Chile: Taxpayers able to obtain credit on income from non-treaty countries

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Chile: Taxpayers able to obtain credit on income from non-treaty countries

winter.jpg
parodi.jpg

Rodrigo Winter

Bernardita Parodi

On October 26 2016, the Productivity Law (Law N° 20,956) was published in the Official Gazette to promote Chile's productivity by establishing a series of measures intended to achieve this goal.

Among the several measures established in Law N° 20,956 is the promotion of service exportation from Chile, as well as services rendered abroad by Chilean individual residents.

In this context, the Productivity Law provides that taxpayers exporting services to foreign countries will be entitled to use the income taxes paid abroad on those services as a credit against the corporate tax paid in Chile. This will apply regardless of the taxpayer's country of residence. In addition, Chilean resident individuals rendering services abroad will be enabled to use the taxes paid abroad in respect of such services as a credit against Chilean personal income taxes.

Before the enactment of Law N° 20,956, taxpayers resident in Chile rendering services abroad could use the income taxes paid abroad as credit against local income taxes, but this was only permitted if the income's source country had a double tax treaty in force with Chile. Therefore, the Productivity Law broadens Chile's unilateral tax credit system for the relief of international double taxation.

For the purposes of using taxes paid abroad as credit against the first category tax, Chilean taxpayers will need to comply with a number of requirements already established by law. For example, tax paid abroad on income from the use of trademarks, patents, formulas, technical assistance and other similar services are now also applicable to export services, as well as the requirement of being qualified as an export service under the terms of the VAT Law.

On the other hand, for income derived from personal services rendered in countries with which Chile does not have an effective double tax treaty, these taxpayers will benefit from the same tax benefits as Chilean residents rendering services in treaty countries. This is available on the condition that these services do not make the individuals lose their Chilean residency. The measure will entitle them to credit against their employment income tax (article 42 of the Chilean Income Tax Law) or against its global complementary tax (article 52 of the Chilean Income Tax Law).

In both cases, the tax credit cap will be set at 32% of net foreign income. Therefore, the Productivity Law, keeps the difference between the 32% of net foreign income cap applicable to non-treaty country source income, whilst applying a 35% of net foreign income cap to income coming from treaty countries.

Finally, according to the provisions of the Productivity Law, these new set of rules will be applicable to income deriving from export services or personal services rendered from January 1 2016.

Rodrigo Winter (rodrigo.winter@cl.pwc.com) and Bernardita Parodi (bernardita.parodi@cl.pwc.com)

PwC

Website: www.pwc.cl

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

An OECD report has uncovered a lack of public trust in politicians as a source for tax information. Banning them from owning shares in companies could boost confidence
‘We did not expect to carve out big economies from the minimum tax system’, Estonia’s finance minister said; in other news, Blick Rothenberg has acquired The Vat Consultancy
The proposal seeks to regulate compulsory TP documentation in line with the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines and simplify filing requirements
Despite the decline in profitability, the firm’s tax advisory business delivered a 3.4% revenue growth
Firms are making use of inventories and ample profit margins to avoid or absorb the initial impact of higher tariffs, an OECD report said
While UN proposals to shift airline taxation from a residence-based system to a source-state one are not set in stone, ex-British Airways CEO Willie Walsh warns they would increase costs and complexity
Von Wobeser y Sierra’s head of tax shares best practices for resolving tax controversy and touts his firm’s founding partner as an exemplar of legal practice
ITR concludes its analysis of World Tax’s rankings for 2026 by highlighting the firms that stood out most on a global scale
Experts from law firm Kennedys outline the key tax disputes trends set to define 2026, ranging from increased enforcement to continued tariff drama and AI usage
They also warned against an ‘unnecessary duplication of efforts’ in UN tax convention negotiations; in other news, White & Case has hired Freshfields’ former French tax head
Gift this article