Colombia

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

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

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

Colombia

Margarita Salas Sánchez

sanchez.jpg

 

EY

Ernst & Young Ltda

Calle 113 N° 7-80

Torre AR, Piso 3

Bogotá DC

Colombia

Tel: +57 1 484 7110

Fax: +57 1 484 7474

Email: margarita.salas@co.ey.com

Website: www.ey.com

Margarita Salas Sánchez joined EY Colombia in September 2008 as executive director of tax services. Today, she is a partner and leader of the tax controversy and litigation department.

Margarita has 23 years of professional experience. She has worked in the public and private sectors as a consultant on various topics related to national taxes, serving national and international clients across several industries.

She has been in charge of tax assistance in various projects and has experience in tax planning and in tax controversy, always seeking fair and timely decisions for the clients she has worked for, providing them with appropriate and proactive support.

She has led EY's tax controversy and litigation team in Colombia for almost five years. The team provides assistance on litigation strategy. Through working for the local tax authorities, team members have gained experience in the analysis and definition of a strategy intended to obtain a favourable decision following the interests of taxpayers.

As the former regional director for taxes in Bogotá for the Colombian National Tax and Customs Administration (DIAN), she worked facing tax controversy issues and tax litigation processes. Before joining EY she was the major taxpayers director in Bogotá, and head of the Major Taxpayers Collections Division for the DIAN, from 1991 to 1997.

Margarita has a law degree from Universidad Libre, a specialist degree in tax from Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Señora del Rosario, and completed postgraduate studies on tax techniques and institutions in the Escuela de Hacienda Pública of Spain. She has been a university professor in very prestigious institutions of Colombia and a speaker at various seminars and events. She is a member of the Colombian Institute of Tax Law (ICDT) and of the International Fiscal Association (IFA). Additionally, she has been co-director of the Observatorio de Jurisprudencia Tributaria of the ICDT, author of specialist articles for its main publication and research leader of the EY team for this project.

ey.jpg



Pedro Enrique Sarmiento Pérez

sarmiento.jpg

 

Deloitte

Carrera 7 No 74 – 09

Bogotá AA 075874

Colombia

Tel: +57 1 546 1810 ext 2023

Fax: +57 1 212 4677

Email: psarmiento@deloitte.com

Website: www.deloitte.com

Pedro Enrique Sarmiento Pérez has more than 35 years of experience in tax management and as a business consultant of the private sector.

Pedro worked for 20 years in different positions at Colombia's National Tax and Customs Direction, including tax administrator, deputy director of collections, general secretary, deputy director of tax and customs audits, and head of the Planning Office.

He was responsible for designing tax policies, procedures and audit plans, and legal conceptualisations. He is also a member of the panel of international experts of the International Monetary Fund, where he has contributed with work in Washington, Guatemala and Bolivia.

After 10 years spent as partner-in-charge of Deloitte Colombia's indirect tax area, international trade and transfer pricing, Pedro was appointed director of the tax and legal practice in Colombia. He is responsible for all of the tax and legal service lines as well as the offices in Bogota, Cali, Medellin, Barranquilla and their 120 professionals.

Pedro's extensive experience includes: tax; customs; transfer pricing; ICA Indirect tax (local commerce tax), consumer tax; stamp tax and utilities litigation; advisory on TIC regulation laws (technology, IT and communications); advisory on foreign trade, customs and ports; tax consulting, planning and structuring of business from the tax and transfer pricing perspective; tax outsourcing on income tax, indirect taxes, industry and commerce tax; and advisory on VAT, ICT and excise tax.

He is involved in the direction and supervision of tax, transfer pricing and customs projects, as well as in the special consulting service in public and private enterprises in industries including energy and mining, manufacturing, transportation, utilities, services, construction, and healthcare.

Pedro holds a Juris Doctor and MBA from the University of Los Andes as well as an expert in fiscalisation, from FDI (Berlin, Germany). He was a participant in international forums of the CIAT (Guatemala 1997) and a member of the negotiating commission of the Rules of Origin FTAA (Washington, 1996).

In addition, Pedro was a lecturer in international tax forums, Montego Bay, 1992 and has been professor of the tax law master's degree of Externado de Colombia University, and of the customs specialisation at the same university, as well as at Sergio Arboleda University, Catholic University of Colombia, and the Industrial University of Santander.

He has participated in several technical courses and conferences he has been invited to by national trade associations and NGOs. In addition, in 2009, Pedro was published in Régimen Aduanero Colombiano – Legis 3rd Edition.

deloitte.jpg



more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

While it’s great that the OECD is alive to multinationals’ fears of being caught in a compliance trap, the ‘common understanding’ illustrates a worrying lack of readiness
Rising demand for specialist expertise has fuelled the growth in tax partner headcounts, Cain Dwyer found; in other news, Switzerland has been urged to reconsider pillar two
An OECD report on the taxation of the digital economy is expected by the end of 2026, according to the group of nations
Trophy assets are evolving from personal indulgences to structured investments, prompting family offices to prioritise tax efficiency, governance discipline, and cross-border compliance
As demand for complex, cross-border private client counsel spikes, Patrick McCormick sees opportunity in starting from scratch
As part of an exclusive global alliance, KPMG will become one of Anthropic’s ‘preferred consultants’ for private equity
In the second part of this series, the focus shifts to how taxpayers can manage ongoing risks across the lifecycle of cross-border structures
Jurisdictions have moved to ensure that multinationals are not punished for late GIR filings due to a lack of available filing portals or exchange relationships
HMRC’s push for unified tax adviser registration won’t prevent every instance of improper conduct, but it is good for taxpayers and the UK’s reputation
Elsewhere, the UAE’s tax office has issued an update on registration penalties and two firms have been busy making lateral hires
Gift this article