Menu
  • Locations
  • About Us
  • Services
  • Experts
  • News & Knowledge
  • Hot Topics
  • Culture & Career
  • Locations
  • Search
  • Press
  • Events & Webinars
  • CI Guide
  • Contact
  • Albania
  • Algeria
  • Angola
  • Argentina
  • Armenia
  • Australia
  • Austria
  • Austria | ICON Wirtschaftstreuhand GmbH
  • Bangladesh
  • Belgium
  • Benin
  • Bolivia
  • Bosnia & Herzegovina
  • Botswana
  • Brazil
  • Bulgaria
  • Burkina Faso
  • Burundi
  • Cambodia
  • Cameroon
  • Canada
  • Cape Verde
  • Central African Republic
  • Chad
  • Chile
  • China
  • Colombia
  • Congo Brazzaville
  • Costa Rica
  • Croatia
  • Cyprus
  • Czech Republic
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Denmark
  • Dominican Republic
  • Ecuador
  • Egypt
  • El Salvador
  • Equatorial Guinea
  • Estonia
  • Eswatini
  • Ethiopia
  • Finland
  • France
  • Gabon
  • Gambia
  • Georgia
  • Germany
  • Ghana
  • Gibraltar
  • Greece
  • Guatemala
  • Guinea
  • Guinea-Bissau
  • Honduras
  • Hong Kong
  • Hungary
  • Iceland
  • India
  • Indonesia
  • Iran
  • Iraq
  • Ireland
  • Israel
  • Italy
  • Italy | WTS R&A
  • Ivory Coast
  • Japan
  • Kazakhstan
  • Kenya
  • Korea
  • Kyrgyzstan
  • Laos
  • Latvia
  • Liberia
  • Libya
  • Lithuania
  • Luxembourg
  • Macao
  • Madagascar
  • Malawi
  • Malaysia
  • Mali
  • Malta
  • Mauritania
  • Mauritius
  • Mexico
  • Moldova
  • Montenegro
  • Morocco
  • Mozambique
  • Myanmar
  • Namibia
  • Nepal
  • Netherlands
  • Netherlands
  • New Zealand
  • Niger
  • Nigeria
  • North Macedonia
  • Norway
  • Pakistan
  • Panama
  • Paraguay
  • Peru
  • Philippines
  • Poland
  • Portugal
  • Puerto Rico
  • Romania
  • Rwanda
  • São Tomé and Príncipe
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Senegal
  • Serbia
  • Seychelles
  • Sierra Leone
  • Singapore
  • Slovakia
  • Slovenia
  • Somalia
  • South Africa
  • South Sudan
  • Spain
  • Sri Lanka
  • Sudan
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • Taiwan
  • Tanzania
  • Thailand
  • Togo
  • Trinidad and Tobago
  • Tunisia
  • Turkey
  • Turkmenistan
  • Uganda
  • UK | FTI Consulting
  • UK | WTS Hansuke
  • Ukraine
  • United Arab Emirates
  • United Arab Emirates | WTS Dhruva Consultants
  • United Kingdom
  • Uruguay
  • USA
  • USA | Frankel Loughran Starr & Vallone LLP (FLSV)
  • USA | GTM Global Tax Management (GTM)
  • USA | VALENTIAM Group
  • Uzbekistan
  • Venezuela
  • Vietnam
  • Wenger Vieli Ltd. | Switzerland
  • WTS Tax Service
  • Zambia
  • Zimbabwe
  • About Us
  • Our Supervisory Board
  • Quality, Process & Risk Management
  • Sustainability & Tax at WTS Global
  • Customs
  • Financial Services
  • Global Mobility
  • Indirect Tax
  • International Corporate Tax
  • Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A)
  • Private Clients & Family Office
  • Sustainability & Tax
  • Tax Certainty & Controversy
  • Tax Technology
  • Transfer Pricing & Valuation
  • Real Estate
  • Digital Tax Law
  • European Tax Law
  • Latest News
  • Brochures
  • Newsletters
  • Surveys & Studies
  • Pillar Two
  • FIT for CBAM
  • Tax Sustainability Index
  • ViDA - VAT in the Digital Age
  • EU WHT Reclaims
  • AI playground
  • ProSports Tax Group
  • Culture and Leadership
  • Diversity
  • WTS Global Academy
  • Career
  • Pillar Two Team
  • Pillar Two - Implementation Status Wordwide
  • Press
  • Events & Webinars
  • CI Guide
  • Contact
WTS worldwide
  • WTS Global
  • Albania
  • Algeria
  • Angola
  • Argentina
  • Armenia
  • Australia
  • Austria
  • Bangladesh
  • Belgium
  • Benin
  • Bolivia
  • Bosnia & Herzegovina
  • Botswana
  • Brazil
  • Bulgaria
  • Burkina Faso
  • Burundi
  • Cambodia
  • Cameroon
  • Canada
  • Cape Verde
  • Central African Republic
  • Chad
  • Chile
  • China
  • Colombia
  • Congo Brazzaville
  • Costa Rica
  • Croatia
  • Cyprus
  • Czech Republic
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Denmark
  • Dominican Republic
  • Ecuador
  • Egypt
  • El Salvador
  • Equatorial Guinea
  • Estonia
  • Eswatini
  • Ethiopia
  • Finland
  • France
  • Gabon
  • Gambia
  • Georgia
  • Germany
  • Ghana
  • Gibraltar
  • Greece
  • Guatemala
  • Guinea
  • Guinea-Bissau
  • Honduras
  • Hong Kong
  • Hungary
  • Iceland
  • India
  • Indonesia
  • Iran
  • Iraq
  • Ireland
  • Israel
  • Italy
  • Ivory Coast
  • Japan
  • Kazakhstan
  • Kenya
  • Korea
  • Kyrgyzstan
  • Laos
  • Latvia
  • Liberia
  • Libya
  • Lithuania
  • Luxembourg
  • Macao
  • Madagascar
  • Malawi
  • Malaysia
  • Mali
  • Malta
  • Mauritania
  • Mauritius
  • Mexico
  • Moldova
  • Montenegro
  • Morocco
  • Mozambique
  • Myanmar
  • Namibia
  • Nepal
  • Netherlands
  • New Zealand
  • Niger
  • Nigeria
  • North Macedonia
  • Norway
  • Pakistan
  • Panama
  • Paraguay
  • Peru
  • Philippines
  • Poland
  • Portugal
  • Puerto Rico
  • Romania
  • Rwanda
  • São Tomé and Príncipe
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Senegal
  • Serbia
  • Sierra Leone
  • Singapore
  • Slovakia
  • Slovenia
  • Somalia
  • South Africa
  • South Sudan
  • Spain
  • Sri Lanka
  • Sudan
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • Taiwan
  • Tanzania
  • Thailand
  • Togo
  • Trinidad and Tobago
  • Tunisia
  • Turkey
  • Turkmenistan
  • Uganda
  • Ukraine
  • United Arab Emirates
  • United Kingdom
  • Uruguay
  • USA
  • Uzbekistan
  • Venezuela
  • Vietnam
  • Zambia
  • Zimbabwe
  • About Us
    About Us

