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Is Your BV About to Get Burned? What the Tax Office Just Revealed About Dividend Tricks Will Hit Small Business Owners Next

Think it’s just for big fish? Guess again, your next audit might say otherwise.
August 7, 2025 by
Is Your BV About to Get Burned? What the Tax Office Just Revealed About Dividend Tricks Will Hit Small Business Owners Next
Linda Pavan

Why This Matters to You

On July 22, 2025, the Dutch Tax Authority (Belastingdienst) issued its formal response to a public access request filed under the Wet open overheid (Woo, Open Government Act). This response concerns its internal consultation on legislative changes to combat dividend stripping.

At first glance, you might think this only affects large corporations and institutional investors. But you'd be wrong. Some of the proposed regulatory principles, if broadly implemented, will eventually reach your doorstep too. Not through new laws tomorrow, but through how tax controls, audits, and refund processes are interpreted over time.

As always, my job is not to scare you, but to shield you by telling you the truth early enough so you can act responsibly.

What Is Dividend Stripping?

Dividend stripping refers to schemes, mostly legal-technical in nature, that aim to circumvent dividend withholding taxes by transferring formal ownership of shares around the dividend payout date, without transferring actual economic risk or benefit.

Typically, the goal is to claim a tax refund (or exemption) that wouldn't be justified if the true economic interest was scrutinized.

What Did the Tax Authority Say?

In its internal contribution to the 2021 policy consultation (now made public), the Tax Authority proposed several structural measures to close these loopholes:

  1. Require both legal ownership and actual economic interest for dividend tax relief;
  2. Introduce a mandatory holding period before any refund can be granted;
  3. Use a net return or base approach to calculate eligible refunds;
  4. Strengthen documentation obligations for dividend-related claims;
  5. Codify the record date (the date used to determine dividend entitlements);
  6. Expand rules to cover related entities within multinational groups.

In other words: they are moving from form to substance. And that shift has implications for all of us.

Why This Affects Small Businesses Too

Even if you’re not engaged in dividend stripping, here’s where the heat touches your kitchen:

  • Stricter documentation: Future audits may demand more clarity on shareholder structure, timing of dividend decisions, and the real financial interest of recipients, even in owner-managed BV structures.
  • Holding period logic: If you restructure or move shares just before distributing dividends, that may trigger scrutiny.
  • Net return models: The concept of adjusting tax relief based on actual economic benefit could influence how your company is taxed on outbound dividend flows, especially if foreign shareholders or holding entities are involved.

For small companies, these kinds of regulatory shifts don't come with warnings. They quietly slip into audit practices, control questions, and compliance reviews, until your accountant looks surprised, and you look exposed.

What Was Disclosed Under Woo?

The disclosure includes:

  • Over 130 documents ranging from internal memos, draft tables, external feedback, to email correspondence;
  • A formal decision not to publish all documents in full, citing:
    • privacy of civil servants (Woo art. 5.1.2.e),
    • preservation of control and audit effectiveness (Woo art. 5.1.2.d),
    • and strict tax confidentiality rules (Article 67 AWR).

This tells us one thing: even the public version only shows the surface. But the direction is clear, compliance expectations are tightening, and the philosophy is shifting from tolerance to preventive control.

What Should You Do Now?

As a micro or small business owner, here’s your practical checklist:

  1. Review dividend practices: If your BV pays out dividends annually, ensure that ownership and economic benefit align, and can be documented.
  2. Keep records of intent: Why was a dividend paid? Who benefits? Can you demonstrate that no artificial steps were taken for tax advantage?
  3. Avoid last-minute restructurings: Changing shareholders, moving shares, or creating new entities right before payouts will raise questions.
  4. Consult proactively: Don’t wait for the Tax Authority to challenge you. Ask your GRC advisor whether your dividend policies are defensible, structurally, not just legally.

Final Word from the Ledger

At ZENTRIQ™, we believe rules are not there to limit you, but to protect your future. If you operate transparently, behave responsibly, and document wisely, you’ll stay ahead of the curve, even when the rules shift under your feet.

This Woo disclosure is not a threat, it’s a warning light. One that tells you what the Tax Authority is thinking before it becomes law.

And if you know what’s coming, you’re already safer than most.

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

Is Your BV About to Get Burned? What the Tax Office Just Revealed About Dividend Tricks Will Hit Small Business Owners Next
Linda Pavan August 7, 2025
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