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Holding Out for a Miracle? Why Your Passive BV Is About to Get Hammered by the New Dutch VAT Rules

No More ‘Paper Tigers’: If Your Holding Isn’t Actually Working, the Taxman Is Coming for Your Deductions, And Ignorance Won’t Save You This Time.
July 21, 2025 by
Holding Out for a Miracle? Why Your Passive BV Is About to Get Hammered by the New Dutch VAT Rules
Linda Pavan

A Shift Long in the Making

Starting 1 July 2025, the Dutch tax landscape changes for anyone operating a holding company. The government has withdrawn long-standing policy decisions and replaced them with new rules that sharply realign Dutch practice with European law. For entrepreneurs running micro and small companies, often with a holding at the top, this is not just a technical update. It’s a redefinition of how the state interprets your business reality.

What’s changed? The Dutch Tax Authority will now strictly require that only holdings with genuine, demonstrable economic activity qualify as VAT entrepreneurs. The days of relying on paper intentions or loose interpretations are over. This is a direct response to European case law and an overdue correction of the Dutch system’s “generosity” compared to other EU member states.

Active vs. Passive: The New Core Distinction

Let’s cut to the bone:

  • Passive Holdings (those that only own shares, collect dividends, but do not provide services) no longer count as VAT entrepreneurs.
  • Active Holdings (those that actually provide management or other services, for real, and at market rates) can still qualify, but only if every step is documented and defensible.

The authorities are no longer interested in your intentions; they want to see proof of value delivered. That means contracts, yes, but also timesheets, correspondence, deliverables, and market-based pricing. Only then does VAT deduction remain possible.

Key implication:

If your holding company’s role is “silent partner,” the door to input VAT deduction closes. Only “working” holdings, with traceable, remunerated activity, remain within scope.

What Entrepreneurs Need to Know, and Do

1. Holding Structure: No More Room for Vagueness

If your group structure involves a holding company, whether for risk separation, succession planning, or fiscal unity, you need to reassess. Passive holdings now fall outside the VAT regime. If your holding delivers real, measurable management or support services, ensure every activity is:

  • Contractually clear
  • Commercially justified
  • Evidenced with documentation

It’s not enough to invoice your subsidiary. The invoice must relate to substantial, delivered services, think board-level support, strategic advice, or hands-on financial oversight, not “advisory in name only.”

2. Fiscal Unity: No Longer Automatic

The ability to treat your holding and operating companies as a fiscal unit, so that intra-group services are VAT-neutral, depends on the holding’s economic activity. If the holding is now classified as passive, it risks ejection from the fiscal unit, triggering new VAT frictions within your group. This demands immediate review and, if necessary, a change in the division of labor between entities.

3. Input VAT Deduction: A Higher Bar

Input VAT on costs (legal, consulting, incorporation expenses) is only deductible if directly linked to taxed services. The Dutch “comfort” of deducting pre-activity costs is now gone. If you’re setting up a new group or expanding, prepare to justify every euro of VAT deduction with a detailed, forward-looking business plan and hard evidence of future taxable activities.

Practical Scenarios, Lessons from the Front Line

  • Classic Management Holding:
    The classic setup, holding owns operating company and charges a management fee. Going forward, this only survives scrutiny if the management service is real, repeated, and evidenced by deliverables. The fee must reflect market rates, and work logs must exist.
  • Investment-Only Holdings:
    If your holding only invests (no active management), you can no longer claim input VAT. Dividends are not “economic activity.” The rules are unambiguous.
  • Holdings with Centralized Functions:
    If your holding employs staff and delivers HR, IT, or admin services to subsidiaries, document every service, charge market rates, and maintain Service Level Agreements. This will protect your VAT position.

What Should You Do Next?

  1. Audit your structure: Map every holding and its activities.
  2. Gather evidence: Timesheets, contracts, invoices, correspondence, build an audit trail for all remunerated activities.
  3. Formalize services: If your holding does real work, ensure contracts and pricing are robust and reviewed annually.
  4. Review fiscal unity: Check if your group still qualifies; restructure if necessary.
  5. Anticipate scrutiny: Expect the Dutch Tax Authority to test the reality, not just the paperwork, behind your structure.

Special Note: International Groups

If your structure spans multiple EU countries, this realignment brings the Netherlands in step with the rest of Europe. The Dutch Tax Authority will now look for actual cross-border management, not merely shareholding. Coordination with advisors in all relevant jurisdictions is no longer optional, it’s essential.

Transitional Relief, But Act Fast

Existing structures built on the old regime are not retroactively challenged, but as of 1 July, you are required to comply with the new reality. The “practical approach” is now history. The only comfort is clarity: once your activities, contracts, and pricing are transparent and defensible, your VAT position becomes sustainable again.

Clarity is Protection

As always, regulatory change is not your enemy, ambiguity is. These new rules may feel restrictive, but they also offer an opportunity to professionalize group structures, clarify roles, and remove latent risk. In the world of VAT, only what is real counts.

At Xtroverso, we believe clarity and structure are not just about compliance, they are the soil in which trust and entrepreneurial freedom grow. If you need to rethink your group or holding structure, now is the time to do so, deliberately and with both eyes open.

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.

Linda Pavan | Head of Tax and Zentriq certified auditor

Holding Out for a Miracle? Why Your Passive BV Is About to Get Hammered by the New Dutch VAT Rules
Linda Pavan July 21, 2025
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