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What is income from business operations?

A business operation according to § 15 EStG exists if you engage in an activity independently (i.e. on your own account and responsibility), sustainably (i.e. not a one-off action) and with the intention of making a profit (i.e. not a hobby) and participate in general economic transactions (i.e. appear externally). However, these conditions apply equally to freelance work according to § 18 EStG.

Businesses include:

  • Craft and industrial businesses,
  • Trading businesses,
  • Brokerage activities (e.g. insurance agents, brokers or commercial agents),
  • Catering businesses,
  • Service companies.
  • Corporations such as public limited companies (AG) and limited liability companies (GmbH) are businesses by virtue of their legal form (§ 2 para. 2 GewStG).

Income from business operations also includes:

  • Profit shares from participation in a partnership (oHG, KG or commercial GbR).
  • Income from the sale of a business, part of a business or a share in a business.
  • Gains from the sale of a share in a corporation if this amounts to at least 1% of the share capital (§ 17 EStG). This also applies to private investors. Since 2009, the partial income procedure applies, i.e. 60% of the capital gain is taxable and 40% is tax-free (§ 3 No. 40 letter c EStG). For shares acquired before 2009, the half-income procedure with its half taxation still applies.
  • Income from the sale of more than 3 properties within 5 years. In this case, the tax office assumes commercial property trading, regardless of the 10-year period.
  • Income from the rental of holiday homes if the type of rental is comparable to a commercial accommodation business. Otherwise, it is "income from renting and leasing".
  • Professional carers according to §§ 1896 ff. BGB have not earned income from business operations since 2010, contrary to previous opinion, but from "other self-employed work" according to § 18 para. 1 no. 3 EStG (BFH rulings of 15.6.2010, BStBl. 2010 II p. 906 and 909).

What is income from business operations?



Who is required to complete Form G (Income from Business Operations)?

A business as defined in Section 15 of the Income Tax Act exists if you engage in an activity independently (i.e., on your own account and responsibility), on a sustainable basis (i.e., not a one-off action), with the intention of making a profit (i.e., not a hobby), and participate in general economic transactions (i.e., appear externally). However, these conditions also apply in the same way to freelance work as per Section 18 of the Income Tax Act (H 15.6 EStR).

Businesses include

  • Craft and industrial enterprises,
  • Trading businesses,
  • Brokerage activities (e.g., insurance agents, brokers, or commercial agents),
  • Catering businesses,
  • Service companies.
  • Corporations such as public limited companies (AG) and limited liability companies (GmbH) are businesses by virtue of their legal form (Section 2 (2) GewStG).

Income from business also includes

  • Profit shares from participation in a partnership (oHG, KG, or commercial GbR).
  • Income from the sale of a business, part of a business, or a share in a business (Section 16 of the Income Tax Act).
  • Gains from the sale of a share in a corporation if this amounts to at least 1% of the share capital (Section 17 of the Income Tax Act). This also applies to private investors. Since 2009, the partial income procedure applies, i.e., 60% of the capital gain is taxable and 40% is tax-free (Section 3 No. 40 letter c of the Income Tax Act). For shares acquired before 2009, the half-income procedure with its half taxation still applies.
    For a shareholding of less than 1% of the share capital, the capital gain has been fully taxable as capital income since 2009, regardless of the holding period, and is subject to the withholding tax of 25%. However, this only applies to shares acquired from 2009 onwards (Section 20 (2) No. 1 of the Income Tax Act). For acquisitions before 2009, the previous legal situation remains, according to which a capital gain is tax-free after a holding period of 12 months. Distributions are subject to withholding tax in both cases from 2009 onwards.
  • Income from the sale of more than 3 properties within 5 years. In this case, the tax office assumes commercial property trading, regardless of the 10-year period. For the sale of up to three properties, the capital gains are usually only taxable within the so-called speculation period of 10 years, as "other income".
  • Income from the rental of holiday homes if the type of rental is comparable to a commercial accommodation business. Otherwise, it is "income from renting and leasing".
  • Professional guardians according to Sections 1896 ff. BGB have not generated income from business since 2010, contrary to previous opinion, but from "other self-employed work" according to Section 18 (1) No. 3 of the Income Tax Act (BFH rulings of 15.6.2010, BStBl. 2010 II p. 906 and 909).

