAT-fraud defence mechanisms at the EU level, complementing national efforts, and leveraging on new data sources for earlier and more precise detection.


      The selection of the remitted material has been prepared by:
      Dr. Aleksandar Ivanovski & Brodie McIntosh