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Where are property taxes highest and lowest in Europe?

By staffJuly 14, 20266 Mins Read
Where are property taxes highest and lowest in Europe?
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Owning a home in Europe means paying tax at almost every turn: buying it, holding it, letting it and selling it.

Across the continent, property ownership comes wrapped in a tangle of taxes that follow you from the moment you sign the contract to the day you sell, and they apply whether the property sits empty or earns you rent.

How much you actually hand over depends enormously on where you buy. Data from the Global Property Guide, which tracks real estate taxation in more than 80 countries, show that housing is taxed heavily right across the continent.

There are four property taxes to keep an eye on.

There is a transfer tax paid at purchase, sometimes called stamp duty; an annual property tax charged on a home’s assessed, market or cadastral value; a rental income tax on earnings from letting; and a capital gains tax on any profit from a sale.

A clean ranking is hard to draw.

Each country applies its own schedule, many headline rates are published as ranges rather than a single figure, and the value on which each tax is charged is not the same everywhere.

Yet one country keeps turning up near the top of almost every list.

How much tax do you pay on rental income across Europe?

For anyone buying to let, rental income tax is the figure that does the most damage to the bottom line, and it’s where countries differ the most.

Global Property Guide models what a non-resident owner would pay on three levels of monthly rent: €1,500, €6,000 and €12,000.

On a modest €1,500 a month, Denmark is the toughest, taking 42.11% from the very first euro, with the Netherlands close behind on 36% and Finland on 30%. Head the other way, and Cyprus starts at zero, while Luxembourg takes a token 2.94%.

Push the rent higher and the order reshuffles.

At €12,000 a month, Belgium tops the table at 47.27%, followed by Denmark on 43.22%, with Germany and Greece level on 41%.

A handful of countries barely move: Italy holds at 21%, Portugal at 28% and the Netherlands at 36% whatever you earn, which can make them a bargain or a penalty depending on the rent.

The countries that climb steepest tend to be the ones that bundle rental income into ordinary income tax. Austria is a good example of this.

In Austria, the income is taxed on the same progressive scale as a salary, running from zero below €13,308 up to 55% on anything above €1 million. In cases like that, the property tax that really stings is just income tax wearing a different hat.

Transfer tax: what it costs to buy property

The tax you pay at purchase is where Belgium pulls ahead again.

Buyers there can face a tax of up to 12.5% of the price, just above the UK’s top rate of 12%, the Netherlands’ 10.4% and Luxembourg’s 10%.

Belgium sets the duty region by region, so your postcode does a lot of the work.

Buy a €500,000 home in Brussels or Wallonia without qualifying for any relief, and you’ll pay the full 12.5%, a tax bill of €62,500 on day one.

For owner-occupiers, however, the picture improves. Brussels exempts the first €200,000 of the purchase price for qualifying buyers, reducing the bill on a €500,000 home to €37,500.

Wallonia offers a reduced 3% rate for eligible purchasers, cutting the tax to around €15,000. Buyers of qualifying social housing from a public body in Wallonia pay no registration duty, while Flanders applies its own separate rates and reliefs.

At the other end of the spectrum, Estonia and the Czech Republic levy no transfer tax on purchases.

Lithuania’s acquisition charges amount to roughly 0.4%, or about €2,000 on a €500,000 home, a fraction of the tens of thousands buyers can face in Belgium.

Which European countries have the highest annual property tax?

Even if a home sits empty, you may still be liable for property taxes.

Here’s where you have to be careful, because the annual property tax is the one number people most often get wrong.

Countries don’t tax the same thing. Some apply a percentage to a home’s market value, others to a much lower cadastral or assessed value that can be decades out of date, and Britain doesn’t use percentages at all, instead slotting homes into valuation bands.

Spain’s maximum property tax rate can reach 4.8% in some municipalities, but it’s applied to the cadastral value rather than the market value, making the headline percentage far less meaningful.

Look instead at what owners typically pay on a home worth around €300,000, and the differences narrow considerably because each country defines the taxable value differently.

In the UK, council tax on a property like that is typically around €2,000 to €3,200 a year, depending on the valuation band and local authority.

France’s taxe foncière and Spain’s IBI generally amount to around €700 to €1,800, as both are based on taxable values that are usually well below market prices. Belgium’s précompte immobilier, calculated from a notional 1975 rental value, often falls into a similar range.

Germany’s Grundsteuer, reformed in 2025, is often lower than that in many neighbouring countries, although bills vary significantly by municipality under the new valuation system.

And in Cyprus and Malta, owners pay nothing at all, because neither country levies an annual property tax.

Capital gains tax in Europe: the bill when you sell a property

Sell at a profit and the tax swings wildly, with how long you’ve owned the place often mattering more than the rate itself.

Denmark is the heaviest here, taxing gains at up to 52.07% once they are added to your overall income.

On a €250,000 profit, that’s as much as €130,000 gone, leaving you with roughly €120,000.

Malta could hardly be more different.

It doesn’t tax the gain at all, instead levying a flat 12% on the sale price as a transaction cost, and that drops to 5% if you’re not a property trader and sell within five years.

Germany takes yet another route: own a property for more than ten years and the whole gain, all €250,000 of it, is tax-free.

Sell inside that window, and you’re taxed at your income rate, plus any solidarity surcharge on top.

So where is property taxed the most in Europe?

Put the four taxes together and one country stands out.

Belgium sits at or near the top when buying, holding and letting, and only its capital gains treatment, at 16.5% to 33%, offers much relief.

At the opposite end sit Cyprus and Malta. Cyprus starts rental income tax at zero, Malta leaves capital gains untouched, and neither charges an annual property tax at all, making them among the lightest-taxed corners of the continent for a property owner.

For a cross-border investor, the headline purchase price is only the opening figure.

What decides whether a European home pays off is how much of the return the local tax code lets you keep, and on that, the gap between a Brussels flat and a Cypriot villa is wide enough to show that, when it comes to property tax, Europe is nowhere near a single market.

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