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Germany tightens law on real estate transfer tax

German taxes still create significant hurdles to investing in German real estate. By far, the most significant tax exposure is the German real estate transfer tax (RETT), levied at a tax rate in the range of 3.5% to 6.5% on the purchase price or the value of the property in the case of an asset deal.

Investors have therefore been creative in setting up RETT optimised transactions by using share deals instead of asset deals. In order to avoid RETT, current law requires that at no point in time 95% or more of shares are held by one person or, in case of a partnership, that not more than 95% or more of the interests are transferred to a new shareholder within a period of five years. Tax driven structures do not exceed these thresholds, ie, transfer of shares 94.9%/5.1% to independent parties, while observing the five-year period for partnerships.

German politicians discovered the impact and started to call these structures – albeit legally allowed – abusive. On 9 August 2019 the German government published a draft which aims to set high barriers against these structures. The proposal includes lowering the threshold to 90%, extending the five years to 10 years, and introducing a new rule pursuant to which transfers of a corporation within 10 years to new shareholders triggers RETT.

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