Nominations open for Indirect Tax Leaders guide

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

Nominations open for Indirect Tax Leaders guide

Indirect tax leaders guide fifth edition

The research period for the sixth edition of International Tax Review's Indirect Tax Leaders guide has begun.

Participants may nominate advisers for inclusion in the guide until March 15. Advisers who receive a minimum number of nominations will be included in the guide.

Indirect tax has never been a more important issue for companies around the world. The trend in rising VAT rates shows no sign of abating. Meanwhile, destination-based VAT/GST systems are spreading around the world in line with Action 1 of the BEPS Project, 'sin' taxes are expanding to more jurisdictions, and environmental taxes have cemented themselves as a key fixture of the global tax landscape.

International Tax Review is committed to raising the profile of these crucial issues. For the sixth year running, we are compiling a guide to the world's leading indirect tax advisers to help clients grappling with changing legislation, new taxes and increaslingly complex indirect tax challenges. We look forward to advisers, corporates and individuals taking part in the research process.

The deadline is March 15 and participants should use the form (link below) to nominate advisers.

International Tax Review Indirect Leaders submission form

If you have any questions about the research, please contact Joe Stanley-Smith, ITR deputy editor.

Joseph.stanley-smith@euromoneyplc.com

+44 (0) 207 779 8142

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The threat of 50% tariffs on Brazilian goods coincides with new Brazilian legal powers to adopt retaliatory economic measures, local experts tell ITR
The country’s chancellor appears to have backtracked from previous pillar two scepticism; in other news, Donald Trump threatened Russia with 100% tariffs
In its latest G20 update, the OECD also revealed tense discussions with the US where the ‘significant threat’ of Section 899 was highlighted
The tax agency has increased compliance yield from wealthy individuals but cannot identify how much tax is paid by UK billionaires, the committee also claimed
Saffery cautioned that documentation requirements in new government proposals must be limited if medium-sized companies are not exempted from TP
The global minimum tax deal is not viable without US participation, Friedrich Merz has argued
Section 899 of the ‘one big beautiful’ bill would have spelled disaster for many international investors into the US, but following its shelving, attention turns to the fate of the OECD’s pillars
DLA Piper’s co-head of tax for the US and Latin America tells ITR about her fervent belief in equal access to the law, loving yoga, and paternal inspirations
Tax expert Craig Hillier agrees with the comparison of pillar two to using a sledgehammer to crack a nut
The amount is reported to be up 57% from the £5.6bn that the UK tax agency believes was underpaid in the previous year
Gift this article