    Here you will find more information on our organization’s structure, experts and global reach.

    Read more
    About Us Our Supervisory Board Quality, Process & Risk Management Sustainability & Tax at WTS Global
  • Services
    Services

    Learn more about our network partners and their services.

    Read more
    Customs Financial Services Global Mobility Indirect Tax International Corporate Tax
    Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) Private Clients & Family Office Sustainability & Tax Tax Certainty & Controversy Tax Technology
    Transfer Pricing & Valuation Real Estate Digital Tax Law European Tax Law
  • Experts
    Experts

    With a representation in over 100 countries, our team offers local expertise on a global scale. Learn more about our experts.

    Read more
  • News & Knowledge
    News & Knowledge

    Welcome to WTS Global Insights. Here you will find news and updates from our worldwide network.

    Read more
    Latest News Brochures Newsletters Surveys & Studies
  • Hot Topics
    Hot Topics

    Overview of the current "Hot Topics" in the tax industry and how we can support with individual questions.

    Read more
    Pillar Two FIT for CBAM Tax Sustainability Index ViDA - VAT in the Digital Age EU WHT Reclaims
    AI playground ProSports Tax Group
  • Culture & Career
    Culture & Career
    Read more
    Culture and Leadership Diversity WTS Global Academy Career
  • Locations
  • Search
29.09.2025

Poland: Finance Minister's guidance of 3 Jul 2025 re. use of beneficial owner test for withholding tax purposes ("Guidance")

After several years' worth of work and the publication of two guidance proposals that came under criticism, on 9 Jul 2025 the Finance Ministry ("FM") published Guidance relating to the definition of a beneficial owner.

Unfortunately, despite such a significant delay and lengthy consultations with business and tax advisors, the Guidance is still far from ideal.

