
BIR Issuances – RMC No. 23-2025
Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 81-2025
Date Posted (BIR Website): September 3, 2025
Effectivity: Immediately
Reiterating the criteria and guidelines for the deductibility of ordinary and necessary expenses under Section 34(A)(1)(a) of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) of 1997, as amended.
I. Background
- Section 34(A)(1)(a) of the NIRC allows deductions for expenses that are ordinary and necessary in the conduct of trade, business, or profession.
- These must be directly attributable to business operations and substantiated with proper documentation.
II. Persons Entitled to Deduct Expenses
Deductions are allowed for:
- Individuals (citizens/resident aliens)- Sec. 24(A), NIRC;
- Non-resident aliens engaged in business – Sec. 25, NIRC;
- Members of general professional partnerships – Sec. 26, NIRC;
- Domestic corporations – Sec. 27 (A), NIRC;
- Proprietary educational institutions and hospitals – Sec. 27 (B), NIRC;
- Government-owned and controlled corporations (GOCCs) – Sec. 27 (C) , NIRC; and
- Resident foreign corporations – Sec. 28(A)(1), NIRC.
III. Criteria for Deductibility
For expenses to be deductible, expenses must:
- Be ordinary and necessary;
- Be paid or incurred within the taxable year;
- Be directly attributable to the business or profession; and
- Be substantiated with proper documentation (i.e. invoices, records or other pertinent papers).
A. Ordinary and Necessary Expenses
- Ordinary: Usual, customary, and typical in business (need not be habitual, but reasonable in amount).
- Necessary: Helpful and appropriate for the business.
- Limits:
- Excessive or disproportionately large expenses are not ordinary (e.g., marketing expenses nearly half of total claimed costs).
- Unreasonable compensation payments not related to actual services are not deductible.
- Burden of proof rests with the taxpayer.
B. Paid or incurred within Taxable Year
- Must fall within the taxable year based on accounting method (cash or accrual).
- Matches the GAAP principle of associating expenses with revenue generated in the same period.
C. Direct Attributable to Business/Profession
- Must have clear connection to taxpayer’s business activities.
- Expenses related to passive income (interest, dividends, royalties) are generally not deductible, since such income is already subject to final tax.
- Differentiates active vs. passive income:
- Active = requires continuous/direct participation in business.
- Passive = earned without substantial participation (e.g., investments).
- Expenses must be segregated if linked to different income streams (regular, preferential, tax-exempt, or final tax).
D. Substantiation
- Expenses must be proven with official records.
- Mere allegations do not justify deductions.
- Rule: deductions = exemptions → strictly construed against taxpayers.
IV. Expenses Related to Tax-Exempt Income
- Not deductible since they do not contribute to taxable income.
- Prevents double benefit (tax exemption + deduction).
V. Expenses Related to Income Subject to Final Withholding Tax
- Expenses related to such income (e.g., bank charges, brokerage fees) are not deductible, since FWT is final.
VI. Expenses Related to Preferential Tax Rates
- Must be segregated from regular income expenses.
- For businesses under 5% SCIT (Special Corporate Income Tax), only direct costs are deductible.
- Indirect costs (e.g., advertising, office supplies) are disallowed.
VII. Special 5% SCIT Incentive Enterprises
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- For IPA-registered enterprises under 5% SCIT, only direct costs (production-related) are allowed.
- Indirect expenses (advertising, representation, office supplies, unrelated freight/handling) are disallowed.
VIII. Effectivity
- The circular is effective immediately.
- All inconsistent rulings and issuances are amended, modified, or revoked.
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