Finances · Use case

Corporate tax automation

Deadlines triggered automatically. Data gathered across all entities. Nothing filed late.

For multinational groups, corporate tax management is one of the most coordination-intensive finance processes — involving multiple tax types, dozens of legal entities across different jurisdictions, strict regulatory deadlines, and a constant flow of surveys, data requests, and submissions. Managed manually, it means tax teams chasing entities by email, consolidating data from inconsistent spreadsheets, and discovering missing information days before a filing deadline. Automated, it becomes a structured, calendar-driven workflow: each tax process triggered automatically at the right time, data collection requests sent to all entities simultaneously, reminders escalated to those with pending submissions, and consolidated reporting generated without manual aggregation — across CIT, VAT, ECSL, and Country-by-Country Reporting.

Finance operations Tax compliance Multinational groups Multi-entity coordination Regulatory reporting
The problem

Manual vs automated corporate tax management

Most multinational tax functions still coordinate filing cycles through email, track entity submissions in spreadsheets, and discover data gaps under deadline pressure — creating compliance risk and unnecessary stress that automation eliminates entirely.

Without automation

What the manual process typically looks like

  • Tax deadlines tracked in spreadsheets or calendars — processes initiated manually when someone remembers
  • Data collection requests sent individually by email — inconsistent templates, inconsistent responses
  • Tax team chases entities manually for missing submissions — time-consuming and often escalated too late
  • Data consolidated manually from multiple spreadsheets — errors introduced at every aggregation step
  • No real-time visibility into which entities have submitted and which are outstanding
  • Different processes for CIT, VAT, ECSL, and CbCR managed in complete isolation — no shared workflow

With automation

What changes when you automate

  • Each tax process triggered automatically based on configured deadlines — no manual initiation required
  • Surveys and data collection requests sent simultaneously to all relevant entities — standardised templates enforced
  • Reminders sent automatically to entities with pending submissions — escalation triggered as deadline approaches
  • Submitted data validated automatically for completeness and consistency before consolidation
  • Real-time dashboard showing submission status across all entities and all tax types simultaneously
  • CIT, VAT, ECSL, and CbCR managed through a shared workflow engine — consistent process, jurisdiction-specific rules

Understanding the process

What corporate tax management involves

Corporate tax management for a multinational group encompasses the full cycle of obligations across multiple tax types and jurisdictions — from the initial triggering of each filing process through data collection across all group entities, validation, consolidation, review, and final submission to the relevant tax authorities. The four primary processes — Corporate Income Tax, Value Added Tax, EC Sales List, and Country-by-Country Reporting — each have distinct deadlines, data requirements, and regulatory frameworks, but share the same underlying coordination challenge: getting accurate, complete data from all relevant entities in time to file correctly.

The coordination burden scales with the number of entities in the group. A multinational with 20 or 30 legal entities across multiple jurisdictions faces a continuous cycle of overlapping deadlines, each requiring its own data collection, validation, and consolidation effort. Automated, the process runs as a managed calendar — each obligation triggered on schedule, each entity contacted automatically, and the tax function’s attention directed to exceptions and review rather than coordination and chasing.

“In a multinational group, the tax team’s biggest challenge is not the tax — it is the coordination. Automation handles the coordination, so the tax team can focus on the judgment calls that actually require their expertise.”
Stages in the process

The corporate tax management workflow

From deadline trigger to final submission — the shared workflow that runs across all four tax processes.

Process trigger

Deadline calendar configured

Process initiated automatically

Relevant entities identified

Tax team notified

Data collection

Surveys sent to all entities

Standardised templates enforced

Submission portal opened

Deadline communicated

Reminders & escalation

Pending entities flagged

Reminders sent automatically

Escalation as deadline nears

Real-time status dashboard

Validation & consolidation

Completeness checked

Inconsistencies flagged

Data consolidated automatically

Group-level view generated

Review & submission

Tax team reviews output

Approval workflow triggered

Submitted to authorities

Confirmation & audit trail

Corporate Income Tax (CIT)

CIT is the annual tax levied on the profits of each legal entity in the group. For multinationals, this means coordinating the collection of financial data — profit and loss statements, deductible expenses, tax adjustments, and prior year losses — from every entity across every jurisdiction, each with its own filing deadline and local reporting requirements. BPA triggers the CIT data collection process automatically per entity based on the relevant jurisdiction’s deadline, sends standardised financial data surveys, tracks submission status in real time, and consolidates the group’s CIT position without manual aggregation.

