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Lohnsteuer kompakt FAQs

 


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When are pensioners required to submit a tax return?

Pensioners are required to submit a tax return if their total income exceeds the annual basic allowance. In 2024, the basic allowance is:

  • 11.784 Euro for single persons
  • 23.568 Euro for married couples
Taxable income:
  • State pension (Anlage R)
  • Private pensions
  • Rental income (Anlage V)
  • Capital income (Anlage KAP)
  • Other income
Taxable portion of the pension:

Not the entire pension is taxable. The taxable portion depends on the year the pension started:

  • For new pensioners in 2024: 83% of the pension is taxable.
  • For pensioners who retired before 2005: 50% of the pension is taxable.

A personal pension allowance is set in the second year of retirement and remains unchanged for life. Pension increases from the third year of retirement are fully taxable.

Example:

Mr Mustermann, who retired in 2005, has an annual pension of 30.000 Euro. His tax-free allowance is 15.000 Euro. As long as his total income does not exceed the basic allowance, he does not have to submit a tax return. However, with a net annual income of 15.000 Euro, a single pensioner would exceed the basic allowance and be required to submit a tax return.

Tip: Pensioners should claim possible income-related expenses to reduce their tax burden. This includes, for example, the income-related expenses allowance of 102 Euro.

When are pensioners required to submit a tax return?



Which income is considered capital income?

With the introduction of the withholding tax, it is generally no longer necessary to submit the KAP form. However, in some cases you must still complete the KAP form:

  • capital gains are not subject to tax deduction (e.g. sale of GmbH shares of less than 1 percent)
  • income from foreign accumulating investment funds
  • income (interest, dividends, etc.) from foreign accounts or deposits
  • interest from loan agreements between private individuals
  • interest on tax refunds
  • surrender of endowment insurance policies (for contracts concluded from 2005)

Note: For certain income, you must also complete the KAP-INV form (for income from investment income not subject to domestic tax deduction) or KAP-BET form (for income from capital assets in the case of shareholdings, if the income and the tax to be credited have been determined uniformly and separately).

Furthermore, the KAP form must be completed in the case of an optional assessment if:

  • a loss carryforward from previous years is to be taken into account or a loss offset of income from capital assets is to be made, or
  • the saver’s allowance has not been fully utilised, or
  • church tax has not been deducted despite church tax liability, or
  • foreign taxes are still to be taken into account, or
  • to check the amount of the capital gains tax deduction.

If you wish to apply for a so-called favourable tax rate check, you must also complete the KAP form. This may allow you to benefit from a lower tax rate with your individual tax rate if it is lower than the withholding tax rate of 25 percent.

 

Losses from worthless shares in the case of pure account write-offs may be offset against income from capital assets, but there is a limit on the amount. Losses can only be offset against income from capital assets up to a maximum of 20,000 Euro. Unused losses are then carried forward to subsequent years. Important: In the case of worthless shares, the bank does not carry out a loss offset. It does not include losses in the loss pot. Losses from worthless shares must therefore be included in the tax return.

Which income is considered capital income?



What information must employees provide?

Income: This section records the information that employees must enter in Form N. This applies to employees, workers, civil servants, and company pensioners. Please enter the data from your income tax statement here.

Expenditure: In the expenditure section, you can claim your work-related expenses. These include, for example, expenses for a home office, travel costs, and training costs.

For married couples, two separate sections for income and expenditure are automatically created.

What information must employees provide?



Am I required to submit a tax return as an employee?

If you are an employee earning income from employment (Form N), your employer deducts income tax, solidarity surcharge, and, if applicable, church tax from your gross salary each month. The taxes are paid directly to the tax office. In theory, everything is settled from a tax perspective, and you do not need to submit a tax return. This also applies to single employees (tax class I) who have not changed jobs during the year.

Mandatory assessment: You must submit a tax return

However, in many cases, the tax authorities suspect that the monthly tax deductions on income from employment have been too low. Many employees are therefore legally obliged to submit a tax return, known as the mandatory assessment.

