Receipts demand is not for all categories of citizens in Greece as of 2020

The new tax bill to be put up for public consultation on Friday will scrap the obligation of online receipts for 11 categories of citizens as of 2020, Kathimerini reports.

Moreover, the calculation of the 30 percent threshold for online transactions as a proportion of taxpayers’ income will concern their real incomes and not the estimates tax authorities make on each taxpayer’s assets and expenditure.

To date, any taxpayers with low incomes and expensive assets or high spending had to produce online receipts according to their estimated income, not the actual one they declared, but the new tax bill is set to change that.

Any taxpayers that fail to produce online transactions (through credit/debit cards or e-banking) equal to 30 percent of their actual income will pay a fine equal to 22 percent of the difference between the sum of their electronic payments and the 30 percent threshold.

Among the categories of citizens who won’t be forced to make online transactions are those aged over 70, people with a more than 80 percent disability, and any taxpayers living in villages with up to 500 inhabitants or islands with up to 3,100 people (unless they are tourism destinations).

The bill also lowers the corporate tax from 28 percent to 24 percent and suspends the value-added tax on properties licensed following January 1, 2006.

It further offers incentives for attracting wealthy non-residents to the Greek tax register, with the emerging details looking quite appealing for the ultra-rich. Sources say that anyone who transfers their tax domicile to Greece will enjoy significant tax discounts for their global income, which regardless of the level will be taxed 100,000 euros, plus 20,000 euros per family member.

The clause not only addresses individuals but corporations too, as long as they make investments of at least 500,000 euros within three years. The greater the investment they make, the lower their tax dues will be, based on the new bill, so an investment of 1.5 million euros will only incur a tax of 50,000 euros, and a 3-million-euro investment will incur half that, at 25,000 euros.

Read more at thenationalherald.com

RELATED TOPICS: GreeceGreek tourism newsTourism in GreeceGreek islandsHotels in GreeceTravel to GreeceGreek destinationsGreek travel marketGreek tourism statisticsGreek tourism report

 

+ posts

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Follow Us

NEWS FEED

Δοκιμή

Visit Vavoulas Website
Amaronda Hotel — Book Online