Who is required to complete Form G (Income from Business Operations)?



What is a net income method?

With the income surplus calculation according to § 4 para. 3 EStG, you can easily determine your business profit. For this purpose, operating income and expenses are recorded and compared according to the cash basis principle. In this simple form of accounting, provisions are not taken into account.

Another advantage is that the income surplus calculation does not require the maintenance of inventory accounts or a stocktake.

If you determine your profit using the income surplus calculation, the surplus of your income over your operating expenses is the profit that is declared for taxation in the tax return.

What is a net income method?



Am I required to submit Form EÜR (net income method)?

The "income surplus calculation - EÜR form" standardises the income surplus calculation.

In the EÜR, you must provide detailed information about your income and expenses.

Until 2016, you were only required to submit this form if your business income exceeded 17,500 Euro and the profit was not determined through accounting (genuine bookkeeping). However, since the 2017 tax year, the simplification rule has been abolished, which allowed a non-formal income surplus calculation to be submitted instead of the formal "EÜR form" if business income was less than 17,500 Euro. Now, all taxpayers who determine their profit using the income surplus calculation are generally required to complete a standardised "EÜR form" and also submit it electronically to the tax authorities, just like the income tax return.

The previous statutory hardship rule still applies: To avoid "unreasonable hardship", the tax office may allow the tax return to be submitted to the tax office in paper form using the officially prescribed form (§ 25 para. 4 sentence 2 EStG; § 13a para. 3 EStG; § 18 para. 3 sentence 3 UStG; § 14a sentence 2 GewStG). In addition to the individual legal regulations, the Fiscal Code contains a general hardship regulation (§ 150 para. 8 AO): The tax office can waive electronic data transmission if it is economically or personally unreasonable for the taxpayer.

This is particularly the case if the taxpayer does not have the necessary technical equipment and creating the technical means for remote data transmission of the officially prescribed data set would only be possible with considerable financial effort, or if the taxpayer is not or only partially able to use the remote data transmission options due to their individual knowledge and skills. However, the tax authorities very rarely grant exceptions!

Check all your EÜR data for plausibility and compare them with data from other entrepreneurs if possible. If your details deviate significantly from the usual ones, the tax office may be prompted to conduct an individual audit.

 

 

Tipp

If you wish to submit your tax return and especially your profit calculation for freelance or business income in paper form, you must submit a "hardship application under § 5b para. 2 sentence 2 EStG in conjunction with § 150 para. 8 AO" to the tax office, provide sufficient justification, and refer to the current rulings.

Important: According to the BFH, the hardship application may only refer to the respective assessment period (BFH ruling of 16.6.2020, VIII R 29/17). This means the application must be submitted anew for each year. It must not state "I request exemption from the assessment period ...", but only "I request exemption for the assessment period ...".

Am I required to submit Form EÜR (net income method)?



When can I determine the profit using the net income method?

In the net income method according to § 4 para. 3 EStG, business income is compared with business expenses, and the result is the profit or loss.  

Traders and farmers can currently determine their profit using the net income method if

  • the annual turnover does not exceed 600,000 Euro and
  • the annual profit does not exceed 60,000 Euro in the calendar year or financial year.

Freelancers, such as lawyers, notaries, tax consultants, doctors, journalists, artists, etc., and other self-employed persons can always use the net income method for their profit calculation - regardless of a turnover and profit limit. They are generally not required to keep accounts, but can do so voluntarily.

Merchants within the meaning of §§ 1 ff. in conjunction with § 238 HGB are always obliged to keep accounts - regardless of a turnover or profit limit. This accounting obligation also applies to tax law (§ 140 AO). The regulation applies to merchants who operate a commercial business, as well as entrepreneurs whose business requires a commercial organisation due to its nature and scope.

When can I determine the profit using the net income method?



Is it possible to choose the net income method retrospectively?

