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      Coat of arms of Iceland
      Government of Iceland 05.05.2026 13:21
      NOTE: This article is more than 5 years old.
      01 February 2008
      /
      Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs

      Principal tax rates 2008

      Principal tax rates 2008 (PDF 73K)

      1. Personal income taxation

      Iceland’s personal income tax structure is such that all personal income in 2008 (other than capital income, see below) is taxed at a PAYE rate of 35.72 per cent, 22.75 % of which goes to the Treasury and 12.97 % to the municipalities. These tax rates remain unchanged from 2007. There is a basic annual tax credit which amounted to 385,800 krónur in 2007 and 408,409 krónur in 2008. An unused tax credit is fully transferable between spouses.

      Tax rate [1]since 1991 (income year) have been as follows:



      Year

      Central gov't
      general tax rate

      Municipal
      tax rate

      Total tax
      rate

      Central gov't
      surtax
      1991
      32.80

      6.99

      39.79
      1992
      32.80

      7.05

      39.85
      1993
      34.30

      7.04

      41.34
      1994
      33.15

      8.69

      41.84

      5.00
      1995
      33.15

      8.78

      41.93

      5.00
      19961
      33.15

      8.79

      41.94

      5.00
      1997, Jan-Apr
      30.41

      11.57

      41.98

      5.00
      1997, May-Dec
      29.31

      11.57

      40.88

      5.00
      1998
      27.41

      11.61

      39.02

      7.00
      1999
      26.41

      11.93

      38.34

      7.00
      2000
      26.41

      11.96

      38.37

      7.00
      2001
      26.08

      12.68

      38.76

      7.00
      2002
      25.75

      12.79

      38.54

      7.00
      2003
      25.75

      12.80

      38.55

      5.00
      2004
      25.75

      12.83

      38.58

      4.00
      2005
      24.75

      12.98

      37.73

      2.00
      2006
      23.75

      12.97

      36.72

      0
      2007
      22.75

      12.97

      35.72

      0
      2008
      22.75

      12.97

      35.72

      0
      1) As of the beginning of 1997, the financing and operation of elementary schools were transferred from the central government to the municipalities. In order to finance the operation of the schools at the municipal level, the central government reduced its tax rate by 2.84 percentage points and the municipalities increased their rate by the same percentage points.

      In addition, tax legislation was amended at the end of 2004 to the effect that the central government income tax was reduced to 24.75% in 2005 (as shown in table above), to 23.75% in 2006 and to 21.75% in 2007. By the middle of 2006, it was decided to rescind 1 percentage point of the cut in the central government income tax in 2007 and bring the tax to 22.75%. The municipal income tax remains unchanged from the previous year.

      Seamen get a special tax reduction of 834 krónur per day in 2007 and 874 per day in 2008.

      The PAYE personal income tax comprises both the central government and municipal income tax [2]. It excludes the social security tax, which is levied on employers (see below).

      In addition to the above, each individual pays a flat tax of 7,103 krónur per year to the Elderly’s Construction Fund, a central government fund used to finance the construction and operation of nursing homes and care centres for the elderly. Persons under the age of 16 and more than 69 years old are exempt from this levy, as well as those with an income below 1,080,067 krónur in 2008.

      As noted above, the central government income tax rate was reduced by 1 per cent both in 2005 and 2006 and further by 1 per cent in 2007. Child allowances (see below) were raised at the same time.

      The personal income tax is levied on gross income excluding income from capital (for the capital income tax, see below), with a number of minor exceptions. Employee contributions to pension funds are deductible. Such contrac­tual contributions normally comprise 4 per cent of gross pay, to which the employer adds a contribution, normally 6-7 per cent [3] which also is deductible as an operating expense on the business side. In addition, the employee can save up to 4 per cent as a supplementary pension saving on a voluntary basis and deduct the contribution from taxable income. Employers generally make a counter-contribution to such voluntary contributions, in many cases fully matching them.

      Interest rebates are granted by the central government for interest expenses incurred from home purchase loans. Such rebates are subject to debt, income and net wealth ceilings. Maximum rebates in 2008 are: 179,713 krónur for a single individual, 231,125 krónur for a single parent and 297,194 krónur for a couple [4].



