Reference

Tax Treaties

Tax Treaties

Plain meaning

Agreements between countries that coordinate tax rules, reduce double taxation, and support information exchange.

Also called

tax information exchange agreement tax conventions tax convention tax treaty TIEA

Key points

  • Tax treaties allocate taxing rights between countries and can reduce withholding taxes on certain cross-border payments.
  • Treaties commonly address residence, permanent establishment, business profits, employment income, pensions, dividends, interest, royalties, and capital gains.
  • A treaty does not usually create tax-free income by itself; it modifies domestic tax rules where the treaty applies.
  • Anti-avoidance rules, limitation provisions, and the multilateral instrument can affect treaty access.
  • Treaty interpretation often depends on exact facts, residency, beneficial ownership, and the wording of the specific treaty.

Why it comes up

Treaty and information-exchange updates can affect cross-border income, withholding taxes, tax evasion enforcement, and multinational planning.

News signals

tax convention information exchange OECD cooperation

Related articles

  • No matching articles yet.
Back to Top