As defined in the law (Article 4a(29) of the CIT Act), the beneficial owner of a payment is an entity for which all of the following is true:

  • receives the payment for its own benefit, and in particular decides independently on its use and incurs the economic risk of its total or partial loss,
  • is not an intermediary, representative, trustee or any other entity required to transfer the payment to some other entity in whole or in part, and
  • carries on genuine business activity in the country in which it is established, if the payment is received in connection with its business, and whether or not it carries on genuine business activity is to be determined with account taken of the nature and scale of its business in relation to the payment.

 

In accordance with the Guidance, the first two conditions should be considered together as a requirement for the payee to have economic control over the payment. The third condition is supposed to follow up on the first two and relate to the payee's characteristics, requiring it to have human, information and/or infrastructural resources that, given the type of its business, are sufficient to enable it to exercise such control.

When interpreting the term "beneficial owner" in the Guidance, FM obsessively invokes CJEU's Danish cases, taking them out of their context. FM fails to note that CJEU's ratio in these cases refers to factual configurations that were indicative of abuse. Polish law already does have dedicated anti-abuse regulations implementing the general rule that you may not rely on Union law in a context suggesting fraud or abuse.

In terms of holdings, while FM does note that they can use shared resources, it allows such shared resources to be taken into account for beneficial owner testing purposes only where the costs of the resources are located exclusively within the jurisdiction under which the given preferential tax treatment is sought.

On the other hand, FM should be praised for confirming in the Guidance that the beneficial owner status requirement does not apply to payments that are not passive income, e.g. payments for cross-border intangible (management etc.) services.

Yet FM wrongly maintains that the beneficial owner requirement applies to dividend payments exempt under PS Directive. FM cites no legal basis for its claim, which is hardly surprising because regardless of whether the underlying law is interpreted functionally, systemically or linguistically, the outcome of the interpretation is the same – both national law and EU law impose the beneficial ownership requirement only in the case of interest and royalty payments, not dividends. Importantly, in its Danish cases under PS Directive, CJEU refused to answer precisely those questions referred to it which concerned the definition of beneficial owner under PS Directive. Interestingly, the Supreme Administrative Court (NSA), following the issuance of the Guidelines issued another decision on August 13, 2025 (case no. II FSK 1510/22), in which it confirmed that the requirement of the status of a beneficial owner is not a condition for the exemption of dividends from taxation under PS Directive.

Furthermore, the Guidance adjusts the scope of due diligence required of Polish payers when verifying a payee's beneficial owner status, depending on whether the payment is made to a related party, to an unrelated party, or by a so-called technical payer (a financial intermediary, such as a bank). In the latter two cases the standard of diligence is lower, given that such entities lack access to information necessary to verify the payee's status.

On a positive note, the Guidance:

  • allows the use of look-through approach to payments of the same kind (subject to conditions),
  • introduces what is called "extended-scope beneficial owner test" in cases where it is not clear at the time of payment whether the payment will be transferred to beneficial owner,
  • introduces a presumption that the BO test is satisfied under PS Directive in the case of dividends that are subject to taxation within EU at least once (use of this presumption requires tracking of the hypothetical dividend chain between subsidiaries and parents).

 

Use of the above solutions is not an obligation of the tax authorities but the right of the relevant party (mainly the payer/withholding agent).

To discuss all the requirements behind the various options or describe all the ins and outs of the Guidance would exceed the content restrictions of this newsletter.

The legal status of Guidance is similar to that of official private tax rulings, meaning it provides assurance if adhered to. But Guidance is not binding on the taxpayers and does not directly bind tax courts.

Proposed changes to CIT Act regarding corporation tax exemptions for foreign investment funds.

Work is underway to amend the CIT Act regarding tax exemptions for foreign investment funds.

The major changes involve:

  1. extending the exemptions (both income-based and entity-based) onto funds from third countries,
  2. varying the exemption conditions to take into account the existence of internally managed funds in other jurisdictions,
  3. introducing another exemption condition allowing the exemption to be used by foreign investment funds from countries with respect to which there is a legal basis for the Polish tax administration to be able to obtain information about Polish residents' accounts with collective investment institutions,
  4. extending the Polish anti-abuse regulations with respect to funds enjoying income-based exemptions (which effectively are all funds other than UCITS).

The condition mentioned under 3 above will also apply with respect to entity-based exemptions for foreign pension funds.

