Kathimerini English

New ENFIA cuts seen next May

Finance Ministry foresees the possibilit­y of slashing the property tax by up to 10 percent in 2020

- BY NIKOS ROUSSANOGL­OU

The amount of additional revenues the government projects it will collect from the inclusion of new areas in the objective values system will determine the size of the new Single Property Tax (ENFIA) reductions planned for 2020.

The Finance Ministry’s plans in this second ENFIA cut in as many years mainly concern small and medium-sized properties, mostly located in areas where objective values – the property rates used for tax purposes – are low compared to market prices.

ENFIA was 22 percent lower on average this year than in 2018: Small properties with an objective value of up to 60,000 euros enjoyed a 30 percent ENFIA cut, while larger ones (over 1 million euros) saw a 10 percent reduction.

Other properties were subject to a reduction ranging from 20 to 26 percent.

Finance Minister Christos Staikouras stated yesterday that the further reduction of ENFIA in 2020 will depend on whether the inclusion of new areas in the objective values system creates the fiscal leeway. The answer to this question is expected next May.

“It is possible that there will be some additional leeway for households that pay a high amount in taxation in May,” the minister said, adding that the reductions will not come to more than 10 percent, in addition to this year’s cuts.

It is estimated that an additional 400-500 million euros of revenues will enter the state coffers next year due to the inclusion of some 7,000 additional areas in the system, as well as the adjustment of the existing values of all properties in an attempt to bring them closer to market rates. Part of that is seen leading to the easing of the supplement­ary property tax that concerns large properties, which fits in with Staikouras’ comment about “households that pay a high amount in taxation.”

The ministry is also considerin­g reducing the taxation on inheritanc­es and parental concession­s, by raising the tax-free threshold that currently stands at 150,000 euros.

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