VAT news [May 2026]
The Court of Justice of the European Union issued several noteworthy decisions in the area of VAT. In one case concerning transfer pricing, it addressed the tax treatment of adjustments resulting from subsequen…
On 3 October 2024, the National Council of the Slovak Republic adopted draft acts which aim to contribute to the long-term stabilisation and sustainability of public funds. The adopted acts introduced a new tax on financial transactions and amended a number of acts related to corporate taxation, including Act No. 595/2003 Coll. on Income Tax, as amended (ITA) and Act No. 222/2004 Coll. on Value Added Tax, as amended (VAT Act).
Tax on Financial Transactions
The National Council of the Slovak Republic introduced a new tax on financial transactions with effect from 1 January 2025. The tax will apply to financial transactions where funds are debited from a tax entity’s account, payment card use, cash withdrawal, and to the recharge of expenses related to the performance of a financial transaction.
Tax entities liable for this tax will include legal entities and organisational units of foreign entities; as regards natural persons, the tax will only apply to entrepreneurs who are clients of a payment service provider.
A taxpayer, primarily the payment service provider or its organisational unit with its registered office in Slovakia, will be required to calculate and pay the tax on financial transactions and file a notification on the tax amount to the tax administrator. If the payment service provider does not have a registered office or an organisational unit in the Slovak Republic, or if the tax entity does not make financial transactions via a transaction (business) account, or the expenses related to the performance of a financial transaction are only recharged to their account, the tax entity will be considered to be the taxpayer, thus preventing tax evasion by creating bank accounts abroad.
The tax base will be the amount of funds debited from the tax entity’s account. The applicable tax rates will be as follows:
- 0.4% of a financial transaction amount for each debited financial transaction, up to a maximum of EUR 40 per transaction;
- 0.8% of a cash withdrawal amount for a cash withdrawal from a business account (ATM or at the branch), with no maximum tax amount per transaction;
- EUR 2 p.a. for the use of a payment card regardless of how many times the card was used during the year;
- 0.4% of the recharged expenses for the recharge of expenses related to the performance of financial transactions which apply to domestic operations, with no maximum tax amount.
The payment of tax is subject to a number of exceptions, which include, inter alia, payment transactions related to the payment of tax and contributions, management of securities or other financial instruments, and payment transactions made between the tax entity’s accounts held with the same provider (e.g. a transfer from the tax entity’s business account to their personal account).
The ITA amendment
The ITA amendment primarily introduces the following changes to corporate taxation:
As regards the taxation of individuals, the ITA amendment restricts the possibility of claiming a child tax bonus to dependent children under 18 years and also limits the tax bonus amount for high-income groups of parents. In relation to the abolition of a parental pension, the ITA amendment also introduces (while retaining the use of the allocation of paid tax for non-profit organisations) the use of the allocation of paid tax for the tax entity’s parents.
The adopted draft act also amends other acts related to taxation, for example:
The Act must be signed by the President of the Slovak Republic and published in the Collection of Laws of the Slovak Republic to become effective.
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