Re. 1

This change is made to comply with the guidelines contained in CJEU's judgment in case C-190/12 Emerging Markets and endorse the practice of Polish tax authorities and courts where exemption has been granted to third country funds comparable to domestic funds.

Re. 2

This change comes in the wake of CJEU's judgment of 27 February 2025 in case C-18/23.

The original wording of one of the conditions had been that, to qualify for the exemption, a fund must be managed by an entity authorised by the relevant financial supervision authority of its home country. This allowed Polish tax authorities to deny exemption to internally managed funds.

This provision is proposed to be changed so that the exemption will be granted to a fund managed in accordance with its domestic legal requirements by:

  • an external entity authorised by the relevant financial supervision authority of its home country, or
  • where the institution has not appointed an external management company, an internal executive board which is established in accordance with national law and whose professional fund management qualifications and powers are evidenced through authorisation from or registration by the relevant financial supervision authority of the institution's home country.

 

It seems the condition for internally managed funds is based on the facts of case C-18/23, which involved a Luxembourgian special investment fund (SIF) operating pursuant to the Luxembourg's Special Investment Funds Act of 13 Feb 2007. As such, the condition does not take into account all potential regulations applicable to funds of this kind. For example, under Article 29 of the UCITS Directive, an internally managed UCITS is required to communicate the names of investment company's directors to the competent supervision authority. There is no mention of any registration or any need to have their qualifications evidenced through an authorisation.

For those reasons, the above provisions of the proposed law are very likely to be amended.

Re. 3

Regarding the legal basis for Polish tax administration to be able to obtain information about Polish residents' accounts with collective investment institutions, this is provided by CRS-based AEOI agreements, MCAAs, and FATCA (for US).

Re. 4

This is a proposal to extend the Targeted Anti-Abuse Rule, or TAAR, in Article 22c of the CIT Act. Previously TAAR was used to deny preferences in cases indicating abuse of PS or IR Directive exemptions. Now TAAR is proposed to be used for income-based exemptions which are generally designed for foreign investment funds other than UCITS (closed-ended funds and special open-ended funds operating in accordance with rules and restrictions applicable to close-ended funds).

In accordance with TAAR, income-based exemptions cannot be used if their use is:

  1. contrary, in the circumstances, to the object or purpose of the regulations, and
  2. the principal purpose or one of the principal purposes of the transaction(s) or some other operation(s), and the arrangement is artificial.

By Article 22c(2) of the CIT Act, an arrangement is not artificial (is genuine) if it is appropriate to conclude in the circumstances that a person acting reasonably and for lawful purposes would apply this arrangement largely for valid commercial reasons. The reasons referred to in the first sentence do not include the intended use of an exemption that is contrary to the object or purpose of its underlying regulations.

It is currently difficult to predict how tax authorities will practically assess on a case-by-case basis whether TAAR applies in the case of any income-based exemption for foreign investment funds.

Note, however, that the lower tax court dealing with key WHT issues (Provincial Administrative Court in Lublin) currently applies TAAR with a great degree of insouciance. For example, it denies preferences where it finds the transaction artificial while omitting to make the other required statutory findings, being whether the main benefit test is met and whether use of the preferential treatment is contrary to the underlying regulations.

One can only hope that the practice of both Polish tax authorities and the Lublin tax court will change under the influence of the recent CJEU case C-228/24 (judgment of 3 April 2025).

The European court held in C-228/24 that for anti-abuse regulations to apply, all the conditions must be satisfied, including not just the non-genuineness condition but also the purposefulness condition (arrangement must be intended to bring a tax advantage that is contrary to object or purpose of the underlying regulations): "it is not sufficient to establish that the arrangement was not put into place for valid commercial reasons reflecting economic reality (...). It is also necessary (...) for the arrangement to have been put into place with the main purpose of obtaining a tax advantage that defeats the object or purpose of that directive."

As far as we know, the draft law is still open to changes, none of which have yet been published.

Recent judgments of Poland's top tax court on exemption for foreign investment funds

On 4 June 2025, the top Polish tax court Supreme Administrative Court (NSA) issued two important decisions regarding tax exemptions for foreign investment funds (cases no. II FSK 696/22 and no. II FSK 843/22).

The cases reached NSA on appeal from advance tax rulings under which a UK employee pension fund was denied a tax exemption on the ground that the fund made an investment in a company whose type corresponds to Polish sp. z o.o. company (limited liability company) and Polish law does not allow pension funds to invest in sp. z o.o. companies. According to the issuing authority, the scope of actual business pursued by the UK pension fund exceeds the scope of investment activities that may be pursued by Polish pension funds.

