Episodios

  • What Is Reported Under MDR?
    Apr 2 2026

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules (MDR) require detailed reporting of arrangements that may undermine tax transparency, particularly those designed to bypass or weaken the Common Reporting Standard (CRS).

    In this episode, we break down what types of arrangements are reportable and what information must be disclosed.

    🔍 1️⃣ Types of Reportable Arrangements

    MDR focuses on arrangements that interfere with transparency—especially under CRS.

    ⚠️ A) Removal of CRS Reporting

    Arrangements are reportable where they:

    • Eliminate CRS reporting obligations entirely

    • Reclassify entities or accounts to fall outside reporting scope

    • Exploit gaps between jurisdictions

    👉 These structures aim to avoid reporting at the source.

    🕵️ B) Opaque Offshore Structures

    Even where CRS technically still applies, arrangements may be reportable if they:

    • Obscure or divert the beneficial owner

    • Use layered entities or intermediaries

    • Create complexity to reduce visibility

    👉 The key issue is loss of transparency, not just formal compliance.

    📄 2️⃣ Information Required in an MDR Disclosure

    When an arrangement is reportable, detailed information must be submitted to tax authorities.

    👤 A) Identification of Persons

    This typically includes:

    • Name, address, and contact details

    • Tax Identification Number (TIN)

    • Date of birth (for individuals)

    🧾 B) Parties Involved

    The disclosure must identify:

    • The person making the disclosure (intermediary or taxpayer)

    • The relevant taxpayer

    • Any clients or intermediaries involved in the arrangement

    🏗️ C) Description of the Arrangement

    A clear explanation of:

    • How the structure works

    • Its purpose and design

    • Key features triggering MDR reporting

    🌍 D) Relevant Jurisdictions

    Disclosure must include:

    • Countries where the arrangement is implemented

    • Jurisdictions where it is made available

    • Any cross-border elements

    ⚖️ Why This Level of Detail Matters

    MDR is designed to give tax authorities:

    • A complete picture of the structure

    • Insight into who is involved

    • Visibility across multiple jurisdictions

    This enables:

    • Targeted audits

    • Cross-border cooperation

    • Early detection of systemic risks

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    Under MDR, reportable arrangements typically involve:

    • Removal or avoidance of CRS reporting

    • Structures that obscure beneficial ownership

    And disclosures must include:

    • Full identification of all parties

    • A detailed description of the arrangement

    • All relevant jurisdictions

    In today’s transparency environment:

    It’s not enough for a structure to comply technically—if it reduces visibility, it may still need to be reported.

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    2 m
  • MDR Penalties and Reporting Requirements
    Apr 1 2026

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules (MDR) are not just about transparency—they come with strict deadlines and meaningful penalties. For intermediaries and taxpayers, non-compliance can be both financially costly and reputationally damaging.

    ⏳ 1️⃣ Reporting Deadlines

    MDR operates on a tight reporting timeline.

    In most cases:

    • Information must be disclosed within 30 days

    • The clock starts when:

    • The arrangement is made available, or
    • The first step of implementation is taken

    👉 This short window reflects MDR’s goal of real-time intelligence, not retrospective reporting.

    💸 2️⃣ Financial Penalties

    Failure to comply can result in substantial penalties, which vary by jurisdiction.

    Examples include:

    • Fines of up to €25,000 in Germany

    Daily penalties in United Kingdom for ongoing non-compliance

    • One-off fines or escalating sanctions depending on severity

    👉 Penalties may apply to:

    • Intermediaries (advisors, lawyers, banks)

    • Taxpayers (where no intermediary reports)

    ⚠️ 3️⃣ Beyond Fines: Reputational Risk

    MDR enforcement is not limited to financial penalties.

