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Greece has positioned itself as one of Europe’s most attractive jurisdictions for mobile capital and internationally mobile individuals, and the Greece non‑dom regime sits at the centre of that strategy. Under the non‑dom programme, a qualifying individual pays a fixed annual levy of €100,000 on all foreign‑sourced income, regardless of its quantum, while a parallel 7% flat‑tax scheme offers foreign retirees a dramatically reduced rate on overseas pension receipts. With Greece tax changes for 2026 now in force through Law 5246/2025, adopted by the Hellenic Parliament on 7 November 2025 and effective from 1 January 2026, both regimes operate within a materially reformed personal‑income‑tax landscape that every adviser must understand before recommending an election.
This guide is designed for high‑net‑worth individuals, family offices, private‑client advisers and in‑house tax counsel who need to make concrete decisions in 2026: whether to elect, when to file, and how to manage the ongoing compliance and exit‑tax risks that come with Greek tax residency. It draws on the official guidance published by the Greek Ministry of Finance and the Independent Authority for Public Revenue (AADE), the text of Law 5246/2025 as summarised by leading advisory firms, and practical experience advising inbound HNWIs and family offices in Greece.
The key takeaways at a glance:
Before engaging with the technical detail, advisers should run clients through five threshold questions:
| Client Profile | Non‑Dom Likely Suitable? | 7% Pensioner Likely Suitable? |
|---|---|---|
| Entrepreneur with substantial foreign investment income, no Greek pension | Yes, strong candidate | No, not pension‑dependent |
| Retired professional receiving UK/EU state and private pensions | Possible, but cost may exceed benefit | Yes, primary candidate |
| Family office principal with mixed active and passive income | Yes, subject to PE analysis | Only if pension income dominates |
Law 5246/2025, officially titled “Tax Reform for Demographics and the Middle Class, Support for Society and the Economy”, is the most significant overhaul of Greek personal taxation since the Income Tax Code was consolidated. The law was adopted by the Hellenic Parliament on 7 November 2025, published in the Government Gazette shortly thereafter, and the great majority of its provisions took effect on 1 January 2026.
The reformed personal income‑tax scale applies to employment, pension and self‑employment income. Under Law 5246/2025, most brackets were reduced by two percentage points compared with the pre‑2026 scale, and a new 39 % band was introduced for income between €40,000 and €60,000. The top marginal rate is now 44 % on income exceeding €60,000. Additionally, workers under the age of 25 benefit from a full 0 % rate on the first €20,000 of income.
Beyond income tax, Law 5246/2025 introduced a 50 % ENFIA (Unified Property Ownership Tax) reduction for qualifying individuals, extended the VAT suspension on transfers of newly built residences until 31 December 2026, and recalibrated several deductions and credits targeting families with children.
| Date | Measure | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| 7 November 2025 | Hellenic Parliament adopts Law 5246/2025 | Review text and identify applicable provisions |
| November 2025 | Publication in Government Gazette | Confirm effective dates for each article |
| 1 January 2026 | Majority of income‑tax and ENFIA provisions take effect | Update payroll, withholding tables and client models |
| 31 December 2026 | Extended VAT suspension on newly built residences expires | Plan property acquisitions before expiry |
For non‑dom and pensioner regime participants, the practical effect of Law 5246/2025 is that any Greek‑source income they earn, which falls outside the flat‑tax shelter, is now taxed on the revised progressive scale. Industry observers expect that the lower marginal rates will make partial Greek employment or local rental income marginally more efficient for non‑doms who also generate domestic revenue streams.