In effect, the authority ruled that the case fails one of the exemption requirements under Article 6(1)(11a)(e) of the CIT Act, being that the fund's business must "solely consist of collecting monies and investment them with the purpose of paying them out to the scheme participants when they reach pensionable age".

The UK fund applied for judicial review and the lower tax court granted its application in two judgments, confirming the fund meets the requirements under 6(1)(11a) of the CIT Act and investing in company shares etc. may not in and of itself be a reason for denying the exemption.

The lower court's verdict was upheld by NSA. Thus, at first glance, this case law is favourable for foreign pension funds.

However, even though it dismissed the Polish tax authorities' appeal, NSA made a major "revision" to the favourable position of the lower court, whose approach it considered to be "incomplete and as such incorrect".

According to NSA, the exemption under Article 6(1)(11a) of the CIT Act is of a hybrid nature (both an entity-based and an income-based exemption).

This means that the exemption is available to foreign pension funds with respect to income from activities identical to those conducted by Polish entities.

Accordingly, there may be foreign pension funds that are like Polish domestic entities and as such eligible for Article 6(1)(11a) exemption, but their Polish activities are wider than those of domestic entities.

Thus, if a foreign pension fund complies with Article 6(1)(11a) of the CIT Act, it qualifies for the exemption offered by that Article. But the exemption will not apply to the extent its Polish-source income is derived from investments otherwise prohibited to Polish pension funds.

Draft regulations to disapply the pay and refund mechanism for technical payers until 31 Dec 2026

On 11 August 2025, the Minister of Finance and Economy published proposals for regulations to amend the regulations disapplying the duty to withhold corporate or personal income tax. The proposed law would disapply the pay and refund mechanism for what are called "technical payers", i.e. institutions which operate securities accounts or omnibus accounts, until 31 Dec 2026.

Finance Ministry's ideas to fund the budget deficit at the expense of the banking sector

Since June the Finance Ministry has been sending signals that it wishes to impose an extra tax on banks.

First, the Finance Minister announced in June that the cabinet are working on a new tax designed to target banks. According to the press, this was not meant to be a windfall tax but tax on statutory reserves held by banks with the National Bank of Poland. The idea attracted heavy criticism from the banking sector as interest on reserves held with NBP is part of corporation tax calculations for banks so such a levy would mean double taxation.

Then, on 21 August, the Finance Ministry posted on its website that they are drafting a legislative proposal to amend the CIT Act to increase the corporation tax rate for banks and make changes to what is called "banking tax".

The Finance Ministry wants the target CIT rate for banks to be 23% instead of the current 19%, starting from 2028.  In the meantime, the rate would be 30% in 2026 and 26% in 2027.

On the other hand, the banking tax rate would be gradually lowered by 10% in 2027 and by 20% as of 2028 (comparing to this year).

Other than those laconic announcements, no draft legislation has been published yet.

 

If you wish to discuss these topics, please contact: Magdalena Kostowska (Doradztwo Podatkowe WTS&SAJA Sp. z o. o.)

Global Financial Services Newsletter #3/2025 now available
News from twelve European countries with a focus on the international Financial Services industry
View publication
Articles you might be interested in

For foreign and domestic investors alike, a new draft bill intends to increase attractiveness of pooled capital investment via regulated investment funds into German infrastructure and renewable energy projects but also into small businesses and start-ups.

Germany: Regulated Investment Funds - New Draft Bill increases Certainty
Read more

News on tax developments affecting the international Financial Services industry.

WTS Global Financial Services Newsletter #2/2025 is now available
Read more

In December 2024, the first foreign investment fund received a tax refund under EU law, following a key German court ruling. However, securing timely WHT refunds requires applicants to navigate complex procedural, operational, and documentation challenges.

Germany: First WHT refund granted to foreign investment fund in Germany
Read more

News on tax developments affecting the international Financial Services industry.

WTS Global Financial Services Newsletter #1/2025 is now available
Read more

News on tax developments affecting the international Financial Services industry.

WTS Global Financial Services Newsletter #3/2024 is now available
Read more

The German Federal Fiscal Court (BFH) recently published two important decisions according to which foreign securities investment funds were discriminated against compared to German investment funds.

Germany: Securities funds and German WHT - 2 important German High Fiscal Court decisions
Read more

The German Federal Fiscal Court's (BFH) recently published its ruling on the “L-Fund case” dated 11 October 2023, following the European Court of Justice judgement of 27 April 2023 (C‑537/20).

