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The Tax Authority Already Knows
Your Offshore Balance.
Does Your Tax Return Reflect It?

The definitive guide to Personal Income Tax Indonesia — for Indonesian nationals with foreign assets, globally mobile professionals, and expatriates working in Indonesia.

100%

Countries auto-sharing your financial data with DJP every year

183

Days in Indonesia triggers full worldwide income tax obligations

200%

Maximum penalty on undeclared income discovered by DJP

2025

CoreTax launched — automated cross-matching now operational

Personal Income Tax Indonesia

Indonesia Income Tax — Worldwide Scope

Income Tax in Indonesia — 5 to 35% Progressive

CRS Data Exchange Active Since 2018

Indonesian Nationals with Foreign Assets

Bank accounts, property, stocks, and crypto held abroad — all must be declared in your annual SPT, even if they generate zero income.

Expatriates Working in Indonesia

Spent 183+ days in Indonesia? You're a tax resident — obligated to declare worldwide income, not just your Indonesian earnings.

Globally Mobile Professionals

Foreign salary paid offshore, overseas pension, or freelance income from international clients — all taxable in Indonesia once residency is established.

You Think Your Foreign Assets Are Safe from Indonesian Tax? Think Again.

This isn't theory. It's the legal reality in force since 2018 — and enforced with unprecedented precision since CoreTax went live in 2025.

"DJP receives your Singapore bank balance automatically, every year. The only question is whether your SPT matches it."

Every Indonesian tax resident is legally required to declare all assets and income held anywhere in the world in their annual SPT Tahunan — property in Australia, a brokerage account in the US, dividends from European shares, savings in a Singapore bank. Most Indonesian nationals with foreign assets are unaware of this obligation. Not because they're dishonest — because no one ever told them. There is no letter from DJP. No notification from your foreign bank. The system moves quietly. And when it finds a discrepancy, the consequences are anything but quiet.

Property Owners Abroad

An apartment in Melbourne, a house in Johor Bahru, a villa in Portugal — all must be listed in the wealth section of your SPT Tahunan. Regardless of whether the property generates rental income. The reporting obligation exists independently of any income generated.

Foreign Account & Investment Holders

Savings accounts at DBS or OCBC Singapore, a stock portfolio on Robinhood or Interactive Brokers, international mutual funds, or crypto on a foreign exchange — all must be declared as foreign assets as of December 31 each year, without exception.

Recipients of Foreign Income

A salary from a foreign company, dividends from overseas shares, interest on an offshore account, royalties from international clients, or freelance fees from platforms abroad — all are subject to Indonesian income tax and must appear in your annual SPT, regardless of where the money lands.

Why This Can No Longer Be Ignored: CRS + CoreTax

Two systems now work together automatically to ensure DJP holds far more data about your finances than most people realize:

Common Reporting Standard — Active Since 2018

Your Bank Reports to DJP Every Year — Without Asking You

Indonesia is an active member of the OECD's Automatic Exchange of Information framework. Banks in Singapore, Australia, the UK, the Netherlands, UAE, the US, Hong Kong, and 100+ other countries automatically transmit account data of Indonesian taxpayers to DJP annually — without your knowledge, without any request from Indonesia. Data transmitted: year-end account balances, interest credited, dividends received, and proceeds from asset sales.

CoreTax — DJP's Automated Detection Engine (2025)

It Cross-Matches Your Foreign Financial Data Against Your SPT. Automatically.

Since January 2025, DJP operates CoreTax — a fully integrated digital platform that consolidates all taxpayer data in one real-time system. CoreTax automatically cross-references incoming CRS data from foreign banks against what's declared in your SPT. Discrepancies are flagged algorithmically — no human auditor needs to open your file first. The paper gap that used to protect the careless is permanently gone.

Countries Already Sending Your Data to DJP

If you hold accounts or assets in any of the following, that data is very likely already in DJP's database:

🇸🇬 Singapore

🇦🇺 Australia

🇬🇧 United Kingdom

🇩🇪 Germany

🇳🇱 Netherlands

🇫🇷 France

🇨🇭 Switzerland

🇦🇪 UAE (Dubai)

🇭🇰 Hong Kong

🇯🇵 Japan

🇰🇷 South Korea

🇲🇾 Malaysia

🇺🇸 USA (via FATCA)

+ 90 more countries

What Indonesian Nationals Must Declare

Complete Global Disclosure Obligation

As an Indonesian tax resident, ALL of the following must appear in your SPT Tahunan — regardless of where the asset is held or which account the income is paid into.

