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No Strategy, No Records, No Chance: How a Dutch SME Owner Lost Her Company to Her Own Sloppiness

From late filings to vague excuses, this is what it looks like when ‘I didn’t know’ meets a judge who definitely does.
August 6, 2025 by
No Strategy, No Records, No Chance: How a Dutch SME Owner Lost Her Company to Her Own Sloppiness
Linda Pavan

A Case You Can Learn From (or Repeat): €1.5 Million in Tourist Tax

Let’s begin with the basics.

Between 2014 and 2021, a private limited company (X B.V.) was assessed over €1.5 million in tourist tax by the municipality of Asten. The reason? The company provided accommodations to migrant workers at a holiday park. The owner objected, arguing she wasn't the one offering the stay, and anyway, it wasn’t clear who should pay. The court disagreed, completely.

Not only did the judge confirm she was the taxpayer, but also stated that the tax assessments were based on her own records, and that the actual overnight stays were likely underreported. Appeals were rejected. Convictions followed, for the director and the parent company, for falsifying records and avoiding tax.

The Bigger Story: Five Red Flags That Apply to Many Entrepreneurs

This isn't just a story about tourist tax. It’s a textbook case of what happens when entrepreneurs treat compliance as an afterthought. It’s not about bad intentions. It’s about bad assumptions.

Here are the five key lessons every micro or small business owner in the Netherlands should take away.

1. You Are Always Responsible for What Happens Under Your Roof

❝“But the employment agency rented the unit.”❞

❝“But we don’t run the housing ourselves.”❞

It doesn’t matter.

If your company owns the property, signs the contracts, or collects the rent, even via affiliates, you are legally the provider of residence. The law holds you accountable. You can’t outsource liability. You can’t hide behind subcontractors or partner companies.

Lesson: Always define, in writing, who does what and who reports what. And when in doubt, assume the tax office sees you as the responsible party.

2. General Objections Will Be Ignored

The court made it crystal clear: the taxpayer submitted vague statements instead of documented counterarguments. She waited too long. She didn’t engage seriously until the hearing, by then, it was procedurally too late.

The tax inspector, in contrast, came with 23 specific factual points, emails, and records.

Lesson: In tax disputes, timing and substance matter. If you miss the written phase or fail to submit specific evidence, courts will dismiss your arguments, even if you later “explain everything” in person. Compliance is a structured process, not a storytelling session.

3. If Your Books Are Dirty, Your Defence Is Already Lost

The director and parent company were criminally convicted for tampering with rental records, including destroying evidence. Even if you argue that today’s assessments are unfair, courts won’t believe you if your administrative past is shady.

The judge even said the assessments were likely too low, not too high.

Lesson: Think long-term. One small act of negligence in your records today can wipe out your entire credibility tomorrow. If your numbers aren’t clean, don’t expect mercy. Expect deeper audits.

4. Tourist Tax Is Not Just for Tourists

The entrepreneur claimed she should pay a flat-rate tourist tax, like for campers or holidaymakers. The court ruled: no.

The law applies full-rate tax when housing is provided for non-recreational purposes—like temporary worker housing. This includes migrant workers, seasonal staff, contracted personnel, or interns, depending on the structure.

Lesson: Always classify your accommodations correctly. Don’t use a recreational flat rate if the purpose is business or employment-related. The tax authority will review your client lists, invoices, and booking patterns.

5. Delegating Without Oversight Is Not a Defence

The business owner said: “I thought the other company handled that.” The court responded: “That’s still your responsibility.”

The judge found that multiple services, cleaning, inspections, key management, were linked directly to the taxpayer, not to an outside party.

Lesson: Delegating operations doesn't mean delegating responsibility. Whether you outsource to a payroll firm, a housing bureau, or an agency, you remain ultimately accountable for taxes, permits, and compliance filings.

The Real Risk: False Confidence

This case is not unusual. What’s unusual is the scale of the damage: over a million euros in assessments, legal fees, public rulings, and criminal convictions.

But in smaller companies, the same mistakes happen silently:

  • Incomplete records
  • Verbal agreements
  • Misclassified housing
  • Tax returns based on “how we always did it”

What’s missing isn’t money—it’s structure.

A Practical Checklist

If you own or operate property, holiday park, apartments, flex units, or even staff housing, ask yourself:

  • Are all occupants correctly registered and documented?
  • Am I charging the right kind of tax, at the right rate?
  • Do I have written agreements defining roles, responsibilities, and tax liabilities?
  • Do I have access to all records submitted in my name?
  • If someone challenges my tax position tomorrow, can I defend it with documents, not just words?

In Closing

Compliance isn’t about fear. It’s about foresight.

If you think tourist tax doesn’t apply to you, or you believe that a court will listen to your explanation without evidence, think again.

We don't need more headlines about tax mistakes. We need more entrepreneurs who know how to read the warning signs, before a judge reads them out loud.

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 , Certified Zentriq Auditor

No Strategy, No Records, No Chance: How a Dutch SME Owner Lost Her Company to Her Own Sloppiness
Linda Pavan August 6, 2025
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