On January 5, 2024, in a live broadcast, our Managing Partner Erdem Mümtaz Hacıpaşaoğlu delivered a deep dive titled “Taxing Foreign Revenues of Digital Products,” examining how the cross-border taxation of digital products entering global markets actually works.

The central thesis of the broadcast was clear: cross-border digital sales by a Turkish venture are not just “receiving revenue from abroad”; they are a tax architecture in which VAT, corporate income tax, transfer pricing, and U.S./EU withholding thresholds must be managed in parallel.

The Turkey side: VAT and corporate income tax

For digital product sales abroad, the session covered VAT exemption conditions, the export-of-services characterization, the foreign-currency-earning document process, and the corporate-income-tax bookkeeping obligations.

Selling in markets: U.S., EU, U.K.

Sales in the U.S. trigger sales tax / nexus obligations; the EU triggers OSS / IOSS registration; withholding-tax triggers were laid out — clearly framing the tax-design decision the founder must make for each market.

Transfer pricing

For structures where a Turkish entity coexists with a U.S. entity (as in flip-ups), the session addressed transfer-pricing documentation and the risks of disguised profit distribution.

Highlights from this broadcast

  • Turkey: VAT exemption, export of services, corporate income tax
  • U.S.: Sales tax, nexus, withholding
  • EU: OSS/IOSS, VAT registration
  • Transfer pricing: Documentation in two-country structures

You can watch the full broadcast on YouTube.

Author

  • Erdem Mümtaz Hacıpaşaoğlu

    Mümtaz is the Managing Partner of Vircon Legal, which he founded in 2016. He advises founders, investors and operators on financing rounds, M&A, cross-border incorporations and regulated verticals — including crypto-asset infrastructure, fintech and games — bringing a former startup founder's perspective to every engagement.

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Published: 5 January 2024 · last updated: 28 May 2026
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws and practices may have changed since the publication date. For specific situations, please consult Vircon Legal.
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