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When Your Verzamelinkomen Finally Matters: A Small-Business Reality Check on the 2025 Tax Credit Change

Why the general tax credit in 2025 depends on all your income not just your work profit
February 23, 2026 by
When Your Verzamelinkomen Finally Matters: A Small-Business Reality Check on the 2025 Tax Credit Change
Linda Pavan


Small business owners know that the numbers we crunch on paper don’t always feel the same in our bank account. One of those quiet numbers is the general  rebate  the general tax credit that reduces what you owe in income tax. For years, this credit was tied to your box 1 income,  profit from work and home, like your business earnings or wages. Starting with the 2025 tax year, the calculation changes: your full verzamelinkomen,  the sum of box 1, box 2 (income from substantial shareholding like dividends) and box 3 (income from savings and investments)  now determines how much credit you get. 

In human terms, this means that what used to be a simple “less you earn, more tax credit you keep” becomes a bit broader. Until 2024, only work-related income mattered for reducing the general tax credit. From 2025, your total reported income across all boxes counts toward that tapering. If you have significant savings, investment returns, or take dividends from your own BV, these now make your general tax credit shrink sooner,  even if your box 1 profit hasn’t climbed. 

For most sole proprietors and micro-business owners, this may not make headlines, but it makes a difference when you look at cash flow. Imagine you ran a year with modest profit but also drew a dividend distribution or had a strong return on savings. Under the old system, your general tax credit would shrug off those other income sources; under the new one, they count together and can reduce your tax credit more quickly. The result is a higher net tax bill or a smaller refund when the Belastingdienst settles up. 

This change doesn’t increase the headline tax rates or introduce a new levy. The general tax credit itself will still max out at around €3,068 in 2025 for those under AOW age,  lower than in 2024, but more importantly, the threshold where it begins to vanish now considers all income together. That means reaching that threshold with part profit and part investment income hits your tax credit just as hard as reaching it with profit alone. 

The practical takeaway for a busy entrepreneur is straightforward: don’t treat your tax credit as a static given tied only to your profit. When you estimate your tax liability or file a provisional assessment (voorlopige aanslag), build the picture from your total expected income, profit, dividends, and investment returns,  not just your business earnings. Updating that picture early in the year makes the end-of-year settlement less of a surprise.

This shift is not a crisis; it’s a nudge toward seeing your entire financial picture together rather than in silos. Adjust your mental model of taxable income, and you’ll avoid the small squeeze on liquidity that comes from assuming a bigger credit than you’ll ultimately keep.

When Your Verzamelinkomen Finally Matters: A Small-Business Reality Check on the 2025 Tax Credit Change
Linda Pavan February 23, 2026
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