For many mid-market groups, transfer pricing considerations often become a focus area once a tax audit, refinancing process, or investor due diligence exposes weaknesses or is even entirely absent. For international mid-market groups, transfer pricing is no longer only a tax compliance topic. It directly affects EBITDA allocation, cash tax leakage, lender reporting, post-acquisition integration, and finance governance.
In practice, transfer pricing challenges are usually operational rather than theoretical. Common issues we frequently observe include:
management services charged without documented allocation support,
local entities applying inconsistent gross margins despite similar functions,
intercompany loans without defensible interest support,
intercompany mark-up not at arms’ length principle, and
local finance teams operating without visibility over the group transfer pricing framework.
Transaction Mapping
- cross-border sales and procurement flows,
- centralized support functions,
- financing arrangements,
- intellectual property ownership,
- warehousing and logistics structures,
- management service arrangements, and
- which entities are actually exposed to key operational risks.
- ERP and IT support recharges,
- shareholder guarantees,
- centralized procurement support,
- management secondments,
- treasury support, and
- cross-border operational oversight.
For many mid-market groups, this operational mapping exercise already resolves a significant portion of future audit discussions.
FAR
Analysis
The functional analysis (Functions performed, Assets used, and Risks assumed — FAR) remains the foundation of any transfer pricing framework. However, in practice, the exercise is less about preparing theoretical documentation and more about understanding how decisions are actually made inside the group. Key practical questions include:
Who controls pricing decisions?
Who manages inventory and customer risks?
Which entity performs strategic procurement functions?
Who controls financing and treasury activities?
Does reported profitability align with operational decision-making?
We regularly observe situations where legal agreements allocate risks to one entity while operational control sits elsewhere. This becomes increasingly relevant during tax audits where authorities assess whether actual conduct aligns with contractual structures.
TP Models
Many transfer pricing frameworks are unnecessarily complex for mid-market groups. In practice, most privately owned international groups operate relatively standard transaction structures:
limited-risk distribution models – where distributors perform routine sales activities with limited entrepreneurial risk;
centralized procurement – where purchasing functions and supplier negotiations are managed centrally for the group;
management service recharges – involving allocation of shared management or support function costs across entities;
contract manufacturing – where manufacturing entities operate on a limited-risk or service-provider basis;
intercompany financing – including loans, guarantees, or centralized treasury arrangements between group entities; and
centralized IP ownership – where intellectual property is legally and economically controlled by a principal entity.
For these structures, overly sophisticated transfer pricing models are often unnecessary. What matters more is consistency, documentation quality, and operational execution. In practice, we commonly see:
cost-plus approaches for support functions – where routine service providers earn a markup on operating costs;
TNMM (Transactional Net Margin Method) approaches for distribution entities – where profitability is benchmarked against comparable independent companies;
simplified allocation keys for group overhead charges – typically based on revenue, headcount, or usage metrics;
quarterly true-up mechanisms – allowing periodic adjustment of intercompany margins toward target profitability; and
centralized repositories for intercompany agreements and benchmark support – ensuring documentation consistency across the group.
The objective is not theoretical perfection. The objective is implementing a framework that Finance can realistically operate and defend.
ERP
Alignment
One of the most underestimated transfer pricing risks in mid-market groups is operational implementation. A transfer pricing policy that does not align with ERP workflows, invoicing logic, or reporting structures usually fails in practice. We frequently observe inconsistent customer and vendor master data and invoice flows inconsistent with contractual arrangements. For management, transfer pricing implementation should therefore be treated as both a finance governance project and an operational process project.
Germany Rules
German entities engaged in cross-border related-party transactions are subject to transfer pricing documentation obligations primarily under § 90(3) of the German Fiscal Code (Abgabenordnung – AO), together with the German Administrative Principles and OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines.
German tax authorities expect transfer pricing positions to satisfy the arm’s length principle under § 1 of the German Foreign Tax Act (Außensteuergesetz – AStG). This requires related-party transactions to be priced consistently with conditions that would have been agreed between independent parties under comparable circumstances.
German transfer pricing documentation requirements generally include a Master File, which provides an overview of the group’s global business, value chain, financing, and transfer pricing framework, and a Local File, which documents the German entity’s specific intercompany transactions, pricing methodologies, benchmarking support, and functional profile.
- Master File requirements apply for groups with consolidated revenue exceeding EUR 100 million;
Local File requirements apply where the annual aggregate value of cross-border intercompany transaction (between parent and subsidiary) categories exceeds:
- EUR 6 million for intercompany goods transactions; and
- EUR 600,000 for services, royalties, financing, guarantees, and other non-goods transactions.
