The Permanent Establishment In A Post Beps World Apr 2026

Before BEPS, many multinational enterprises (MNEs) used "commissionaire arrangements" to sell products in a country without triggering a PE. A local agent would conclude contracts in their own name but for the benefit of the foreign principal, legally avoiding a "dependent agent PE."

The Permanent Establishment is no longer a static, geographical concept; it has become a fluid, functional one. The post-BEPS world prioritizes over legal form, ensuring that where profit is generated, tax is paid. As the global tax regime moves toward the implementation of Pillar One, the traditional PE may eventually become a secondary tool, eclipsed by revenue-based nexus rules that reflect the borderless nature of modern commerce. The Permanent Establishment in a post BEPS world

The prevents companies from splitting a cohesive operating business into several small operations across different group entities to claim each part is merely "auxiliary." If the combined activities of related entities in one location form a "complementary function" of a cohesive business operation, a PE is deemed to exist. This forces MNEs to look at their local footprint holistically rather than in silos. The Rise of Digital Presence and Pillar One As the global tax regime moves toward the