Submission obligation legally regulated

For this reason, § 46 EStG regulates numerous cases in which employees are obliged to submit a tax return:

  1. You have earned additional income of over 410 Euro during the year that was not subject to wage tax deduction. This includes, for example, fees, pensions, or rental income.
  2. You have received wages from several employers simultaneously during a year.
  3. You have had a tax allowance (e.g. for work-related expenses, special expenses, extraordinary burdens) entered on your income tax card. The allowances are to be reviewed again as part of the tax return. Exception: If it is a disability allowance, a bereavement allowance, or only the number of child allowances, you are not obliged to submit a tax return.
  4. You and your spouse both receive wages and one of you was taxed under tax class V or VI or you both chose the factor procedure with the tax class combination IV/IV.
  5. You have received wage replacement benefits (e.g. parental allowance, short-time work allowance, or unemployment benefit) during the year. These income replacement benefits are subject to the progression clause and can increase the personal tax rate on the remaining income.
  6. You have received a severance payment or remuneration for work over several years from a former employer for which the favourable one-fifth rule was applied.
  7. As divorced or separated parents, you have chosen a different allocation of the training allowance or the disability allowance for the child.
  8. You have received special payments and changed employers in the same year, and your new employer did not take into account the values of the previous employer when calculating income tax.
  9. Your marriage was divorced during the year or your partner died and one of the spouses remarries in the same year.
  10. You have a spouse with limited tax liability who lives in the EU/EEA and is entered on your income tax card.
  11. You have your residence or usual place of abode abroad and have applied for unlimited tax liability in Germany.

Note: From 1 January 2020, numerous mandatory assessment criteria also apply to employees with limited tax liability (§ 50 para. 2 sentence 2 no. 4c EStG, amended by the "Act on Further Tax Promotion of Electric Mobility and Amendment of Other Tax Regulations" of 12 December 2019).

Am I required to submit a tax return as an employee?



Is there an obligation for all non-employees to submit a tax return?

Even if you do not earn income from employment, you may still be required to submit a tax return under certain conditions.

Self-employed individuals, business owners, landlords, and pensioners must submit a tax return if their income exceeds the basic allowance. A tax return is mandatory for everyone if the total income (income minus income-related expenses and/or business expenses) exceeds the following amounts:

 

However, it may also be beneficial in other cases to submit a tax return as a self-employed individual, business owner, landlord, or pensioner. For example, if you wish to claim a loss carryforward, you must submit a tax return for the relevant assessment year.

Since the pension reform in 2005, more and more pensioners have to pay taxes and may need to submit a tax return.

Is there an obligation for all non-employees to submit a tax return?



Who needs to complete Form S for the self-employed?

A self-employed activity is typically carried out by freelancers. A freelancer is someone who works independently and is responsible for their own work, engaging in a specific professional activity or occupation listed in § 18 para. 1 of the Income Tax Act. Freelance professions require an activity that does not necessarily need to be preceded by a university degree. It only needs to be a form of scientific training. This includes self-study or knowledge acquired through professional experience. The knowledge must be equivalent to a university degree.

(1) Freelancers are, on the one hand, individuals who perform a specific activity (§ 18 para. 1 no. 1 of the Income Tax Act), namely a

  • scientific, artistic, literary, teaching or educational activity.

(2) Freelancers are also individuals who practise a specific professional occupation explicitly mentioned in the Income Tax Act (§ 18 para. 1 no. 1 of the Income Tax Act):

  • Medical professions: doctors, dentists, alternative practitioners, dental practitioners, physiotherapists.
  • Legal and business consulting professions: lawyers, notaries, patent attorneys, auditors, tax consultants, business economists, certified accountants, tax agents.
  • Technical and scientific professions: surveyors, engineers, architects, commercial chemists, pilots.
  • Media professions: journalists, photojournalists, interpreters, translators.

(3) Freelancers can also be individuals who practise a similar profession comparable to the listed professional occupations in terms of activity and training. The list of freelance professions in § 18 para. 1 no. 1 of the Income Tax Act is not exhaustive. It is important that the activity is carried out in a leading and independent manner based on personal expertise. This applies, for example, to the following professions:

  • Geriatric nurses, dieticians, occupational therapists, podiatrists, speech therapists, orthoptists, medical pedicurists, state-certified masseurs and therapeutic masseurs, medical bath attendants, paramedics, dental practitioners, midwives, psychological psychotherapists, child and adolescent psychotherapists, IT consultants, business consultants.
  • Software engineering, work as a network or software administrator and supervisor (Federal Fiscal Court rulings of 22.9.2009, VIII R 31/07, VIII R 63/06, VIII R 79/06).

