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Withholding Means Paying, Even If You Later Get It Wrong

What a recent Dutch court ruling quietly changes for how small businesses handle tax assumptions
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  • LINDA PAVAN
  • Withholding Means Paying, Even If You Later Get It Wrong
  • March 30, 2026 by
    Linda Pavan


    Most small business owners don't think about dividend tax in their day-to-day work. But the principle behind a recent court ruling applies much more broadly.

    It affects your cash flow, filings, and business risk.


    The message from the court is simple: if you withhold tax, you are expected to pay it. Even if it later turns out that withholding wasn't actually required.

    What the Ruling Actually Says


    The case itself involved an intricate international structure. A company withheld dividend tax and, at the same time, relied on a mechanism to reduce or eliminate the actual payment.

    Later, the entire setup was deemed artificial.


    But the court focused on a more practical point: the tax had been withheld, so it had to be paid. Whether that withholding was correct in substance did not undo the obligation.

    This replicates a more extensive pattern confirmed by the Dutch Supreme Court in July 2025. In two landmark rulings, the Court denied dividend withholding tax exemptions to Belgian holding companies, finding the structures "artificial and aimed at avoiding Dutch tax."

    The Court accepted that families retained full discretion over whether to distribute or reinvest dividends. This lack of obligation to reinvest, combined with the absence of control over dividend use, contributed to the finding of abuse.

    Where This Becomes Relevant for Small Businesses


    In practice, decisions are often made based on advice, interpretation, or a "defensible position." That is part of doing business.

    But this ruling shows that your administrative actions carry weight on their own. What you record, declare, and process creates real obligations.

    You cannot later reverse this by arguing your reasoning was flawed.


    I see a similar pattern in everyday situations. An entrepreneur paying out to a holding company might withhold dividend tax "just to be safe." It feels cautious.

    By withholding, you create a duty to declare and pay. Uncertainty becomes a concrete obligation.

    Correcting these actions is rarely simple and can lead to delays or scrutiny.

    The Penalty Layer


    In this case, a penalty was imposed because the parties knowingly engaged in a structure with visible risks. The penalty is applied when deliberate actions show clear awareness of those risks.

    For smaller businesses, this does not mean every mistake leads to a fine.

    But it does underscore an important point: "we thought it was acceptable" is not a strong position if the setup lacks real economic substance.

    Since July 2019, meeting Dutch substance requirements is no longer a safe harbor. It shifts the burden of proof to the Dutch Tax Administration to demonstrate that a structure is abusive.

    If substance requirements are not met, you must prove the structure is driven by sound business motives.

    What This Means for Your Administration


    The practical takeaway is not dramatic, but it is precise.

    Only withhold tax if you understand why you are doing it.

    If there is doubt, it is often better to clarify first than to fix later. And when a structure mainly exists to achieve a tax outcome, it is worth asking whether it still makes sense without that advantage.

    The Dutch Tax Administration uses methods to detect returns that may contain errors. This includes monitoring the proper recording of data by withholding agents in wage declarations, as well as differences between the payroll taxes declared and the amounts remitted.

    Administrative mistakes are increasingly likely to be caught.

    If you need to correct an error, you can use the Dutch voluntary disclosure scheme. If you disclose and correct within two years, you avoid negligence penalties; after two years, penalties still apply but are reduced.

    Waiting longer than two years still results in a penalty, but the sentence is reduced.

    Bottom Line


    This is about control over your own administration.

    What you put on paper, or in your system, is what you will be held to. In a busy business, keeping things clear and grounded is not just efficient; it's essential.

    Clarity in administration protects your business.

    COURT RULING 24-03-2026 ECLI:NL:GHARL:2026:1691, 23/2320


    in LINDA PAVAN
    # ES IT Linda Pavan NL TAX
    Linda Pavan March 30, 2026
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