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Fall of the Schoof Cabinet: What’s Next for Fiscal Policy?

Cabinet collapse, stable taxes, why 2025 remains fiscally calm while 2026 hides the real turbulence.
June 4, 2025 by
Fall of the Schoof Cabinet: What’s Next for Fiscal Policy?
Linda Pavan
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As Head of Ledger and Tax Compliance at Xtroverso, I am not in the business of politics—but I do study its fiscal ripple effects with precision. The recent decision by PVV leader Geert Wilders to pull the plug on the Schoof cabinet raises a question my clients ask first: What does this mean for my numbers?

Let’s be clear. Chaos in the coalition does not automatically translate into chaos in your ledger. At least not in 2025. The Dutch fiscal machine, like its railways, runs with pre-approved tracks. But 2026? That’s where the fog begins.

2025: Stability in a Year Already Set

Most of the tax measures for 2025 are already law, passed by both houses. You won’t wake up tomorrow to surprise changes in your wage withholding or asset declarations.

  • Box 1: The lowest income bracket now bears a rate of 35.82%. A modest increase in the labor tax credit brings limited but welcome breathing room for employees.
  • Self-Employed: The zelfstandigenaftrek drops again, down to €2,470. A predictable cut in a long-declining curve.
  • Box 3: The tax-free threshold stays at €57,000 and the tax rate holds at 36%. No sudden storms here, yet.
  • Box 2: Business owners benefit from a reduced high rate: 31%.
  • Excise & Energy: Fuel duties remain lowered and a minor energy tax reduction on natural gas adds stability for households.

These are not just numbers. These are political decisions already crystallized into fiscal code. For now, these hold.

2026 and Beyond: The Real Suspense

The fall of the cabinet shifts attention to what won’t happen. This is not about reversing the present but suspending the future. Some legislative dossiers will be marked “controversial” by the Tweede Kamer, paused until a new cabinet sits.

What’s at risk?

  • Box 3 Reform: Still burning. Still urgent. Despite caretaker status, consensus across party lines means reform might still proceed. But speed is lost, and timing matters when you’re taxing not just capital, but trust.
  • Allowance System Overhaul: Frozen. The complexity here makes it politically radioactive without a stable hand on the wheel.
  • Tax Plan 2026: Technically due on Prinsjesdag (Budget Day, Sept. 16), but it will be a thin broth. The caretaker cabinet will draft it, yes, but without bold policy moves. Expect continuity, not creativity.

Legislation That May Still Pass

Not all bills fall with the cabinet. Some are technical, internationally mandated, or supported by cross-party majorities. These may still pass:

  • DAC9 Implementation Law: An EU directive aimed at more transparent data exchange. Required, not optional.
  • Minimum Tax Adjustments: Under OECD frameworks—again, politically neutral but structurally important.
  • CBAM Implementation Law: To operationalize the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism. Green compliance meets global trade.

In short: Europe doesn’t stop because The Hague stutters.

Entrepreneurial Perspective: Wait Mode Activated

For SMEs and the self-employed, the fiscal scenery is familiar, but the path ahead is now unclear. Strategic tax planning for 2026 must now account for two parallel realities:

  1. A caretaker cabinet with no mandate to innovate.
  2. A future cabinet whose composition—and ambition—we cannot yet model.

This means 2025 becomes a “fiscal pause year.” Not because your business pauses, but because policy does.

Peace in the Fiscal Tent?

Let’s not mistake inertia for peace. Yes, your 2025 fiscal landscape is mostly mapped out. But this calm is not a destination, it’s a delay. Investors, business owners, and compliance officers now operate in a suspended state: no alarms, but no advancement.

So what should you do?

Stick to fundamentals.

Keep documentation airtight.

Assume 2026 brings disruption.

And above all, read the footnotes in every political development.

Because in Dutch fiscal law, it’s the details, not the headlines, that shape your real liability.

AUTHOR : Linda Pavan

Co-Founder of Xtroverso | Head of Ledger and Tax Compliance

Linda Pavan brings disciplined precision to Xtroverso, anchoring its financial, fiscal, and operational integrity. As a ZENTRIQ™ Certified Auditor, she translates complexity into clarity—ensuring every decision is traceable, compliant, and strategically sound. Her quiet rigor empowers businesses to act with confidence and accountability.

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