Taxpayers who are not required to keep accounts and do not voluntarily keep books and prepare financial statements have the right to choose between the business asset comparison under section 4 (1) EStG and the cash basis accounting under section 4 (3) EStG:

  • A taxpayer not required to keep accounts has - according to previous opinion - effectively exercised their right to determine profits through inventory comparison under section 4 (1) EStG only when they prepare an opening balance sheet, set up commercial bookkeeping, and make a financial statement based on inventories.
  • If, on the other hand, the taxpayer has only recorded business income and expenses, they have exercised their right to determine profits through cash basis accounting under section 4 (3) EStG based on this actual practice.

According to the new opinion, the entrepreneur can also exercise the right after the end of the year, in principle indefinitely until the tax assessment becomes final. If the entrepreneur then prepares an annual financial statement, they only decide on profit determination through accounting at that point - and not already with the establishment of bookkeeping at the beginning of the financial year (BFH ruling of 19.3.2009, BStBl. 2009 II p. 659).

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However, the right is restricted by certain conditions (section 4 (3) sentence 1 EStG). For example, the choice of cash basis accounting is no longer possible after the financial statement has been prepared. Similarly, the choice of profit determination through inventory comparison is excluded if the taxpayer has not prepared an opening balance sheet and set up commercial bookkeeping promptly at the beginning of the profit determination period. The choice between the types of profit determination may also be excluded if the taxpayer is bound by a choice made for a previous financial year.

Note: This interpretation also serves the simplification purpose of cash basis accounting. The taxpayer can opt for cash basis accounting to avoid preparing the financial statement, even if they have already set up bookkeeping. For the tax office, it is only important that it actually receives the cash basis accounting after the choice has been made.

Is it possible to choose the net income method retrospectively?



When must I declare my profit from business operations separately?

You must make a separate income assessment if a different tax office from your local tax office is responsible for this income. This is the case, for example, if you operate your business at a location other than your place of residence.

If you are involved in a joint venture or partnership, a separate and uniform assessment is also carried out.

Your local tax office will be informed of the amount of income attributable to you. You must therefore always provide the relevant tax office and the tax number under which this income is assessed.

If you do not (yet) know the exact amount of the tax assessment, enter "0.00" or the estimated amount in the relevant field and explain this in the cover letter to your tax office.

When must I declare my profit from business operations separately?



What is included in capital gains?

Income from business operations also includes the profit from the sale of an entire business, a part of a business (branch, subsidiary), or a share in a partnership. The termination of a business is also considered a sale. Shares in a company that are created when a business, part of a business, or a share in a partnership is contributed to a company as an asset in exchange for shares in the company at below market value are also included (§ 21 UmwStG).

If you sell or terminate your business or share in a partnership, you can take advantage of two important tax benefits:

  • Tax allowance for sale: The profit from the sale is tax-free up to 45.000 Euro. However, this amount is reduced if the profit from the sale exceeds 136.000 Euro, by the amount exceeding this limit. Therefore, the tax allowance is no longer available if the profit from the sale is 181.000 Euro or more (§ 16 Abs. 4 EStG).
  • Reduced tax rate: The remaining profit from the sale, after deduction of the allowance, is eligible for the one-fifth rule. Upon request, it can also be taxed at a reduced rate, namely 56% of the average tax rate and at least 14% (§ 34 Abs. 3 EStG).

The tax allowance for sale and the reduced tax rate are only granted under certain conditions:

  • You must be at least 55 years old or permanently incapacitated for work in the sense of social security law.
  • You can only claim these benefits once in your lifetime: the tax allowance for sale from 1996, the reduced tax rate from 2001.
  • You must apply for the benefits.

If the business is sold before the age of 55, without being permanently incapacitated for work, only the one-fifth rule applies. However, this rule does not result in any tax savings if current income is already taxed at the top rate.

When selling a share in a partnership, you are also entitled to the full tax allowance for sale, not just a proportionate amount. However, if you sell only part of your share in a partnership, the profit from the sale is considered current income, and neither the tax allowance for sale nor the reduced tax rate or the one-fifth rule apply (§ 18 Abs. 3 i.V.m. § 16 Abs. 1 Satz 2 EStG).

