Video Briefing

Offshore Citizen: 100% Tax Exemption in Slovenia?

Dec 9, 2022Video Briefing7:08Watch on YouTube

Living in Slovenia can be paired with a long‑term tax strategy that allows high‑income individuals to defer or reduce personal tax liabilities. By leveraging the country’s capital‑gains tax schedule and structuring earnings through a foreign company, it is possible to achieve an overall effective tax rate around 10 % after a multi‑year horizon.

Slovenian tax landscape

  • Standard rates – Personal income tax is relatively high; corporate tax is 19 %.
  • Residency – Obtaining residency is possible but can be a slow process; citizenship requires language proficiency and a longer waiting period.
  • Geography – Slovenia borders Italy and Croatia, offers a clean environment, modest city sizes (≈ 200 k residents), and extensive outdoor recreation.

Freelancer regime (income < €100 k)

For freelancers earning less than €100 000 per year, Slovenia offers a special regime that reduces the effective tax rate to roughly 4 %. This is attractive for digital nomads or independent contractors who meet the income threshold.

Capital‑gains tax reduction over time

Slovenian law taxes capital gains at 25 % initially, but the rate declines with the holding period:

Holding period Capital‑gains tax rate
0–5 years 25 %
5–10 years 20 %
10–15 years 15 %
> 15 years 0 %

After 15 years, capital‑gain income becomes tax‑free, providing a clear incentive for long‑term investment strategies.

Using a foreign company to lower corporate tax

  • The standard Slovenian corporate tax is 19 %.
  • By establishing a foreign company in jurisdictions with favorable tax regimes, the effective corporate tax can be reduced to ≈ 10 % in certain cases, provided the company maintains genuine substance (e.g., local directors, office, staff).
  • Profits retained within the foreign company are not immediately subject to Slovenian personal tax.

Building a tax‑deferred “retirement fund”

  1. Accumulate profits – The foreign company retains earnings, paying the reduced corporate tax.
  2. Reinvest – Profits are reinvested to grow the asset base.
  3. Liquidation – When the company is eventually dissolved, the distribution is treated as a capital gain rather than a dividend.
  4. Tax outcome – If the liquidation occurs after the 15‑year holding period, the capital‑gain tax is zero; otherwise, the reduced schedule applies, yielding an overall effective tax rate near 10 % on the accumulated amount.

Practical considerations and risks

  • Time horizon – The strategy relies on a 15‑year period; tax laws could change before then.
  • Controlled foreign corporation (CFC) rules – Slovenia has CFC regulations that may limit the benefits of foreign entities unless additional structures (e.g., trusts) are employed.
  • Residency requirements – To benefit from the regime, one must maintain Slovenian residency, which involves bureaucratic steps and may take time to secure.
  • Language and citizenship – Full citizenship is difficult due to language requirements; however, residency alone is sufficient for the tax advantages discussed.
  • Business substance – The foreign company must demonstrate real economic activity to avoid challenges from tax authorities.

Summary

By combining the freelancer tax regime (for lower earners), the progressive capital‑gains tax schedule, and a carefully structured foreign company, individuals can create a long‑term, low‑tax environment in Slovenia. The approach hinges on maintaining residency, adhering to CFC rules, and accepting a multi‑year commitment, but it offers a pathway to an effective tax rate around 10 % for high‑income earners and investors.