European Exit Tax Country Comparison for Founders 2026

exit tax

This guide gives an overview of “exit taxes” across Europe, specifically tailored for 2026. Things are moving quickly. Several countries consider introducing such taxation. Make sure to reach out to our specialists if you want a person to advice on your situation.

Exit taxation is a tax on the unrealized “on-paper” profit of your assets (like company shares) that you built up while living in a country, which is triggered at the moment you move your tax residency away. The “moral” behind It: that the country where you were a resident at the time of building up wealth, provided the infrastructure, legal system, education, and economic stability that allowed you to build that wealth; therefore, it reserves the right to tax the value created within its borders, even if you leave before “cashing in” (selling) those assets.

This article is particularly useful for startup founders and entrepreneurs holding significant equity, as well as investors and business angels with substantial shareholdings (like the 1% in Germany or 5% in the Netherlands) who plan to move their tax residency. It is also critical for high-net-worth individuals whose assets exceed national thresholds (like โ‚ฌ800K in France) and long-term expatriates or “digital nomads” who may unknowingly trigger this tax after residing somewhere for 6-10 years. Finally, it serves as a quick reference for tax advisors and planners advising clients on cross-border relocation, especially given the critical 2025/2026 changes.

Before we compare, these are the most important terms you should know:

Exit Tax: A tax on the potential profit of your assets (primarily company shares). It is triggered simply by moving your tax residency out of the country, even if you have not sold any shares. It’s essentially a tax on “unrealized gains.” The moral jusitification is that the country you provided the infrastructure, legal system, education and general (economic) stability that allowed a person to build that wealth that is no being taxed. The country then reserves the right to tax the value created within its borders, even if you leave before selling those assets. There are loads of pros and cons, but we will leave that to others.

Unrealized Gains: The “on-paper” profit of your shares. It’s the difference between their current market value and the price you originally paid for them.

Threshold: The set of conditions that make you liable for the tax. This is usually a combination of how long you lived there (e.g., “6 of last 10 years”) and how much you own (e.g., “>โ‚ฌ800K”).

Deferral: The option to postpone paying the tax bill. This is often automatically granted when moving to another EU/EEA country, but payment is usually required immediately if moving elsewhere (e.g., to the US or Dubai).

Forgiveness / Waiver: A rule that cancels your deferred exit tax bill after certain conditions are met. Common examples include not selling the shares for a set period (15 years in France) or moving back to the country (10 years in Spain).

Capital Gains Tax (CGT): This is the “normal” tax you pay on the actual profit when you finally sell your shares. Countries listed as “No Exit Tax” (like Portugal or Switzerland) will only tax you when you make this actual sale.

Special Cases (e.g., Sweden, UK): These countries don’t tax you for just leaving (no exit tax), but they “claw back” the right to tax you if you sell your shares within a few years of having left (e.g., Sweden’s 10-year rule).

Exit Tax Countries

France ????????

Threshold: Resident 6 of last 10 years AND (shares >โ‚ฌ800K OR >50% ownership)
Deferral: Automatic for EU/EEA moves
Forgiveness: 15 years if shares not sold
Rate: 30% (12.8% + 17.2% social)

Sources: French Tax Authority | KPMG | Qualifisc

Germany ????????

Threshold: โ‰ฅ1% shareholding in last 5 years
Deferral: 7-year installments for EU/EEA (with interest)
Rate: Up to 26.375%
NEW 2025: Also applies to investment funds โ‰ฅโ‚ฌ500K

Sources: German Finance Ministry | Grant Thornton | Noerr

Netherlands ????????

Threshold: โ‰ฅ5% substantial interest
Deferral: Automatic, interest-free for EU/EEA
Key benefit: Tax only due when shares sold
Rate: 26.9% (24.5% on first โ‚ฌ67K)

Sources: NedTax | PwC | People & Media

Spain ????????

Threshold: Resident 10 of last 15 years AND (shares >โ‚ฌ4M OR >25% of company >โ‚ฌ1M)
Deferral: 10-year for EU/EEA
Forgiveness: Tax waived if return within 10 years
Rate: 19-30%

Sources: Gentile Law | IR Global | Kinship

Denmark ????????

Threshold: Resident 7 of last 10 years AND shares >DKK 100,000 (~โ‚ฌ13,400)
Deferral: Available for EU/EEA
Note: Very low threshold
Rate: 27-42%

Sources: Danish Tax Agency | Skat.dk | PwC

Norway ????????

Threshold: Unrealized gains >NOK 3M (NEW 2025)
Deferral: 12-year with installments (interest-free)
Rate: 37.84%
NEW 2025: 70% of dividends trigger proportional payment of the deferred tax

Sources: Norwegian Tax Admin | Government | KPMG | Schjรธdt

Belgium ????????

2025: NO exit tax
Jan 1, 2026: 10% exit tax starts
2-year window: No tax if shares not sold within 24 months
ACTION: Move by December 31, 2025

Sources: KPMG | EY | PwC | BDO

Italy ????????

Threshold: >25% voting or >5% listed
Deferral: Available for EU/EEA
Rate: 26%


No Exit Tax Countries

Portugal ????????

No exit tax on unrealized gains for individuals
Capital gains: 28% on actual sale only
Very founder-friendly

Sources: NHR Guide | PwC

Ireland ????????

No exit tax on individuals
CGT: 33% on actual disposal only
Note: Ireland has corporate exit tax and fund exit tax

Sources: Revenue | CCPC

Switzerland ????????

No exit tax on private assets
Wealth tax while resident
Clean exit

Sources: SwissInfo | Taxea

Austria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Czech Republic, Greece ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

No exit tax on unrealized gains
CGT on realized gains only


Special Cases

Sweden ????????

NO EXIT TAX on unrealized gains
10-year rule: Swedish CGT applies to REALIZED gains (actual sales) for 10 years after leaving
Exit tax proposals: Cancelled 2023

Sources: Schjรธdt | Nomad Tax

UK ????????

Current: No exit tax on unrealized gains
Temporary non-resident rule: If you return within 5 years, CGT applies to REALIZED gains made while abroad
โš ๏ธ The proposed exit tax was NOT introduced following the latest budget.

Sources: UK Gov | Bloomberg


Quick Reference

EXIT TAXNO EXIT TAXSPECIAL CASE
FrancePortugalSweden (10-yr realized gain rule)
GermanyIrelandUK (Temp. non-resident rule)
NetherlandsSwitzerland
SpainAustria
DenmarkEstonia
NorwayLatvia
ItalyLithuania
Belgium (from Jan 1, 2026)Poland
Czech Republic
Greece
Belgium (until Dec 31, 2025)

Critical 2025 Changes

Belgium: Last year without exit tax – move by Dec 31, 2025.

Norway: New NOK 3M threshold, 12-year deferral, and dividend rule now in effect.

Germany: Fund rules expanded.

UK: Exit tax under consideration.


Planning Essentials

EU/EEA vs Non-EU:

  • EU/EEA: Deferral, often interest-free.
  • Non-EU: Immediate payment, collateral often required.

Valuation:

  • Based on fair market value at departure.
  • Last funding round โ‰  tax valuation.
  • Document methodology.

Timing:

  • Plan 18-24 months ahead.
  • Belgium: Move by Dec 31, 2025.

Return Clauses:

  • France: 15-year forgiveness
  • Spain: 10-year forgiveness (if you return)
  • Norway: 12-year installment plan (waived if you return)

This article is for informational purposes only. Consult qualified tax advisors in both countries before relocating.

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