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What Really Counts as a Business Asset for Investment Deduction in a BV?

Understanding the real rules behind what your BV can deduct, no fluff, just facts. A practical guide to turning smart purchases into strategic tax savings.
June 13, 2025 by
What Really Counts as a Business Asset for Investment Deduction in a BV?
Linda Pavan
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Let me tell you a quick story.

Last year, a young entrepreneur came to me with a proud smile and a neat Excel list of all the things he had bought for his new BV. A laptop, a fancy espresso machine, ergonomic chairs, some business cards, even a one-year subscription to Spotify for "creative productivity."

His question was simple:

“Can I deduct all of this as an investment?”

My answer was also simple, but maybe not what he expected:

“Not everything you buy is a business asset, and not every business asset qualifies for investment deduction.”

That’s where we start.

1. First: What is the Investment Deduction for a BV?

In the Netherlands, when your BV makes certain investments in business assets, it can claim an extra tax deduction under the small-scale investment deduction (KIA – Kleinschaligheidsinvesteringsaftrek).

This is not depreciation (that’s separate). The KIA gives your BV a percentage of the total investment amount as a direct reduction in your taxable profit.

But, here’s the kicker, only qualifying business assets count.

2. The What: Which Assets Actually Qualify?

Here’s the checklist I always give to clients:

Minimum value per item: €450 (excluding VAT)

Used within your BV

Used for business operations, not resale or rental

Expected to last more than 1 year

Total annual investments: between €2,901 and €392,230

If you tick these boxes, your BV could receive up to 28% deduction of your investment total.

Examples that usually qualify:

  • Professional equipment and machinery
  • Office furniture (desks, chairs, storage)
  • Laptops and company smartphones
  • Software licenses for internal use
  • Electric delivery vans or cargo bikes
  • Security systems and professional tools

3. The Not-What: Common Mistakes I See (Too Often)

Let’s bust a few myths.

Espresso machines? Not unless you run a café.

Spotify or Netflix subscriptions? No, even if it’s for “creative flow.”

Cars for private and business use? Usually not.

Personal items you now use for work? Not unless properly transferred and valued.

Land, houses, or goodwill? Always excluded.

Also:

  • Leased or rented assets don’t count.
  • Assets bought with government subsidies don’t qualify either.

4. The How: What You Need to Do (Practically)

Here’s my short, sharp process:

  1. Track investments in real time. Don’t wait until the end of the year.
  2. Record the purchase date, invoice, amount (ex. VAT), and supplier.
  3. Use accounting software that tags assets above €450.
  4. At year-end, calculate total qualified investments.
  5. Apply KIA in your corporate tax return (VPB).

I always recommend keeping a separate “investment ledger” to avoid confusion with operational expenses.

5. And Then There’s the Exit Trap: Disinvestment

Here’s something I wish more founders knew:

If you sell, give away, or repurpose the asset within 5 years, you might be hit with a disinvestment recapture (desinvesteringsbijtelling).

That espresso machine, if bought for €1,200 and sold on Marktplaats after 3 years? You’ll have to repay part of your deduction. Ouch.

6. Other Investment Deductions (EIA and MIA)

Beyond the small-scale deduction, there are two “big siblings”:

  • EIA (Energy Investment Deduction): 40% extra deduction on sustainable or energy-saving assets.
  • MIA (Environmental Investment Deduction): up to 45% extra for green, innovative equipment.

To qualify, the asset must be on the government’s official environmental or energy investment list. Always double-check before buying.

Assets Are Not Just Stuff—They’re Strategic

Here’s what I told that young entrepreneur:

“Treat your investments as strategic tools, not just purchases.”

When you understand what qualifies, you stop wasting money—and you start using the tax system to strengthen your business, instead of just surviving it.

So next time you shop for your BV, ask yourself:

Will this make me more productive, efficient, or secure? If yes—and if it ticks the tax boxes—congratulations. You’ve just invested in your future.

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.

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