    Many jurisdictions apply “name and shame” measures, including:

    • Public identification of non-compliant taxpayers

    • Disclosure of intermediaries promoting reportable schemes

    • Publication of enforcement actions

    📢 4️⃣ The “Name and Shame” Effect

    This approach is designed to:

    • Disrupt the marketing of aggressive tax schemes

    • Warn potential clients about high-risk promoters

    • Deter repeat behavior by increasing visibility

    👉 It transforms MDR from a compliance obligation into a market deterrence tool.

    🧠 5️⃣ Why MDR Penalties Are So Strict

    MDR is designed to:

    • Capture arrangements before they spread

    • Hold intermediaries accountable

    • Encourage early and proactive disclosure

    Strict penalties ensure:

    • Timely reporting

    • Accurate information

    • Serious compliance engagement

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    Under MDR:

    • Reporting must generally occur within 30 days

    • Penalties can include significant fines and daily sanctions

    • Reputational consequences—such as public disclosure—can be severe

    In today’s environment:

    Failing to report is often more costly than reporting.

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    3 m
  • Understanding MDR Hallmarks
    Mar 31 2026

    Under Mandatory Disclosure Rules (MDR), not every arrangement is reportable. Instead, reporting is triggered when an arrangement exhibits specific characteristics known as “hallmarks.”

    These hallmarks act as risk indicators, helping tax authorities identify structures that may involve tax avoidance or attempts to bypass transparency rules.

    🔍 What Are MDR Hallmarks?

    Hallmarks are defined features or patterns that suggest an arrangement could be used to:

    • Avoid tax

    • Circumvent reporting obligations (e.g., CRS)

    • Obscure beneficial ownership

    If an arrangement meets one or more hallmarks, it may need to be reported to tax authorities.

    🧠 1️⃣ Generic Hallmarks

    These are broad indicators commonly found in marketed or packaged schemes.

    Examples include:

    Confidentiality clauses preventing disclosure of the structure

    Success-based fees, where advisors are paid based on the tax advantage achieved

    • Standardized structures offered to multiple clients

    👉 These hallmarks focus on the commercial behavior of promoters and intermediaries.

    🌍 2️⃣ Specific Hallmarks

    These target particular types of arrangements that raise tax or transparency concerns.

    Examples include:

    • Cross-border payments between related entities

    • Acquisition of loss-making companies to offset profits

    • Structures designed to disguise beneficial ownership

    • Arrangements exploiting mismatches between jurisdictions

    👉 These hallmarks focus on the technical design of the arrangement.

    ⚖️ 3️⃣ The Main Benefit Test (MBT)

    Not all hallmarks automatically trigger reporting.

    For certain hallmarks, reporting is required only if:

    One of the main benefits of the arrangement is obtaining a tax advantage

    This is known as the Main Benefit Test (MBT).

    🧩 How MBT Works

    • If the tax advantage is incidental → may not be reportable

    • If the tax advantage is a key driver → likely reportable

    👉 MBT introduces a purpose-based test, not just a structural one.

    ⚠️ Why Hallmarks Matter

    Hallmarks are central to MDR because they:

    • Define what must be reported

    • Trigger obligations for intermediaries and taxpayers

    • Enable tax authorities to identify high-risk arrangements early

    They shift the system from:

    • Technical compliance → to intent and risk assessment

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    Under MDR:

    • Hallmarks are red flags, not automatic violations

    • They identify arrangements that may require disclosure

    • Some hallmarks apply automatically

    • Others depend on the Main Benefit Test

    In today’s environment:

    If a structure looks like it was designed to gain a tax advantage, it may need to be reported—even if it is technically legal.

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    4 m
  • MDR Regulatory Frameworks Overview
    Mar 30 2026

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules (MDR) are not a single global law—they are a network of coordinated regimes across jurisdictions. While the principles are aligned, each framework applies differently depending on geography and scope.

    In this episode, we break down the three key MDR systems shaping global tax transparency.

