December 29, 2025
The Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is the world’s leading
architect of economic policy, bringing together 38 member countries to address
important worldwide standards, especially about corporate taxation, as set out
in the OECD Model
Tax Convention.
In keeping with this aim, the OECD has now released what is clearly a highly
significant 2025 Guidance on Permanent Establishment (PE), which is, arguably,
the most pressing international tax development for companies with cross-border
remote workers, now that a different style of working has evolved because of
the pandemic.
The rule brings
vital clarity to the core question: In what circumstances, precisely, does an
employee's foreign home office constitute a "taxable presence" (PE)
on behalf of the employer? This is critical for multinationals that want to
navigate the complicated, cumulative tax jurisdictions in a fully distributed
workplace setup.
Definition
of Permanent Establishment (PE):
The Permanent
Establishment (PE) is the most basic concept in international taxation, which
is essentially the floor that determines when a state has a right to tax the
corporate profits of a business that originates from a different state. The
definition of a PE is essentially embodied in Article 5 of the OECD Model Convention,
which states that a PE is a "fixed place of business" where the
business of an enterprise is wholly or partly exercised in a different state.
The emergence of a
PE is the major force that generates a corporate tax liability in a foreign
state, because once a PE is set up, such as when a sales office, factory, or
research laboratory is established, the corporate entity is obliged to pay a
corporate income tax on the income earned attributable to that particular
activity in a foreign state.
In short, a PE
means that a business has developed a taxable presence abroad that is of a
certain level of importance sufficient to warrant a proportionate share of
profits being attributed to the host country.
The Remote
Work Problem the OECD Solved
Prior to the
pandemic, a clear set of regulations existed with regard to what constitutes a
Permanent Establishment (PE), namely that a fixed property, a separate office
high-rise, a factory, an immobile branch office qualifies as a PE. The sudden
explosion of worldwide teleworking has destroyed this definition, throwing
international taxation law into a state of crisis.
The problem: Was
such a person, a mid-level employee, sitting at his kitchen computer in Spain,
with his own internet connection, capable of putting a legally binding PE
together for his Canadian or United States-based employer?
This uncertainty
posed a massive risk to MNCs. They were threatened with the frightening
possibility of embarking on a complicated, spontaneously generated, and costly
corporate tax compliance nightmare in every foreign country where a teleworking
employee wanted to live. The OECD’s 2025
guidelines specifically
address this existential dilemma, providing a crystal-clear, universally
accepted answer to effectively preserve international trade continuity.
What Are the
Effects of the OECD’s 2025 Guidance on PE Risk for Telecommuters?
A. The
Default Rule: Home Offices Don't Create a PE
The most important
lesson from the 2025 guidelines is that in virtually all cases of teleworking,
a worker’s home office cannot per se constitute a Permanent Establishment (PE)
of his employer. This is because such treatment is based on the principles of
control and necessity:
No Right of
Access: The employer lacks the legal right of access to the home office of the
employee. This is because the home office belongs to the employee, not the
employer, and cannot be used for the employer’s purposes.
Employee Choice:
This is where the agreement is based on the employee’s choice, convenience, or
need. It is not a requirement of the business.
For instance,
consider a software programmer working from his apartment in Lisbon, Portugal,
for a software company in the U.S. Since the software company is not leasing
the apartment, it has no rights to that premise, which is merely used for the
programmer’s convenience, so a PE is not generated in Portugal.
B. The 50%
Working Time Threshold: A Clear Safe Zone
The following
significant issue that should be taken into consideration is that of the
working time threshold. Under the new rules, the likelihood of becoming a PE is
small when the employee spends fewer than 50% of the overall working hours in
the jurisdiction within a 12-month period at a distance from the workplace.
Under 50%: If the
employee spends less than 50% of his/her working hours in the foreign country
(for instance, two days a week), the PE risk is reduced. It is categorized as
the "safe zone" because the PE risk is less.
