12 September 2025 — Publication
European businesses, including SMEs, are increasingly weighed down by the complexity of the tax environment in which they operate. Multiple and sometimes overlapping EU rules, inconsistent national implementation, and outdated administrative processes create unnecessary burdens for taxpayers and tax authorities alike.
In its paper on tax simplification, Accountancy Europe sets out a vision and practical recommendations for a more streamlined, coherent, and technology-enabled EU tax framework that reduces compliance costs, strengthens legal certainty, and preserves the competitiveness of European business without undermining tax revenues.
Read the full paper.
For companies engaged in cross-border trade, divergent interpretations of EU directives, inconsistent guidance, and duplicated reporting requirements lead to uncertainty, delays, and higher costs. At the same time, tax authorities themselves are often under-resourced and reliant on outdated systems that prevent them from using data effectively.
The European Commission has recognised the urgency of this issue, with a “tax omnibus” initiative expected in 2026. Accountancy Europe supports the Commission by presenting concrete, practitioner-driven proposals for simplification, grounded in the experience of accountants, advisors and auditors who see the real-world impact of complexity every day.
The statement calls for a consolidation pause in the further expansion of tax legislation. The past decade has seen an unprecedented wave of EU and international tax rules, compounded by new requirements in sustainability and due diligence reporting. Against this backdrop of political and economic uncertainty, businesses need stability. The paper therefore calls on the EU to focus on reviewing and refining existing legislation, ensuring it is proportionate, coherent, and aligned with international standards, before proposing new, wide-ranging measures.
One of the central challenges identified in the paper is the lack of effective IT resources within tax administrations. While digital tools such as real-time reporting and e-invoicing have improved compliance in some Member States, many authorities still operate with outdated, paper-based systems. This causes delays in registrations, rulings, audits, and enforcement, while also leaving vast amounts of data under-utilised.
Accountancy Europe recommends that Member States invest in modern IT systems that are secure, user-friendly, and based on an “enter once” principle. Member States should leverage advanced analytics and AI to target high-risk areas more effectively. Alongside this, cooperative compliance programmes should be expanded to build trust and assist tax authorities deploy their scarce resources in targeting high risk taxpayers.
The paper underlines that EU Directives, by design, give Member States flexibility in implementation. This has led to widely diverging national practices, inconsistent guidance, and an uneven playing field for businesses. To address this, Accountancy Europe calls on the European Commission to:
Such measures would significantly reduce uncertainty and compliance costs, including for SMEs navigating cross-border activity.
The paper identifies several areas where EU direct tax rules overlap, conflict, or impose unnecessary burdens:
On indirect taxes, the paper makes a strong case for comprehensive VAT reform. Despite being the EU’s most harmonised tax, VAT rules remain fragmented, costly, and ill-suited to modern business models. SMEs are particularly disadvantaged by divergent reporting obligations, refund processes, and interpretations of key concepts.
The paper’s recommendations include:
The paper also highlights distortions caused by exemptions in financial services, real estate, and corporate reorganisations, suggesting that targeted social policies would be more effective than reduced VAT rates.
Accountancy Europe’s paper is a constructive roadmap for reform. It emphasises that simplification is not about reducing tax obligations but about making them clearer, more consistent, and easier to comply with, ultimately benefiting businesses, tax administrations, and governments alike.
The message is clear: Europe’s tax system must evolve from a patchwork of complex, overlapping rules into a streamlined, digitally enabled framework fit for the realities of modern business. By acting now, the EU can ease burdens on businesses including SMEs, boost competitiveness, and build trust in the tax system while still safeguarding revenues in the public interest.
Read the full paper.