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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Banking secrecy and Tax Haven status  







2 Communal tax system  





3 State tax system  



3.1  Fees  





3.2  Direct taxation  





3.3  Indirect taxation  





3.4  Customs duties and fees  



3.4.1  Consumption rates  









4 Income tax  





5 Corporate tax  





6 Value added tax  





7 Capital gains tax on property transfers (PLV)  





8 References  














Taxation in Andorra







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The tax system of Andorra has evolved according to the country's economic activity and structure, and the tax bases have been expanded to optimally distribute the weight of the tax burden, going from an almost exclusively indirect tax system to a system with direct taxation that can be approved at the international level.[1] Despite its taxes, Andorra ceased to be a tax haven for its neighboring countries years ago, and for the European Union and OECD recently.[2]

In accordance with the mandate established in the 1993 Constitution, tax powers are divided between the Comuns — town councils – and the Government.

History[edit]

After the Andorran Constitution came into force, the qualified law delimiting the powers of the Comuns, of November 4, 1993, configures and delimits the powers of the commons within the framework of their self-government.[1]

During the period 1994–1996, an important activity of tax development was observed with the creation of five new taxes:

In 2000, the legislator approved the Law on the Tax on the provision of services (ISI), in accordance with the political model of generalizing indirect taxation to all sectors of the economy. It is a framework law that establishes the bases for indirect taxation on services and that, through specific laws, within two years, must be developed in all sectors.

In May 2002, the indirect tax on the provision of banking and financial services (currently repealed), and the indirect tax on the provision of Insurance services were approved. The same year, the rate was approved by reason of the notarized public faith service (currently repealed) and the tax on real estate property transfers within the framework of fiscal co-responsibility between the commons and the Government.

In 2003, Law 10/2003, of June 27, on communal finances unifies the essential elements of communal taxes and homogenizes the bases of the various tax figures that these local administrations develop through the respective ordinances. On November 3 of the same year, the three specific tax laws were passed that generalize indirect taxation to all sectors of the economy:

These three new taxes, which entered into force on January 1, 2006, were replaced by the indirect general tax (IGI), which entered into force on January 1, 2013.

Government direct taxation begins in 2006 with the entry into force of the capital gains tax on property transfers. It is a direct tax that is taxed on the increase in the value of real estate that is evidenced by the inter vivos, onerous or lucrative transfers of real estate, as well as by the constitutions or transfers of real rights over them.

On December 29, 2010, three major taxes were approved in the field of direct taxation. They are:

In 2013, Andorra announced plans to impose an income tax in response to pressure from the European Union.[3] The tax was introduced in 2015, at a flat rate of 10%.[4] Also the General Indirect Tax (IGI) was applied. Its introduction allowed replacing the vast majority of existing indirect tax figures that taxed the consumption produced in the territory. In this way, the indirect taxation framework becomes more neutral and efficient for companies and fairer for citizens.

In 2014, the Department of Taxes and Borders was created, with the aim of establishing an administrative authority in charge of managing the tax system and the customs system, equipped with human resources and legal mechanisms that allow for management and collection effective income of a tax nature.

Finally, on January 1, 2014, the Personal Income Tax (IRPF) came into force, which completes the configuration of the Andorran fiscal framework and introduces a tax system comparable to that existing in other neighboring countries, the European Union and the OECD. The new tax covers all the income that the taxpayer may obtain, regardless of its type and source, also incorporating business income that until then was taxed on income tax from economic activities.

Banking secrecy and Tax Haven status[edit]

In 2016, Andorra took steps to renounce banking secrecy to end its status as a tax haven.[5]

Communal tax system[edit]

The qualified Law delimiting the powers of the commons determines the taxing power of municipalities in relation to taxes:[6]

State tax system[edit]

The fees, taxes and rates that compound the state tax system of Andorra are:[1]

Fees[edit]

Direct taxation[edit]

Indirect taxation[edit]

Customs duties and fees[edit]

Consumption rates[edit]

Income tax[edit]

Andorra introduced the personal income tax regime on the first of January 2015. It is a tax composed of sections that are applied on the income tax base, similar to that of neighboring countries. Without going into the many details of the tax and in a simplified way:[7]

The tax on savings income follow the same regime as the income tax, but the difference in this case is that the first €3,000 of investment income is tax exempt. The rest of income is taxed at 10%.

Corporate tax[edit]

The more relevant tax on corporations in Andorra is the IS or Impost de Societats (IS), and corresponds to a fixed general rate of 10%.

There are in addition some bonuses for new corporations:[8]

Value added tax[edit]

Andorra is not part of the EU VAT area, despite being in a customs union with the EU. On January 1, 2013, Andorra introduced the IGI (Impost General Indirecte), that is the main value added tax and indirect tax, replacing the sales tax regime.[9] Its general tax rate is 4.5%,[10] but there are some other rates applied to certain goods and services:[9]

Capital gains tax on property transfers (PLV)[edit]

When someone want to sell Andorran property to obtain some profit, a capital gains tax will be applied on the real asset. The nominal rate is 15% if the property is sold before the first year, 13% if it is sold in the second year of possession, 10% in the third year of possession and decreases by 1% each year after the third year (so the rate can be 0% in the 12th year). However, an individual can avoid the capital gains tax buying another property before six months of the sale.[11]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Tax System". Government of Andorra (in Catalan).
  • ^ "Taxation in Andorra in 2020". Andorra Insiders (in Spanish, English, French, Catalan, Portuguese, and Russian). 2020.
  • ^ Andorra bows to EU pressure to introduce income tax, The Telegraph, June 2, 2013.
  • ^ Individual income tax, Government of Andorra. (in Catalan)
  • ^ "Andorra to renounce banking secrecy as it sheds tax haven status". TheGuardian.com. December 2, 2016.
  • ^ "Taxation in Andorra". Andorra Insiders (in English, Spanish, Catalan, French, Portuguese, and Russian). 2020.
  • ^ "IRPF, the income tax in Andorra". Andorra Insiders (in English, Spanish, French, Catalan, Portuguese, and Russian). 2020.
  • ^ "Corporation tax (IS) in Andorra". Andorra Insiders (in English, Spanish, Catalan, French, Russian, and Portuguese). 2020.
  • ^ a b "General indirect tax or VAT in Andorra". Andorra Insiders (in English, Spanish, French, Catalan, Portuguese, and Russian). 2020.
  • ^ http://www.expansion.com/pymes/2016/03/17/56e2f4fbca4741a8028b4650.html (in Spanish)
  • ^ http://www.nomoretax.eu/living/relocation-to-andorra/ (in English)

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Taxation_in_Andorra&oldid=1171211292"

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    This page was last edited on 19 August 2023, at 18:11 (UTC).

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