Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
The Belastingdienst logo on a window
The Belastingdienst logo on a window - Credit: Joeppoulssen / Depositphotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
Business
box 3 tax
Tax Authority
savings tax
wealth tax
asset tax
realized returns
unrealized returns
Tweede Kamer
Monday, 23 February 2026 - 12:00

Share this article:

New Box 3 tax could force startup staff, early investors to pay tax on unsold shares

Dutch startups and scale-ups are raising alarms about a new tax system set to take effect in 2028, warning it could saddle employees and early investors with large tax bills on shares they cannot easily sell. The concerns center on a revised Box 3 regime approved earlier this month by the Tweede Kamer, according to the FD.

The legislation overhauls how the Netherlands taxes income from savings and investments, known as Box 3. The current system taxes people on an assumed return, not what they actually earn. In 2021, the Hoge Raad ruled that approach unlawful, prompting the government to redesign the tax.

The current system taxes people on a notional return, not what they actually earn, as calculated by the Belastingdienst, the Dutch tax office.

Startups say the change creates acute problems for people holding equity in young, fast-growing companies. Many such firms unexpectedly fall outside an exemption included in the bill, meaning staff and early backers could owe tax on sharp increases in share value even when those shares cannot be readily sold. As a result, shareholders may have to pay the tax out of personal savings or even take out loans to cover the bill.

Employees are also uneasy, said Michiel Muller, co-founder of online supermarket Picnic. “We have many international people who are asking what this means for them. That is entirely logical,” Muller told FD. “The same thing happened when the 30 percent ruling for expats was going to be scaled back. People come here because we offer a whole package of conditions. It is problematic when several elements of that threaten to shift multiple times.”

More like this

Image
The Belastingdienst logo on a window
Dutch parliament greenlights new Box 3 tax, set to take effect in 2028
Image
Eelco Heinen
New Dutch Cabinet pulling back Box 3 asset tax plan over unrealized gain tax fears
Image
The Belastingdienst logo on a window
Netherlands likely to start taxing capital gains annually by 2028
Image
The Belastingdienst logo on a window
Tax Authority starts refund process for too high asset taxes; Expected to cost €6.4 bil.
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch wine production hits second-highest level on record in 2025
  • Electric shock critically injures Amsterdam student on school trip to Germany
  • Dutch gov’t against national age limit on social media; Prefers EU regulation
  • Burger King pushing Amsterdam meat advert ban with veggie lookalike grilled patty
  • Teen arrested in Amsterdam in probe into series of March explosions, synagogue attacks

Top stories

  • Drents Museum heist: Men sentenced to 47 months in prison for theft of Dacian treasures
  • Too many single family homes for too few families; Vacancy, depreciation looms: ABN Amro
  • Employees of porn site Motherless upload child sex abuse videos themselves
  • Dutch gov't will only allow European company to operate DigiD platform
  • Video: Suspected tornado whips through village near Enschede, damaging homes

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content