(4) Activities that cannot be classified as freelance work and do not constitute a business operation fall under other self-employed activities. A characteristic here is also personal work performance. However, other self-employed activities are usually carried out occasionally and only exceptionally on a sustainable basis (§ 18 para. 1 no. 3 of the Income Tax Act):

  • Executors, asset managers, supervisory boards, property managers, insolvency administrators, trustees, carers, estate administrators, arbitrators, interviewers for state statistical offices, childminders, legal guardians, etc.

The distinction between business operations and self-employed activity is often difficult, as freelance work usually also involves the intention to earn income. Many activities therefore fall under both the characteristics of freelance work and those of a business. In these cases, the decisive criterion is the intellectual, creative work that is the focus of freelance work.

 

Who needs to complete Form S for the self-employed?


Field help

Were you an employee, civil servant, a pensioner with company pension rights or a retiree?
(Forms N, N-AUS)
Was Partner B an employee, civil servant, pensioner with company pension rights or retiree?
(Forms N, N-AUS)

Select "yes" if you had income from employment.

You should have the following documents on hand for processing:

  • Employment tax statement (Lohnsteuerbescheinigung) for the current employment as an employee or
  • Employment tax statement from pension payments (occupational pension or civil service pension).

You can also enter information in this section if

  • you have received wages for employment abroad (wages according to double taxation agreement (DTA), the decree on employment abroad (ATE) or intergovernmental agreement (ZÜ)). In this case, you will need to enter additional information in the Form N-AUS.
  • You have received wages without tax deduction.
  • You only want to apply for the employee savings bonus (Arbeitnehmer-Sparzulage) as part of the employee's saving scheme (vermögenswirksame Leistungen).
Have you received income from self-employment or freelance work?
(Form S incl. Form EÜR)
Has Partner B received income from self-employment or freelance work?
(Form S incl. Form EÜR)

Select "yes" if you are self-employed and earn income from this occupation.

The income of self-employed persons is the profit or loss from this occupation.

For each self-employed occupation, a balance sheet or a net income method (Einnahmeüberschussrechnung = EÜR) must be submitted electronically.

Exception: Employees and senior citizens who are not required to file an electronic tax return and who receive expense allowances for voluntary work up to the allowance for voluntary work of 840 Euro or the trainer allowance of 3.000 Euro per year may continue to use paper forms, which is often accepted in practice.

The following income in Form S cannot be declared with Lohnsteuer kompakt:

  • Income from partnerships pursuant to sect. 15 of the Income Tax Act (EStG) and
  • Income from venture capital companies.
Did you have income from business or a photovoltaic system?
(Form G incl. Form EÜR)
Did Partner B have income from business or a photovoltaic system?
(Form G incl. Form EÜR)

Select "yes" if you have a business and earn income from it.

The resulting income is the profit or loss from the business.

For each self-employed occupation, a balance sheet or a net income method (Einnahmeüberschussrechnung = EÜR) must be submitted electronically.

Exception: Employees and senior citizens who are not required to file an electronic tax return and who receive expense allowances for voluntary work up to the allowance for voluntary work of 840 Euro or the trainer's allowance of 3.000 Euro per year may continue to use paper forms, which is often accepted in practice.

The following income in Form G cannot be declared with Lohnsteuer kompakt:

  • Income from partnerships according to sect. 15b of the Income Tax Act (tax deferral models),
  • Income from the sale to a REIT-AG and
  • Income from commercial livestock breeding, forward transactions or participations.
Have you earned income from capital assets?
(Forms KAP, KAP-BET or KAP-INV)
Has Partner B earned income from capital assets?
(Forms KAP, KAP-BET or KAP-INV)

Select "yes" if you had income from capital assets.

Note: Most investors do not need to give any details about their capital gains in their tax returns and can do without Form KAP.

However, information about your income from capital investment is required on Form KAP if, for example,

  • The capital gains were not subject to a tax deduction,
  • You wish to have the reason for or the amount of the tax withheld reviewed,
  • You are subject to church tax and have capital gains from which capital gains tax (Kapitalertragsteuer) has been deducted but not church tax.

