Tax Compliance in Turkey: A Complete Guide for Foreign Companies

Tax Compliance in Turkey: Complete Guide for Foreign Companies | OZM Blog
🇹🇷 EXPERT INSIGHT | OZM COMPLIANCE SERIES

Tax Compliance in Turkey: A Complete Guide for Foreign Companies

From corporate tax to digital services levy — navigate Türkiye’s tax landscape with confidence. Updated for 2026 regulations, double tax treaties, and enforcement trends.

Turkey has emerged as a critical hub for foreign investment, bridging Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. However, its tax system is dynamic, heavily digitized, and strictly enforced. For foreign companies — whether operating through a subsidiary, branch, or without a physical presence — understanding corporate tax, VAT, withholding obligations, and Digital Services Tax (DST) is the cornerstone of sustainable operations. This guide delivers a full compliance roadmap, penalties to avoid, and strategic tips to optimize your tax position.

🎯 Key takeaway: The Turkish Tax Procedure Law (VUK) requires rigorous documentation. Even a minor misdeclaration may trigger penalties. Foreign entities must assess permanent establishment (PE) risk, transfer pricing rules, and e-invoicing mandates.

📊 1. Corporate Income Tax (CIT)

Resident companies (legal seat or management in Turkey) pay CIT on worldwide income. Non-resident companies pay CIT only on Turkey-sourced income if they have a permanent establishment (PE) or derive certain revenues (e.g., services, royalties).

Tax YearStandard CIT RateFinancial Sector RateExport / R&D Reduction
202625%30%Up to 5% reduction with incentives
202525%30%Same framework

Corporate tax returns are filed annually by the end of the 4th month following the fiscal year (April 30 for calendar year). Advance provisional tax returns are due quarterly (March, June, September, December).

💡 Pro tip for foreign companies: Even if you don’t have a legal entity, digital activities or dependent agents may create a PE. Get a PE analysis before starting operations.

💰 2. Withholding Tax (WHT) on Cross-Border Payments

Turkey applies withholding taxes on payments made to non-residents, unless reduced by a Double Taxation Treaty (DTT). Standard rates:

  • Dividends: 15% (10% for listed shares, treaty rates may be 5-15%)
  • Royalties & license fees: 20% (standard) – can be reduced to 10% or lower under DTTs (e.g., UK, Germany, US treaties)
  • Technical services / consulting fees: 20% WHT (deemed as royalty in some cases)
  • Interest on loans: 10% (bank loans 0% if specific conditions met, treaty relief)

Foreign companies must ensure the Turkish payer deducts WHT at source. To benefit from treaty rates, non-residents must obtain a Tax Residency Certificate and submit a “Treaty Relief” application.

🔔 Important update: As of 2025, Turkey increased scrutiny on “service PE” and withholding on management fees. Failure to withhold exposes the Turkish entity to liability.

🧾 3. Value Added Tax (KDV) – Key for Foreign Entities

Standard VAT rate is 20% (reduced rates: 10% for basic food/textbooks, 1% for certain residential deliveries). Foreign companies providing digital services or e-commerce to Turkish consumers must register for VAT if they exceed certain thresholds? Actually, since 2021, non-resident digital service providers must register via the “VAT on Digital Services” simplified regime – submit quarterly returns (no threshold). Also, foreign firms with a PE file normal VAT returns.

For B2B services imported from abroad, reverse charge mechanism applies: Turkish client accounts for VAT. But in many cases, the non-resident must still register if they provide electronically supplied services (e-books, apps, streaming) to non-VAT registered persons.

📌 VAT Refund for Foreign Companies: Non-residents without a PE can reclaim Turkish VAT incurred on expenses (e.g., trade fairs, consultancy) through the VAT Refund for Non-Residents procedure. Time limits apply (end of calendar year + 6 months).

📱 4. Digital Services Tax (DST) – The Game Changer

Turkey introduced DST in 2020, targeting global digital giants. The rate is 7.5% on revenues derived from digital advertising, social media, app stores, and multi-sided platforms where the service is provided to Turkish users. Liable companies: global consolidated revenue > €750 million AND digital service revenue from Turkey > TRY 20 million (approx).

DST is filed quarterly, due by the last day of the following month. No deduction for VAT or corporate tax. This is particularly relevant for foreign tech companies (Google, Meta, Amazon, etc.) but also any non-resident earning digital ad revenue from Turkish IP addresses.

⚖️ Interaction with OECD Pillar One: While Turkey supports global tax reform, DST remains in effect until a multilateral solution is implemented. Foreign digital platforms must comply or face stiff penalties (up to TRY 10 million per tax procedure).

🏢 5. Permanent Establishment & Transfer Pricing Rules

Foreign companies without a legal entity can still be subject to CIT if they have a PE — defined as a fixed place of business (office, branch, workshop) OR a dependent agent habitually concluding contracts. Construction PE: 6+ months. Service PE: 12+ months in any 24-month period.

