Tax audit of individuals
A practical guide to how ANAF audits individuals: personal tax situation verification, indirect methods of income assessment, unannounced and documentary controls, your rights throughout the procedure, and the avenues of administrative and judicial review.
General framework of tax audits
Fiscal Procedure Code (Law 207/2015), Title VI · forms of audit · who carries them out
A tax audit is the set of activities through which the tax authority verifies the legality of the taxpayer's affairs and their compliance with the tax law. For individuals, the central instrument is the Personal Tax Situation Verification (PTSV), the procedure through which ANAF compares declared income against the person's actual wealth and expenses and, in case of mismatch, establishes additional income through indirect methods. This guide covers that procedure in detail and presents, in summary, the other forms of control that may apply to an individual.
Forms of audit under the Fiscal Procedure Code
| Form of audit | Legal basis (FPC) | Applicable to individuals? |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Tax Situation Verification | art. 138–147 | Yes, the specific procedure for individual income tax |
| Tax inspection | art. 113–133 | Yes, typically for self-employed (PFA), liberal professions or economic activities |
| Unannounced control | art. 134–135 | Yes, without prior notice |
| Anti-fraud control | art. 136–137¹ | Yes, operational control, without notice |
| Documentary verification | art. 148–149 | Yes, "desk-based" coherence analysis |
The principles that protect you
Whatever the form of audit, the tax authority is bound by the general principles of the Fiscal Procedure Code: good faith (art. 12), the right to be heard before any decision is taken (art. 9), the active role of the authority and the establishment of the truth (art. 7), the exercise of discretion within the limits of reasonableness and fairness (art. 6), and the mutual duty of cooperation. These principles are concrete arguments in any subsequent administrative appeal.
Personal Tax Situation Verification
Art. 138 FPC · scope, definition of "personal tax situation", the "once-only" rule
ANAF has the right to audit the entirety of an individual's personal tax situation, in respect of income tax (art. 138 para. (1) FPC). In essence, the procedure aims to determine whether the income declared by a person covers the growth of their wealth and the expenses incurred over a given period.
The "once-only" rule
The Personal Tax Situation Verification is carried out only once for income tax and for each taxable period (art. 138 para. (17)). By way of exception, the head of the tax authority may order the re-audit of a period if, before the expiry of the limitation period, additional information unknown at the date of the initial audit comes to light (art. 144).
The period that may be audited (limitation)
The audit is carried out within the limitation period applicable to the right to establish tax claims (art. 140 para. (2)):
| Situation | Limitation period | Date from which it runs |
|---|---|---|
| General rule | 5 years | 1 July of the year following the one for which the obligation is owed (art. 110 para. (1)–(2)) |
| Claims arising from a criminal offence | 10 years | The date the offence was committed (art. 110 para. (3)–(4)) |
Preliminary activities
Art. 138 para. (2) & art. 140¹ FPC · risk analysis · compliance notice · selection
Before being actually audited, an individual passes through a three-stage filter. Understanding these stages is essential: in many cases, the issue can be resolved before the audit proper is triggered.
Stage 1. Risk analysis
The structure at the level of ANAF's central apparatus determines the risk of non-compliance with income declaration obligations. The risk represents the significant difference between the income estimated through the risk analysis and the income declared by the person and/or by paying agents for the same period.
Stage 2. Compliance notice
For persons identified as carrying tax risk, ANAF has an obligation to send, in writing, a compliance notice regarding the risks identified (art. 140¹). Through the notice you are given the opportunity to review your situation and to file or correct your returns.
Stage 3. Selection
Individuals to be audited are selected on the basis of the risk level established through the risk analysis (art. 138 para. (2) lit. c)). By way of exception, up to 10% of those selected in a calendar year may be chosen at random (art. 138 para. (2¹)). High-risk persons who have not remedied the risks after the compliance notice are mandatorily subject to a Personal Tax Situation Verification or to a documentary verification (art. 140¹ para. (4)).