Value Added Tax (VAT)

VAT obligations recur monthly or quarterly depending on jurisdiction — making them one of the highest-frequency tax coordination challenges for a multinational group. Each entity must report output VAT collected and input VAT recoverable for the period, with figures reconciled against transactional data. BPA triggers VAT data collection automatically at each period end, sends standardised templates to each entity, validates submitted figures for arithmetic consistency, and flags entities whose submissions deviate from expected ranges for tax team review before consolidation.

EC Sales List (ECSL)

The EC Sales List is a supplementary VAT reporting requirement for businesses that supply goods or services to VAT-registered customers in other EU member states. ECSL submissions must reconcile precisely with the corresponding VAT return for the same period — making data consistency between the two processes critical. BPA coordinates ECSL data collection in parallel with the VAT process, cross-validates submitted ECSL figures against the corresponding VAT data automatically, and flags discrepancies for resolution before either submission is finalised.

Country-by-Country Reporting (CbCR)

CbCR is an annual OECD-mandated obligation for large multinational groups — requiring a detailed breakdown of revenue, profit, tax paid, employees, and assets by country. The data must be consistent with the group’s consolidated financial statements and transfer pricing documentation. BPA triggers the CbCR data collection process from all group entities simultaneously, enforces the standardised OECD template, validates entity submissions for internal consistency and cross-entity reconciliation, and generates the consolidated CbCR report for tax team review and submission to the relevant tax authority.


How automation helps

How automation improves corporate tax management

Every tax obligation triggered on time, every entity contacted simultaneously, every missing submission chased automatically, and every dataset validated before it reaches the tax team for review. Coordination handled by the system — judgment reserved for the tax professionals.

Automated deadline management & process triggering

BPA maintains a configurable tax calendar covering all obligations across all jurisdictions — CIT, VAT, ECSL, and CbCR — and triggers each process automatically at the appropriate lead time before the filing deadline. The tax team is notified automatically when each cycle opens, with no manual initiation required and no deadline discovered too late to coordinate effectively.

Automated data collection across all entities

When a tax process is triggered, BPA sends standardised surveys and data collection requests simultaneously to all relevant legal entities — ensuring every entity receives the same template, the same instructions, and the same deadline. Submission portals are opened automatically, and the tax team has real-time visibility into which entities have responded and which are outstanding from the moment the process is triggered.

Automated reminders & escalation

Entities that have not submitted by intermediate checkpoints receive automated reminders — escalating in frequency and urgency as the deadline approaches. If an entity remains non-responsive within a defined threshold of the deadline, the escalation is automatically routed to the entity’s finance director and the group tax team simultaneously, creating accountability without requiring the tax team to manage the chasing process manually.

Automated validation & cross-entity reconciliation

Submitted data is validated automatically for completeness, arithmetic consistency, and cross-entity reconciliation — including the critical cross-validation between VAT and ECSL figures. Entities whose submissions contain errors or inconsistencies are notified automatically with specific flagged items, allowing corrections to be made before the consolidation stage rather than discovered during the tax team’s review.

Automated consolidation & group reporting

Once all entity submissions are validated, BPA consolidates the group-level dataset automatically — aggregating figures across entities, applying group-level adjustments where configured, and generating the consolidated output in the format required for each tax type. The tax team receives a clean, validated consolidated dataset for review rather than a collection of individual spreadsheets to reconcile manually.

Approval workflow & submission audit trail

Consolidated outputs are routed automatically through a structured approval workflow before submission — ensuring the appropriate sign-offs are obtained from the group tax function and, where required, senior finance leadership. Every submission is logged automatically with a complete, timestamped audit trail covering data collection, validation, consolidation, approval, and filing — available for tax authority enquiry or internal audit at any time.


100%
On-time filing rate
Automated deadline triggering and escalating reminders ensure every obligation is initiated on time and every entity submits before the filing deadline.
80%
Reduction in tax team coordination effort
Automated data collection, reminders, and consolidation eliminate the manual chasing and aggregation that consumes the majority of the tax team’s cycle time.
100%
Audit trail completeness
Every data submission, validation, consolidation, and filing action logged automatically — full documentation available for tax authority enquiry at any time.

Based on industry benchmarks for tax process automation in multinational groups. Actual results vary by organisation.


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