Corporate Tax Readiness
Corporate tax readiness is built before filing season. It requires clean accounting, defensible documentation, governance discipline, and a structure-to-activity alignment that holds up under regulator or banking review. We help groups operating across the US, UK, UAE and international jurisdictions build a controlled, auditable tax posture.
What “Tax Readiness” Includes
Tax readiness is a control system: accurate books, traceable transactions, consistent governance records, and evidence that matches the economic reality of the entity and group. This reduces penalties and improves stakeholder confidence.
Accounting-to-Tax Traceability
Ensure records, ledgers and supporting documents match reporting requirements.
- Chart of accounts discipline
- Transaction categorization review
- Evidence mapping (invoices, contracts, receipts)
- Consistency checks across entities
Governance & Documentation
Tax posture becomes defensible when governance records support decisions and flows.
- Board approvals for material actions
- Dividend/distribution evidence discipline
- Intercompany documentation coordination
- Policy and control framework posture
Group-Level Readiness
Align holding/operating roles and cross-border flows to reduce contradictions.
- Holding vs operating role clarity
- Substance alignment support
- Risk trigger review and mitigation
- Audit/bank inquiry readiness
Cross-Border Focus
Corporate tax frameworks differ, but the fundamentals are consistent: records, evidence, and coherence. We coordinate posture so group documentation remains consistent and defensible across jurisdictions.
United States
- Entity reporting posture and documentation discipline
- State-level business compliance coherence
- Banking and stakeholder consistency support
United Kingdom
- Accounts-to-tax consistency checks
- Governance evidence and filing posture alignment
- Group structuring coherence for stakeholders
UAE & Middle East
- Corporate tax readiness and documentation system
- Alignment with ESR and UBO requirements
- Evidence posture for banks and regulators