Indirect methods of income assessment
Art. 138 para. (9)–(11) FPC · OPANAF 675/2018, as amended by OPANAF 417/2023
When the declared income cannot be reconciled with the person's wealth and expenses, ANAF establishes income through indirect methods, approved by order of the ANAF president (art. 138 para. (9)). The tax authority exercises judgement over the method and its scope within the limits of reasonableness and fairness, ensuring a fair proportion between aim and means (art. 138 para. (11)).
| Method | How it works | When it is typically used |
|---|---|---|
| Source and use of funds | Compares total funds used (expenses, acquisitions, savings) with total identified sources of funds. The positive difference = additional income. | When the person has used funds in excess of identified sources |
| Cash flows | Analyses inflows and outflows through bank and financial accounts and the cash balance. | When operations were conducted predominantly through accounts, with significant inflows |
| Net wealth | Determines the growth of net wealth between the start and end of the period, adjusted for expenses, and compares it to declared income. | When significant growth in net wealth is observed over the period |
Conduct of the audit
Art. 138–142, 145 FPC · the notice · the declaration of assets · deadlines · duration · suspension
Procedural steps
- Verification notice. Before the audit, ANAF informs you in writing through the verification notice (art. 138 para. (5)). The notice contains the legal basis, the start date, the audited period, the option to request a postponement (only once, on justified grounds), the request for documents and for filing the declaration of assets and income, and the mention of the right to professional / legal assistance (art. 141).A postponement request is decided within 5 days.
- Submission of documents (60 days). You have at most 60 days from the communication of the notice, subject to forfeiture, to submit supporting documents or clarifications. The deadline may be extended by 30 days, once, upon justified request and with ANAF's consent (art. 138 para. (6)).Submission periods do not count towards the audit's duration.
- Declaration of assets and income. At ANAF's request through the notice, you are required to file a declaration of assets and income within the deadline above (art. 138 para. (7)). The items to be declared and the template are established by order of the ANAF president.The minutes of finding record the start date of the audit (art. 140 para. (6¹)).
- Application of the indirect method. ANAF establishes the income of the audited period using one of the indirect methods and, if new elements emerge, may request additional documents from you, with a reasonable deadline of at least 10 days (art. 138 para. (9) and (12)).You may, at any point during the procedure, submit documents and explanations (art. 138 para. (13)).
- Communication of findings and hearing. Upon completion, ANAF presents you with the findings and the tax consequences, granting you the right to express your standpoint (art. 145 para. (3)). You have 5 working days from the presentation of conclusions to submit your written standpoint (art. 145 para. (5)).Exception: if the base is not adjusted or you expressly waive the right, in writing.
Place and duration
Suspension of the audit (art. 142)
The audit may be suspended where failure to satisfy a condition prevents its completion, notably for: an expert report; investigations to identify persons or to verify the reality of transactions; at the written request of the individual on the basis of an objective situation (only once); to obtain information from third parties or from tax authorities of other states. Suspension and resumption are communicated in writing.
Your rights and obligations
Art. 138, 141, 143, 145 FPC · what you may request · what you must do
Rights of the individual taxpayer
- The right to be informed through the verification notice before the action begins (art. 138 para. (5)).
- The right to professional or legal assistance, communicated through the notice (art. 141 para. (3)). The audit may take place at the office of your tax adviser / attorney (art. 140 para. (3) lit. b)).
- The right to request the postponement of the start date, once, on justified grounds (art. 141 para. (1) lit. d)).
- The right to cooperate in establishing the facts — to provide information, to submit documents and to name persons to give information (art. 143 and art. 138 para. (14)).
- The right to be informed throughout the procedure of the findings (art. 138 para. (16)).
- The right to be heard before the decision is issued and to submit a written standpoint within 5 working days (art. 9 and art. 145 para. (5)).
- The right to challenge the tax assessment decision (art. 268 et seq.).
