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What the Taxman Won’t Tell You When You Move Abroad as an Entrepreneur

Escape the weather, not the bill, how emigrating can trigger a fiscal ambush on your business, assets, and future.
July 4, 2025 by
What the Taxman Won’t Tell You When You Move Abroad as an Entrepreneur
Linda Pavan
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Let me tell you a story.

A few years ago, a client, let’s call him Marco, called me from Portugal. He had just bought a villa on a hill, was sipping vinho verde, and wanted to “wrap things up in the Netherlands.” His words, not mine.

“What do I need to do, Linda?”

“Sell everything and change my address?”

I sighed. Not because of the wine or the sunshine. But because this, this, is how many entrepreneurs underestimate emigration. As if it’s a suitcase and a plane ticket.

No, Marco. And no, dear reader. If you’re a business owner thinking of emigrating, you’re not just moving. You’re triggering a fiscal event. And fiscal events don’t come with Aperol and beach towels. They come with consequences.

Let’s walk through them.

The Myth of the Simple Goodbye

Entrepreneurs fantasize about lower taxes and better sunsets. Fine. But here’s the real list you need to look at before you say adiós:

  • What happens to your BV or eenmanszaak?
  • Will the tax office want to settle immediately?
  • What about your pension, lijfrente, or substantial interest (aanmerkelijk belang)?
  • And if your company remains active in the Netherlands, can you even call yourself “gone”?

If you don’t have answers, stop packing.

Three Hard Realities

  1. The Exit Tax Is Real.
    The Belastingdienst doesn’t wave you off with a smile. It wants to tax your hidden reserves, goodwill, and retained earnings as if you’re selling your company, even if you’re not.
  2. Conserverende Aanslag = A Time Bomb.
    They might postpone taxation, but only under conditions. Break those, and the bomb goes off, with interest.
  3. You Can’t Emigrate If Your Company Doesn’t.
    If your business activities are still managed from the Netherlands, guess what? The Dutch tax office will say you never left.

And they won’t send a postcard.

One Document That Saves Headaches

Our in-house experts in collaboration with ZENTRIQ Team wrote a guide that should be mandatory reading for every entrepreneur or advisor. It’s not a blog post. It’s a reference manual. It explains:

  • The difference between leaving as a person and relocating as an enterprise.
  • When you must calculate stakingswinst (cessation profit).
  • What triggers an exit levy.
  • How to assess whether the centre of management moved or not.

Spoiler: saying “I live in Ibiza” is not enough.

Here’s What I Want You to Remember

If you’re serious about your business, treat your emigration with the same seriousness.

If you’re working with clients with international ambitions, educate them before the tax authorities do.

And if you’re dreaming of a new life abroad, don’t make it a fiscal nightmare.

And next time you call me from a beach, let’s talk about tax rulings first.

You don’t “leave” a fiscal system. You negotiate your exit. If you don’t know the rules, someone else writes your bill.

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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