The passive-income tax holiday is fading. The talent tax breaks are not. If you are a skilled professional or founder choosing a European base, the difference between countries can be tens of thousands of euros a year. Three regimes dominate the conversation: the Dutch 30% ruling, Spain’s Beckham Law, and Portugal’s IFICI. This is your plain-language guide to expat tax breaks in Europe as of 2026, what each one offers, and where the fine print bites. No jargon, just the numbers that move your decision.
By the Travel Explore editorial desk. Last updated 6 July 2026. This is general information, not tax advice.
In this article
- Why these expat tax breaks exist
- The Dutch 30% ruling, now heading to 27%
- Spain’s Beckham Law and Portugal’s IFICI
- Tax questions, answered
Why these expat tax breaks exist
Countries compete for skilled people the same way companies compete for staff. Special tax regimes are the bait. They let qualifying newcomers keep more of their income for a set number of years, offsetting the cost and hassle of relocating. The catch is that each regime targets a different profile. Some reward high earners with a flat rate. Some exempt foreign income. Some are open only to specific professions. Read them as tools, not trophies. The best expat tax breaks for a software founder may be useless to a retiree, and the reverse is just as true.
The Dutch 30% ruling, now heading to 27%
The Netherlands lets eligible incoming employees receive part of their salary tax-free. For 2025 and 2026 that share stays at 30%. From 1 January 2027 it drops to 27%, and the salary norm rises to €50,436. Employees who received the ruling before 2024 keep the full 30% and partial non-resident status until the end of 2026, a transition cushion for early movers. It is generous but employment-based, so you need a qualifying job and salary. If the Netherlands is on your shortlist, timing your start date around these thresholds genuinely matters.
Spain’s Beckham Law and Portugal’s IFICI
Spain’s Beckham Law is the crowd favourite for high earners. It applies a flat 24% on employment income up to €600,000, exempts most foreign income, and carries no minimum salary requirement, covering employees, remote workers, directors and startup founders. Portugal’s successor to the old NHR is IFICI, sometimes called NHR 2.0, offering a flat 20% rate for up to ten years but limited to innovation and qualified roles. Consider Mateo, a fintech founder from Mexico deciding between Madrid and Lisbon. If his income is high and mostly foreign, Spain’s exemption often wins. If his work fits Portugal’s innovation criteria, the 20% rate and longer horizon can pull ahead.
Thinking about where to base yourself? Check which visa you qualify for before you weigh the tax.
The quick comparison
- Netherlands: 30% tax-free share in 2026, falling to 27% in 2027. Needs a qualifying job.
- Spain: flat 24% up to €600,000, foreign income largely exempt, no minimum salary.
- Portugal IFICI: flat 20% for up to 10 years, limited to innovation and qualified roles.
- Match the regime to your income shape and profession, not the headline rate.
Tax questions, answered
Is the Dutch 30% ruling ending? It is shrinking, not ending. It stays 30% through 2026 and becomes 27% from 2027, with a higher salary norm.
Who benefits most from Spain’s Beckham Law? High earners with significant foreign income, thanks to the flat 24% band and the foreign-income exemption.
Did Portugal scrap NHR? The original NHR closed to new entrants. Its successor, IFICI, targets innovation and qualified professions at a flat 20%.
Can I combine a visa with these tax breaks? Yes. The visa gives you the right to live and work; the tax regime is a separate application once you qualify as a resident.
Related reads
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Choose your base with eyes open
Tax breaks are powerful, but they reward planning, not wishful thinking. Match the regime to how you actually earn, confirm the current rules with a local adviser, and you can keep far more of what you make. For help lining up the visa behind the move, start here: https://linktr.ee/travelexpore
Sources
- Business.gov.nl, 30% ruling compensation down to 27% (T0 official) — https://business.gov.nl/amendments/30-percent-ruling-compensation-down-to-27-percent/
- PwC Netherlands, Expat ruling becomes 27% ruling (T1 specialist) — https://www.pwc.nl/en/insights-and-publications/tax-news/pwc-special-budget-day/expat-ruling.html
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