Date Published: 29/09/2022
ARCHIVED - Spanish government reduces income tax for lower earners
Spain has introduced a series a fiscal measures which include a tax on the rich and savings for 50% of workers
With rising costs continuing to cripple consumers in Spain, the Minister of Finance had some welcome news on Thursday September 29 in the form of tax cuts, higher expense brackets and exemptions.
The biggest change announced by minister María Jesús Montero for 2023 is that the income threshold for the lower tax rate will be extended from 18,000 euros to 21,000 euros (gross salary), a measure that will benefit 50% of workers in Spain, since the median salary is right around the 21,000-mark.
“A worker who today earns 18,000 euros will save 746 euros a year with this measure,” explained Montero, who added that the total savings over two years will amount to 1,881 million.
These are the main changes the government has made:
- The VAT rate on feminine hygiene products will be lowered from 10% to 4%.
- A temporary ‘solidarity tax’ will be created for 2023 and 2024 which will affect anyone with a net worth of more than 3 million euros. The government estimates that the measure will impact 23,000 taxpayers to the tune of 1,500 million. The tax will have three sections: a rate of 1.7% for assets of between 3 and 5 million; 2.1% for assets of between 5 and 10 million euros, and 3.5% for assets of more than 10 million euros.
- The tax rate on capital gains of more than 200,000 euros will increase from 26% to 27%, and for gains of more than 300,000 it will jump to 28%. This is expected to collect 204 million and affect 17,814 taxpayers.
- The cut-off for salaries exempt from paying income tax will be raised from 14,000 euros to 15,000 euros.
- The minister has announced a reduction in corporate tax by two points (to 23%) for micro-SMEs, which invoice less than one million euros. Some 407,000 companies will benefit with savings of 292 million.
- For freelancers, the reduction of deductible expenses that are difficult to justify under the simplified direct estimation regime will be increased from 5% to 7%. This will benefit more than 577,000 self-employed people in Spain, who will save 184 million euros.
Image: Pixabay
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