Germany: Landmark decision - Good news for foreign investment funds seeking to recover German WHT
Read more

On 22 March 2024, the German parliament approved a bill that enacts significant changes applicable to German and non-German Real Estate funds.

Germany: Real Estate funds - significant tax law changes enacted
Read more

It may be of interest to foreign asset managers and custodian banks that the German government recently presented a plan to stabilize the statutory pension system.

Germany: Germany intends to launch 200 bn Euro pension fund
Read more

For a German private investor the indirect investment in cryptocurrency via CIVs is less tax beneficial than a direct holding of this asset class.

Germany: German Tax Law and Regulatory Implications on Crypto Investments via Investment Funds
Read more

News on tax developments affecting the international Financial Services industry.

WTS Global Financial Services Newsletter #2/2024 is now available
Read more

WTS and Peters Schönberger & Partner (PSP) are founding an AI joint venture that could shake up the industry. This is because it allows control functions to build their own generative AI applications. It puts pressure on consulting firms and tool providers because it turns their customers into kings.

Kingmakers: How WTS and PSP give corporations control over AI
Read more

In its decision of 20 April 2023, the Cologne Fiscal Court awards a Belgian insurance company a refund of German WHT suffered on German portfolio dividends in 2009 under the free movement of capital of European law.

Germany: Foreign insurance company - Cologne fiscal court grants reduction of German WHT to 0%
Read more

This revision of German VAT law is particularly important for international asset managers with offices in Germany and international investment advisors.

Germany: VAT exemption for the management of AIFs
Read more

Germany had already applied for the introduction of mandatory electronic invoicing as a special measure under Art. 395 of the VAT Directive in 2022. By decision of 25 July 2023, the Council of the European Union approved this approach.

e-Invoicing in Germany - ambitious goals: tax authorities are aiming for mandatory electronic invoicing from 2025
Read more

Recently, the German Ministry of Finance (MoF) presented two new important draft pieces of tax rules in many ways relevant for the international Financial Services industry.

Germany: New tax developments regarding FS-related matters
Read more

The German tax authorities, together with the legislator, are aiming for mandatory electronic invoicing for certain business transactions as early as January 1, 2025. The amended requirements show clear parallels to the European Commission's proposed directive "ViDA - VAT in the Digital Age".

Germany: Mandatory electronic invoicing in Germany
Read more

Telework and hybrid work are present as never before. In the case of multi-state workers, this can unfortu­nately bring about a mandatory social insurance in the other country.

New Framework for telework between Germany and Austria
Read more

15 December 2022 saw the Council of the European Union reach its unanimous agreement on the “Council Directive on ensuring a global minimum level of taxation for multinational and large-scale domestic groups” in a written procedure.

Germany: Council of the EU reaches agreement on global minimum taxation (Pillar Two)
Read more

The new law significantly tightens obligations to cooperate with the revenue authorities in the area of transfer pricing.

Germany: Bundesrat adopts DAC7 Transposition Act
Read more

The German government presented to the public a memorandum on future legislative measures to improve the financing of investments and to facilitate capital market access for companies, especially start-ups, growth companies and SMEs.

Germany: Draft bill to improve attractiveness of Germany as a Financial Services location
Read more

In the course of the German Investment Tax Reform 2018, the taxation of investment funds and their German investors changed fundamentally.

Germany: Court decision: taxation of realized capital gains from fund units in the context of the 2018 tax reform
Read more

Since 1 January 2019, special taxation rules have applied to vouchers.

Germany: Federal Fiscal Court: transfer of vouchers in distribution chains
Read more

Due to the extraordinary burdens for the German taxpayers and tax authorities as a result of the impact of Covid-19, the war in the Ukraine and extensive new land tax declaration requirements in Germany

Germany: Annual VAT returns: new deadlines and interest rules
Read more

In its Judgment of 17 May 2022 (published on 29 September 2022), in Case VII R 2/19 "Hamamatsu", the German Federal Fiscal Court (Bundesfinanzhof, BFH) rejected the appeal filed on points of law

Appeal in “Hamamatsu” case rejected by German Federal Fiscal Court
Read more

16 June 2022 saw the ECJ issue its judgement in the case C-572 - “ACC Silicones”,

German WHT - ECJ judgement in the case “ACC Silicones” - C-572/20
Read more
Germany: Treaty override regarding German assignees working for a Chinese company
Read more

During the year a Ukrainian resident employed by a representative office of a German company in Ukraine has come to Germany and is working remotely for the Ukrainian office.