The non‑dom regime was introduced to attract high‑net‑worth individuals to transfer their tax residence to Greece. The core proposition is straightforward: in exchange for paying a flat annual tax of €100,000, a qualifying individual’s entire foreign‑sourced income, dividends, interest, capital gains, rental income, business profits earned abroad, is covered by that single payment. There is no obligation to declare the underlying foreign income on the Greek tax return, and no additional Greek tax is levied on it regardless of quantum.
| Item | Rule | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Annual flat tax | €100,000 per principal applicant | Paid annually; covers all foreign‑sourced income |
| Family member supplement | €20,000 per additional family member | Applies to spouse and dependants included in the election |
| Greek‑source income | Taxed under the standard progressive scale | From 2026, rates range from 9 % to 44 % under Law 5246/2025 |
| Duration | Available for up to 15 tax years from election | Subject to ongoing compliance and residency maintenance |
| Foreign‑income disclosure | No obligation to declare foreign income in Greece | Simplifies reporting but does not eliminate home‑country obligations |
Not every individual who wishes to relocate qualifies. The core eligibility requirements, as set out in the Income Tax Code and amplified by AADE guidance, include the following:
The election process follows a structured path. Advisers should plan for a minimum lead time of 90 days before the intended date of Greek tax residency:
A critical point that is sometimes overlooked: the non‑dom flat tax covers only foreign‑sourced income. Any income arising in Greece, rent from Greek property, employment income for services performed in Greece, profits from a Greek PE, is taxed under the standard progressive scale (now 9 %–44 % under Law 5246/2025). Social‑security contributions may also apply to Greek employment or self‑employment income, and non‑dom participants are not exempt from the solidarity surcharge on Greek‑source earnings where it remains in force.
From a withholding perspective, Greek‑source dividends, interest and royalties paid to a non‑dom resident are subject to the standard domestic withholding rates. The flat tax does not displace these withholdings; it simply means the individual is not additionally taxed on foreign equivalents.
Example 1, Entrepreneur with foreign dividends: A UK‑resident entrepreneur with €2 million in annual dividend income from non‑Greek holding companies relocates to Athens. Under the Greece non‑dom regime, the entire foreign dividend stream is covered by the €100,000 flat fee. The entrepreneur also purchases a rental property in Athens generating €30,000 per year; that rental income is taxed on the progressive scale at an effective rate of approximately 15 %. Total Greek tax liability: roughly €104,500, compared with a potential UK liability many times that figure.
Example 2, Family with UK pensions and investment income: A married couple, both receiving UK private pensions totalling €80,000 per year, also holds a portfolio producing €500,000 in foreign dividends and gains. The non‑dom election (€100,000 plus €20,000 for the spouse = €120,000) covers all foreign income including the pensions. By contrast, the 7% pensioner regime would tax the pensions at €5,600 but leave the investment income subject to the standard scale. For this couple, the non‑dom election is clearly preferable because the investment income dominates.
Greece’s 7% flat‑tax regime for foreign pensioners was introduced to attract retirees, particularly from EU member states and countries with double‑tax‑treaty networks, by offering a low, predictable tax rate on overseas pension income. The regime is codified alongside the non‑dom provisions and operates subject to conditions that advisers must verify carefully.
To be eligible for the 7% pensioner regime, an individual must satisfy three principal conditions:
The regime is available for a maximum of 15 tax years from the year of election. It terminates automatically if the individual ceases to be a Greek tax resident, fails to file the annual return, or if the qualifying conditions are no longer met. There is no renewal or extension beyond the 15‑year cap.
The 7% rate applies to foreign‑sourced pension income, which includes state pensions, occupational pensions, and private pension annuities. Lump‑sum pension withdrawals, such as the UK pension commencement lump sum (PCLS), may also fall within the regime’s scope, though the treatment of lump sums has been the subject of interpretive debate. Industry observers expect the AADE to clarify this point through administrative guidance, but advisers should approach lump‑sum planning with caution until a definitive ruling is published.
Any non‑pension income earned by a 7% regime participant, for example, rental income from Greek property or interest from Greek bank accounts, is taxed under the standard progressive scale. The 7% rate does not shelter investment income, capital gains or business profits.
The comparison depends entirely on the ratio of pension income to other foreign income:
The application process mirrors the non‑dom route in several respects:
Both the non‑dom and pensioner regimes require the individual to become a Greek tax resident. Tax residency in Greece is determined by the Greek Income Tax Code, interpreted by reference to AADE administrative guidance and, where applicable, the tie‑breaker rules in bilateral double‑tax treaties.
