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Belgium Income Tax Guide (2026)

A complete guide to Belgian personal income tax — tax brackets, deductions, tax-free allowance, expat regime, filing deadlines, and optimisation strategies for residents and international workers.

Belgium income tax guide — brackets, deductions, filing

Belgium has one of the highest personal income tax rates in Europe, but also offers significant deductions, allowances, and a special expat regime that can substantially reduce your effective tax burden. Whether you're a Belgian resident, an international employee, or a self-employed professional, understanding the Belgian income tax system is essential for financial planning. For corporate taxation, see our accounting services and corporate tax rate guide.

Belgian Income Tax Brackets (2026)

Belgium applies progressive tax rates to net taxable income (after social security deductions and allowances):

Annual Taxable IncomeTax RateTax on Band
€0 – €15,82025%max €3,955
€15,820 – €27,92040%max €4,840
€27,920 – €48,32045%max €9,180
Above €48,32050%unlimited

On top of these federal rates, a municipal surcharge (gemeentelijke opcentiemen/centimes additionnels communaux) of 0–9% is applied to the calculated tax. The average is approximately 7%, making the effective marginal rate on high incomes approximately 53.5% (50% × 1.07).

Tax-Free Allowance

Every Belgian taxpayer benefits from a tax-free allowance (belastingvrije som/quotité exemptée d'impôt):

SituationTax-Free Amount (2026, approx.)
Basic allowance (single)€10,570
+ 1 dependent child+€1,850
+ 2 dependent children+€4,760
+ 3 dependent children+€10,670
+ 4 dependent children+€17,270
Disabled taxpayer+€1,850
Spouse/partner with no income+€10,570 (marital quotient)

The tax-free allowance is converted to a tax credit at 25%, meaning it reduces your tax by approximately €2,643 (basic allowance × 25%).

Who Pays Belgian Income Tax?

  • Belgian residents: Taxed on worldwide income (salary, self-employment, rental, investment, pension). Residence is determined by your domicile or centre of economic interests.
  • Non-residents: Taxed only on Belgian-sourced income (Belgian employment income, Belgian real estate income, Belgian company director fees).
  • Expats (special regime): Qualifying inbound taxpayers can exclude up to 30% of gross salary as tax-free allowance (see below).

Income Categories

Belgian income tax applies to four categories of income:

1. Employment Income (Beroepsinkomen)

Salary, bonuses, benefits in kind (company car, housing), stock options, and termination payments. Social security (13.07%) is deducted before income tax calculation. Employers withhold tax monthly (bedrijfsvoorheffing/précompte professionnel). Use our salary calculator to estimate your net pay.

2. Self-Employment Income

Net profit from self-employed activities (revenue minus deductible professional expenses). Self-employed pay social security quarterly (~20.5% of net income). See our self-employed visa guide for immigration aspects.

3. Real Estate Income

Belgian property: taxed on indexed cadastral income × 1.40 (not actual rent). Foreign property: actual rental income minus costs, at progressive rates. Mortgage interest on primary residence may be deductible (regional competence).

4. Investment Income

Dividends: 30% withholding tax (final, no further tax). Interest: 30% withholding (final). Capital gains on shares: generally tax-free for individuals (if "normal management of private assets"). Crypto gains: taxable if speculative; tax-free if normal management.

Key Deductions & Tax Credits

DeductionAmount/RateNotes
Professional expensesActual or flat-rate (max ~€5,520)Employees can choose flat-rate (30% of gross, capped) or actual documented expenses
Pension savingsUp to €1,020 (30% credit) or €1,310 (25% credit)Third-pillar pension contributions
Charitable donationsMin. €40/year, 45% tax reductionTo approved Belgian organisations
Childcare costs€15.70/day per child (under 14)45% tax reduction
Long-term savingsUp to €2,450/year30% tax reduction (life insurance, pension)
Energy investmentsVariesRegional tax credits for insulation, solar panels, heat pumps
Service vouchersRegional benefitTax reduction for dienstencheques/titres-services

Special Expat Tax Regime (BBIB/RSCI)

Since January 1, 2022, Belgium has a formal inbound taxpayer regime for qualifying international employees and company directors:

  • 30% cost allowance — up to 30% of gross remuneration (capped at €90,000/year) treated as tax-free expense reimbursement
  • Qualifying conditions: recruited from abroad or posted to Belgium, minimum gross salary of €75,000/year (before the 30% exclusion), not Belgian tax resident in the 5 years before arrival
  • Duration: maximum 5 years (+ 3-year extension for researchers)
  • Non-resident status option: qualifying expats can elect to be treated as non-residents for income from non-Belgian sources
The expat regime can reduce the effective tax rate from ~50%+ to approximately 35–40% for qualifying individuals. Our tax advisory team assists with applications and ongoing compliance.

Tax Filing

  • Tax year: Calendar year (January 1 – December 31)
  • Filing method: Online via Tax-on-web (recommended) or paper form
  • Deadline (online): Typically mid-July of the following year
  • Deadline (via accountant): Typically late October
  • Assessment notice: SPF Finances issues the assessment (aanslagbiljet) typically within 6–18 months of filing
  • Payment/refund: Due within 2 months of assessment notice

For corporate tax filing, see our corporate tax return guide.

Social Security Contributions

CategoryRateBase
Employees13.07%Gross salary
Employers~25–27%Gross salary
Self-employed~20.5%Net professional income

Social security is deducted before income tax calculation. For payroll processing, our team coordinates with Belgian social secretariats.

Thomas Claes — Senior Legal Advisor at LawSupport

Thomas Claes

Senior Legal Advisor — Tax & Accounting

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Frequently Asked Questions

Belgium uses progressive tax brackets (2026): 25% on income up to €15,820; 40% on €15,820–€27,920; 45% on €27,920–€48,320; 50% on income above €48,320. A tax-free allowance of ~€10,570 applies. Municipal surcharges (0–9%, average ~7%) are added on top.
Paper returns: typically late June. Online (Tax-on-web): typically mid-July. Returns filed via accountant: typically late October. Exact dates are set annually by Royal Decree.
The basic tax-free allowance is approximately €10,570 for 2026. Additional allowances apply for dependent children: ~€1,850 for 1 child, ~€4,760 for 2, ~€10,670 for 3, ~€17,270 for 4.
Belgium has a special tax regime for inbound taxpayers (since 2022). Qualifying expats can receive up to 30% of gross remuneration as tax-free (capped at €90,000/year), significantly reducing effective tax rate.
Key deductions: tax-free allowance, children allowances, mortgage interest (regional), pension savings (up to €1,310), charitable donations (45% credit), childcare costs (€15.70/day), and long-term savings insurance.
Belgian property: taxed on indexed cadastral income × 1.40, not actual rent. Foreign property: actual rental income minus expenses at progressive rates.

Optimise Your Belgian Tax Position

Our tax advisory team helps residents and expats minimise their Belgian income tax burden.

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