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Hakusi sanalla 'income tax' tuotti 253 tulosta
Fess-haku
  1. 17.4.2026 | New legislation would give municipalities the option to collect a tourist tax, which would be a new source of income from tourism. Individual municipalities would decide whether to adopt the tax.
    https://vm.fi/en/-/ministry-of-finance-begins-legislative-drafting-of-tourist-tax
  2. International income taxation International income taxation in Finland is governed by the following legislation: the Income Tax Act; the Act on the Taxation of Business Income; the Act on the Taxation of Shareholders in Controlled Foreign Companie...
    https://vm.fi/en/international-income-taxation
  3. Taxation of capital income In Finland, earned income and capital income are taxed separately. Capital income includes, among other things, dividend income capital income from entrepreneurial income rental income profit-share and capital gains inco...
    https://vm.fi/en/taxation-of-capital-income
  4. Taxation of earned income Finnish taxation is based on a schedular system, in which earned income and capital income are taxed separately. Earned income includes, among other things, wages the proportion of entrepreneurial income defined as earned...
    https://vm.fi/en/taxation-of-earned-income
  5. Tax treaties The Ministry of Finance is responsible for preparing tax treaties that are binding on Finland. These include income tax treaties, inheritance and gift tax treaties, tax information exchange agreements (TIEAs) and agreements on executi...
    https://vm.fi/en/tax-agreements
  6. Tourist tax The Ministry of Finance is making preparations for a tourist tax that will provide municipalities with an additional source of income from tourism. Municipalities would be able to choose whether to adopt the tax, and revenues from the ...
    https://vm.fi/en/tourist-tax
  7. Tax system The Ministry of Finance prepares the tax laws that regulate taxation. Taxpayers include all people living in Finland as well as corporations and companies doing business in Finland. Tax recipients in addition to the state include all mu...
    https://vm.fi/en/tax-system
  8. 22.4.2026 | Prime Minister Petteri Orpo’s Government has agreed on the General Government Fiscal Plan for 2027–2030. Both the global economy and Finland’s finances are facing challenges. In its spending limits session, the Government focused on new targeted measures to strengthen people’s confidence in the future and improve the conditions for growth and employment.
    https://vm.fi/en/-/194055633/orpo-government-uncertain-times-call-for-measures-to-build-confidence-and-boost-growth-1
  9. 16.5.2024 | Starting next year, tax cards will enter into force from the beginning of January. The aim is to clarify the tax withholding procedure and reduce the need to make changes to tax cards. The Government submitted its proposal for legislative amendments on 16 May.
    https://vm.fi/en/-/tax-cards-to-enter-into-force-from-start-of-the-year
  10. 30.4.2026 | Economic recovery in Finland will be further delayed as a result of the crisis in the Middle East. The general government deficit will widen and remain large according to the Economic Forecast published by the Ministry of Finance on 30 April.
    https://vm.fi/en/-/rising-energy-prices-slow-economic-growth
  11. 16.9.2024 | The Ministry of Finance is requesting comments on a bill on a tax credit for large investments aimed at building a climate-neutral economy. The Government decided on the preparation of the tax credit as part of the Government’s growth package in its spending limits session last spring.
    https://vm.fi/en/-/bill-on-tax-credit-for-large-investments-aimed-at-building-a-climate-neutral-economy-sent-out-for-comments
  12. Business taxation Entrepreneurs, corporations, partnerships and their joint owners as well as the people engaged in agriculture and forestry are subject to business taxation. The profit of private business persons and self-employed persons is taxe...
    https://vm.fi/en/business-taxation
  13. 4.4.2023 | The treaty will eliminate double taxation with respect to income taxes and prevent tax evasion and avoidance. The treaty was signed on 4 April by Finnish Minister of Finance Annika Saarikko and French Ambassador Agnès Cukierman.
    https://vm.fi/en/-/finland-and-france-sign-new-tax-treaty
  14. Personal taxation Personal taxation includes all taxes paid by natural persons and estates of the deceased. The most significant of these are earned income and capital income taxes. In Finland, separate assessment is used in taxation, meaning that...
    https://vm.fi/en/personal-taxation
  15. Taxation The purpose of taxation is to collect income to finance the duties of the public sector. Taxation balances income and consumption, aims to regulate consumption and production by taking account of the environment, and to reduce the consump...
    https://vm.fi/en/taxation
  16. Real estate taxation Real estate tax is an annually paid tax based on the ownership of a property. Introduced in 1993, the real estate tax replaced the land tax, the street charge, the tax on income from housing, and presumptive income taxation. M...
    https://vm.fi/en/real-estate-taxation
  17. Cooperation in international taxation The EU, the OECD and the UN all deal with international income tax issues. There is also cooperation among the Nordic countries in international tax affairs. As a member of the EU, Finland contributes to the p...
    https://vm.fi/en/co-operation-in-international-taxation
  18. Taxation at source on interest Taxation at source on interest applies to domestic interest accrued by deposits held in accounts created for the receipt of public deposits located in banks or corresponding co-operative savings and loan associations...
    https://vm.fi/en/taxation-at-source-on-interest
  19. Benefits in kind Benefits in kind mean benefits other than cash which the employee receives from the employer on the basis of an employment relationship. Benefits are determined by a Tax Administration decision. Benefits received on the basis of a...
    https://vm.fi/en/benefits-in-kind
  20. General government finances General government finances include the central government, wellbeing services counties, municipalities and joint municipal authorities, the Provincial Government of Åland, statutory pension insurance companies and inst...
    https://vm.fi/en/general-government-finances