Tax Foundation

06/15/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/16/2026 10:13

VAT Exemption Thresholds in Europe, 2026

Across 32 major European countries, Switzerland has the highest absolute VAT exemption threshold, at CHF 100,000 (€106,724). The United Kingdom and France follow, at £90,000 (€105,043) and €87,000. Spain and Turkey are the only countries that do not have a threshold, meaning that all businesses are enrolled in the VAT system.

The same nominal amount can carry different economic weight across countries with varying price levels. Adjusting for purchasing power parity (PPP), Romania has the highest threshold at RON 395,000 ($202,206), followed by the Czech Republic and Italy, at CZK 2,000,000 ($155,039) and €85,000 ($140,246) respectively.

While VAT registration thresholds reduce administrative and compliance costs, they do so at the expense of tax revenue. They also introduce a distortion by favoring smaller firms over larger ones, which can prevent businesses from realizing economies of scale as tax-advantaged micro-enterprises crowd out more productive competitors.

High thresholds also create a large "notch," or tax cliff, at the cutoff. A firm whose turnover edges one euro above the threshold suddenly owes VAT on its entire value added, not just the marginal amount. Empirical work consistently finds that firms respond by underreporting turnover or scaling back real activity to stay below the line.

The Czech Republic illustrates this effect. It maintains one of the highest VAT exemption thresholds in Europe in PPP terms, and the distribution of Czech corporations spikes sharply just below the cutoff, with the bunching point shifting together with the increase in the threshold. High VAT exemption thresholds can create substantial economic costs by distorting business size and incentivizing bunching behavior. Policymakers should seek to lower these costs by reducing or eliminating VAT exemption thresholds.

Recent Changes

Several European countries have recently increased their VAT registration thresholds. Hungary lifted its threshold from HUF 18 to 20 million (€45,250 to €50,280) in 2026 and is scheduled to increase it further to HUF 22 million (€55,310) by 2027. Poland lifted its threshold from PLN 200,000 to 240,000 (€47,170 to €56,610) from 2026, and Romania increased its threshold from RON 300,000 to RON 395,000 (€59,500 to €78,340) earlier in September 2025. The Belgian parliament has approved raising the VAT threshold from €25,000 to €30,000 in April 2026, with entry into force still pending.

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Tax Foundation published this content on June 15, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on June 16, 2026 at 16:13 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]