Treaty override regarding Ukrainian employees working in Germany
Read more

In the current situation, the relevant measures and sanction lists may change at any time, even at short notice.

Germany/EU: Restrictive measures against Russia and Belarus due to the war of aggression against Ukraine – Current developments
Read more

On 20 December 2021, the OECD published the model rules on global minimum taxation (“Pillar Two”), on which around 140 countries have agreed as part of the work of the OECD's Inclusive Framework.

Germany: Pillar Two (WTS Global ICT Newsletter)
Read more

In a series of rulings in 2019 and 2020, the German Federal Fiscal Court has abandoned its decades-long ruling practice on implicit group support and the blocking effect of para. 9 OECD Model Tax Convention.

Germany: New case law on the determination of arm’s length interest rates for intercompany loans
Read more

On 29 September 2021, the German Federal Fiscal Court (“BFH”) gave a ruling on the tax legal concept of economic ownership in the context of securities lending.

Germany: Economic ownership and securities lending & WHT on crypto fund units
Read more

The new European Regulations on ITGS (regulation (EU) 2019/2152 and the implementing regulation (EU) 2020/1197), finally changing foreign trade statistics reporting, also led to major changes regarding the Intrastat reporting.

Germany: Changes to Intrastat reporting
Read more

There have been several changes to German Transfer Pricing rules in the past months. Read more for additional information.

Recent changes on German Tax Law concerning Transfer Pricing
Read more

On 14 July 2021, the “Verwaltungsgrundsätze Verrechnungspreise” (Administrative Principles Transfer Pricing, in the following “administrative principles  2021”) were published.

German Federal Ministry of Finance: Administrative Principles 2021 published
Read more

As reported in #3/2021, in two letters dated 11 May 2021 and 18 June 2021 the German tax authorities have adopted the latest decision of the Federal Fiscal Court regarding warranty commitments granted for remuneration originating from practices in the motor vehicle trade.

Germany: Postponed: warranty commitments granted for remuneration as insurance transaction
Read more

The initially planned implementation of the regulations with immediate effect proved to be impossible in practice. Therefore, the tax authorities published a non-objection regulation in an additional circular letter dated 19 August 2021

Germany: Sale of admission tickets for events, non-objection regulation
Read more

The massive expansion of electromobility in recent months is affecting many areas. After electric car purchases had for a long time remained at a low-level, new registration figures for pure battery vehicles and plug-in hybrids multiplied last year. These developments have also led to a need for action in the area of electricity tax.

 

Electromobility’s electricity tax implications in Germany
Read more

Addressing the general topic of the tax-legal allocation of securities out on loan, including the perspective of financial accounting.

Germany: Administrative guidance on securities lending transactions
Read more

On 31 August 2021, the German government issued a draft version of an Ordinance on the issuance of funds units as crypto assets.

Germany: Introduction of crypto fund units
Read more

Following up on the ECJ, also the Federal Fiscal Court had already ruled in 2019 that supervisory board members who only receive a fixed remuneration do not qualify as entrepreneurs within the meaning of the German VAT Act (i.e. “taxable person” as per the VAT Directive 2006/112/EC). The tax authorities have now adopted the case law on remuneration risk with a letter from the Federal Ministry of Finance dated 8 July 2021.

Germany: Supervisory board members as taxable persons
Read more

The tax authorities have adopted the latest decision of the Federal Fiscal Court regarding warranty commitments granted for remuneration originating from the practices in the motor vehicle trade.The new rules will be mandatory for all warranty commitments issued after 31 December 2021.

Germany: Warranty commitments granted for remuneration as insurance transaction
Read more

According to a German tax provision dating back to 1925 (Sec. 49 (1) No. 2 lit. f EStG), the mere fact that IP owned by foreigners is either exploited in a German permanent establishment or registered in a German register could trigger non-resident taxation in Germany, even if there is no further nexus in Germany (e.g. none of the affected parties – payer and payee – are German tax residents).

German registered IP of foreigners subject to tax in Germany
Read more

In Germany, the Federal Ministry of Finance has published the Administrative Principles 2020. These replace the version of 2005 to some extent, but there is a greater emphasis on procedural aspects.

German Federal Ministry of Finance: Administrative Principles 2020 published
Read more

WTS Germany shares its view on the recent opinion of European Court of Justice’s Advocate General Kokott in the proceedings C-545/19 - “AEVN”, dated 6 May 2021.