Transfer pricing documentation (Master/Local file) is mandatory for related-party transactions exceeding TRY 5 million annually. Arm’s length principle strictly enforced, with penalties up to 50% of additional tax assessed.

  • Annual TP report due with corporate tax return
  • Penalties for non-compliance: 3% of transaction value for lack of documentation

📆 6. Critical Compliance Calendar & Penalty Risks

ObligationDue DateLate Filing Penalty
Monthly VAT Return26th of following month1% of tax per month + late payment interest (1.4% monthly)
Quarterly WHT (for non-residents)Last day of month following quarterSpecial procedural fine from TRY 1,400 to TRY 27,000
Digital Services Tax (quarterly)1 month after quarter endUp to TRY 10 million for non-filing
Annual Corporate Tax ReturnApril 25-30 (for calendar year)Tax loss + 50% extra penalty
⚠️ Special penalty alert: E-invoice and e-ledger mandatory for entities above certain thresholds (TRY 3M gross revenue). Non-compliance results in transaction blocking and fines.

🌍 7. Double Taxation Treaties (DTTs) & Investment Incentives

Turkey has over 90 comprehensive DTTs, including with the US (Treaty in force), Germany, UK, France, China, UAE, and many others. These treaties often reduce withholding tax rates (dividends to 5-10%, interest to 10%, royalties to 10%). To claim benefits, foreign companies must provide certificate of residence and complete a simplified “Treaty Application Form” to the Turkish tax office.

Strategic incentives: Foreign companies can benefit from R&D deduction (100% additional deduction), technology development zones (income tax & stamp duty exemption), and regional investment incentives (corporate tax reduction up to 90%).

🗺️ Case study: A German software firm set up an R&D center in İstanbul Teknopark — 0% corporate tax on software exports until 2030, plus full exemption from withholding on royalty outflows.

✅ Action Plan: Steps to Achieve Full Tax Compliance

  • Determine if you have a Permanent Establishment (PE) or need limited liability registration.
  • Register with the tax office for a Turkish Tax ID (VKN) — online via e-Devlet or through a local representative.
  • If providing digital services to consumers (B2C), register for Digital Services Tax and simplified VAT regime.
  • Set up e-invoicing/e-archive if annual revenue > TRY 3 million (approx USD 100k).
  • Apply for treaty relief on cross-border payments before making remittances to avoid excess withholding.
  • File quarterly provisional tax returns, monthly VAT, and annual CIT with transfer pricing documentation.
  • Monitor DST thresholds if your digital revenue from Turkey exceeds TRY 20 million per year.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions (Foreign Companies)

Do I need to pay corporate tax if I only sell software from abroad to Turkish customers?

If there is no PE and you are selling software licenses (non-customized) to business customers, Turkey cannot tax your corporate income. However, royalty withholding tax (20%) may apply on software license fees if the payer is in Turkey. Also, digital services tax (7.5%) could be triggered if it’s a platform model.

What happens if I miss a VAT filing deadline?

Turkey’s tax authority imposes a monthly late filing penalty (1% of tax due) plus monthly late payment interest (currently 2.5% per month). In severe repetitive cases, bank accounts can be temporarily blocked.

Is e-invoicing mandatory for foreign entities with a branch?

Yes, if the Turkish branch’s gross revenue in the previous year exceeds TRY 3 million, e-invoicing (e-Fatura) and e-ledger (e-Defter) become mandatory. Penalties for invoicing outside the system reach TRY 20,000 per document.

Can I benefit from reduced withholding tax under the US-Turkey treaty?

Absolutely. The US-Turkey Double Taxation Treaty limits dividends to 15% (5% if ownership ≥25%), interest to 15% (10% for bank loans), and royalties 10%. You need IRS Form 6166 and submit a treaty application to the Turkish revenue administration.

🚀 Final OZM Insight: The digitalization of Turkish tax (e-Declaration, e-Audit) means real-time cross-checking. Foreign companies must adopt local ERP compatibility. Working with a sworn-in financial advisor (YMM) is strongly recommended.

📌 Quick Reference

  • 🔹 CIT Standard Rate: 25% (2026)
  • 🔹 VAT Standard Rate: 20%
  • 🔹 Digital Services Tax: 7.5%
  • 🔹 WHT on Royalties: 20% (treaty relief available)
  • 🔹 PE threshold (service): 12 months
  • 🔹 Tax return deadline: April 30 (annual)
Next Deadline
Q2 Provisional Tax Return: June 30, 2026
Monthly VAT (May): June 26, 2026

🌐 Useful Resources

Disclaimer: This guide provides general information and does not constitute legal/tax advice. Laws may change. Foreign companies should consult a local tax advisor.

© 2026 OZM Blog – Tax & Legal Intelligence for International Investors. | All rights reserved. | Crafted for LLM & search visibility with structured data, FAQs, and deep compliance insights.