Joke Collection Website - Public benefit messages - Our company has received a tax risk reminder letter from the tax bureau. How should we respond?

Our company has received a tax risk reminder letter from the tax bureau. How should we respond?

First of all, the risk warning service is a service measure provided by the tax authorities. Whether to choose to accept the service is a voluntary act of the taxpayer. However, when it comes to actual work, you still need to take it seriously and report the situation to the local tax authorities.

Secondly, this is a convenient service. The main purpose is to help taxpayers comply with tax laws, fulfill their obligations, reduce tax processing costs, and reduce tax risks.

Therefore, units that have received tax risk warnings do not need to be nervous. They are just reminding you that there are some non-compliances in the taxation of your company, so the company only needs to conduct self-examination.

As long as you conduct a self-examination and analysis on the above points, if you have not fully fulfilled your tax obligations, you can make up for the tax through self-examination; if it is an actual situation, you only need to explain it truthfully. As long as you can explain it clearly, the tax bureau will accept it.

Tax risk refers to the use of risk management theories and methods by tax authorities, based on current tax laws and regulations and relevant management regulations, to deeply explore the tax registration information, tax declaration information, financial accounting information, filing information, etc. Third-party tax-related information and other inherent laws and connections, establish a corporate income tax policy compliance risk indicator system, and embed it in the "Golden Tax Phase III" collection and management system. Before taxpayers complete the tax return and formally declare tax, the Its declaration data is scanned, and the scan results and doubtful information are pushed to taxpayers in a timely manner to guide taxpayers to correctly understand and comply with tax laws, correctly calculate the tax payable, and reduce tax risks.