Why You Should Care
If you are a Dutch entrepreneur running a micro or small company, you may have considered offering “virtual shares” or “phantom shares” to reward loyal employees without giving away actual equity. It sounds elegant: you align staff interests with company performance, avoid shareholder dilution, and keep legal complexity low.
But the latest interpretation of the Salary Tax Act 1964 confirms a problem that can turn your good incentive idea into a payroll tax headache: the moment of enjoyment rules under Article 13a(2). These rules decide when the tax office considers the benefit to be “received”, and in some cases, that is not when the employee gets the money.
What the Ruling Says in Plain Dutch
The case analysed by the Knowledge Group is about employees who can trade part of their regular salary (gross wages) for participation in a virtual share plan.
Key features of such a plan:
- No voting rights, no dividends, no real shares.
- A three-year lock-up before payout.
- Value depends on company performance (often linked to the share price or a financial formula).
- If the employee leaves early, the unused part of their forgone salary is paid out immediately (minus tax).
The Tax Authority says:
- First Tax Moment: The moment the employee decides to give up part of their salary in exchange for virtual shares, the waived amount is already taxable wages.
- Second Tax Moment: When the lock-up ends and the benefit is actually paid, that amount is also taxable, but you can deduct the part already taxed earlier (no double taxation on the same euro).
- No Negative Wages: If the shares drop in value, you cannot create a tax loss to offset. That drop is considered a private investment risk, not an employment-related loss.
Why This Matters to Entrepreneurs
If you are an employer, this means:
- Payroll Tax Comes Early: You must withhold and remit payroll tax immediately when the salary is converted into virtual shares, even though your employee will not see the cash for years.
- Cash Flow Impact: Your company pays tax now on income your staff will only enjoy later. If the business underperforms, employees may end up with less benefit than they were taxed on.
- Administrative Complexity: You will need a system to record both tax moments, apply correct netting, and avoid over- or under-withholding.
- Employee Relations Risk: Employees may feel unfairly taxed on income they never received if the value drops. You will have to explain this clearly before they join the plan.
Strategic Takeaways for Small Businesses
-
Think Twice Before Using Salary-for-Shares Swaps
For large corporates, phantom shares can be a motivational tool. For micro and small companies, the early tax trigger can wipe out the intended benefit. -
Consider Annual Bonus Alternatives
A straightforward cash bonus or profit-sharing scheme paid within the same calendar year avoids the unusual timing rule in Article 13a(2). -
Document and Disclose Risks Upfront
Any virtual share plan must come with a plain-language explanation of tax timing, possible double taxation, and the “no negative wages” rule. -
Avoid Cross-Year Salary Deferrals
The law was designed to combat income deferral across years, even if your plan is well-intentioned, crossing the year boundary without payout is a red flag. -
Get Professional Structuring Help
If you still want a phantom share plan, you can design it in a way that avoids the fictitious enjoyment trigger, but it requires careful legal and payroll engineering.
Bottom Line
Virtual shares can be a smart motivational tool, but for small companies in the Netherlands they often create more fiscal friction than financial value.
If you want to reward loyalty and align interests, structure your incentives with the payroll tax clock in mind, otherwise you may be paying tax years before anyone gets paid.
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.