50% or More: If
the employee surpasses the 50% threshold, a closer analysis of the situation is
necessary. It is at this stage that the OECD guidelines bring a closer
assessment of whether a commercial reason exists for the employee’s presence in
a foreign state.
C. The
Qualitative Test: Is the Location a Place of Business?
Having satisfied
the 50% threshold, the following major consideration is whether the employee’s
presence in the foreign country is of benefit to the enterprise from a
commercial perspective, rather than simply being a location that is for the
employee’s convenience. The employee’s presence is of a commercial nature when
the arrangement of working remotely facilitates a strategic aim, thus placing
that location at the disposal of the enterprise.
High PE Risk
(Commercial Reason Exists):
The presence of
the employee at the foreign location increases the likelihood of a PE because
it provides a direct advantage to the business enterprise. This includes, but
is not limited to, the following:
Direct Engagement
with Local Customers: Interacting with customers, suppliers, or related parties
in the foreign jurisdiction to facilitate business activity.
Building/Growing
the Market: Efforts to enter a new market or increase the presence of the
company in that area.
Strategic
Time-Zone Placement: This is positioning an employee in a particular time zone
that helps them serve clients effectively from different time zones, giving a
competitive advantage to the business.
On-Site Service
Performance: The performance of tasks that require the presence of the employee
physically, such as the performance of training, repair work, or other on-site
services that serve as a business reason for the employee's presence.
Low PE Risk
(Non-Commercial Reason):
Conversely, a low
PE Risk situation may arise when the employee is merely working from a distant
location on non-commercial grounds, such as convenience, cost-cutting
arrangements, and so on. This can encompass:
Internal Cost
Savings: The use of teleworking purely for internal cost savings, such as
minimizing the need for office accommodation, falls within the realm of
internal efficiency, which is not a requirement from a business perspective
within the foreign country.
Talent Retention
Benefit: In situation where the remote work privilege is given with a minimum
goal of keeping the staff satisfied as an employee benefit, but with no aim of
facilitating a strategic activity within the foreign country, such might not
amount to a commercial purpose.
Limited Local
Engagement: Occasional or sporadic engagement with local clients or parties,
which may not add to the strategic goals of the business, would not amount to a
commercial reason.
Main
Operator Exception
This means that a
different definition is used when one individual is essentially conducting the
entire activity of a business. For example, a non-resident consultant
conducting his own consulting business from a home office in another country
will make such a location a fixed place of business for that enterprise. This
is because when such a non-resident conducts his own business, his home is
essentially the base of his business, thereby making a PE come into existence.
Conclusion
The OECD’s 2025
guidelines serve as a benchmark for businesses and employee heads who find
themselves entangled in the complexities that come with a PE in the context of
remote work. So long as employees are not spending a cumulative total of 50% of
their time in a foreign country, with no purpose to serve a business within
that foreign country, the likelihood of creating a PE is slim. Where businesses
are engaging in international employment, these are fundamental thresholds that
can serve to mitigate potential risks.
At Water &
Shark, we assist businesses in tackling such challenges with confidence. We
assist our clients with cross-border remote work arrangements, PE risk
evaluations, international mobility solutions, as well as adherence to current
international tax regulations. We provide expert guidance to help your business
navigate the evolving modern worldwide workplace and protect and preserve what
matters most.
FAQ –
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Does
remote work automatically create a Permanent Establishment (PE)?
2. When can
a home office create PE risk for an employer?
PE risk may arise when an employee spends 50%
or more of their working time in a foreign jurisdiction and their presence
serves a clear commercial purpose for the business.
3. What is
the 50% working time threshold in the OECD guidance?
The OECD uses a 50% benchmark over a 12-month period
as a key indicator. Staying below this threshold generally places the
arrangement in a lower PE-risk zone.
4. Does
employer control over the home office matter?
Yes. If the employer has no legal right of access or
control over the employee’s home office, it is less likely to be considered a
PE.
5. How can
businesses reduce PE risk with remote employees?
By monitoring working time, defining remote work
policies, limiting commercial activity in foreign locations, and conducting
periodic PE risk assessments.