  • Foreign bank and savings accounts — including year-end balances as of December 31 each year
  • Property owned outside Indonesia — houses, apartments, land, commercial real estate — with or without rental income
  • Stock portfolios, mutual funds, bonds, or other investment instruments held through foreign brokers or platforms
  • Cryptocurrency held on foreign exchanges or in self-custody wallets
  • Rental income from property located outside Indonesia
  • Dividends, interest, and capital gains from foreign investment instruments
  • Salary or compensation from foreign employers — whether paid to an Indonesian or foreign account
  • Royalties, copyright income, patents, or intellectual property revenue from foreign parties
  • Pension funds or retirement benefits managed by foreign financial institutions
 

Isi

Indonesia's Tax System: Self-Assessment Means You Are Responsible

Indonesia operates a self-assessment framework administered by DJP. There are no annual tax bills. If you don't file correctly, the system doesn't remind you — it flags you.

Personal income tax in Indonesia (Pajak Penghasilan Orang Pribadi / PPh OP) applies to all individuals who qualify as tax residents, as well as to non-residents earning income from Indonesian sources. For tax residents — including foreign nationals who have crossed the 183-day threshold — the scope covers all income earned anywhere in the world. This guide covers the complete framework: residency rules, tax rates, what must be declared, current enforcement mechanisms, penalties, and the path to compliance.

183 Days in Indonesia = Worldwide Tax Liability. No Exceptions.

One number separates two profoundly different tax obligations — and it's crossed more often than people realize.

Tax Resident

An individual qualifies as a tax resident if they are domiciled in Indonesia, or physically present for more than 183 days within any 12-month period. Foreign nationals who meet this threshold are treated identically to Indonesian citizens — obligated to declare and pay tax on their worldwide income and disclose all global assets.

⚠ Tax residents must declare ALL global income — not just income earned within Indonesia.

Non-Resident Taxpayer

Individuals who spend 183 days or fewer in Indonesia within any 12-month period are classified as non-residents. They remain subject to Indonesian tax — but only on income sourced from within Indonesia. A flat 20% withholding rate generally applies, subject to any applicable bilateral tax treaty (P3B).

Tax treaties between Indonesia and 70+ partner countries can reduce or eliminate withholding rates for qualifying non-residents.

⚠ The 183-Day Trap Most People Fall Into

The 183-day count applies to any 12-month period — not just the Indonesian calendar year. It includes vacation days, family visits, and remote working days spent physically in Indonesia. Many foreign nationals who believe they are non-residents have already crossed this threshold across multiple years — and never filed a single SPT.

How Much Do You Actually Owe? Progressive Rates from 5% to 35%

Indonesian personal income tax is calculated progressively under Article 17 of the Income Tax Law — each bracket applies only to the slice of income within it, not to total gross income.

Annual Taxable Income (IDR)

Approx. USD Equivalent

Tax Rate

Up to IDR 60,000,000

Up to ~USD 3,700

5%

IDR 60,000,001 – IDR 250,000,000

~USD 3,700 – USD 15,400

15%

IDR 250,000,001 – IDR 500,000,000

~USD 15,400 – USD 30,800

25%

IDR 500,000,001 – IDR 5,000,000,000

~USD 30,800 – USD 308,000

30%

Above IDR 5,000,000,000

Above ~USD 308,000

35%

* USD equivalents are indicative, based on IDR 16,250/USD. Tax is assessed and paid in IDR.

Non-Taxable Income Threshold (PTKP)

Every taxpayer receives a personal deduction of IDR 54,000,000/year (single, no dependants). Additions: married +IDR 4,500,000 · spouse with separate NPWP +IDR 54,000,000 · each dependant (max. 3) +IDR 4,500,000 each. Tax applies only to taxable income — gross income minus all permitted deductions and PTKP.

Countries Already Sending Your Data to DJP

Employment Income

Salary, wages, bonuses, and benefits-in-kind are taxable employment income. Employers withhold PPh 21 monthly — but submitting the annual SPT remains the individual's personal legal obligation regardless of employer withholding.