Proof of incapacity for work

To prove permanent incapacity for work, a notice from the pension insurance provider or a medical certificate is usually sufficient. This can also be done by a private insurance company if their conditions meet a certain threshold for incapacity for work. However, it has been established that there are other ways to prove permanent incapacity for work (BFH ruling of 14.12.2022, X R 10/21).

What is included in capital gains?



Who qualifies as a joint entrepreneur?

A joint partner is someone who, together with at least one other partner, is the owner, tenant, and/or beneficiary of a business.

This means you are in a position to make economic decisions only together with your business partner(s) and to decide on the company's profit share. Such a partnership must take the form of a partnership for which the legislator provides three specific types:

  • Civil Law Partnership (GbR)
  • General Partnership (OHG)
  • Limited Partnership (KG)

The type of partnership determines the extent to which joint partners participate in the profit and how the company is to be treated for tax purposes. In the tax return, you specify the type of business you operate or lease as a joint partner in the form of a partnership. Possible entries could be: "craft business", "estate agent", "restaurant", etc. In addition to this information, you must also enter the tax number of each business and the respective tax office in the tax return.

The result of the respective profit calculation is entered in Form G for traders or in Form S for freelancers and other self-employed persons.

Who qualifies as a joint entrepreneur?



What is the half-income / partial income procedure?

The half-income procedure was replaced on 1 January 2009 by the partial income procedure.

Under the half-income procedure, income from shares in companies (shares, GmbH shares, cooperative shares) is only 50% taxable. Advertising costs related to this can also only be deducted by half. If such shares are part of business assets, the income from them - after deducting half of the expenses - is to be taxed as income from business operations.

If your income from business operations (as a sole trader, from a partnership, according to separate determination, from a group) includes income for which the half-income procedure applies, enter this amount here as a total. Only the half taxable partial amount!

Under the partial income procedure, income and capital gains from shares in companies (shares, GmbH shares, cooperative shares) are 60% taxable. In return, only 60% of the expenses are deductible as advertising costs. So if you hold shares in companies as business assets, you must separately declare dividends and profit distributions received, which are included in your income from business operations or self-employment and are only 60% taxable, in Form G or Form S.

What is the half-income / partial income procedure?



Is there also an obligation to submit the EÜR form electronically for secondary business income?

For self-employed individuals, tax returns in paper form are no longer accepted. This also applies to private households with photovoltaic systems and individuals with commercial secondary income of more than 410 Euro, such as part-time winegrowers. The tax offices consistently reject tax returns submitted in paper form.

This means: If there is no hardship case, a tax return submitted in paper form will be considered as not submitted. A hardship case applies if: The purchase of the necessary technical equipment with a PC and internet connection is only possible with considerable financial effort, or the knowledge and personal skills to use it are not or only partially available.

In this case, late fees may apply.

Note: Employees and pensioners who are not obliged to submit an electronic tax return and receive expense allowances for their voluntary work up to the amount of the volunteer allowance of 840 Euro or the trainer allowance of 3.000 Euro per year may, in our opinion, still use the paper forms for the tax return. However, the tax offices are increasingly handling this more restrictively.

Is there also an obligation to submit the EÜR form electronically for secondary business income?



Is there an obligation to submit the EÜR electronically even if the profit is small?

The Rhineland-Palatinate Tax Court has ruled that taxpayers with income from profits are required to submit their income tax return electronically to the tax office, even if they earn only minor profits from part-time work. The electronic form is mandatory if the profit exceeds 410 EUR (Rhineland-Palatinate Tax Court, 15.7.2015, 1 K 2204/13).

The case: The claimant is self-employed part-time as a photographer, author, and diving instructor. The tax office first informed him in 2011 that he was required to submit his income tax return electronically due to this self-employment. The claimant argued that the profits from his self-employed work would only be around 500 Euro per year in the future. He also fundamentally opposed the transmission of personal data via the internet, as he had already had relevant experiences with internet misuse. Even with internet banking, absolute security could not be guaranteed.