Obligations of the taxpayer
- To submit the supporting documents and clarifications within the 60 (+30) day deadline, subject to forfeiture (art. 138 para. (6)).
- To file the declaration of assets and income, at ANAF's request (art. 138 para. (7)).
- The duty of cooperation and to provide the information relevant to establishing the actual tax position.
Outcome of the audit
Art. 145–146 FPC · verification report · tax assessment decision · ancillary obligations
Verification report (art. 145)
The outcome is set out in a written report presenting the findings from a factual and a legal perspective. Attached to the report are the documents on which the findings were based, the records of the meetings and your standpoint, on which the tax authority must rule within the report itself.
Tax assessment decision (art. 146)
The report underpins the issuance of:
- a tax assessment decision, if the taxable base is adjusted; or
- a decision to close the verification procedure, if the base is not adjusted.
The decision is communicated to the audited individual. In addition to the additional income tax, the authority establishes ancillary tax claims (late-payment interest and penalties) attached to the principal sums.
Tax residency verification and reclassification as resident
Art. 7 point 28 & 37, art. 59, art. 230 Fiscal Code · residency questionnaires · taxation of worldwide income
A distinct chapter of the tax audit of individuals concerns tax residency. The stake is significant: an individual who is a tax resident of Romania has full tax liability, meaning they owe tax on their worldwide income (earned both in Romania and abroad), whereas a non-resident is taxed only on Romanian-source income (art. 7 point 37 and art. 59 Fiscal Code). When ANAF finds that a person meets the residency conditions, that person is reclassified as a Romanian tax resident, with effects on the entirety of their income.
When you are an individual tax resident (art. 7 point 28)
It is sufficient to meet at least one of the following conditions:
| Criterion | Content |
|---|---|
| Domicile | Your domicile is in Romania. |
| Centre of vital interests | The place to which your personal and economic relations are closest is in Romania (art. 7 point 6): family, dwelling, principal source of income, accounts, wealth. |
| Presence over 183 days | You are present in Romania for one or more periods totalling more than 183 days, in any consecutive 12-month interval ending in the target calendar year. |
| Romanian citizen in state service | You are a Romanian citizen working abroad as an official or employee of Romania in a foreign state. |
Residency questionnaires (art. 230 para. (7))
Residency is determined by the central tax authority on the basis of standard questionnaires:
- Questionnaire on arrival in Romania. An individual who arrives and stays in Romania more than 183 days files it within 30 days of meeting the 183-day threshold. On its basis and on the supporting documents, ANAF determines whether you have full or partial tax liability.ANAF notifies the person within 30 days of the questionnaire being filed.
- Questionnaire on departure from Romania. A resident leaving for periods totalling more than 183 days in any consecutive 12 months files it 30 days before departure (art. 59 para. (4)–(7)).Evidence of change of residency to another state must also be provided, where applicable.
- Tax residency certificate. If you invoke residency in a state with which Romania has a double tax treaty, you must produce a residency certificate issued by the foreign authority, valid for the relevant year(s) (art. 59 para. (6)).Failing such certificate, the domestic residency rules prevail.
When you become taxable on worldwide income
| Situation | Worldwide-income taxation from | Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Centre of vital interests in Romania | The first day on which you declare that the centre of vital interests lies in Romania | art. 59 para. (2) |
| Presence over 183 days | The first day of arrival in Romania | art. 59 para. (2¹) |
Exception: persons who establish, by way of a residency certificate, that they are resident in a state with which Romania has a double tax treaty, who are subject to the provisions of the treaty (art. 59 para. (3)).
Audit of persons reclassified as residents
Reclassification as a resident opens up, practically, the full scope of the tax audit over worldwide income:
- The reclassified person falls within the scope of Personal Tax Situation Verification (Chapters 2–7), and ANAF may apply the indirect methods for income from any source, including foreign sources.
- ANAF holds information about income and accounts abroad through the automatic exchange of information (the CRS standard and the DAC Directive on administrative cooperation), which it compares with declarations filed in Romania.