    🇪🇺 1️⃣ EU DAC6

    The European Union framework is based on:

    Directive (EU) 2018/822

    🔍 What It Covers

    • Cross-border tax arrangements within the EU

    • Arrangements that meet specific “hallmarks”

    • Both aggressive tax planning and certain standard structures

    ⚖️ Key Features

    • Reporting obligation primarily on intermediaries

    • Applies across all EU Member States

    • Automatic exchange of reported information between countries

    👉 DAC6 is one of the broadest and most widely enforced MDR regimes.

    🇬🇧 2️⃣ UK DOTAS & MDR

    The United Kingdom operates a dual system:

    🧠 DOTAS (Domestic)

    • Disclosure of Tax Avoidance Schemes (DOTAS)

    • Focuses on UK domestic tax avoidance arrangements

    • Long-standing regime with established enforcement

    🌍 UK MDR (International)

    • Targets offshore structures and CRS avoidance

    • Aligned with OECD MDR principles

    • Focuses on arrangements that:

    • Circumvent CRS
    • Obscure beneficial ownership

    👉 The UK separates domestic vs international disclosure frameworks.

    🌍 3️⃣ OECD Model Rules (Global Standard)

    At the global level, MDR is driven by the

    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

    🎯 Purpose

    • Provide a standardized framework for countries to adopt

    • Target arrangements that:

    • Avoid CRS reporting
    • Conceal beneficial ownership

    🔄 How It Works

    • Countries implement the rules into domestic law

    • Information is shared internationally

    • Focus is on intermediaries and promoters

    ⚖️ How the Frameworks Compare

    FrameworkScopeFocus

    DAC6 (EU)

    Cross-border EU arrangements

    Broad hallmarks & automatic exchange

    UK DOTAS

    Domestic UK arrangements

    Tax avoidance schemes

    UK MDR

    Offshore / CRS avoidance

    OECD-aligned

    OECD MDR

    Global model

    CRS avoidance & transparency

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    MDR operates on three levels:

    Regional (EU DAC6)

    National (UK DOTAS & MDR)

    Global (OECD Model Rules)

    Despite differences, they share a common goal:

    Expose tax planning early—especially where structures are designed to avoid transparency.

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    3 m
  • The Two Types of Mandatory Disclosure Rules
    Mar 29 2026

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules (MDR) are designed to identify tax planning before it becomes widespread. Instead of relying only on reporting financial accounts, MDR requires taxpayers and intermediaries—including lawyers, banks, and advisors—to disclose certain arrangements directly to tax authorities.

    🌍 The Two MDR Initiatives

    Developed by the

    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, MDR operates through two distinct but complementary frameworks:

    🧠 1️⃣ Aggressive Cross-Border Tax Arrangements

    Originating from

    OECD BEPS Action 12, this initiative focuses on early detection of tax avoidance schemes.

    🔍 What It Targets

    Arrangements that exhibit specific “hallmarks”, such as:

    • Opaque ownership structures

    • Artificial transactions lacking economic substance

    • Tax base erosion strategies

    • Structures designed to generate tax advantages across jurisdictions

    🎯 Objective

    • Provide real-time intelligence to tax authorities

    • Allow early intervention

    • Prevent widespread adoption of aggressive schemes

    🏦 2️⃣ CRS Avoidance Arrangements

    The second pillar focuses specifically on circumventing the Common Reporting Standard (CRS).

    Earlier attempts to close loopholes—through:

    • FAQs

    • Implementation guidance

    proved difficult to enforce consistently.

    ⚠️ The Reality

    CRS avoidance strategies evolved quickly, often described as:

    “Like trying to stamp out cockroaches”—closing one loophole simply led to another.🔄 The MDR Solution

    Now:

    Any arrangement with CRS avoidance hallmarks is reportable

    • Focus is on design and intent, not just technical compliance

    • Intermediaries must disclose structures that:

    • Obscure beneficial ownership
    • Reclassify entities to avoid reporting
    • Exploit gaps between jurisdictions

    ⚖️ Who Must Report?

