Ľubomíra Murgašová | 26.9.2024 |
The government has passed a law on a new tax - Financial Transaction Tax, which should be effective from 1 January 2025 and will apply to both legal persons and natural persons - entrepreneurs. The new tax has not been approved by the Parliament yet. The businesses will be required to have a business account (transaction account) to carry out financial transactions related to their business in Slovakia. The law introduces new tax rates and deadlines for filing notifications and remittance of tax.
The law introduces new tax rates and deadlines for filing notifications and remittance of tax. In this article, we look at the key points and potential risks of this proposal. The proposal has already passed on by the Parlement in the first reading.
The draft law on the tax on financial transactions was approved by the government and is currently awaiting discussion in the parliament in II. reading. However, it is still undergoing various modifications and raising many questions and uncertainties, but it is clear that the Financial Transaction Tax will have a significant impact on the business environment.
The new Financial Transaction Tax Act will apply to legal entities, organisational units and entrepreneurs, however, it is not clearly defined from the wording of the Act whether it will apply to all activities under Section 6 of the Income Tax Act (e.g. attorneys, notaries, authors, artists, consultants, bankruptcy trustees, etc.). It is absolutely crucial that the legislator adds a definition of entrepreneur or a reference for a specific law in order to remove legal uncertainty. The new tax does not apply to the state bodies.
The aim is to tax transactions that taxpayers carry out in the conduct of their business by means of bank transfers. These transactions will be identified by being carried out exclusively in a so-called transaction account (business account). For legal persons, these are accounts belonging to that legal person. Each natural person entrepreneur will be required to set up a separate business bank account (a transaction account separate from private bank accounts) by 31 March 2025 at the latest. The tax will not be avoided even by an entrepreneur who fails to comply with this obligation.
Specifically, the law proposes to tax the following transactions:
The new transaction tax will therefore also apply to funds already taxed once, e.g. wage payments, dividend payments, etc. The new tax will also apply to loan repayments.
The bill further lists transactions on which the tax will not apply, these include payments of taxes and levies, card payments (via a physical terminal or online payment gateway) and other.
3. Who will be liable for the tax?
Taxpayers will be banks and payment service providers based in Slovakia, or organisational units of foreign financial institutions.
The businesses can also become the liable for the tax. A businesses becomes a liable for the tax when:
4. Tax base, rates and tax period
The Financial Transaction Tax will operate as a new form of withholding tax, where the bank will deduct the tax in a similar way to bank charges from the taxpayer's account. The tax is at the businesses’ expense and will not be passed on to the recipient of the payment.
The taxpayer (the bank or the businesses to whom the taxpayer's obligation passes) must always remit the tax no later than the end of the month following the end of the tax period. There are two tax periods for the new tax:
a. Calendar month: the tax on debit transactions and cash withdrawals will be paid monthly, for the first tax period in April 2025 it is possible to pay the tax by the end of July 2025.
b. Calendar year: a tax of €2 per credit/debit card is applied once a year, even to cards that have been cancelled during the year, if used as least once.
The new tax will be a tax-deductible cost for the businesses.
The bill also requires businesses accepting cash only from 1 July 2025 to allow customers to pay by card as well, which will impose additional costs on those businesses.
The current version of the law contains ambiguities, new undefined terms and loopholes.
The draft on Financial Transaction Tax poses several risks, mainly stemming from inconsistencies in information and insufficient definitions - issues that should normally be addressed in the context of the comment procedure, but which the government has from their point of view "successfully" shortened.
Among the other problematic parts we have identified, several types of transactions are not currently excluded from the proposal, the taxation of which would place an additional burden on those affected:
Imagine a situation where company XY with 10,000 employees pays a minimum net wage of €615 . At the currently proposed rate of 0.40% per month, this would result in a financial transaction tax of approximately €295,200 per year for company XY. If we assume the average wage in Slovakia, which is currently €1,520 (gross), the annual financial transaction tax for our company XY would be approximately €554,366.
The new tax could make foreign investors reluctant to do business in Slovakia, and not only through additional taxation of labour, which is already one of the highest taxes in Slovakia.
The Financial Transaction Tax Act will have a significant impact on business costs. In addition, the additional administrative costs associated with the maintenance of accounts and records will place a significant burden not only on businesses but also on the banks themselves, which will have to bear the administration associated with the new law. The financial transaction tax will mostly tax both income that has already been taxed and income that is exempt from tax.
All these changes may make foreign investors reluctant to do business in Slovakia. By planning to also tax wage payments, this may cause a reduction in the number of employees, which may negatively affect employment rate in Slovakia.
The biggest concern, however, stems from the encouragement of the grey economy, where entrepreneurs would switch to a cash-based form of doing business
Grant Thornton will keep you up to date on further developments on the new transaction tax law to help you prepare for the upcoming changes. We will be glad to provide you with tax consulting in regards to the new obligations and help you with the correct maintenance of accounts and transaction records to meet all legislative requirements. Don't hesitate to contact us for an efficient and seamless implementation of new policies.
Ľubomíra Murgašová | 10.9.2024 | News
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