- Foreign-source income that is not declared leads to additional tax and ancillary charges; sums whose source cannot be documented risk being taxed at the 70% rate applicable to income from unidentified sources (Chapter 4).
- To avoid double taxation of the same income, the foreign tax credit or the exemption method provided by the applicable treaty applies (art. 130–131 Fiscal Code), on the basis of documents evidencing the tax paid abroad.
The other forms of control
In brief: tax inspection, unannounced control, documentary verification, anti-fraud control
An individual, especially one carrying out an economic activity (self-employed PFA, sole proprietorship, liberal profession), may also be subject to the other forms of control. Here are the essential reference points.
Avenues of review
Art. 268–281 FPC · administrative appeal · administrative-fiscal court litigation
The tax assessment decision is an administrative-fiscal act that may be challenged. The administrative appeal is a mandatory prior administrative remedy (without it you cannot reach the court), but it does not remove your right to bring proceedings in court (art. 268 para. (1)).
- Administrative appeal (45 days). Lodged within 45 days of communication of the decision, subject to forfeiture, with the issuing tax authority (art. 270 para. (1) and art. 269 para. (4)). Exempt from court stamp duty.If the act does not state the available remedy, the deadline is 3 months.
- Content of the appeal. In writing, with: identification data, subject matter, factual and legal grounds, evidence, signature. The taxable base and the tax claim must be challenged only jointly (art. 268 para. (3); art. 269).State the contested amount, by category.
- Resolution. Appeals against acts of the central tax authority are resolved by the specialised structure within the Ministry of Finance (art. 272). The resolution decision is binding on the issuing body.It is rendered by reasoned decision (art. 273–274).
- Administrative-fiscal court litigation. Against the resolution decision (or in the absence of a timely reply) you may apply to the competent administrative court (tribunal or court of appeal, depending on the amount), in accordance with Law 554/2004.The deadline and competent court are stated in the resolution decision.
Criminal side: tax evasion
Law 241/2005 · art. 132 & 150 FPC · when the audit turns into a criminal file
If, during the audit, the tax authority finds facts that may constitute the elements of an offence, it issues minutes of referral to the criminal prosecution bodies. These minutes are not a fiscal-administrative act and cannot be challenged through the fiscal appeal (art. 150 FPC); findings regarding the taxable base are severed in accordance with art. 132 FPC.
Reference points from Law 241/2005
- Tax evasion (art. 9): concealment of the taxable asset / source, omission to record operations, parallel records, etc., punishable by imprisonment, aggravated by reference to the prejudice.
- Grounds for reducing or waiving the penalty: full reparation of the prejudice, increased by a statutory percentage, during the proceedings may lead, under the conditions of the law, to a reduction of the statutory sentence or to non-custodial sanctions.
This chapter presents general information, not an individualised criminal analysis. A specific situation requires dedicated legal advice.
What to do if you receive a notice
A practical checklist for individuals
- Read the notice in full: legal basis, audited period, start date and requested documents.
- Note the deadlines: 60 days for documents (extendable by 30), the deadline for requesting the postponement of the start.
- If you first received a compliance notice, urgently evaluate the filing / correction of returns in the 30-day window (it may avoid the audit altogether).
- Contact a lawyer / tax consultant: you have the express right to professional assistance, and the audit may take place at their offices.
- Reconstruct the source of each sum: contracts, bank statements, donations / inheritances, loans, sales of assets, any document that identifies the source of income.
- Prepare the declaration of assets and income carefully; coherence with supporting documents is essential.
- Keep every communication in writing and request that explanations be recorded in documents signed by both parties.
- At the end of the audit, use the 5 working days for a reasoned written standpoint on the findings.
- If you receive the tax assessment decision, compute the 45-day deadline for the appeal and consider an application to suspend enforcement.
- Pay special attention to sums without documented source: they risk being taxed at 70%; prioritise identifying their sources.