    MDR applies to:

    • Tax advisors

    • Lawyers

    • Banks

    • Wealth managers

    • Corporate service providers

    👉 If no intermediary is involved, the taxpayer themselves may be required to report.

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules represent a major shift:

    • From reactive reporting (CRS) → to proactive disclosure (MDR)

    • From focusing on accounts → to focusing on arrangements and planning

    Today:

    If a structure shows avoidance hallmarks, it is likely reportable—regardless of whether it technically complies with CRS.
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    5 m
  • The Purpose of Mandatory Disclosure Rules
    Mar 28 2026

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules (MDR) are a key part of the global transparency framework designed to identify and deter arrangements that undermine CRS reporting. Rather than focusing only on taxpayers, MDR targets the ecosystem behind tax planning—the intermediaries, promoters, and structures themselves.

    🌍 What MDR Is Designed to Do

    Developed by the

    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, MDR aims to:

    • Define and capture intermediaries involved in CRS avoidance

    • Identify those who design, market, or supply such arrangements

    • Create early visibility for tax authorities

    This shifts the focus from detection after the fact → to prevention and intelligence gathering.

    🧠 1️⃣ Identifying Intermediaries

    MDR establishes clear rules for who must report, including:

    • Advisors designing structures

    • Promoters marketing arrangements

    • Service providers facilitating implementation

    This ensures responsibility does not sit solely with the taxpayer.

    🔄 2️⃣ Spontaneous Exchange of Information

    Information collected under MDR is shared between jurisdictions through the:

    Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters

    Key feature:

    Spontaneous exchange (not automatic)

    • Triggered where a country believes the information may be relevant to another jurisdiction

    This allows tax authorities to act quickly across borders.

    📊 3️⃣ Intelligence Gathering for Authorities

    MDR is fundamentally an intelligence tool.

    It enables:

    • Identification of emerging avoidance schemes

    • Analysis of patterns across jurisdictions

    • Early intervention before widespread use

    🎯 4️⃣ Practical Outcomes

    The information collected allows:

    🔍 Targeted Audits

    Authorities can focus on high-risk taxpayers and structures

    🌐 Global Coordination

    The Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes can:

    • Identify weaknesses in CRS implementation

    • Recommend improvements

    🚫 Deterrence

    By requiring disclosure:

    • The marketing of avoidance schemes becomes riskier

    • Intermediaries face greater scrutiny

    • Aggressive planning is discouraged

    🏗️ 5️⃣ Policy Origins

    MDR builds on earlier transparency initiatives, including:

    OECD BEPS Action 12

    • UK disclosure regimes (e.g., DOTAS / POTAS)

    • EU Mandatory Disclosure Rules (DAC6)

    It represents the next evolution of global tax transparency.

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules are not just about reporting—they are about changing behaviour.

    They aim to:

    • Expose CRS avoidance early

    • Hold intermediaries accountable

    • Enable cross-border intelligence sharing

    • Deter aggressive tax planning before it spreads

    In today’s environment:

    It’s not just what you report—it’s what you plan that may need to be disclosed.

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    3 m
  • Mandatory Disclosure Rules Explained
    Mar 27 2026

    Global transparency doesn’t stop at reporting bank accounts. The OECD introduced Mandatory Disclosure Rules (MDR) to go one step further—targeting the people who design and promote structures that may undermine CRS.

    In this episode, we explain what MDR is, who it targets, and why it matters.

    🌍 What Are Mandatory Disclosure Rules?

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules are part of the OECD’s broader transparency framework, developed by the

    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

    Their purpose is to:

    • Detect arrangements designed to circumvent CRS reporting

    • Increase visibility over cross-border tax planning structures

    • Shift focus from taxpayers to intermediaries and promoters

    🎯 Who Do MDR Target?

