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  1. Logical_Wheel_1420 on

    >The new Box 3 system replaces the old tax-free capital threshold (€57,684 in 2025) with a tax-free annual return of €1,800.

    is the limit still the same? you get taxed on investments you haven’t sold if it’s over €57,684 in a year?

    that’s insane if that’s actually the limit. imagine getting taxed because a christmas rally put you over and then the market dumped in january. why would you ever invest?

  2. freezing_banshee on

    Taxes on ANY unrealized gains are theft. They’re taking money from you that you don’t actually have.

  3. “Why do European companies struggle to raise capital compared to the US?”

    Taxing unrealised gains is absolute insanity.

  4. I buy $500,000 worth of Stock. A misleading news article comes out which causes its worth to increase to $600,000. A day later the company comes out and says the article is erroneous. The stock returns to its original value.

    I now owe $36,000 to the government.

  5. Time to pack your bags and leave the Netherlands. What a horrible idea. The amount of capital flight will be for the history books if this passes.

  6. LeadingPool5263 on

    We have this in Ireland, Deemed Disposal, but only forced pay in year 7. I like the idea of a tax free amount in each year, we don’t have that in Ireland.
    I agree with the underlying idea though, it is generally to catch wealthy borrowing off assets for income etc and paying no tax, eg Elon Musk.

  7. These kind of taxes should only be applied to people who already have too much money… at the very least threshold should be €100M – €500M

  8. Did anyone actually research what’s about to be changed? The Netherlands has had a wealth tax since 1892 and the current system has been in place since 2001

    The Netherlands already had a tax on wealth including unrealized gains that was a % over a fixed assumed 4% growth in the system that was in effect from 2001. That means that investments over a certain amount as well as wealth in the bank were assumed to grow by 4% and you were taxed over that amount. A judge ruled this to be an illegal structure because even if your growth was less than 4% people were getting taxed on fictitious growth they did not actually experience.

    From 2023 until 2027 a temporary system is in place that puts a roughly 1.2% assumed growth on wealth in banks and 6% on investments and if your growth is actually less than that you can get a tax deductible on the next year.

    In 2028 this system is going to move to be completely fixed on your actual experienced growth. Yes this means if you experienced more than the assumed 6% growth you are paying more than in the previous system, but only because previously the government was wrongly guestimating you were experiencing less growth. For most people who are simple savers at banks or conservative investors this probably ends up with them paying less taxes overall because they do not experience 6% growth.

    Start ups and real estate both have exemptions btw.

    The law has also only passed in the Second Chamber, and there have already been parties that want changes to be made before 2028.

    Specifically the 36% number is just that part of what has been passed is that the number is definitly going to be 36% of your experienced growth, as it has been since 2024 (increased from 32% in 2023)

    Please do more than reading headlines

  9. This seems like a really bad idea and I find it hard to believe a liberal Dutch government will allow it to become law.

  10. lol… best of luck to a Dutch company ever competing with an American one with this. How will they ever raise money ?

  11. Diligent_Lobster6595 on

    Doesn’t this make long-term investments a upper-class feature ?
    If working-class people are basically forced to sell out of fear of the market, while the upper-class always are able to pay off the tax no worries.

    Who exactly is it that drives these politics forward in the Netherlands ?

  12. Dutch guy here. In one week our new government decided we have to work to 70+ years and this tax system. They have no clue what they are doing. It’s sickening just to close a 2 million gap…

  13. Any tax on an unrealised gains is ludicrous.

    Move assets off shore or move out all together to a market friendly jurisdiction.

  14. How many times do you get taxed on that money?  Say, I invest 1000, and in a year, it’s worth 1500. Presumably, I pay taxes on the 500.  Then, a year later, it’s worth 1750.  Do I pay taxes on 750, or 250?  

  15. Doesn’t apply to the rich land owners lmao trying to keep the poors in the renters class

  16. MarzipanTop4944 on

    The idea that people are OK with the government just taking 1/3 of anything in taxes is insane. Taxes should never be more than 10-15% total and we already pay 9-21% on VAT taxes. We are doomed as a species.

  17. This, from a serious news site, seems relevant:

    “The new system taxes the unrealized gains on these assets – the profits of investments that have increased in value, but haven’t been cashed out yet. Parliamentarians don’t like that this will result in people paying tax on money they don’t have yet. **A majority, therefore, asked the government to come up with a way in which investors** [**only pay tax on realized returns**](https://nltimes.nl/2026/01/20/netherlands-likely-start-taxing-capital-gains-annually-2028) **- money in their pocket once they sell the asset involved. They want the government to present that plan by Budget Day 2028 at the latest**.”

    [https://nltimes.nl/2026/02/13/dutch-parliament-greenlights-new-box-3-tax-set-take-effect-2028](https://nltimes.nl/2026/02/13/dutch-parliament-greenlights-new-box-3-tax-set-take-effect-2028)

  18. My government literally looked at the Christmas court case debacle and thought: Let’s do worse. Holy shit. The state will get sued to oblivion.

  19. Legitimate-Gain426 on

    Average wage earners are failing to realize that taking loans on unrealized gains to further invest elsewhere has been a strategy by the Epstein class for a very long time. Can this policy alone reform taxation and stop tax dodging, I’m not informed enough to say. I still think it’s better to try to get a better understanding of what this really means before rallying against it. The Panama papers were a clear indication that there were many tax evasion methods that billionaires were taking advantage of, that the average person like myself was yet to understand or had the wealth to access.

  20. I hope everyone leaves the Netherlands, it’s the only way the idiots in charge realize their mistakes.

    François Hollande tried to tax all millionaires at 75% in 2012 and 6,000-10,000 left in the first year….

    I would never invest while. Being a tax resident of the Netherlands, when I could do so in Bulgaria, or Romania, or Croatia, or Monaco or Cyprus, or Malta and not pay on unrealized gains, like what the fuck do they think people are going to do?

  21. BelgianPolitics on

    The Dutch are going to colonize Antwerp Province after this. I mean I wouldn’t blame them. 10% on realized gains (and €10K exception) vs 36% on unrealized gains…you might as well pop over the border if your portfolio is big enough to justify it.

  22. Haunting_History_284 on

    By the time you do the math on what you owe, the “unrealized” gain in the crypto market could be wiped out. It’s incredibly volatile. Seems like a nightmare for the tax payer if they still owe on a gain that no longer exist because it did exist at some point past a tax due date.

  23. So everyone can just collectively tank the price of crypto on the tax assessment day, then buy it back up the next day, right?

  24. CapableAmbassador209 on

    From what I understand you can put up to 30% of your salary until you reach about 137,800$ in a tax exempt account that will not be subject to that new 36% unrealised gain tax. This means that only about 2-3% of the Dutch population will be hit by this. Everybody complains that the rich take too big a portion of the pie but when there’s measures to deal with it people freak out thinking they are richer than they really are. The vast majority of the Dutch will not be affected by this unless they invest outside this tax exempt account.

  25. If you own 3 houses, this could make sense. If you don’t, good luck ever getting a house in NL