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Tax Tips Every Freelancer Should Know

By Marc DupontPublished on March 5, 20262 min read

Understanding Your Tax Obligations as a European Freelancer

As a freelancer in Europe, your tax obligations depend on where you are tax resident — not necessarily where your clients are located. This distinction is critical and often misunderstood.

Tax residency is typically determined by where you spend more than 183 days per year, where your primary economic interests lie, or where your permanent home is. If you're working across multiple countries, you need expert guidance to avoid accidental double taxation.

Key Tax Strategies for IT Freelancers

1. Optimize your salary structure With an umbrella company like Hightekers, your gross income can be structured to maximize net pay through legal deductions, expense reimbursements, and benefits.

2. Track all business expenses Equipment, software subscriptions, home office costs, professional development, and travel related to client work are all potentially deductible.

3. Understand VAT rules for cross-border services When providing services to clients in other EU countries, the reverse charge mechanism typically applies — meaning you don't charge VAT, but you must still report it correctly.

How Hightekers Handles Tax Compliance for You

One of the biggest advantages of using Hightekers as your umbrella company is that we manage all tax compliance on your behalf. This includes:

  • Monthly payslip preparation and payroll tax filings
  • Social security contributions in your country of employment
  • A385 certificates for cross-border workers
  • Year-end tax optimization review with your dedicated account manager

About the Author

M

Marc Dupont

HR Expert

HR expert with 15 years of experience in international employment and tax optimization.

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