Form KAP-BET must be completed for income and creditable taxes from investments that are determined separately and uniformly.

Note: Form KAP-BET must only be filled in by investors who have capital gains or creditable taxes from investment in a private company.

Form KAP-INV is intended for the declaration of investment income that is not subject to a domestic tax deduction.

Note: Investors who have investment shares that are held at a foreign bank or investment company must complete Form KAP-INV. Reason: The foreign financial institution does not pay withholding tax to the German tax authorities.

In this case, submit details about all capital gains received. Lohnsteuer kompakt will then automatically apply for the most favourable rate for all capital gains.

Note: If you had shares that have lost their value and have been derecognised from your custody account, the bank does not offset losses. In other words, it does not place losses in the loss pot. This applies even if you only have one custody account through which you carry out all share transactions. It is mandatory to include the losses from shares that have lost their value in your tax return.

Did you have capital gains or rental income?
(Forms KAP, KAP-INV, KAP-BET or Form V)

Select "yes" if in 2024 you had

  • Income from renting and leasing (Form V),
  • Income from capital assets (Form KAP),
  • Income from investments (participations)(Form KAP-BET) or
  • Income from investment income that was not subject to domestic tax deduction (Form KAP-INV).
Did you have income from pensions or pension contracts
(Forms R, R-AUS, R-AV/bAV)?
Did Partner B have income from pensions or pension contracts?
(Annex R, R-AUS, R-AV/bAV)

Select "yes" if you received a pension in 2024.

In the pension income section, declare:

  • Pensions from the German Pension Insurance,
  • Pensions from agricultural pension funds,
  • Pensions from occupational pension schemes,
  • Private pensions (including survivor's pensions, disability pensions) and
  • Retirement benefit contracts (including pension funds, pension schemes, direct insurance)

Both spouses may need to submit their own Form R.

Important: Please enter company pensions, for which you have received a pay slip, in the employment section.

Did you have income from renting and leasing?
(Form V)
Did Partner B have income from renting and leasing?
(Form V)

Select "yes" if you earned income from renting and leasing in 2024.

In the section Renting and Leasing, you can declare income from:

  • a developed property, for example, house rented out, privately-owned flat that is rented out,
  • an owner-occupied house / privately-owned flat, if individual rooms are rented out,
  • all investments, for example, property or joint-heirship,
  • subletting rented rooms,
  • all undeveloped land (e.g. car park), other immovable property (e.g. ships) and tangible assets (e.g. business equipment)
  • as well as from the transfer of rights, for example, leasehold rights, copyrights, gravel exploitation rights.

The income earned is split 50:50 between the two partners by Lohnsteuer kompakt by default in the case of spouses/life partners. However, a separate allocation of income can also be made for each property that is rented out.

Did you have income from sales transactions (e.g. property, cryptocurrencies)?
(Form SO, Part 2)
Did Partner B earn income from sales transactions (e.g. property, cryptocurrencies)?
(Form SO, Part 2)

Select "Yes" if you sold or exchanged anything from your private assets in 2024 and made profits or losses. In the tax return, this is referred to as private sales transactions.

This particularly applies to:

  • Properties or land that you sold within 10 years of purchase. (Note: Owner-occupied properties may be tax-free)
  • Cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, etc., if you sold or exchanged them for other coins or euros within 12 months of purchase
  • Other assets, e.g. gold, art, antiques, classic cars, or gemstones, if you sold them within one year
  • Company shares, e.g. shares in GmbHs or other companies, if a taxable profit was made on the sale
  • Losses incurred from such sales if the purchase and sale were within the specified periods

Important:

  • An exchange is also considered a sale for tax purposes – e.g. Bitcoin for Ethereum or euros.
  • Profits from private sales transactions are tax-free if they are less than 1.000 Euro. For married couples, this allowance applies separately to each person.
  • Even in the case of losses, you must select "Yes" if they are to be considered for tax purposes.
  • If you have inherited or been given something, the original purchase date of the person from whom you received it applies.

Special cases: A taxable sales transaction may exist even without a classic sale, e.g. if:

  • an item was transferred from business assets to private assets,
  • in the event of a business closure or conversion (e.g. GmbH to sole proprietorship),
  • something was sold before it was legally acquired.