According to the tax court, the Income Tax Act requires the electronic form if the profit exceeds 410 Euro. This form was not unreasonable for the claimant. The residual risk of a hacker attack on the stored or transmitted data, remaining after all technical security options have been exhausted, must be accepted in view of the state interest in administrative simplification and cost savings.

Absolute confidentiality of data cannot be guaranteed anyway, as data stored "analogue" in paper form could also be stolen, e.g. in a burglary at home or – as reported in the media on 13.6.2015 – in burglaries into bank mailboxes. Electronic tax returns are also required for VAT, and the Federal Fiscal Court has already ruled that this is constitutional despite the "NSA affair".

 

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Currently, the Münster Tax Court has ruled that a balance sheet may also be submitted to the tax office in paper form if the creation of the technology for data transmission would be financially too costly (judgment of 28.1.2021, 5 K 436/20 AO).

However, the Federal Fiscal Court has ruled that a financial expense of 40.54 Euro for the required electronic transmission of the balance sheet and the profit and loss account in the officially prescribed data format is also (economically) reasonable for a "micro-enterprise" (Federal Fiscal Court judgment of 21.04.2021, XI R 29/20).

Note: Employees and pensioners who are not required to submit an electronic tax return and receive expense allowances for their voluntary work up to the amount of the volunteer allowance of 840 Euro or the trainer allowance of 3.000 Euro per year may, in our opinion, continue to use the paper forms for the tax return. However, the tax offices are increasingly handling this more restrictively.

Is there an obligation to submit the EÜR electronically even if the profit is small?



Photovoltaics: Operating and selling the system are business income

Even before 2022, the tax authorities allowed concessions for operators of small photovoltaic systems, but only for systems up to 10 kWp: Upon written application by the taxpayer, it could be assumed that a system was not operated with the intention of making a profit ("hobby option"). Result: It was permitted to forgo the preparation and submission of an income statement, and profits no longer had to be taxed.

Since 1 January 2022, photovoltaic systems on single-family homes (including roofs of garages and carports as well as other outbuildings) up to 30 kWp have been legally exempt from tax.

But not only systems on single-family homes are favoured:

  • Systems installed on buildings not used for residential purposes (e.g. commercial property, garage courtyard) are also exempt from tax. The limit here is also 30 kWp.
  • For systems on multi-family houses and mixed-use buildings, the limit is 15 kWp per residential or commercial unit.
  • In addition, photovoltaic systems on buildings predominantly used for business purposes are favoured up to 15 kWp per residential/business unit.
  • A maximum of 100 kWp per taxpayer or partnership is exempt from tax.

The tax exemption applies regardless of the date the photovoltaic system was commissioned for income and withdrawals generated since 1 January 2022.

The simplification rule from 2022 is structured differently from the previous hobby option: Taxation is now compulsorily waived and not just as part of an option. A "hobby application" is therefore no longer relevant. This is regulated in § 3 No. 72 EStG in the version of the Annual Tax Act 2022.

Photovoltaics: Operating and selling the system are business income



Is a home office deductible for managing the photovoltaic system?

Since 1 January 2022, photovoltaic systems on single-family homes (including roofs of garages and carports as well as other outbuildings) up to 30 kWp have been legally exempt from tax.

But not only systems on single-family homes are favoured:

  • Systems installed on buildings not used for residential purposes (e.g. commercial property, garage courtyard) are also exempt from tax. The limit here is also 30 kWp.
  • For systems on multi-family homes and mixed-use buildings, the limit is 15 kWp per residential or commercial unit.
  • In addition, photovoltaic systems on buildings predominantly used for business purposes are favoured up to 15 kWp per residential/commercial unit.
  • A maximum of 100 kWp per taxpayer or partnership is exempt from tax.

The tax exemption applies regardless of the date the photovoltaic system was commissioned for income and withdrawals generated since 1 January 2022.

Expenses may not be deducted as business expenses or advertising costs if they are directly economically related to tax-free income. This is regulated in § 3c para. 1 EStG. This also means that operating expenses directly economically related to the (possibly future) operation of tax-exempt photovoltaic systems are not deductible. This also applies to any costs of a home office in connection with the management of the photovoltaic system.

