DAC8 - How to prepare for new CRS controls?

DAC8 - How to prepare for new CRS controls?

Ten years after its introduction into EU laws, CRS reporting will be enhanced with a new set of information to be exchanged. While in terms of client and investor onboarding procedures, DAC 8 will not change how a Financial Institution (FI) should work, tax authorities will be better equipped to detect incomplete or incoherent sets of reporting data.

At the same time, tax authorities under the guidance of the EU Commission and the OECD are conducting more and more controls and on-site audits.

It is thus important for FIs to have a strong governance in place around CRS (and other tax transparency regulations such as FATCA, DAC6 etc.) and to carefully review their operating model to ensure that any potential compliance gaps are identified and corrected before the entry into force of the Directive in January 2026.

As part of this course, PwC Academy offers to highlight your company's requirements regarding this topic and to address, in a comprehensive and practical way, the questions professionals are confronted with in the light of their mandatory professional duties and the 'progressive' evolution of CRS regulations.

Thanks to the strong expertise in the financial sector and the professional experience of our lead experts, our courses can help FIs improve their CRS knowledge according to the best practices.

This module is part of our Automatic Exchange of Information (AEOI) training curriculum.

Duration: 2h

Language: Available in English and French. The supporting material is only available in English.

Number of participants: up to 15

Available as intra-company course (i.e. dedicated session on demand)

Course content can be customised on demand under specific conditions.

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Objectives

By the end of this training, participants will be able to:

  • identify the impacts of the new regulatory requirements on their organisation;
  • review their operating model;
  • prepare a remediation plan if necessary;
  • enhance their CRS procedure and control framework in line with the new requirements and market practice;
  • understand the interactions with other tax regulatory requirements.

Content

  • Key concepts around CRS
  • Explanations on the changes brought by DAC8 in the current CRS reporting obligations
  • Deep dive on the CRS governance requirements in Luxembourg law
  • Overview of the recent regulatory updates at Luxembourg, European and international levels
  • Return of experience from recent tax authorities controls
  • Explanations of the interactions with other tax regulations

Target audience

  • Operations, compliance and/or tax functions from banks and from insurance companies
  • (Alternative) asset managers

Our lead experts

This training will be coordinated by Pierre Kirsch and Camille Perez, Partners at PwC Luxembourg.

Pierre Kirsch is a partner in the Luxembourg financial services tax practice with over 29 years of experience serving clients in banking, insurance, and asset management. He leads a team specialising in tax compliance analysis for onboarding banking clients and investors into complex alternative fund structures. Pierre and his team advise financial sector actors in Luxembourg and internationally, helping clients review onboarding and tax reporting processes, implement controls, and define organisational roles. He contributed to establishing PwC Regulated Solutions S.à r.l., managing daily operations, and supports PwC’s financial services clients with consulting and reporting on operational taxes including FATCA, CRS, QI, and CbCR.

Camille Perez is a partner in the Financial Services Tax department with over 15 years of experience in tax consulting and compliance for banking, asset management, and private equity clients in France and Luxembourg. He is a core member of PwC Luxembourg’s tax transparency expert team, specialising in directives such as DAC1 to 7, AML tax, FATCA, and QI, with expertise developed since 2011. Camille regularly leads tax transparency workshops and advises financial industry clients on EU/US tax compliance. He also co-chairs the ALFI working group on CRS and has managed numerous reporting and audit projects for major financial clients.

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