If in doubt, please seek tax advice.

Did you have any other income in Germany or abroad?
(Form SO and AUS)

Select "Yes" if you had additional income in 2024 that does not fall under the usual categories such as wages, pensions, capital gains, or rental income.

Other income in Germany

  • Other income, e.g.:
    • Brokerage commissions
    • One-off payments
    • Income from blockchain applications (e.g. mining, staking, airdrops)
    • Recurring payments
    • Maintenance payments
    • Income as a member of parliament
  • Private sales transactions, e.g.:
    • Sale of property or land (within 10 years of purchase)
    • Sale of cryptocurrencies, gold, art, classic cars or other items (within one year of purchase)

Income from abroad

  • for example, rental income, pensions, self-employment or investments, even if they are tax-free in Germany (e.g. under a double taxation agreement) but subject to progression clause.
  • on which taxes were paid abroad that you wish to credit in Germany
Did you have income from abroad?
(Form AUS)
Did Partner B have income from abroad?
(Form AUS)

Select "Yes" if you received income from abroad in 2024 – for example, foreign rental income, income from self-employment, or pensions from abroad.

Such income must be declared in Form AUS – regardless of whether Germany taxes it or not. This applies both to countries with and without double taxation agreements (DTA).

No information is required here if you:

  1. received capital income from abroad. This belongs in the Capital Income section.
  2. received foreign wages. These are recorded exclusively in the Employees section. Additional information is only required if you wish to claim credit for foreign taxes.

The following special cases are currently not supported by Lohnsteuer kompakt:

  • Income subject to flat-rate taxation (sect. 34c para. 5 of the Income Tax Act (EStG))
  • Special remuneration according to sect. 50d para. 10 sentence 5 of the Income Tax Act (EStG)
  • Additional taxation (sect. 7–14 of the Foreign Taxation Act (AStG))
  • Income from family trusts (sect. 15 of the Foreign Taxation Act (AStG))
  • Negative foreign income not tax-free under DTA (sect. 2a para. 1 of the Income Tax Act (EStG))
Stammdaten für Husband

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Were you self-employed, did you run a business or did you operate a photovoltaic system?
(Forms G, S, EÜR)

Select "yes" if in 2024 you had

  • Income from self-employment or freelance work (Form S)
  • Income from a business (Form G) or
  • Income from a photovoltaic system (also Form G)

For each self-employed work and business, a balance sheet or Form EÜR must also be submitted electronically.

Tax-free photovoltaic systems since the 1st of January 2022

Since 1 January 2022, photovoltaic systems on single-family homes up to 30 kWp have been tax-free. This regulation also applies to the roofs of garages, carports and other outbuildings.

But not only single-family homes are privileged:

  • Tax exemption also applies to systems on commercial properties up to 30 kWp.
  • For blocks of flats and mixed-use buildings, the limit is 15 kWp per residential or commercial unit.
  • Photovoltaic systems on buildings used primarily for business purposes are eligible for tax relief up to 15 kWp per unit.

The tax exemption applies to income and withdrawals since 1 January 2022 and is automatic, without the right to choose or apply.

Expenses that are directly related to tax-free income cannot be deducted as business expenses or income-related expenses.

For expenses relating to a year before 2022 but paid in 2022 or later, we recommend submitting Form EÜR and claiming the costs, even if this may lead to disputes with the tax office. If necessary, please contact a tax advisor or tax lawyer in your local area for advice.

Did you have other income from payments, maintenance payments or as a member of parliament?
(Form SO, Part 1)
Did Partner B have other income from payments, maintenance payments or as a member of parliament?
(Form SO, Part 1)

Select "yes" if you had one or more of the following types of income in 2024:

  • Regular payments that are recurring (e.g. private pensions or recurring payments from a contract)
  • Compensation payments to avoid a pension rights adjustment (e.g. in the event of divorce)
  • Regular maintenance payments you received
  • Income from digital currencies/cryptocurrencies (e.g. Bitcoin, Ethereum) – for example, through mining, staking, forging, lending or airdrops
  • One-off income, e.g. a brokerage commission or a fee for a service
  • Remuneration as a member of parliament
  • Losses from certain investments, e.g. from tax deferral models or loss allocation companies (e.g. investments with tax losses)

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