Is a home office deductible for managing the photovoltaic system?

Field help

Tax-free share of partial income

Enter here tax-free income that is subject to the partial income method.

60% of the income and capital gains from investments in corporations (e.g. stocks, shares in limited liability companies) are taxable, as are 60% of the associated income-related expenses. The partial income system applies instead of the withholding tax for significant investments (e.g. business assets or significant private investments).

Shareholdings in business assets: Dividends and other distributions (60% taxable) must be declared in Form G or S. The tax-free share is 40% (sect. 3 no. 40 of the Income Tax Act (EStG)).

Income

Enter the profit or loss from your full-time or part-time self-employment in accordance with your separately prepared net income method (EÜR) or balance sheet. Detailed information about income and expenses is required in the Form EÜR.

Please mark losses with a minus sign ("-").

For each self-employed activity, a balance sheet or Form EÜR must be submitted electronically.

Federal state (Bundesland)

Indicate here in which federal state the relevant tax office is located.

Which tax office is responsible for you depends on your place of residence or company headquarters. In Germany, there are clear rules governing jurisdiction:

  • Private individuals: The tax office in the district where your main residence is located is in charge.
  • Companies: In this case, the tax office in the district of which the company's registered office or permanent establishment is located is in charge.
  • Communities: If you own shares in a community, you should contact the tax office responsible for the registered office of this community.

Important: It is not possible to select the relevant tax office without selecting the federal state.

Tax reference number

Enter here the tax number under which the company or community is registered.

Enter the tax number assigned by the tax office, not the VAT identification number (according to sect. 27a of the Value Added Tax Act (UStG)).

If you have several tax numbers, enter here the tax number of the business or company.

Tax office

Select here the relevant tax office.

The tax office responsible for you depends on your place of residence or company headquarters. In Germany, there are clear rules governing jurisdiction:

  • Private individuals: The tax office in the district where your main residence is located is in charge.
  • Companies: In this case, the tax office in the district of which the company's registered office or permanent establishment is located is in charge.
  • Communities: If you own shares in a community, you should contact the tax office responsible for the registered office of this community.

The selection list used by SteuerGo is based on the official directory of the Federal Central Tax Office, which lists all current tax offices.

In brackets, you will also find the four-digit Federal Finance Office number (BUFA number). The last two or three digits of the BUFA number also form the first numeric block of your tax number (this varies according to your federal state).

Information about the net income method (EÜR)

If you have already created the Form EÜR (net income method) with another programme and submitted it electronically, select "The EÜR has already been created".

If you want to create the form EÜR with SteuerGo, select "The EÜR should be created using form-based entries".

Note: If you do not fulfil your obligation to submit the "Form EÜR", the tax office can impose a penalty payment. However, a late surcharge may not be imposed because the "Form EÜR" is not considered part of the tax return (Regional Tax Office Rhineland (OFD Rheinland) from 21.02.2006, S 2500-1000-St 1).

Were tax-free reorganisation gains obtained?

Select "yes" if you have received tax-free restructuring gains in accordance with § 3a EStG.

If necessary, please contact a local tax advisor for advice.

What is this about?

Restructuring gains occur when a company's debts are partially or fully waived to prevent insolvency. These gains are tax-free under certain conditions according to § 3a EStG. This means that the proceeds from the debt waiver are not subject to income tax if the company's restructuring is the priority and all conditions are met.

What does "tax-free restructuring gain" mean?

Tax-free restructuring gains are profits resulting from a creditor waiving a claim to avert impending insolvency. For these gains to remain tax-free, the company must be in a financial crisis, and restructuring must be the priority. The tax exemption under § 3a EStG can be applied if the tax office has confirmed the need and ability for restructuring.

When should you provide information?
  • If debts were partially or fully waived for you as part of a company restructuring.
  • If this debt waiver was intended to avert insolvency and economically stabilise the company.
Where can you find the information?

The necessary details on the amount and type of restructuring gains can be found in the restructuring agreements or the tax office's confirmation of tax-free treatment under § 3a EStG.

