New Chilean regulations on the common reporting standard

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

New Chilean regulations on the common reporting standard

Sponsored by

sponsored-firms-pwc.png
New Chilean regulations on the common reporting standard

The Chilean Internal Revenue Service (Chilean IRS) has issued two relevant resolutions regarding compliance for tax transparency.

The first related to the reporting of financial accounts under the OECD's common reporting standard (CRS) (Resolution 48 dated May 31 2018), and the second referred to trust reporting affidavit instructions (Resolution 46 dated May 18 2018).

Reporting on Chilean financial accounts under the CRS

Chile signed the Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters (MAAT) on October 24 2013. Since then, the required legal framework for the introduction of the automatic exchange of financial accounts information has been going through its final implementation stage, as Chile has committed to performing its first exchange in 2018.

In this regard, Chile signed the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement for the Common Reporting Standard (CRS MCAA) on June 4 2015, and later on adopted the CRS under Decree 418 (2017), which aimed at setting forth "the regulation of the obligations for financial institutions to review and identify financial accounts related to individuals with foreign tax residency".

Primary legislation was introduced in late 2017 under Law 21.047 which incorporated Article 62-ter into the Chilean Tax Code and granted the IRS the authority to require information from qualified financial institutions that they hold regarding titleholders on financial accounts or their controllers with foreign tax residency (a much broader description is included in Article 62-ter).

Article 62-ter also establishes that financial institutions must submit the information to the Chilean IRS on June 30 of each year, following certain reporting criteria as dictated by the Chilean IRS.

Indeed, Resolution 48 dated May 31 2018 indicates that the information that must be submitted to the Chilean IRS by the qualified financial institutions must include: (i) information on financial accounts opened from July 1 to December 31 of 2017; (ii) information regarding pre-existing individuals´ accounts of major value; and iii) pre-existing accounts that until June 30 have been identified as accounts related to persons with foreign tax residency.

Information regarding pre-existing accounts must include the information from June 30 to December 31 of 2017. Special provisions are also included regarding pre-existing accounts of lower value.

The information must be submitted using the 'CRS XML Schema' with the corresponding adjustments made by the Chilean IRS, and sent through its website.

It is critical that financial institutions finalise their due diligence procedures and be duly prepared for the imminent reporting stage that will take place as from September 2018.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

India is signalling flexibility on expat taxation to attract foreign expertise, though employers will need to navigate disclosure, treaty and scope uncertainties
Brazil is trying to follow in the US’s footsteps and secure its own 'qualified side-by-side status', ITR understands
The surge in probes comes as the UK tax authority seeks to close a VAT gap of £11.4bn from last year, Pinsent Masons’ research has suggested
ITR’s survey data reveals widespread client disappointment with firms’ use of technology but our upcoming AI in Tax event offers advisers a chance to flip the script
Firms announced key tax partner hires across the US and UK, while fintech and software providers revealed board appointments and new tools for multinational tax teams
It continues a prolific spree of investment for the firm, after it launched in Indonesia, Thailand, Saudi Arabia and Japan in 2025
Booming APA statistics reflect the growing credibility of India’s TP framework and the country’s shift toward a tax certainty approach, ITR has heard
Partners at both firms have voted in favour of the tie-up, which marks ‘the largest law firm merger in history’
The latest edition of Taxing Times with ITR covers all the controversy from a dramatic period for the carve-out deal, and also dissects the big four's AI strategies
Hany Elnaggar examines how the OECD’s global minimum tax is reshaping PE concepts across the GCC, shifting the focus from formal presence to substantive economic activity
Gift this article