Business & Freelance

Self-employed individuals report net business income in the SPT. Those with annual gross turnover below IDR 4.8 billion may elect a simplified final tax of 0.5% on gross revenue (PP 23/2018) instead of progressive rates.

Investment Income

Bank interest: 20% final withholding. Dividends from Indonesian companies: 10% final tax (exemptions available if reinvested domestically). Capital gains from BEI-listed shares: 0.1% final tax on gross transaction value.

Not Just Your Indonesian Salary — Everything You Own and Earn, Everywhere on Earth

For Indonesian tax residents, the scope of taxable income is far broader than most people assume. The legal framework is designed to capture all economic gains regardless of geographic origin.

Indonesian-Source Income

(All Taxpayers)

  • Salaries, wages, bonuses, and all employment remuneration from an Indonesian employer — including housing, transport, and entertainment allowances
  • Income from professional services, consulting, legal or medical practice, or freelance work conducted in Indonesia
  • Rental income from property located within Indonesia — subject to 10% final withholding tax
  • Business profits from trade or commercial activity carried out in Indonesia
  • Dividends, interest, and royalties from Indonesian companies or financial institutions

Foreign-Source Income

(Tax Residents Only)

Mandatory Worldwide Declaration

If you are an Indonesian tax resident, ALL of the following must be declared in your annual SPT — regardless of which account the income is paid into or where it originates.

  • Salary or compensation paid by a foreign employer into any bank account, anywhere in the world
  • Rental income from property owned outside Indonesia
  • Dividends from shares held in foreign-listed companies or foreign brokerage accounts
  • Interest, investment returns, and capital gains from foreign financial accounts or portfolios
  • Pension, annuity, or retirement income received from a foreign institution

Foreign Assets Must Be Declared — Even with Zero Income

Beyond income, Indonesian tax residents must list all assets held anywhere in the world in the wealth section of their SPT — foreign bank accounts, investment portfolios, real estate, business interests, and vehicles — regardless of whether they generated any income. Failing to disclose assets is a separate legal violation from undeclared income, and is precisely the data category that CRS reporting captures automatically every year.

CoreTax Is Watching. It Doesn't Sleep, Forget, or Negotiate.

Two developments have permanently transformed Indonesian tax enforcement. The assumption that foreign income is invisible to DJP is not only wrong — it's now legally dangerous.

Common Reporting Standard (CRS)

100+ Countries Send Your Financial Data to DJP — Every Year

Indonesia joined the OECD's AEOI framework in 2018. Banks in the UK, France, Germany, Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong, UAE, and 100+ countries automatically transmit Indonesian taxpayer account data to DJP annually — without your knowledge, without any request. Data includes: year-end account balances, interest credited, dividends received, and asset sale proceeds.

CoreTax — DJP's Unified Digital Platform (2025)

It Cross-Matches CRS Data Against Your SPT Automatically

Launched January 2025, CoreTax replaced DJP's fragmented systems with a single real-time database. NPWP records, SPT filings, payroll reports, property registrations, customs data, and CRS inflows are now cross-referenced automatically. Gaps between your SPT and foreign financial data are flagged algorithmically — before any human auditor opens your file. The paper gap is permanently gone.

What This Means in Plain Terms

If you hold foreign bank accounts, investment portfolios, offshore rental income, or a pension paid abroad — that data is very likely already in DJP's system. The question is no longer whether the authority can find the discrepancy. It's whether you correct it before the system flags you first. Voluntary disclosure before DJP contacts you carries substantially lower penalties and eliminates criminal exposure. Once an audit is formally opened, that option closes permanently.

Filing Your SPT Is Not Optional — Even When You Owe Zero Tax

Every registered Indonesian taxpayer must submit an annual personal income tax return (SPT Tahunan Orang Pribadi). Non-filing — even with zero liability — is a recorded administrative violation in DJP's CoreTax system.

NPWP — Your Mandatory Tax Identification Number

The NPWP (Nomor Pokok Wajib Pajak) is the individual tax ID issued by DJP. Registration is mandatory for all Indonesian citizens with taxable income and for foreign nationals meeting the 183-day residency threshold. An NPWP is also required for certain bank account openings, work permit applications, and property transactions in Indonesia.

