15 November 2023 — Publication
The Head Office Tax System for micro, small and medium sized enterprises (HOT) issued on 12 September is a Directive proposed by the European Commission to encourage cross-border expansion of SMEs. HOT’s purpose is to reduce the tax related administrative burden SMEs face when they open permanent establishments[1] in other Member States. Accountants should be aware of this proposal to consider the impact for their SME clients.
This webpage provides a high-level summary of the main provisions. For more details please refer to proposed Directive full text.
HOT is a proposed Directive, all provisions and timelines are therefore subject to change during the legislative process.
The proposals concern corporate income tax exclusively (or its equivalents). They aim to simplify the tax calculations and filing requirements for SMEs that operate in other Member States through permanent establishments.
Once an SME has joined the system, it will only be obliged to report and pay the corporate income tax in respect of the profits of the Head Office and all permanent establishments to the Member State in which the Head Office is located.
The impact assessment indicates that this would help reduce cost in corporate income tax compliance by 32%. This amounts to a maximum total saving for SMEs across the EU of €3.4 billion per year.
The taxable profits will be computed for both the Head Office and its permanent establishments using the tax rules of the Head Office’s jurisdiction.
The amount of tax for the permanent establishments will be based on these adjusted results multiplied by the appropriate rate of tax in force in the Member State where each of the permanent establishments are based (the ‘Host’ jurisdictions).
Qualifying SMEs will be able to apply for the system, which is proposed to come into effect with a projected date of 1 January 2026. HOT is not compulsory for SMEs.
To qualify, the business must first:
Accounting Directive SME criteria: At balance sheet date, companies must not exceed at least 2 of the 3 following criteria: – Net turnover of €40 million per year – Balance sheet total of €20 million – Average 250 employees |
If an SME is in scope, it also needs to meet these eligibility criteria in order to apply for HOT:
Company A |
Member State A: Head Office turnover is €1 million Member State B: PE has turnover of €900 000 Member State C: PE has turnover of €950 000 Head Office is eligible to apply for HOT in Member State A |
Company B |
Member State A: Head Office turnover is €1 million Member State B: PE has turnover of €1 200 000 Member State C: PE has turnover of €950 000 Head Office is not eligible to apply for HOT in Member State A |
SMEs should apply for HOT to the relevant authority in the Head Office Member State at least 3 months before the end of the fiscal year preceding the fiscal year in which the SME wishes to start applying the rules. For example, if an SME wishes to use HOT for the fiscal year ended 31 December 2028, it must apply, at the latest, by 30 September 2027.
The Head Office must then apply HOT rules for five fiscal years. If the eligibility criteria are still met, there is an option to renew, which must be exercised at least six months before the expiry of the current term.
If the Head Office tax authority declines the HOT application, SMEs have a right of appeal.
Head Office rules will automatically cease to apply with effect from the following fiscal year if either of the following occurs:
If the current provisions are approved by Member States, the HOT proposal will:
From the perspective of preservation of Member States’ tax base, opportunities for SMEs to profit shift to more beneficial tax regimes are restricted by both the upper limit on the respective turnover of permanent establishments and by the fact that moving the jurisdiction of the Head Office ends the existing HOT scheme.
The proposal will follow the normal legislative process for a tax file, meaning unanimity decision by all EU Member States in the Council, and a non-binding opinion by the European Parliament.
[1] “‘permanent establishment’ means a fixed place of business situated in another Member State, as defined under the relevant bilateral convention on the avoidance of double taxation or, in absence thereof, in national law.”