WHT reclaim – CJEU Case C-545/19 (“AEVN”) – Update
Read more

In this article, our tax experts at WTS Germany have summed up the latest developments in the financial services industry in Germany.

Germany: Upcoming legislation on crypto assets, new fund types, WHT reclaims and ATAD
Read more

German fiscal administration needs to consider the “Danske bank” ruling form the ECJ.

ECJ case “Danske bank” and its potential effects on German VAT landscape
Read more

Germany intends to apply modified rules for work deliveries as of July.

Germany: Work deliveries – update
Read more

Germany’s highest tax court, the Bundesfinanzhof (BFH), has filed a preliminary ruling request to the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU). The request comprises five questions relating to the concept of “final losses”. 

The German Federal Tax Court has filed a preliminary ruling request on “final losses” - ETLC Newsflash #21
Read more

Germany is narrowing the application of the tour operator margin scheme by partially excluding companies from outside of the EU.

Germany: TOMS no longer applicable for all non-EU companies as of 2021
Read more

Our WTS Financial Service experts provide information on how the international financial services industry should be prepared for the transformation within German tax law towards more tax transparency and digitalisation.

Germany: Digitalization of tax law and tightening of WHT process
Read more

In Germany, a new fact has been introduced that has led to an obligation for non-residents to file a German income tax return. In the majority of cases, this will cause a considerable additional tax burden in addition to the additional effort of submitting the declaration. It applies as of the 2020 German tax return filing season which should start in 2021.

New tax return filing obligation for non-residents in Germany
Read more

There is a consultation agreement between France and Germany which should mitigate the tax consequences of home-working days caused by the pandemic.

Being prepared for the 2020 French and German tax return filing season
Read more

On 1 October 2020, the Federal Ministry of Finance issued a circular which finally reflects the jurisdiction of the Federal Fiscal Court regarding the definition of work deliveries as of 2013.

Germany: Revised definition of work deliveries
Read more

An overview of work-from-home tax regulations in Germany during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Germany: Stay compliant when working from home
Read more

View the full webinar recordings here

Multinationals operating in the UK and in Germany must successfully navigate key considerations when addressing U.S. GAAP reporting
Read more

To face economic consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic, the standard VAT rate and the reduced VAT rate are adjusted for the period 1 July 2020 until 31 December 2020. 

Germany: Reduced VAT rates until 31 December 2020
Read more

Typification of the arm’s length principle also applicable to domestic transactions? A comparison of tax consequences in cross-border and domestic cases

Germany: Suggested draft law on IC financing
Read more

An overview on the economic and crisis management package from the German black-red party coalition in response to the consequences of the Corona crisis

Germany: Temporary cut in VAT rates and extension of payment due dates for import VAT
Read more

An overview of recent decisions of the German Federal Fiscal Court, the final OECD guidance and Germany's bilateral position

Germany: I/C Financial Transaction and Transfer Pricing: Final OECD Guidance and Germany’s Bilateral Position
Read more

In Germany, employees of a foreign permanent establishment (PE) of a Germany-based company are taxable in Germany from day 1.

Germany: New flat-rate tax for Branch Traveller
Read more

Measures include deferral, reduction of advance payments and waiver of enforcement measures

Federal Ministry of Finance and federal states: Tax measures to mitigate the effects of coronavirus
Read more

Comments on Pillar I

OECD Proposal for a new tax order
Read more

Teaser Video: Panel 3 at the WTS Global Tax Directors Meeting 2019

WTS-Germany Partner Dr. Gabriele Rautenstrauch on DAC6 compliance in day-to-day business
Read more

Klaus D. Hahne, Dr. Karen Möhlenkamp and Dr. Tom Offerhaus named Best Lawyers 2019

Best Lawyers Ranking 2019: Five WTS Germany tax lawyers awarded
Read more

The German Ministry of Finance further extended the transition period to 1 January 2020

Germany: Supply of goods via consignment stock as of 2019 – update
Read more

WTS's AI solution for optimizing customs functions

AI & Customs - on the way to the digital tax function
Read more

In its ranking Expert Guides names the "leading experts" in specific tax and law fields

Expert Guides has listed WTS Germany Partner Maik Heggmair and Prof. Dr. Axel Nientimp as TP experts
Read more
Show more

Get in contact

If you have any questions about WTS Global or our global services, please get in touch.
We will respond to you as soon as possible.

Contact