By Anthony N. Verni, Attorney at Law, CPA
Series: International Tax Reform 2025 – Part 5 of 6
Why Intangibles Still Dominate International Tax Planning
In today’s economy, intangibles drive value—brands, software, algorithms, and data are now the principal sources of global profit. As business models digitize, tax authorities increasingly view intangibles as the main lever for profit shifting. The Internal Revenue Code §482 remains the key U.S. authority allowing the IRS to reallocate income among related parties “to clearly reflect income.” But as foreign jurisdictions adopt the OECD’s Pillar Two global minimum tax, U.S. companies face conflicting global rules on how and where intangible income can be taxed and how the income taxes work in the framework.
The DEMPE Framework: Global Consensus on Substance
The OECD’s DEMPE framework—Development, Enhancement, Maintenance, Protection, and Exploitation—defines who earns intangible-related income. Simply owning legal title to IP is no longer sufficient; economic ownership follows substance. U.S. parents must demonstrate that foreign affiliates performing R&D or marketing functions receive appropriate returns, and low-substance IP holding companies are prime audit targets.
Practice Insight:
DEMPE has become the de facto global standard. Attorneys should ensure that intercompany contracts and transfer-pricing studies explicitly map each DEMPE function to the responsible entity, with documentation supporting actual decision-making and risk control.
U.S. Transfer Pricing Framework Under §482
The U.S. transfer pricing and Pillar Two are grounded in the arm’s-length principle, implemented through Treas. Reg. §§1.482-1 to 1.482-9. Primary methods for intangible transfers include the Comparable Uncontrolled Transaction (CUT) Method, Profit Split Method, Comparable Profits Method (CPM), and Cost-Sharing Arrangement (CSA) Rules under Treas. Reg. §1.482-7.
2025 developments include enhanced documentation standards, coordination with global minimum-tax rules, and increased litigation risk as foreign tax authorities invoke Pillar Two to justify higher “residual” profit allocations.
Cost-Sharing and Buy-In Payments Under Scrutiny
Under Treas. Reg. §1.482-7, participants in a cost-sharing arrangement (CSA) must pay for pre-existing IP (a “buy-in”) and share ongoing costs commensurate with expected benefits. The IRS continues to challenge inadequate buy-in valuations, missing DEMPE documentation, and “cash box” participants lacking real substance.
Practice Insight:
After the 2023 Medtronic III decision, courts expect detailed, contemporaneous valuation evidence. A cost-sharing study that fails to link economic control to the participant’s contributions risk full §482 reallocations and penalties under §6662(e).
Transfer Pricing and Pillar Two: The Collision Course
The OECD’s Pillar Two global minimum tax introduces a new layer of complexity. Under the collision of transfer pricing and Pillar Two, jurisdictions must compute effective tax rates (ETRs) based on financial accounting of foreign income. If a jurisdiction’s ETR falls below 15%, a “top-up” tax applies—potentially ignoring traditional transfer-pricing outcomes. Even if compliant with arm’s-length pricing, groups could face foreign “top-up” taxes on profits already taxed in the U.S.
For additional insights into digital-economy taxation, see Taxing Foreign Corporations in the Digital Age.
Intercompany Services and the New Arm’s-Length Standard
Multinationals allocate administrative, management, and R&D costs among affiliates under Treas. Reg. §1.482-9. 2025 guidance clarifies that benefits must be measurable and service allocations tied to digital platforms, algorithms, or customer data must account for intangible exploitation, not merely cost recovery.
Documentation: What the IRS and Foreign Tax Authorities Expect
The IRS and OECD both emphasize contemporaneous, narrative-rich documentation, including function, asset, and risk analysis (FAR), economic analysis supporting chosen methods, and evidence of DEMPE alignment. Penalties under §6662(e) and (h) for valuation misstatements can reach 20–40%.
Practice Insight:
Avoid generic transfer-pricing reports. Each should narrate the actual control environment and who makes strategic decisions, approves budgets, and bears downside risk.
Litigation and Enforcement Trends
IRS LB&I Transfer Pricing Practice (TPP) and foreign authorities are sharing data more aggressively via treaty networks. Key trends include focus on software and platform intangibles, scrutiny of marketing intangibles, and rising use of APAs (Advance Pricing Agreements) for stability.
Strategic Takeaways for Practitioners
To navigate transfer pricing and Pillar Two in 2025:✓ Integrate transfer pricing with global minimum-tax modeling.
✓ Re-evaluate cost-sharing arrangements—ensure buy-ins reflect current market value.
✓ Document DEMPE rigorously with operational evidence.
✓ Engage early with competent authorities for APAs and MAPs.
✓ Train clients’ finance teams to maintain consistent intercompany pricing support files.
Key Authorities and Resources
- IRC §482 – Allocation of income among related parties
- Treas. Reg. §§1.482-1 to 1.482-9 – Transfer-pricing methods
- Treas. Reg. §1.482-7 – Cost-sharing arrangements
- IRC §6662(e), (h) – Transfer-pricing penalties
- IRM 4.61.3 – Development of §482 cases
- IRS Publication 5300 – Transfer Pricing Examination Process (TPEP)
- OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines (2022)
- BEPS Actions 8–10 – Value creation and substance
The Future of Intangibles and Global Coordination
The world’s tax systems are shifting from statutory compliance to economic coherence. Transfer pricing now intersects with financial reporting, global minimum-tax compliance, and cross-border substance evaluation. Attorneys and CPAs must ensure that economic ownership aligns with jurisdictional taxation and integrate DEMPE, §482, and Pillar Two modeling.








