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Silent Conversion Denied: Tax Ruling Limits Options for Small Business Owners in the Netherlands

New 2025 decision clarifies that only direct entrepreneurs, not transferred co-beneficiaries, can restructure into a BV tax-free. Here’s what micro and small company owners must know.
August 19, 2025 by
Silent Conversion Denied: Tax Ruling Limits Options for Small Business Owners in the Netherlands
Linda Pavan

The Case in Brief

The recent ruling (KG:212:2025:4) clarifies an important limitation in the Dutch Income Tax Act 2001. The situation unfolded as follows:

  • 2018: X enters a general partnership (vof) and is taxed as an entrepreneur under Article 3.4.
  • 2020: The vof becomes a limited partnership (cv). X becomes a limited partner and is treated as a co-entitled person under Article 3.3.
  • 2022: X transfers his share to employee Y, using the silent transfer facility (Article 3.63). Y becomes a limited partner.
  • 2024: Y wants to contribute her limited partnership share into a private limited company (bv).

The tax question: Can Y use the silent conversion facility (Article 3.65) to move her share into a bv without triggering immediate taxation?

The tax authority’s answer: No. Y is only a co-entitled person, not a direct continuing entrepreneur. Silent conversion is reserved only for those whose co-entitlement directly continues their own entrepreneurial activity.

Why This Matters for Small Entrepreneurs

Many Dutch entrepreneurs rely on silent transfer (geruisloze doorschuiving) and silent conversion (geruisloze inbreng) facilities to restructure their businesses without facing immediate taxation. These mechanisms are lifelines for small companies that want to grow, professionalize, or transfer ownership smoothly.

This ruling draws a sharp line:

  • If you become co-entitled through direct continuation of your own entrepreneurship (for example, a managing partner becoming a limited partner), you keep access to the silent conversion facility.
  • If your co-entitlement is acquired through transfer from someone else (like Y from X), you lose that direct link. The law sees you not as a continuing entrepreneur, but as a co-beneficiary.

The difference is subtle, but the tax implications are massive.

The Practical Implications

For entrepreneurs, this decision means:

  1. Restructuring has limits. If you acquire your share through a transfer and later want to move into a bv, expect tax consequences. The silent conversion will not protect you.
  2. Plan succession carefully. Bringing in employees or family members as partners sounds attractive, but if they step in via transfer rather than direct entrepreneurial continuation, their options for tax-neutral restructuring shrink.
  3. Beware of hidden tax triggers. Without access to Article 3.65, any attempt to move a partnership share into a bv can lead to immediate taxation of hidden reserves and goodwill. For small businesses, that tax bill can be a sudden and painful shock.
  4. Consult early. Before changing your vof into a cv, or transferring shares to employees or family, assess the long-term tax impact—not just the short-term succession.

The Entrepreneur’s Dilemma

This case highlights a broader tension in Dutch tax law:

  • The system recognizes the need to give entrepreneurs flexibility, but
  • It draws strict boundaries once you stop being an entrepreneur in your own right and become only a co-beneficiary.

For micro and small enterprises, this can feel like a trap: you bring someone into the business with the best intentions, but unknowingly cut off their path to a tax-neutral conversion later.

My Advice to Entrepreneurs

  • Think two moves ahead. Every restructuring decision today limits or unlocks tax options tomorrow.
  • Protect your successors. If you want employees or family to eventually run the business, structure their entry in a way that preserves their entrepreneurial status.
  • Don’t underestimate timing. The “direct continuation” rule is strict: if the chain is broken, the silent facilities are gone.

In plain terms: once you stop being seen as the entrepreneur, the tax law stops treating you like one.

Closing Reflection

This ruling is not just about tax mechanics. It is a reminder that entrepreneurship in the Netherlands is a legal status with privileges and limits. If you want to grow, pass on, or professionalize your small company, you need foresight. Tax law rewards continuity, not substitution.

The lesson is clear: structure succession not just with trust, but with precision.

SOURCE: 
KG:212:2025:4 Postponed continued entrepreneurship and silent conversion

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

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Silent Conversion Denied: Tax Ruling Limits Options for Small Business Owners in the Netherlands
Linda Pavan August 19, 2025
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