Get free access to
Our legislation updates make it easy for you to keep on top of the latest changes affecting your business. Receive our articles, opinions, tips, industry news, country profiles, regional overviews and studies, latest events and even more, directly into your mailbox.
Check out our Newsroom to see what is included!
We will send you only relevant information we consider may be of your interest and treat your personal data in compliance with our Privacy policy and GDPR statement.
Unable to subscribe? Try this page.
Within the operations of international corporate groups, it is commonplace for affiliated entities to engage in intercompany transactions. These transactions can take various forms, such as:
The Hungarian Corporate Income Tax Act (Tao. tv.) sets out specific rules for such transactions and requires that their pricing comply with the arm’s length principle.
The arm’s length principle requires that the pricing of intra-group transactions be consistent with the price that would have been agreed upon between independent parties under comparable circumstances.
To determine the appropriate price, a benchmarking analysis is typically conducted using a database, which groups market data into a range based on profitability indicators. Within this range:
The arm’s length range therefore consists of the values between Q1 and Q3. If a company’s profit level falls outside this range, Hungarian regulations require it to be adjusted accordingly.
As of 2022, the regulations have become stricter: by default, the target of the adjustment is no longer any point within the arm’s length range, but specifically the median value.
This means that if the pricing of a related-party transaction falls below the arm’s length range, the company is required to adjust its corporate tax base up to the median. In many cases, this requirement can significantly increase the taxable base.
The legislation also allows for a more favorable approach: the year-end adjustment. In this case, the taxpayer does not need to adjust the transaction’s profitability up to the median, but only up to the lower quartile (Q1).
The Hungarian Accounting Act treats such adjustments as an option, meaning that related parties may adjust the acquisition cost of assets, their expenses and costs, as well as their revenues, by the difference between the applied transfer price and the arm’s length price.
If the taxpayer opts for this approach, the retrospective transfer pricing adjustment is handled either through invoice modification (where possible at the individual transaction level) or by issuing a corrective accounting document.
This year-end adjustment is implemented in practice either through corrective invoicing or by issuing an accounting document, and it offers several advantages:
Base data:
The company applied an 8.5% profit margin on costs of HUF 400 million, which results in a profit of:
HUF 400,000,000 × 8.5% = HUF 34 million
Since this profit falls below the arm’s length range of 10.21% to 32.01%, an adjustment is required.
If the company does not carry out a year-end adjustment, it must increase its corporate income tax base to the median level.
The median is 21.10%, so the arm’s length profit would be:
HUF 400,000,000 × 21.10% = HUF 84.4 million
This means the difference between the actual profit (HUF 34 million) and the median-based profit (HUF 84.4 million) is:
84.4 – 34 = HUF 50.4 million
In this case, the company must increase its corporate tax base by HUF 50.4 million.
It is also important to note that local business tax and the innovation contribution are subject to separate methods for determining the tax base.
We emphasize that adjustments to these tax bases may also be required.
If the company opts for a year-end adjustment, it is sufficient to reach the lower quartile profitability level, i.e. 10.21%.
In this case, the calculation is as follows:
HUF 400,000,000 × 10.21% = HUF 40.84 million
Given that the actual profit is HUF 34 million, the amount of the required adjustment is:
40.84 – 34 = HUF 6.84 million
At year-end, an accounting document or corrective invoice must be issued for HUF 6.84 million to the related party. This ensures that the profitability level reaches the lower bound of the arm’s length range, and the transaction is deemed compliant with the arm’s length principle.
In such cases, no corporate tax base adjustment is required. Moreover, if an actual settlement is made between the parties in connection with the transfer pricing adjustment, no further tax base modification is necessary for local business tax or the innovation contribution either.
The table below compares the key financial figures of the two adjustment methods, clearly illustrating the difference between a corporate tax base adjustment to the median and a year-end adjustment up to the lower quartile.
Type of adjustment | Final profit | Adjustment amount | Corporate tax base adjustment required? |
To Median (Tax Base Adjustment) | HUF 84.4 million | HUF 50.4 million | Yes |
To Lower Quartile (Year-End Adjustment) | HUF 40.84 million | HUF 6.84 million | No |
Based on the table, it is clear that an adjustment to the median results in a significantly higher increase in the tax base (HUF 50.4 million), whereas a year-end adjustment to the lower quartile can be achieved with a much smaller accounting entry (or in some cases, invoicing) of only HUF 6.84 million, without triggering any further tax base modification.
This comparison clearly demonstrates that the year-end adjustment is a far more cost-effective option, while still ensuring full compliance with the applicable regulations.
If a company fails to adjust its profit level that falls below the arm’s length range:
This poses a significant financial risk, especially in the case of high-value transactions.
Year-end adjustments offer companies a cost-efficient way to ensure compliance with the arm’s length principle.
The key advantages of this approach include:
This solution allows businesses to achieve both tax compliance and economic efficiency at the same time.