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Personal Income Tax – is a tax paid by Portuguese citizens domiciled in Portugal for their worldwide income. Non-residents of Portugal only pay this tax for their Portuguese sourced income. [11] [12] [13] Corporate Income Tax – is a tax applied to the income of companies operating in the territory of Portugal. [4] [14] [15] [16] [17]
Taxes in Portugal are levied by both the national and regional governments of Portugal. Tax revenue in Portugal stood at 34.9% of GDP in 2018. [1] The most important revenue sources include the income tax, social security contributions, corporate tax and the value added tax, which are all applied at the national level.
The list focuses on the main types of taxes: corporate tax, individual income tax, and sales tax, including VAT and GST and capital gains tax, but does not list wealth tax or inheritance tax. Personal income tax includes all applicable taxes, including all unvested social security contributions.
Certain compulsory transfers such as fines, penalties, and most social security contributions are excluded. Refunds and corrections of erroneously collected tax revenue are treated as negative revenue. UN-WIDER: Total taxes consists of taxes, social contributions, grants receivable, and other revenue. Data are in current national currency.
Portugal has signed an Agreement to Avoid Double Taxation with the territory. [5] Guam: Unincorporated and organized U.S. territory: Portugal has signed an Agreement to Avoid Double Taxation with the country. [6] Kiribati: Country - Isle of Man: Crown dependency: Portugal has signed an agreement of exchange of tax information with the territory ...
The total Finnish income tax includes the income tax dependable on the net salary, employee unemployment payment, and employer unemployment payment. [18] [19] The tax rate increases very progressively rapidly at 13 ke/year (from 25% to 48%) and at 29 ke/year to 55% and eventually reaches 67% at 83 ke/year, while little decreases at 127 ke/year ...
The Netherlands taxes the worldwide inheritance and gifts left by its citizens for the first 10 years after moving from the Netherlands to another country, as if they remained residents of the Netherlands. [158] Portugal taxes its citizens who move to a tax haven [Note 15] as residents of Portugal, for the first five years after moving there ...
Equalization is a step in property taxation to bring a uniformity to tax assessment levels across different geographical areas or classes of properties. Equalization is usually in the form of a uniform percentage of increase or decrease to each area or class of property.