      Child benefits are granted for each child, subject to income thresholds. The amendments to tax legislation that came into effect at the end of 2004 included a schedule for raising child benefits. In 2004-2007 they are as follows (in krónur per year):


      2007

      2008

      For all children under the age of 71

      56,096

      57,891

      Children under the age of 18 :

      First child

      139,647

      144,116

      Each additional child

      166,226

      171,545

      Benefits for single parents:

      First child

      232,591

      240,034

      Each additional child

      238,592

      246,227

      Income threshold for benefit curtailment:

      For couples

      2,231,195

      2,415,492

      For a single parent

      1,115,598

      1,207,746

      Curtailment of benefits:

      For one child

      2%

      2%

      For two children

      6%

      6%

      For three children or more

      8%

      8%

      1. These benefits are not linked to income.

      Rent subsidies supplied by municipalities to low-income tenants are tax-free.

      The tax treatment of stock options was introduced into tax legislation in 2001 as a result of the fact that a number of companies had begun to reward their employees with options to buy stock at a defined price as a part of the employees’ total emolument package. Profits from stock options are now defined as capital gains, subject to a 10 per cent tax, whereas previously they were defined as ordinary income, subject to the common personal income tax rate. The exercise of stock options is subject to certain conditions, the chief being: (1) Stock options must be available to all employees; (2) A minimum of twelve months must pass between the establishment of a stock option contract until it is exercised. (3) The exercise price must not be lower than the average trading price for the last ten trading days before the option is exercised. (4) The employee must own the stock for no less than two years after purchase. (5) The annual stock option must not exceed 600,000 krónur at the exercise price.

      2. Taxes on capital income and net wealth

      Starting in 1997, a uniform 10% tax is levied on all capital income such as interest income, dividends, capital gains and rental income. The capital income tax is withheld at source for both businesses and individuals, as applicable. Individuals pay no further tax on capital income, whereas capital income incurred by businesses is taxed as ordinary corporate profits with the withholding capital income tax being offset against the corporate income tax.

      There is no tax on net wealth. The net wealth tax was abolished at the end of 2005. The last net wealth tax assessment took place in 2005 on the basis of net wealth at the end of 2004.

      3. The social security tax

      A general social security tax rate of 5.34% is paid by the employer to the Treasury on top of personal wage income paid to the employee..

      4. Corporate taxation

      As of the beginning of 2002, Iceland’s corporate income tax was lowered from 30 per cent to 18 per cent. All the proceeds of the tax accrue to the Treasury. Municipalities levy no income tax. Partnerships with unlimited liability that file for taxes as distinct legal entities had their tax rate lowered from 38 per cent to 26 per cent[5]. As with the net wealth tax on individuals, the corporate net wealth tax has been abolished.

      As of 2002, the so-called inflation accounting system was abolished and replaced by conventional historical accounting. Inflation accounting has been in effect for a number of years due to the fact that inflation was at one time quite substantial and accounting methods had to reflect that fact. For the past decade, however, inflation has been in the single figures and the need for inflation adjustments in company accounts was diminished. Furthermore, international accounting standards are generally based on historical cost, and Icelandic standards are therefore being brought into conformity with international norms. As of 2002, Icelandic firms are allowed to keep their books and draw up their accounts in foreign currency, subject to the restriction that the bulk of their business must be in the accounting currency. Their tax liability continues to be in krónur. The table below shows the corporate and partnership taxation rate since 1989 (in per cent):


      Corporations

      Partnerships

      1989

      50

      50

      1990

      45

      45

      1991

      45

      45

      1992

      39

      41

      1993

      33

      41

      1994

      33

      41

      1995

      33

      41

      1996

      33

      41

      1997

      33

      41

      1998

      30

      38

      1999

      30

      38

      2000

      30

      38

      2001

      2002

      30

      18

      38

      26

      2003

      18

      26

      2004

      2005

      2006

      18

      18

      18

      26

      26
      26

      2007

      18

      26

      2008

      18

      26

      Since March 1999, so-called international trading companies, having established a venue in Iceland, are subject to a 5 per cent income tax. This refers to companies that exclusively trade in goods and services outside Iceland. In December 2003, legislation was passed to abolish the tax benefit for international trading companies as of the beginning of 2008.

      In 2002, a number of changes in the corporate income tax system took place in order to make it more flexible and in line with that of other European countries. The carry-forward provision for net losses was extended from eight to ten years. Depreciation rules were amended so that straight-line depreciation on machinery, equipment, vehicles, ships, aircraft and other non-fixed assets is replaced with remaining-balance depreciation and the rates were sharply increased.


      Previous rates

      New rates

      Min.

      Max.