The thresholds apply per transaction category (not the total revenue of the entity) rather than per counterparty.
In practice, documentation prepared within six months after the financial year-end is typically treated as contemporaneous documentation. Once formally requested by the German tax authorities, documentation generally must be submitted within:
- 60 days under normal procedures; or
- 30 days during an ongoing tax audit.
German tax audits routinely focus on management and shareholder services, financing arrangements and guarantees, loss-making German entities, substance and decision-making functions, business restructurings, and consistency between transfer pricing documentation and statutory accounts.
Although transactions below the statutory local file thresholds may not require formal local file documentation under § 90(3) AO, companies are still generally expected to maintain appropriate supporting documentation and substantiation for cross-border related-party transactions.
During tax audits, German tax authorities frequently request a high-level transaction overview or supporting information to assess potential transfer pricing risk areas.
- failure to submit a Master File may trigger penalties of EUR 5,000;
- failure to submit Country-by-Country Reporting (CbCR) - generally applicable for multinational groups with consolidated annual revenue of at least EUR 750 million - may trigger penalties of EUR 10,000;
- failure to provide usable Master File or Local File documentation may result in penalties ranging from 5% to 10% of the income adjustment, subject to a minimum penalty of EUR 5,000;
- delayed submission may lead to additional late-filing penalties and increased audit scrutiny.
Where transfer pricing positions are determined not to satisfy the arm’s length principle, German tax authorities may perform income adjustments under § 1 AStG, potentially resulting in additional corporate income tax, trade tax, interest charges, and double taxation exposure.
Swiss
Rules
Switzerland does not currently impose standalone statutory transfer pricing documentation requirements comparable to Germany’s formal Local File and Master File framework. However, Swiss tax authorities apply the arm’s length principle based on Swiss tax law, OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines, and long-standing administrative practice. Transfer pricing considerations are primarily assessed under:
- the Swiss Federal Direct Tax Act (DBG);
- the Swiss Tax Harmonization Act (StHG);
- OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines adopted in Swiss administrative practice; and
- substance-over-form principles applied by Swiss tax authorities.
Swiss entities must be able to demonstrate that related-party transactions are conducted at arm’s length and supported by appropriate commercial and economic rationale. In practice, Swiss tax authorities increasingly expect contemporaneous support for:
- intercompany financing arrangements,
- management service charges,
- principal and distribution structures,
- IP ownership and royalty arrangements,
- substance and decision-making functions, and
- allocation methodologies used for shared service structures.
Although Switzerland does not prescribe formal Local File thresholds similar to Germany, taxpayers are generally expected to maintain sufficient supporting documentation to substantiate pricing methodologies, benchmarking support, and operational substance during tax audits. Audit reviews in Switzerland frequently focus on:
- whether sufficient Swiss substance exists for reported profits,
- financing arrangements and thin capitalization considerations,
- management service benefit tests,
- hidden profit distributions,
- intercompany interest rates, and
- consistency between contractual arrangements and actual conduct.
Although
Switzerland does not impose standalone transfer pricing documentation
penalties comparable to Germany, however in case of insufficient
support for intercompany pricing, Swiss tax authorities may
reclassify transactions and impose upward taxable income adjustments.
In
cases involving insufficient documentation or inability to support
transfer pricing positions, Swiss tax authorities may apply
estimation approaches based on available market data and comparable
profitability indicators.
Documentation
- unsupported year-end adjustments,
- margins outside benchmark ranges,
- inconsistent invoicing patterns,
- weak support for management service charges, and
- misalignment between contracts and actual conduct.
In practice, transfer pricing frameworks operate more effectively when monitored throughout the year rather than reconstructed retrospectively. Quarterly reviews of operating margins, intercompany balances, financing arrangements, and management fee allocations often prevent year-end audit disputes and remediation exercises.
Conclusion
For international mid-market groups, transfer pricing is no longer only a year-end tax documentation exercise. It has become part of broader finance governance, operational integration, and reporting discipline. In practice, the most effective transfer pricing frameworks are not necessarily the most sophisticated. They are the frameworks that operational teams understand, Finance can execute consistently, and management can defend during audits, transactions, and cross-border expansion.
About Group Accounting Partner
Group Accounting Partner is a modern, AI-enabled accounting advisory boutique specializing in group accounting, consolidation, and financial reporting for PE/VC-backed companies and international mid-market groups.