What Must Be Included in Your Annual SPT

  • All income sources— employment (domestic and foreign), business income, professional fees, investment returns, rental income, and any other gains classified as income
  • Deductions and PTKP— personal deductions based on marital status and dependants; occupational expense deduction at 5% of gross employment income (capped at IDR 500,000/month)
  • Tax credits and prepayments— employer withholding (PPh 21), monthly instalments (PPh 25), and foreign tax credits available under bilateral treaties
  • Worldwide asset declaration— all assets as of December 31, in Indonesia and abroad: property, vehicles, financial accounts, investments, business interests
  • Liabilities— outstanding loans and mortgages. DJP uses net asset movements to detect unexplained wealth accumulation
  • Final tax income— rental receipts, interest, and share gains must be listed separately even though they don’t affect the main progressive tax calculation

PPh 25 — Monthly Advance Instalments for the Self-Employed

Employees with employer-withheld PPh 21 generally don't need separate monthly payments. Self-employed individuals and those with business income must pay monthly PPh 25 advance instalments based on the prior year's tax liability. Full reconciliation happens in the annual SPT filing, with any remaining balance paid or refund claimed at that point.

From 2% Monthly Interest to 6 Years in Prison — This Is Not a Bluff

The Indonesian tax penalty framework is designed to be genuinely dissuasive — escalating from compounded interest through travel bans to criminal prosecution. Every sanction applies equally to Indonesian nationals and foreign residents.

These Penalties Apply to Indonesian Nationals and Foreign Residents Equally

Indonesian tax law makes no distinction between citizens and resident foreign nationals when it comes to enforcement. Non-compliance penalties, travel bans, asset seizures, and criminal prosecution apply equally to WNI with undeclared foreign assets and to expatriates who have crossed the residency threshold.

2% / Month

Late Payment Interest — Compounded

Unpaid tax accrues interest at 2% per month, compounded, from the original due date until settlement. A single year of delay adds 24% in interest charges alone — with no statutory cap on accumulation. Multi-year arrears compound dramatically.

IDR 100K

Late Filing Administrative Penalty

Failure to submit the annual SPT by the deadline triggers a fixed penalty of IDR 100,000 per return. Modest in isolation — but permanently recorded in DJP's CoreTax profile and can trigger audit selection and further scrutiny.

50%

Underpayment Surcharge — Standard Rate

When an audit reveals understated tax — due to omitted income, incorrect deductions, or undisclosed foreign assets — a surcharge of 50% of the additional tax assessed is applied on top of the underlying liability plus compounded interest.

100–200%

Intentional Non-Disclosure Penalty

Where DJP determines the omission was deliberate — such as systematically failing to declare foreign income across multiple years — penalties of 100% to 200% of tax owed are assessed. This is the most common outcome when CRS data reveals material, multi-year discrepancies.

CEKAL

Travel Ban — You Cannot Leave Indonesia

DJP has statutory authority to issue a cekal — an immigration ban preventing departure from Indonesia until all outstanding tax debt is resolved. Applies to both Indonesian nationals and foreign residents. Does not require a court order. Actively enforced against expatriates.

SEIZURE

Asset Freezing and Seizure

For outstanding tax debts, DJP can freeze Indonesian bank accounts and seize Indonesian property without a prior court ruling. These enforcement actions can occur while a taxpayer is still contesting an assessment — before any final determination has been made.

6 YEARS

Criminal Prosecution

Deliberate tax evasion — knowingly providing false information, concealing income, or falsifying documentation — is a criminal offence under Article 39 of UU KUP. Penalties include fines and imprisonment of up to six years. No distinction is made between citizens and resident foreign nationals.

You Still Have a Window. But Only If You Move Before DJP Knocks First.

Indonesian tax law provides a meaningful structural advantage to those who self-correct before any audit or official DJP contact. Understanding this window — and how quickly it closes — is the most critical thing anyone with outstanding obligations needs to know.

