Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
1280px-Amsterdam_Zentrum_20091106_162 (1)
Church of Scientology in Amsterdam (Photo: Wikimedia Commons/Sterilgutassistentin) - Credit: Church of Scientology in Amsterdam (Photo: Wikimedia Commons/Sterilgutassistentin)
charity
Church of Scientology
public welfare institution
Scientology
tax benefits
tax status
tax-free status
The Hague court
Thursday, 22 October 2015 - 12:23

Share this article:

Hague Court deals blow to Scientology tax-free status

The Dutch branch of the Church of Scientology has lost its tax status as "public welfare institution", and the tax benefits that go along with it, in a ruling made by the court in The Hague on Wednesday. The court decided that the sales of the Church's expensive courses and therapy sessions are clearly aimed at making a profit, and thus it does not belong on the tax authorities' charity list. Scientologists believe that there are two major divisions of the mind - the reactive mind and the analytical mind, according to Wikipedia. The reactive mind stores painful and debilitating images, "engrams", that move people further away from their true identity. The Church promises believers that they can get rid of these engrams with special techniques and eventually achieve a "clear" state - a sort of super human with a clear mind. The Church offers courses and therapy sessions to work towards this "clear" state, and these quickly cost thousands of euros. The court ruled that these courses cost significantly more than commercial educational institutions' average school fees. "If providers on the secular education market had similar prices, prospective students would experience it as prices for top education by top teachers in prime locations." The court finds the prices to be very commercial. According to the court, Scientology consciously seeks profits to fill its purse and was able to build "substantial wealth" like this. The Church can still appeal against this ruling, but it is not yet clear if they will. A spokesperson called the judge's ruling "discrimination based on religious beliefs". This ruling puts a provisional end to a long ongoing process that started in the Amsterdam Court two years ago, according to newspaper Trouw. Back then the court ruled that the Church of Scientology does not have a commercial character because it gave courses and therapy sessions to poor Scientologists as gifts. The Supreme Court questioned this ruling late last year, also being concerned about the prices Scientology charges.

More like this

Image
Dutch Princesses Amalia, Ariane, and Alexia, from left to right, in the summer of 2025
Man, 33, remains in custody over suspected plot against Princesses Amalia and Alexia
Image
King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima, joined by Princesses Ariane, Amalia and Alexia during the King's Day visit to Emmen, Drenthe. 27 April 2024
Lawyer silent ahead of hearing in case involving alleged plot against Dutch Princesses
Image
A home in Amsterdam sold by realtor Makelaarsland. 6 March 2022
Dutch housing giant Vesteda extends deadlines to prevent large-scale home sales
Image
Gavel with lady justice in the background
Man sentenced to five years, psychiatric treatment for online sex abuse of 34 children
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch suspect arrested in Copenhagen for 2022 double assault case, one victim died
  • Harry Styles tells Amsterdam “I love you” in newspaper message after record ArenA run
  • Amsterdam police warn of rise in crime involving people who have “nothing to lose”
  • Most Dutch employers have not raise commuting reimbursements after fuel policy change
  • China’s military tracks Dutch warship in Taiwan Strait, calls earlier passage illegal

Top stories

  • Rutte, Schoof, De Jonge set for second week of Dutch COVID-19 inquiry hearings
  • Surfer dies at Ouddorp beach; Kite surfer killed 24 hours earlier in Rockanje
  • Police intercept ATM explosion in Vlaardingen; One suspect arrested, second flees
  • 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

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

Footer menu

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