Corporate Tax 

Corporate tax is an integral part of a corporation's financial management. The purpose of tax planning as part of a company's overall business strategy is to avoid tax risks and benefit as much as possible from tax opportunities.

hero image Corporate Tax
Professional tax management involves carefully monitoring each corporate transaction and identifying the tax implications from an early stage.
 

Structural and process-related company reorganizations in particular feature numerous challenges and opportunities at the tax level. Strategic tax management, blending perfectly into the company's structures, achieves quick, visible results and plays a key role in success.

 

Corporate Tax - sustainable tax management with a view to improving financial results


We consider a wide-ranging and in-depth knowledge of your company as essential for the successful development of tax concepts and strategies. In close cooperation with corporate management, we assess your overall tax situation and present strategies as the basis for sustained tax management. Our multidisciplinary approach combined with the ongoing transfer of knowledge helps you to be tax-compliant in all situations and puts you in a position where you can react flexibly to changes in order to make use of tax benefits.

 

 

Our tax professionals have an excellent educational background, are familiar with national and international tax law, and are always up-to-date in their field. With 13,000 tax professionals in 106 countries, KPMG is one of the few contact partners able to offer you specific knowledge worldwide.

 

Read more about our Services.

Stefan Kuhn

Stefan Kuhn

Partner, International Corporate Tax

+41 44 249 32 43

Giuseppe Sottile

Giuseppe Sottile

Partner, International Corporate Tax

+41 22 704 15 15

KPMG's Corporate and Indirect Tax Survey 2011

Teaser Image Corporate and Indirect Tax
Corporate and Indirect Tax Rates in international comparison.

The Capital Contribution Principle

The Capital Contribution Principle

Information about the introduction of the capital contribution principle