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What Tax Advisors Won’t Tell You About That iShares Case And Why Your Small Dutch Business Is Next

A 15% dividend tax, a legal loophole, and a European Court that’s about to redraw the map for every Dutch entrepreneur using holding structures or foreign investments.
July 14, 2025 by
What Tax Advisors Won’t Tell You About That iShares Case And Why Your Small Dutch Business Is Next
Linda Pavan
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A Tax Case That Isn’t Just for the Big Funds

You might think a European tax case involving iShares and Spanish dividend withholding has little to do with your small business in Rotterdam, Haarlem, or Amersfoort. Think again.

The preliminary ruling request in Case C‑139/25 (iShares Europe ETF vs. Spain) isn’t about ETF giants alone. It’s about how European law defines fairness when one country withholds tax on investment income and another doesn’t offer practical relief. And while the case revolves around cross-border funds, its logic could soon apply to any structure holding foreign income, yes, including your investment BV, Stichting, or holding structure.

Let me walk you through why you should care and what may be next.

The Crux of the Case: 15% Withheld, 1% If You’re Local

Spain imposes a 15% withholding tax on dividend payments to non-resident investment funds. Spanish domestic funds? They pay just 1% corporate tax. This difference matters and EU law (specifically Article 63 of the TFEU on free movement of capital) doesn’t allow discrimination based solely on residency.

iShares, based in the U.S., argued this was discrimination. Spain said: not really, you could have neutralized this via your own tax system and a bilateral treaty (the Spain–USA double tax treaty). The fund didn’t. Instead, it passed the tax credit on to its investors via a U.S. “pass-through” system.

So the question becomes: If the fund chooses not to offset the tax, can Spain still claim it provided a neutral, fair framework?

That’s where the European Court was asked to intervene.

Why Micro and Small Entrepreneurs in the Netherlands Should Pay Attention

You may not run a cross-border investment fund, but you might:

  • Use foreign holdings or investment vehicles for savings, pensions, or joint ventures.
  • Operate in a country that withholds tax before paying you dividends or royalties.
  • Assume a double tax treaty will “fix” the issue, even if practically it doesn’t.
  • Work with clients or partners who face unseen tax asymmetries and compliance gaps.

What this case exposes is the gap between formal legal theory and practical fiscal effect. Just because a country says “you could have claimed relief” doesn’t mean it’s administratively or economically viable. And that has implications.

For example:

  • BV structures holding foreign shares may encounter unexpected friction.
  • Trust setups or fonds voor gemene rekening (FGR) relying on pass-through tax treatment could face scrutiny.
  • Dividend stripping structures used in pan-European portfolios may now need to justify actual benefit realization at investor level, not merely theoretical eligibility.

This case forces a shift from treaty entitlement to outcome-based proof. And that’s governance.

What the Court May Decide and What You Need to Prepare For

At the heart of the referral is a simple but potent question:

Is it enough for a non-resident fund to have the possibility of neutralizing the tax difference, or must it prove that this neutralization actually occurred at investor level?

If the Court sides with iShares, form over substance won’t hold anymore. Even small foreign-registered entities claiming tax relief via treaties may need to:

  • Prove equivalence with local entities.
  • Demonstrate actual tax relief uptake, not just eligibility.
  • Bear the burden of evidence when using structures relying on pass-through or deferred taxation.

And if the Court sides with Spain, expect tax authorities across the EU to lean harder on the theoretical neutralization argument, placing the administrative burden on the entrepreneur.

Either way, we enter a stricter compliance era for cross-border capital income, even at small scale.

What Should Dutch Entrepreneurs Do Right Now?

  1. Audit your current structures: Are you using foreign entities that claim treaty benefits? If so, how do you document and trace tax neutrality?
  2. Evaluate all pass-through mechanisms: Whether you’re relying on FGRs, CVs, LPs, or U.S. LLCs, don’t assume eligibility equals protection. You may need to show investor-level impact.
  3. Check alignment with ZENTRIQ™ standards: At XTROVERSO, we require all international tax setups used by clients to go through a governance assessment, not just legal review. Economic substance matters.
  4. Reassess dividend tax planning: If you or your clients receive foreign dividends, map not just the withholding tax, but the actual outcome in your personal or corporate tax return.
  5. Get ahead of future reporting duties: Cases like these often become the base for new DAC rules (like DAC8). Expect more disclosures, more beneficial owner tracking, and more digital tax data exchange.

Europe Is Watching Substance, Not Just Structure

Micro and small entrepreneurs can no longer hide behind boilerplate legal setups. Governance means foresight. And foresight means understanding that what seems like a “big case” may knock at your door in the form of a tax audit, a dividend mismatch, or a treaty claim gone sour.

At XTROVERSO, we don’t just do tax. We read between the lines. And we help you prepare for what’s coming, not what once worked.

AUTHOR : Linda Pavan

Co-Founder of Xtroverso | Head of Ledger and Tax Compliance

Linda Pavan brengt gedisciplineerde precisie naar Xtroverso en verankert de financiële, fiscale en operationele integriteit ervan. Als ZENTRIQ™ Gecertificeerd Auditor vertaalt zij complexiteit naar helderheid—waarbij elke beslissing traceerbaar, compliant en strategisch doordacht is. Haar stille nauwkeurigheid geeft bedrijven het vertrouwen en de verantwoordelijkheid om met zekerheid te handelen.

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