    MDR is specifically aimed at:

    🧠 1️⃣ Promoters & Designers

    Those who:

    • Create or market structures intended to avoid reporting

    • Develop offshore arrangements or planning strategies

    • Package and sell these structures to clients

    ⚖️ 2️⃣ Intermediaries & Service Providers

    This includes professionals who:

    • Advise on or implement structures

    • Facilitate the setup of entities or accounts

    • Provide legal, tax, or financial services connected to the arrangement

    Even partial involvement may trigger obligations.

    🔍 What Must Be Disclosed?

    Under MDR, certain arrangements must be reported if they:

    • Undermine or bypass CRS reporting

    • Obscure beneficial ownership

    • Use opaque structures or jurisdictions

    • Exploit classification mismatches

    These are often referred to as “hallmarks” of avoidance.

    📊 How MDR Works

    If an arrangement meets the criteria:

    • The intermediary must report it to tax authorities

    • If no intermediary is involved, the taxpayer may have to report

    • The information is then shared internationally between jurisdictions

    This creates a proactive transparency system, rather than relying solely on CRS data.

    ⚠️ Why MDR Matters

    MDR significantly expands the compliance landscape:

    • It targets intent and design, not just outcomes

    • It increases scrutiny on advisors and institutions

    • It creates early visibility for tax authorities

    Failure to comply can result in:

    • Financial penalties

    • Regulatory consequences

    • Reputational risk

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    Mandatory Disclosure Rules are designed to:

    • Catch structures before they succeed

    • Hold intermediaries accountable

    • Close gaps in CRS reporting

    The message is clear:

    Transparency now applies not just to accounts—but to the planning behind them.
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    3 m
  • CRS Exemptions: Which Financial Institutions Don’t Report?
    Mar 26 2026

    Not every Financial Institution (FI) under the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) is required to report. Certain entities are automatically treated as Non-Reporting Financial Institutions because they pose a low risk of tax evasion and serve public or systemic functions.

    In this episode, we break down which institutions are exempt—and when those exemptions can be lost.

    🏛️ 1️⃣ Governmental Entities

    CRS exempts entities that form part of the state.

    This includes:

    • National governments

    • Political subdivisions (e.g., states, provinces, municipalities)

    • Agencies or entities wholly owned by government bodies

    These entities are excluded because they perform public administrative functions, not private wealth management.

    🌍 2️⃣ International Organizations

    Certain supranational institutions are also exempt, including:

    • World Bank

    • International Monetary Fund (IMF)

    • European Bank for Reconstruction and Development

    To qualify:

    • The organization must be primarily composed of governments

    • It must operate for public or multilateral purposes

    🏦 3️⃣ Central Banks

    Central banks are automatically treated as Non-Reporting FIs.

    Examples include:

    • Federal Reserve System

    • Bank of England

    Also included:

    • Entities wholly owned by one or more central banks

    These institutions are excluded because they support monetary policy and financial stability, not private investment activity.

    ⚠️ When Exemptions Can Be Lost

    CRS exemptions are not absolute.

    An otherwise exempt entity may lose its Non-Reporting FI status if:

    • It engages in commercial financial activity, or

    • Financial accounts are used for private benefit

    Examples:

    • A government-owned entity operating like a commercial bank

    • An account used to channel income to private individuals

    💰 Private Benefit Rule

    A key limitation:

    If income or assets held by an exempt entity are used to benefit private persons, then:

    • The entity may be treated as a Reporting FI for that period

    • CRS obligations can apply for that year

    This prevents abuse of public-entity exemptions for private wealth structuring.

    🎯 Key Takeaway

    Under CRS, the following entities are generally Non-Reporting Financial Institutions:

    • Governmental entities

    • International organizations

    • Central banks

    However:

    • The exemption depends on function, not just status

    • Engaging in commercial activity or benefiting private persons can trigger reporting obligations

    CRS exemptions are designed to protect public institutions—not to create loopholes.

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