Germany Enacts a Law to Amend its GMT Law for June 2024 and January 2025 OECD Guidance

On December 23, 2025, Germany published a Tax Amendment Law in the Official gazette to amend the Minimum Tax Act. This follows the  previous discussion drafts and includes the December 2023, June 2024 and January 2025 OECD Administrative Guidance and DAC9 amendments.

December 2023 OECD Administrative Guidance

Aspects of the December 2023 OECD Administrative Guidance included in the Law include:

ProvisionLaw
Purchase Accounting Adjustments (consistent reporting condition, goodwill impairment adjustment) (Article 1)Law, Section 87a

Joint Ventures (Article 2.2.1)Law, Section 85
Same Financial Statements/Local Financial Statements for Statutory Reporting (Article 2.3.1)Law, Section 87
Exclusion of swinging accounts and separate tracking (Article 1.2.1)Law, Section 87
Using different accounting standards (Article 2.3.2)Law, Section 87
Adjustments to Qualified Financial Statements/Dividend Mismatches (Article 2.3.3)

Law, Section 87
MNEs not required to file CbC Reports (Article 2.3.4)Law, Section 84
Qualified Financial Statements for PEs (Article 2.3.5)
Law, Section 87
Treatment of hybrid arbitrage arrangements (Article 2.6)Law, Section 87b
Amendments to Blended CFC Rules (Article 4.2)Law, Section 88

 June 2024 OECD Administrative Guidance

The Law includes a number of amendments and additions arising from the June 2024 OECD Administrative Guidance. The table below shows an overview of the provisions.

ProvisionLaw
Aggregate Deferred Tax Liabilities Category basis (Article 1.2.1)Law, Section 50a

Exclusion of certain types of General Ledger accounts and separate tracking (Article 1.2.1)Law, Section 50a
Exclusion of General Ledger accounts that generate standalone Deferred Tax Assets (Article 1.2.1)Law, Section 50a

Exclusion of swinging accounts and separate tracking (Article 1.2.1)Law, Section 50a

FIFO/LIFO Basis (Article 1.2.2)Law, Section 50a
Aggregation of Short-term DTLs (Article 1.2.3)

Law, Section 50a
Reversal of DTLs that accrued before the Transition Year (Article 1.2.2)
Law, Section 50a
5 year unclaimed accrual election (Article 1.2.2)
Law, Section 50
Recalculated deferred tax where GloBE carrying value differs from accounting carrying value (Article 2.1.2)Law, Section 50
GloBE and accounting carrying values and the Transition Rules (Article 2.1.2)
Law, Section 64
Extension of the Substitute Loss Carry-forward DTA to PEs, hybrids and reverse hybrids (Article 4.1)

Law, Section 50

Exclusion of deferred tax assets or liabilities arising under a Blended CFC regime from transition rules (Article 4.2.3)
Law, Section 50
Determining GloBE status when a Flow-through Entity is held directly by another Flow-through Entity (Article 5.2.2)Law, Section 7(32)
Non-group owners: Partially owned Flow-through Entities (Article 5.3.2)
Law, Section 7(32)
Non-group owners: Indirect minority ownership (Article 5.3.5)
Law, Section 7(32)
Taxes allocated to a flow-through entity (Article 5.4.2)Law, Section 49
Hybrid entities – Taxes pushed down include indirect owners (Article 5.4.2)Law, Section 7(32)
Hybrid entities – Entities located in jurisdictions without a Corporate Income Tax system (Article 5.5.4)Law, Section 7(32)
Extension of taxes pushed down to include Reverse Hybrids (Article 5.6.2)Law, Section 49

January 2025 OECD Administrative Guidance

Section 82/82a of the Law includes the deferred tax recognition amendments to Articles 9.1 of the GloBE Rules in the January 2025 OECD Administrative Guidance (including the grace period for DTA reversals). The consequential amendments to the Transitional CbCR Harbour (Section 87) and the QDMTT Safe Harbour (Section 81) are also included.

For detailed information on the application of the GloBE Rules in Germany, based on the latest 2024 Second Discussion Draft, see our:

Germany: GloBE Country Guide 

OECD Administrative Guidance: Domestic Implementation Matrix

QDMTT: Domestic Design Matrix

Transitional CbCR Safe Harbour: Domestic Implementation Matrix