Was there any foreign income that should be taxed at a lower rate in Germany (pursuant to sect. 11 of the Foreign Tax Law (AStG))?

Select "yes" if your foreign income under section 11 of the AStG is to be partially taxed in Germany to avoid double taxation.

If necessary, please contact a local tax advisor for advice.

What is this about?

If you have passive income such as interest, dividends, royalties, rental income, or profit shares abroad taxed at a lower rate than in Germany, the tax office may check whether this income is taxed in Germany. The reduction amount under section 11 of the AStG can partially avoid double taxation.

What does the reduction amount under section 11 of the AStG mean?

The reduction amount decreases the taxable portion of your foreign income in Germany, as it has already been taxed abroad. Only the difference to the German tax rate is taxed.

When should you provide information here?
  • If you have earned income abroad that counts as "passive income" in Germany and was taxed at a low rate.
  • If this income is to be taxed in Germany but has already been taxed abroad.
Where can I get the information?

You can find the necessary information on the amount and type of your foreign income in the certificates or tax documents of the country where the income was earned.

Business identification number

Enter the economic identification number (Wirtschafts-Identifikationsnummer) that was assigned to you by the Federal Central Tax Office (BZSt) for your business.

The structure of the business identification number is as follows:

  • It always begins with the prefix "DE".
  • This is followed by 9 digits, whereby the ninth digit is always the check digit.
  • After that, a hyphen is placed.
  • A 5-digit distinguishing number follows at the end.

Example of a correct W-IdNr.: DE232637828-12345

The W-IdNr. is issued to all economically active persons and organisations, in particular:

  • Commercial companies (legal entities such as limited liability companies or stock corporations),
  • Individual companies and partnerships (e.g. general partnerships, limited partnerships),
  • Personal associations (e.g. companies, owners' associations).

The W-IdNr. adds to the already existing identification numbers such as the tax number and the personal tax identification number (IdNr.), which continue to remain in effect. It serves to simplify administration and to improve the exchange of data between authorities. The tax number must continue to be used on all tax forms.

Further information about the W-IdNr. can be found on the website of the Federal Central Tax Office (BZSt): www.bzst.de/widnr.

Was Corona aid or the like paid out in 2025 and it has already been declared in previous years?

Were immediate assistance (Corona-Soforthilfen), interim aid (Überbrückungshilfen) and / or comparable subsidies paid out in the year 2025 that have already been declared in the balance sheet of the previous business year 2024 (as a receivable / other asset) and in the Form Corona Aid (Corona-Hilfen)?

Was Corona aid or the like repaid in 2025 and it was declared in previous years?

Were immediate assistance (Corona-Soforthilfen), interim aid (Überbrückungshilfen) and / or comparable subsidies paid back in the year 2025 that have already been declared in the balance sheet of the previous business year 2024 (as provision / liability) and in the Form Corona Aid (Corona-Hilfen)?

Did you receive or repay Corona aid or the like for your business in 2025?

If you have received or paid back Corona aid, interim aid or similar subsidies for your business, select "yes".

Total immediate assistance (Soforthilfe) received and repaid

Enter the total amount of Corona aid you have received in this field. This includes, in particular, all one-off payments and aid that you have received as a solo self-employed person or freelancer to overcome pandemic-related financial difficulties.

... extraordinary income included therein

Enter here profits (extraordinary income) to be taxed at a reduced rate which are favoured by the one-fifth regulation (sect. 34 of the Income Tax Act (EStG)). This may be the case by:

  • Compensation to replace lost or missing income.
  • Compensation for the termination or non-execution of an occupation, for the termination of profit participation or entitlement to profit participation.
  • Indemnities as compensation payments to sales agents in accordance with sect. 89b of the Commercial Code (HGB).
  • User fees and interest within the meaning of sect. 24, no. 3 of the Income Tax Act (EStG), if they are paid subsequently for a period of more than 3 years.
  • Remuneration for several years' work.

You do not need to apply for the consideration of the fifth regulation. The tax office automatically checks whether the normal taxation or the reduced taxation under the fifth regulation is more favourable for you.

