International tax treaties are not just for the Apples and Amazons of this world. If you’re running a one-person consulting firm in Breda and your client’s in Brussels, congratulations, you’re officially a cross-border entrepreneur. Welcome to the world of tax treaties, where what you don’t know can (and will) hurt you.
The Myth: “It’s Just for Multinationals”
I hear this all the time:
“Linda, we’re small. Just a few invoices here and there abroad. These treaties can’t apply to us.”
Oh, sweetheart. That’s exactly when they start to matter. Because the moment your income, service, or intellectual property crosses a border, so does your tax risk.
And trust me: the Dutch and the Belgians (or the Germans, or the Americans) don’t have drinks together before deciding who gets to tax your earnings. They have treaties. And you better read them before the tax inspector reads your file.
The Reality: If It Crosses a Border, It Crosses Into Treaty Territory
Picture this:
- You're a Dutch software developer. A German client hires you for a three-month remote job.
- You’re a Dutch advisor, traveling regularly to Belgium for on-site work.
- You’re licensing IP to a company in the U.S. and receiving royalties monthly.
Now ask yourself:
- Do I have a permanent establishment abroad without knowing it?
- Do I know which country can tax which part of my income?
- Is withholding tax being applied fairly, or twice?
If you can't answer confidently, you're not in control. You’re just hoping it won’t go wrong. That’s not strategy. That’s denial.
What These Treaties Actually Do (And Why You Should Love Them)
International tax treaties, let’s call them what they are: agreements between countries to avoid double taxation and legal confusion. They don’t just protect companies from being taxed twice; they create clarity about who gets to tax what, when, and how.
Some practical benefits:
- They define the concept of permanent establishment (PE), so your coffee shop in Ghent doesn’t become a surprise tax anchor.
- They set rules for withholding tax on dividends, royalties, and interest.
- They clarify residency status, so you don’t get ping-ponged between two tax authorities like a fiscal tennis ball.
Why SMEs Ignore This (Until It’s Too Late)
Let’s be blunt: most SMEs don’t think internationally until they’re already in it. You say “yes” to a foreign client, send the invoice, cash the money and only months later realize that tax rules changed the moment you crossed that border.
By then, it’s clean-up time. That means:
- Scrambling for treaty relief applications
- Filing corrective reports
- Paying penalties, or even being accused of evasion
Don’t do that to yourself.
What You Should Do Today, Not Tomorrow
- Identify your international exposure. It’s not just where you are, it's where your clients, partners, and services land.
- Look up the relevant tax treaty.
- Read the damn thing, or find someone who will. Yes, the language is dry. Yes, the concepts are subtle. That’s why people like me exist.
- Integrate tax planning into your contracts. Include clauses about withholding tax, reporting obligations, and residency proof.
- Educate your accountant. If they roll their eyes at international matters, change the team. Compliance isn’t a suggestion; it’s your legal perimeter.
Respect the Rules, or They’ll Bite
Treaties aren’t for fancy lawyers in Brussels. They’re for you, the everyday SME that dares to grow beyond the comfort zone of its domestic market. But with growth comes complexity and ignoring that complexity is not “lean.” It’s naive.
You don’t have to be afraid of tax treaties. But you do have to respect them. Learn the rules, apply them smartly, and you’ll not only avoid problems, you’ll save money, gain strategic clarity, and sleep better at night.
And if you're still unsure? You know where to find me.
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.