Key Takeaways
- Taiwan’s tax audits are increasingly driven by data matching, not only manual document checks.
- E-invoices allow the Ministry of Finance to compare reported sales with actual transaction records.
- Cash-flow mismatches, such as high bank deposits but low declared revenue, are common audit triggers.
- Cross-border data helps identify offshore income, foreign platform revenue, and related-party risks.
- Businesses should regularly reconcile invoices, bank deposits, platform payouts, VAT returns, and accounting books.
Taiwan’s tax authority identifies high-risk businesses by comparing reported tax filings with independent data sources, including e-invoices, bank and payment flows, online platform records, customs data, and cross-border tax information. If the numbers do not match, the business may be flagged for review or audit.
What Is Taiwan’s Data-Matching Tax Audit Model?
Taiwan’s National Taxation Bureaus use multiple data points to assess whether a business’s tax filings are reasonable. Instead of looking only at accounting records prepared by the taxpayer, the tax authority can compare those records with external or third-party information.
For example, a business may report low sales on its VAT return, but its e-invoice records, payment settlements, delivery activity, or import data may suggest a much higher level of business activity. This inconsistency can make the business appear high risk.
In practice, the authority is asking a simple question:
Do the business’s declared numbers match its real economic activity?
If the answer appears to be no, the business may receive an inquiry, document request, or audit notice.
How Does the Tax Authority Use E-Invoices?
E-invoices are one of Taiwan’s most powerful tax-audit tools. Businesses required to issue electronic uniform invoices must upload invoice data to the Ministry of Finance E-Invoice Platform within the required timeframe.
This gives the tax authority access to detailed sales information, including invoice amount, date, buyer information, and transaction patterns. It also helps connect sales records with payment methods and customer activity.
E-Invoice Data | What It Helps Detect |
Sales invoices | Whether reported revenue is complete |
Purchase invoices | Whether costs and inventory are reasonable |
Invoice timing | Whether sales are recorded in the correct period |
Buyer tax ID | Whether B2B transactions match both parties’ records |
Payment or carrier data | Whether consumer sales align with reported tax filings |
A common risk pattern is where a business has substantial purchases but reports very low sales. Another example is where platform sales or card payments are much higher than the total e-invoices issued.
From a practical tax-review perspective, e-invoices are no longer just billing documents. They are part of the government’s digital audit trail.
How Does Cash Flow Become an Audit Trigger?
Cash flow is often where underreported sales become visible. Even if a business fails to issue invoices correctly, money usually still enters a bank account, payment account, credit-card settlement account, or platform wallet.
Taiwan’s tax authority may compare declared revenue with:
- bank deposits;
- credit-card settlements;
- LINE Pay, JKOPay, or other electronic payment records;
- e-commerce platform payouts;
- cash-on-delivery collections;
- refund and chargeback records.
A mismatch does not automatically mean tax evasion. Some deposits may be loans, capital injections, intercompany transfers, or owner advances. However, if the business cannot explain the source clearly, the tax authority may treat the unexplained amount as suspected sales revenue.
Common red flags include:
- Bank deposits significantly exceed reported sales.
- Platform payout reports do not match VAT filings.
- Business income is collected through personal accounts.
- Refunds and discounts are claimed without supporting records.
- Inventory purchases indicate higher sales volume than reported.
In real compliance work, many problems arise not because the owner intended to hide income, but because the business uses too many systems: Shopee, momo, Shopify, credit cards, bank transfers, cash, and accounting software. If these are not reconciled regularly, errors accumulate quickly.
How Does Cross-Border Data Matching Work?
Cross-border data matching is especially important for e-commerce sellers, importers, exporters, SaaS companies, trading businesses, and multinational groups.
Taiwan participates in international tax-information exchange mechanisms, including financial account information exchange and Country-by-Country Reporting for multinational enterprise groups. The tax authority may also review customs declarations, foreign payment records, and related-party arrangements.
Cross-border matching may reveal:
- foreign bank or financial-account information;
- offshore platform income;
- import values inconsistent with domestic sales;
- overseas service, royalty, or commission payments;
- related-party transactions with unusual profit margins;
- differences between Taiwan tax filings and group-level reporting.
For example, a Taiwan company may report low domestic revenue, but foreign platform data or offshore receipts may indicate that sales were actually made to overseas customers. Another common case involves related-party service fees or management fees that reduce Taiwan taxable profit without sufficient documentation.
What Types of Businesses Are More Likely to Be Flagged?
High-risk businesses are usually those with inconsistent data patterns. The following businesses should pay special attention:
Business Type | Main Risk Area |
Online sellers | Platform revenue higher than VAT filings |
Restaurants and retailers | Cash or delivery-app income not fully reported |
Importers | Import volume inconsistent with sales |
Influencers and creators | Sponsorship or platform income omitted |
Cross-border service providers | Foreign receipts not reported properly |
Multinational groups | Transfer pricing or profit allocation issues |
Online sellers are a particularly important category. Taiwan’s tax authority has repeatedly emphasized that online business activities are subject to tax rules just like physical stores. If an online seller reaches the relevant registration or invoice threshold, it should handle tax registration, invoicing, and filing properly.