Without Proactive Action

CoreTax flags discrepancy between CRS data and your SPT filing

Formal audit opened — voluntary disclosure rights lost permanently

Full penalties: 50–200% surcharge + 2%/month compounded interest

Cekal travel ban issued; Indonesian accounts and assets subject to seizure

Criminal prosecution risk remains open for deliberate concealment

Total loss of control over timing, narrative, and outcome

With Voluntary Disclosure

Full compliance package structured and filed before DJP identifies any gap

Prior-year SPT corrections filed via the amendment mechanism (SPT Pembetulan)

Substantially reduced penalty rates — treated far more leniently by DJP

Criminal exposure eliminated — voluntary disclosure bars prosecution in most cases

Travel ban and asset seizure risk removed once compliance is confirmed

Full control over timing, structure, and disclosure approach

The Absolute Constraint

Voluntary disclosure is only available while DJP has not yet formally opened a tax audit or investigation for the relevant period. Once that threshold is crossed, the right to self-correct disappears and the full enforcement framework applies. Every month of delay also adds 2% in compounded interest. The window is real — but it is not unlimited.

Seven Steps from Exposure to Full Compliance — No Panic, Just Strategy

Whether filing for the first time or correcting years of gaps, the path follows a clear sequence. A certified Konsultan Pajak is strongly advisable for cases involving foreign income, multiple years, or significant asset declarations.

1

Establish Your Residency Status

Determine whether and when you became a tax resident. This requires reviewing your physical presence across all relevant years, examining applicable tax treaties between Indonesia and your home country, and identifying the precise date your worldwide tax obligation commenced.

2

Register or Verify Your NPWP

If you don't yet hold an Indonesian tax identification number, registration with DJP is a prerequisite for filing. If an NPWP exists but returns have not been submitted, identify and document the gap years before taking any corrective action.

3

Compile a Complete Income and Asset Inventory

Gather documentation for all income sources across all relevant years: employment payslips, annual employer statements, bank statements from all accounts (Indonesian and foreign), property documents, investment account statements, pension statements, and foreign asset valuations as of December 31 each year.

4

Calculate Tax Liability for Each Year

A certified Konsultan Pajak will calculate net taxable income for each year, applying the correct progressive brackets, personal deductions, and any available treaty relief. Amounts already withheld by employers are reconciled against the actual liability to determine the true outstanding balance.

5

File Initial or Corrected SPT Returns via CoreTax

Returns are submitted through DJP's CoreTax platform. For prior years with no return submitted, an initial SPT is filed. For years where income or assets were omitted, an amended return (SPT Pembetulan) is filed. All foreign income and assets must be correctly declared.

6

Settle Outstanding Tax and Interest

Any additional tax identified must be paid through DJP's payment channels (e-billing / SSP). Interest is calculated and settled concurrently. For voluntary corrections filed before DJP contact, the applicable interest rate is lower than post-audit penalty rates — making early action financially meaningful.

7

Maintain Ongoing Annual Compliance

Following the initial catch-up, the annual SPT must be submitted each year by the March 31 deadline (or any extended deadline DJP announces). Taxpayers with foreign income benefit significantly from consistent documentation practices throughout the year.

Direct Answers to the Questions That Actually Matter

I'm an Indonesian national with a bank account in Singapore. Does DJP actually know about it?

Very likely yes. Singapore is one of 100+ countries that automatically transmit Indonesian taxpayer account data to DJP every year under the Common Reporting Standard. The information transmitted includes year-end account balances, interest credited, dividends received, and proceeds from asset sales. This happens without your knowledge and without any request from DJP. If your SPT doesn’t reflect that account, CoreTax will flag the discrepancy automatically.

I haven't filed an SPT for several years. What should I do first?

The most important step is to conduct a proper residency and income assessment with a certified Konsultan Pajak before DJP independently identifies the gap. As long as a formal audit has not been opened, you retain the right to file voluntary corrections — which are historically treated far more leniently by DJP than post-audit enforcement. Every month of delay adds 2% in compounded interest and increases the risk of the system flagging you first.

My salary is paid by a foreign company into an overseas account. Is it taxable in Indonesia?

If you are an Indonesian tax resident (more than 183 days in Indonesia within any 12-month period), yes — your worldwide income is taxable regardless of where it is paid or banked. The physical location of the bank account and the nationality of your employer do not override residency-based obligations. The income must be declared in your Indonesian SPT, with potential relief available under any applicable bilateral tax treaty (P3B).

Does Indonesia have a tax treaty with my home country? Will I be taxed twice?

