If you run a BV, you already know the real world is ruled by timing: when invoices get paid, when costs land, when your accountant can close the books, and when the Belastingdienst finally issues the final assessment. In that gap, “belastingrente” (tax interest) can become an unplanned expense that doesn’t feel like interest at all, it feels like a penalty for being a small business with imperfect information.
On 16 January 2026, the Hoge Raad (Dutch Supreme Court) drew a clear line: the special, higher minimum tax-interest rate that applied to corporate income tax (vennootschapsbelasting, often shortened to Vpb) was not properly justified and is therefore invalid. In plain terms, Vpb payers were treated as “equal cases” compared with other taxpayers for tax-interest purposes, yet were charged a higher rate without a solid reason. The Court also noted that a mainly budget-driven extra burden cannot simply be parked with one specific group.
Why does that matter on your desk on a Tuesday morning? Because tax interest is calculated over time, so it hits cash flow, not theory. A very normal situation: you make better profit than expected, or a one-off deal lands late in the year, and your provisional assessment (voorlopige aanslag) no longer matches reality. The final Vpb assessment comes later, and suddenly there’s an interest bill on top. Under the old approach, that interest could be calculated with a minimum of 8% for Vpb in certain years, which is simply a lot of money to lose for something that is often not “wrongdoing” but delayed certainty.
The Court’s outcome in this case was that the interest should be calculated using the general rule instead, effectively the same framework used for other taxes, so the difference isn’t a philosophical point, it’s a number. For businesses that have been charged Vpb tax interest at the higher rate, this is a signal to look closely at past assessments and ongoing disputes. If an objection or appeal is still open, the practical impact can be immediate. If everything is final, the window may be narrower, but it is still worth checking what is possible with your advisor, because “final” in tax can depend on dates and procedures more than people realise.
The calmer lesson is this: don’t treat tax interest as background noise. Tighten the small habits that prevent expensive surprises, keep your provisional assessment realistic when the year turns out differently, don’t wait until the last moment to surface changes in profit, and build a tiny buffer for “timing costs” in your cash planning. Not because you should fear the tax system, but because you deserve predictability. And when the rules drift into unfairness, it’s good to remember: they can be corrected, sometimes in a way that puts real euros back into the everyday life of a small business.
Ruling Dutch Supreme Court, 16 January 2026 ECLI:NL:HR:2026:59