      Min.

      Max.

      Ships, ship equipment, passenger vehicles

      5

      10

      10

      20

      Aircraft and related equipment

      5

      10

      10

      20

      Industrial machinery and equipment

      5

      15

      10

      30

      Office equipment

      10

      20

      20

      35

      Earthmoving and construction equipment,

      other vehicles and transport equipment and

      other non-fixed assets

      10

      20

      20

      35

      Other assets are depreciated on a straight-line basis. Their main depreciation rates remain unchanged and are as follows:


      Min.

      Max.

      Residential, office and commercial buildings

      1

      3

      Industrial and farm buildings

      3

      6

      Piers and glass hothouses

      6

      8

      Drill holes, electric overhead wires,

      removable work camps

      7.5

      10

      Acquired intellectual property rights

      15

      20

      Goodwill purchased

      10

      20

      5. The value added tax

      There is a general value added tax of 24.5 per cent on domestic goods and services. Exports of goods and services and several other transactions are zero-rated. A 14 per cent tax applies to most foodstuffs and a number of other items. As of March 1st 2007, the value added tax of 14 per cent will be reduced to 7 per cent and apply to the following items:

      • All food (excl. liquor and wine), most of which has been taxed at 14 per cent but a few items at 24.5 per cent (e.g. soft drinks, sweets).
      • Restaurant services, food canteens and similar services.
      • The rental of hotel rooms and guest quarters and other related services.
      • Radio and TV licence fees.
      • Newspapers, magazines.
      • Books and book audio recordings.
      • Hot water, electricity, oil for space heating and water for swimming pools.
      • Road tolls.
      • CD disks (excl. DVDs), tapes and similar items (previously taxed at 24.5 per cent).

      As a general rule, all transactions are taxable except where exemptions are specified. The most common categories of exemption are health services, social services, education, libraries and art, sports, passenger transport, postal services, rental of property and parking spaces, insurance and banking services.

      6. Motor vehicle taxation

      The system of taxing motor vehicles and fuel is explained in a separate document that may be accessed here.

      7. Real property taxation

      Municipalities tax real property on the basis of assessed value as is registered in the real property database kept by the Land Registry, a central government agency that keeps track of all real property transactions and valuations in the country. The assessed value is imputed from actual market values as they appear in sales data. On this basis, the municipalities impose a tax on the assessed value of 0.5 per cent a year on residential housing, farm buildings, recreational housing and adjacent land rights; 1.32 per cent on hospitals and health facilities, schools, dormitories, nursery schools, athletic buildings and libraries. A 1.32 per cent charge is also imposed on industrial, office and commercial buildings, fish processing buildings, hunting lodges and structures used for tourism services. These percentage charges may be increased by up to 25 per cent by a decision of any municipal council.

      Endnotes



      [1] The central government general tax and the municipal tax are collected together on a PAYE basis and the rates are shown as applicable in the year of collection. The central government surtax rate is shown in the year of assessment, i.e. assessment in any given year is based on the previous year’s income.

      [2]The PAYE tax collection rate is the same for the whole country. Municipalities, however, have different municipal tax rates, ranging from 11.24 to 13.03 per cent. An average of municipal income taxes is collected through the PAYE system. Actual tax settlements take place in the following year after a tax return has been filed and the actual tax has been assessed.


      [3] In many cases the employer contribution is considerably higher. For central government employees it is 11.5 per cent and for airline pilots and similar professions with a shorter working life it is even higher.


      [4] The following constraints apply to interest rebates: (1) They can not exceed 5 per cent of the remaining debt balance incurred in buying a home for one’s own use. (2) The maximum amount of interest payments that qualify for an interest rebate calculation is 524,469 krónur for an individual, 688,517 krónur for a single parent and 852,562 for a couple. (3) Six per cent of taxable income is subtracted from the interest expense. (4) The rebates begin to be curtailed at a net worth threshold of 5,273,425 krónur for a single individual and 8,437,481 krónur for a couple and are eliminated altogether at a 60 per cent higher amount.


      [5] In fact, the income taxation of corporations and partnerships is about the same. If a corporation has an income of, say, 100, it pays 18 in income tax. If it chooses to use the entire remainder, 82, as dividends, it pays a further 8.2 (i.e. 10 per cent of 82) as capital income tax, for a total of 26.2 (18+8.2) per cent. A partnership pays a total of 26 per cent on an income of 100 up front and is not subject to a further capital income tax.



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