Indonesia has signed double taxation avoidance agreements (P3B) with over 70 countries, including most major economies across Europe, Asia-Pacific, and North America. These treaties typically provide mechanisms — such as foreign tax credits or income exemptions — to eliminate or reduce double taxation. However, treaty relief is not automatic: it must be actively claimed through the SPT process, and the income must still be disclosed to DJP even where it is ultimately exempt or reduced.

I own property abroad that generates no rental income. Do I still need to declare it?

Yes, absolutely. Indonesian tax residents must declare all assets held anywhere in the world in the wealth section of their annual SPT — including foreign real estate — regardless of whether those assets generate any income. The asset reporting obligation exists independently of any income generated. This is precisely the data that CRS information transmitted by overseas institutions reveals to DJP automatically every year.

My employer already withholds PPh 21. Do I still need to file an SPT?

Yes. Employer withholding under PPh 21 covers tax on your Indonesian employment income — but it does not discharge the legal obligation to file an annual SPT. If your only income is your Indonesian salary with no other sources and no foreign assets, your SPT may show zero additional liability — but it must still be submitted. If you have any foreign income, foreign bank accounts, investments, or overseas assets, none of that is captured by your employer’s payroll withholding.

What happens if I leave Indonesia before resolving my tax obligations?

Outstanding tax obligations do not disappear upon departure. DJP can issue a cekal — an immigration travel ban — preventing you from leaving Indonesia if a significant tax debt is known. Even after departure, outstanding obligations may surface during future visa or permit applications, and individuals returning to Indonesia at any future point may face enforcement action on the original outstanding liability. Resolving all tax matters before departure is strongly advisable.

What is the NPWP and do I need one as a foreigner?

The NPWP (Nomor Pokok Wajib Pajak) is Indonesia’s individual taxpayer identification number. Registration is mandatory for any person meeting the criteria for tax residency — including foreign nationals. Beyond tax compliance, an NPWP is required for certain bank account openings, work permit processing, and property transactions in Indonesia. Registration is completed at the local DJP tax office (KPP) or online through the DJP portal.

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Penafian

Konten yang disediakan di situs web ini diterbitkan oleh PT. Bisnis Hub Asia (Kami", atau "kita") hanya untuk tujuan informasi umum. Meskipun segala upaya telah dilakukan untuk memastikan keakuratan dan ketepatan waktu informasi yang disajikan, kami tidak memberikan pernyataan atau jaminan, baik tersurat maupun tersirat, mengenai kelengkapan, keakuratan, keandalan, kesesuaian, atau ketersediaan konten, produk, atau layanan apa pun yang dijelaskan di situs web ini. Segala ketergantungan pada informasi tersebut sepenuhnya merupakan risiko pengguna sendiri.

Kami adalah badan swasta dan independen dan adalah tidak berafiliasi dengan, diizinkan oleh, atau bertindak atas nama Pemerintah Republik Indonesia, kementerian, lembaga, atau perwakilan resmi yang ditunjuk. Situs web ini tidak bukan menyediakan, menawarkan, atau mempromosikan dokumen atau layanan resmi pemerintah, termasuk namun tidak terbatas pada:

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Kami berkomitmen untuk memastikan perlindungan data pribadi Anda sesuai dengan Undang-Undang Nomor 27 Tahun 2022 tentang Perlindungan Data PribadiSegala informasi pribadi yang dikumpulkan melalui situs web ini akan diproses untuk tujuan yang dijelaskan secara jelas dalam [Pernyataan Privasi] kami. Kami tidak menjual atau menyalahgunakan data pribadi dalam keadaan apa pun.

Dengan mengakses dan menggunakan situs web ini, Anda mengakui dan menyetujui ketentuan yang tercantum dalam Pernyataan Penyangkalan ini. Anda selanjutnya setuju untuk menggunakan situs web ini dan informasi yang diberikan secara bertanggung jawab dan sesuai dengan hukum dan peraturan yang berlaku.

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Bertemu dengan Pakarnya

Bertemu dengan Pakarnya

Daris Salam adalah CEO Business Hub Asia, yang menawarkan keahlian lebih dari satu dekade di bidang keuangan dan operasional. Sebagai akuntan bersertifikat dengan latar belakang Brevet Tax, ia mengkhususkan diri dalam memasuki pasar dan pertumbuhan strategis. Ia berdedikasi untuk memberdayakan investor internasional melalui konsultasi yang kuat dan pelacakan kinerja tingkat tinggi.

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