A common misconception is that holding a Golden Visa automatically confers Greek tax residency. It does not. The Golden Visa grants a residence permit, a right to live in Greece, but tax residency depends on whether the individual actually meets the substantive tests below. Conversely, an individual can become a Greek tax resident without a Golden Visa if the factual criteria are met. Advisers should never conflate immigration status with tax status.
| Test | Evidence Required | Risk If Weak |
|---|---|---|
| 183‑day physical presence | Travel records, passport stamps, utility bills, school enrolment | Failure to meet day count may invalidate non‑dom/pensioner election |
| Centre of vital interests | Location of family home, spouse/children’s residence, social ties, bank accounts | If centre is disputed, dual‑residency and treaty tie‑breaker analysis required |
| Habitual abode | Pattern of stays over multiple years | Sporadic presence undermines residency claim even if 183 days met in one year |
Family offices relocating to Greece must satisfy substance requirements to avoid creating a taxable PE for the underlying investment structures. The likely practical effect of a poorly structured family office is that both the office entity and the principal become subject to full Greek taxation on profits channelled through Greece. Advisers should verify the following before any relocation:
Participation in the non‑dom or 7% pensioner regime does not eliminate all Greek reporting obligations. All Greek tax residents, including those on flat‑tax regimes, must file an annual income‑tax return. Participants must also comply with foreign‑asset disclosure requirements, beneficial‑ownership registers and, where applicable, FATCA/CRS reporting through their Greek financial institutions.
| Taxpayer Type | Key Reports | Typical Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Non‑dom regime participant | Annual income‑tax return (Greek‑source income); confirmation of flat‑tax election; foreign‑asset statement if required | Generally by 30 June of the following tax year (verify annually) |
| 7% pensioner regime participant | Annual income‑tax return declaring foreign pension at 7 % and any Greek‑source income at standard rates | Generally by 30 June of the following tax year (verify annually) |
| Standard Greek tax resident | Annual return on worldwide income; capital‑gains disclosures; foreign‑asset statements; solidarity surcharge (where applicable) | Generally by 30 June of the following tax year |
Individuals who later leave Greece may trigger exit‑tax provisions on unrealised capital gains in certain asset classes, particularly shareholdings above prescribed thresholds. Anti‑abuse rules also apply: the tax authority may challenge arrangements where the substance of the Greek presence is insufficient or where the election is used primarily to facilitate treaty shopping. Early indications suggest that AADE auditors are paying closer attention to non‑dom participants who maintain minimal physical presence while claiming the flat‑tax benefit.
If the tax authority denies or revokes a non‑dom or pensioner election, the individual may object through the following pathway:
Litigation is advisable primarily where the dispute involves the interpretation of eligibility criteria, the classification of income as Greek‑ or foreign‑sourced, or the application of anti‑abuse rules to complex structures.
| Regime | Eligible Individuals | Key Tax Outcome / Term |
|---|---|---|
| Non‑dom flat‑tax (€100,000 base) | Foreign individuals transferring tax residence to Greece (subject to eligibility rules; family supplement of €20,000 per member) | Fixed annual fee on all foreign income; foreign income not declared in Greece; up to 15 years |
| 7% pensioner regime | Foreign pensioners transferring tax residence from a treaty/cooperation jurisdiction | 7% flat tax on foreign‑sourced pension income; up to 15 tax years; non‑pension income taxed at standard rates |
| Standard Greek tax residency | All Greek tax residents (183 days / centre of vital interests) | Progressive income tax (9 %–44 % under Law 5246/2025 from 2026); worldwide taxation |
Choosing between the Greece non‑dom regime, the 7% pensioner scheme and standard residency is a decision that turns on individual circumstances, the composition of income, family structure, investment plans and long‑term residency intentions. With Law 5246/2025 reshaping the broader Greek tax landscape from 2026, the window for proactive planning is open now. Advisers should begin with a client‑profile assessment against the checklist above, proceed with pre‑move due diligence, and engage experienced Greek tax counsel to navigate the election, compliance and reporting obligations that follow.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Alexandros Karakitis at Karakitis Tax & Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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