Tax rates in Estonia
Tax Rates
Consumption Taxes
- Nature of the Tax
-
Value Added Tax (VAT) - Käibemaks (in Estonian)
- Tax Rate
-
20%
- Reduced Tax Rate
-
Two reduced rates are available: 0% and 9%.
A reduced rate of 9% is available on items such as books, periodicals, medical equipment and products for disabled people, and accommodation sevices.
Zero-rated items include exported goods, most exported services, intracommunity supplies of goods, the sale of certain services to foreign persons and goods supplied on vessels and aircraft.
Exemptions are provided for health care services; real estate transactions; financial services; insurance, reinsurance and insurance mediation services; educational services (only non-commercial basic education); lotteries and gaming; postal services; learning materials related to education.The import of goods used to contrast the COVID-19 epidemic is exempt from customs duties and import VAT from 30 January 2020 to 31 July 2020.
- Other Consumption Taxes
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Excise taxes are levied on tobacco, alcohol, electricity, some packaging materials and motor fuel. Please visit the website of the Estonian Tax and Customs Board for further information on excise duties.
A tax is levied on heavy vehicles intended for the carriage of goods, with quarterly rates varying between EUR 0 and EUR 232.60.
A gambling tax is levied on income derived from the operation of games of skill, totalizers, betting, lotteries and promotional lotteries. The tax is also levied on gaming tables and machines used for games of chance in authorised premises.Following the COVID-19 emergency, excise duty rates on certain fuels (such as diesel and natural gas) and electricity were temporarily reduced from 1 May 2020 to 30 April 2022.
Corporate Taxes
- Company Tax
-
20% CIT at 20/80 of the net amount of profit distribution
- Tax Rate For Foreign Companies
-
Resident companies are taxed on profits distributed from their worldwide income, while permanent establishments of non-resident companies are taxed only on profits distributed from Estonian-source income. Other income sourced in Estonia derived by non-residents may be subject to final withholding tax or corporate income tax rate by way of assessment.
Companies are considered resident if they are established pursuant to Estonian law.
- Capital Gains Taxation
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Capital gains are treated as ordinary income of Estonian resident companies; however, they are taxed only where there is a profit distribution.
- Main Allowable Deductions and Tax Credits
-
Companies are no longer subject to income tax, they are only taxed on distributed benefits according to the Estonian Company Tax Law. According to the terms of this new law, legal entities are exempt from tax on profits that are not distributed, whether reinvested or retained. Payments made to foreign affiliates are also exempt from tax when they serve the business interests of the company. As a result, there is no provision for depreciation or for carrying forward or backward tax losses.
Since 1 January 2018, companies that are subject to tax on benefits in kind granted to staff may be exempted up to a maximum of EUR 100 per quarter if these benefits relate to expenditure on sports or health programmes. Entertainment expenses may be exempted from corporate tax up to a maximum of EUR 32 per month.
All taxes paid are deductible.
- Other Corporate Taxes
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Land is subject to a tax which is calculated according to the estimated value of the land at rates varying between 0.1% and 2.5% depending on the municipality. The tax can be paid by the owners or the users.
The social tax payable by the employer amounts to 33% of the salary (20% for the pension fund, 13% for the health insurance). Employers also contribute 0.8% of the salary for unemployment insurance and withhold 1.6% for their employees' contributions to the compulsory accumulative pension scheme, if the employee has joined such scheme.
Employers are liable for tax on fringe benefits granted to employees. Benefits are subject to a 20/80 corporate income tax and 33% social tax on the sum of the benefit and the 20/80 CIT (a fringe benefit of EUR 100 would give rise to a EUR 25 CIT and a EUR 41.25 social tax with a 33% tax applying to EUR 125).
A gambling tax is levied on income derived from the operation of games of skill, totalizers, betting, lotteries and promotional lotteries. The tax is also levied on gaming tables and machines used for games of chance in authorised premises.
Taxes apply on heavy goods vehicles, at rates varying between EUR 0 and 930.4 per year.
Local authorities may also levy certain taxes, often at negligible rates for companies.
- Other Domestic Resources
-
Consult Doing Business Website, to obtain a summary of the taxes and mandatory contributions.
Country Comparison For Corporate Taxation
|
Estonia |
Eastern Europe & Central Asia |
United States |
Germany |
Number of Payments of Taxes per Year |
8.0 |
13.9 |
10.6 |
9.0 |
Time Taken For Administrative Formalities (Hours) |
50.0 |
226.2 |
175.0 |
218.0 |
Total Share of Taxes (% of Profit) |
47.8 |
36.5 |
36.6 |
48.8 |
Source:
Doing Business,
Latest available data.
Individual Taxes
Tax Rate
Individual income tax |
20% |
Certain qualified pension payments |
10% |
Dividends |
dividends distributed and subject to the reduced rate of 14% are subject to an additional WHT of 7% |
- Allowable Deductions and Tax Credits
-
There is a basic personal allowance of EUR 6,000 (i.e. EUR 500 per month) for annual income up to EUR 14,400. The yearly allowance is gradually reduced for annual incomes between EUR 14,400 and EUR 25,200 and is zero for any annual income exceeding EUR 25,200. Click here for more info.
Residents can deduct an extra EUR 2,160 for his/her resident spouse when their total combined taxable income is below EUR 50,400. A lump-sum 20% deduction is available for income from renting out immovable property.
Further deductions are available for certain additional personal allowances, as well as certain deductible documented expenses, which fall into two categories:
- the first category includes certain mandatory payments, which can be deducted without any limitations, including unemployment insurance contributions, contributions to a compulsory accumulative pension scheme, and certain obligatory contributions to foreign social security schemes;- the second category includes deductions that are allowed for tax policy reasons and which have various limitations on deductibility. It includes certain bank and leasing interest paid in relation to acquiring a personal residence, certain educational expenses, certain gifts and donations, and certain payments to personal pension schemes.
- Special Expatriate Tax Regime
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Resident individuals are liable to tax on worldwide income, irrespective of the origin of the income. Non-residents are taxed on their Estonian-source income.
A limited list of taxable items applies to non-residents: income from work under an employment contract or contractor's agreement in Estonia; income from a business carried on in Estonia; royalties; income from the lease of assets located in Estonia; gains from the disposal of assets located in Estonia; directors' fees paid by Estonian enterprises or non-residents; income of a sportsperson or an artist from activities in Estonia; and pensions and scholarships.
Starting from 2022, non-residents from another member state of the European Economic Area are allowed to apply for calculation of the basic exemption monthly, at the moment of payment.
Consult the website of the EMTA for further details.
Double Taxation Treaties
- Countries With Whom a Double Taxation Treaty Have Been Signed
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See the list of the tax treaties
- Withholding Taxes
-
- Dividends: 0%/7% (dividends paid to individuals if the distribution has been subject to the reduced CIT rate at the hands of the paying company)
- Interest: 20% (resident individuals)/0% (non-residents)
- Royalties: 0% (resident companies)/10% (non-resident companies and individuals)/20% (resident individuals)
- Bilateral Agreement
-
The United Kingdom and Estonia are bound by a double taxation treaty.
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Latest Update: June 2024