... including positive income within the meaning of sect. 2, para. 4 of the Reorganisation Tax Act (UmwStG)

Enter the positive income as defined in sect. 2, para. 4 of the Reorganisation Tax Act (UmwStG).

Business income

Select the type of commercial income that you have generated:

  1. Individual entrepreneur
    Select "Individual entrepreneur" if you run your business alone.
  2. Business premises outside the place of residence
    If your business is in a different district from your place of residence, the tax office responsible for your business will determine your profit separately. In this case, you must submit a "Declaration for separate and uniform determination" to the tax office responsible for your business and select "according to separate determination".
  3. Co-entrepreneur
    Select "Co-entrepreneur" if you are the owner, tenant or beneficiary of a business together with at least one partner.
  4. Co-entrepreneur of minor importance
    This applies, for example, to a jointly operated photovoltaic system on one's own house. Since 2021, a separate declaration is no longer necessary here.
Profits are determined according to

Select here how the profit calculation for your business is carried out:

  • Net income method (sect. 4 para. 3 of the Income Tax Act (EStG)): Profit is calculated by comparing income and expenses. This method is particularly suitable for smaller companies.
  • Balance sheet (sect. 4 para. 1 or 5 of the Income Tax Act (EStG)): With this more complex method, an inventory must be carried out and a Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Calculation prepared at the end of the year.

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.

Income according to the net income method (EÜR)
The income according to the net income method (EÜR) is shown here.
 
Click on the button "Anlage EÜR" to edit the net income method.
Tax-free share of partial income

The tax-free part of the partial income according to the net income method is shown here.

Click on the button "Anlage EÜR" to edit the net income method.

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Click on the button "Anlage EÜR" to edit the net income method (EÜR).

Have you closed your business and had a loss on disposal?

Select "yes" if you have closed your business and incurred a capital loss.

If necessary, please consult a local tax advisor for advice.

What is this about?

If you have closed your business and incurred a loss from the sale of business assets (e.g. machinery, property), this is referred to as a capital loss. This loss can be claimed for tax purposes under certain conditions.

What is a capital loss?

If you close your business and sell business assets – such as machinery, vehicles, or property – for less than their book value, this is called a capital loss. The book value is the value these assets have in the accounts at the time of sale.

When should you provide information here?
  • If you have closed your business.
  • If a loss was incurred from the sale of business assets.
Where can you find the information?

You can find the amount of the capital loss in your profit calculation or the sales documents created when the business was closed.

Have you closed the business and made a capital gain?

Select "yes" if you have ceased your business operations and made a capital gain.

If necessary, please contact a local tax advisor for advice.

What is this about?

If you have closed your business and sold business assets, a capital gain may have arisen. This capital gain is recorded in Form G, regardless of whether it is partially tax-free or fully taxable.

What is a capital gain?

If you close your business and sell business assets – such as machinery, vehicles, or property – for more than their book value, this is referred to as a capital gain. The book value is the value these assets have in the accounts at the time of sale.

Under certain conditions, you can also apply an allowance according to § 16 para. 4 EStG to this capital gain to reduce your tax burden. This allowance is mainly aimed at older entrepreneurs who are closing their business after many years.

When should you provide information here?
  • If you have closed your business.
  • If you have made a profit from the sale of business assets.
Where can you find the information?

You can find the amount of the capital gain in your sales documents or, if necessary, in the profit calculation you prepared when closing the business.

Note: If you have any questions, please contact a tax advisor for individual advice.

Have you sold shares in corporations?

Select "yes" if you have sold shares in a corporation and made a capital gain or capital loss.

Please contact a local tax advisor for advice if necessary.

What is this about?

If you have sold shares in a corporation (e.g. GmbH or AG), a capital gain or loss may have occurred. Gains and losses from the sale of such shares are recorded separately in the tax return under § 17 EStG if you have held at least 1% of the company's capital in the last five years.

What are capital gains and losses under § 17 EStG?

A capital gain occurs if the sale proceeds of your shares in the corporation exceed the purchase costs. Conversely, a capital loss occurs if the sale proceeds are below the purchase costs. Gains and losses from such sales are subject to special tax regulations.

When should you provide information here?
  • If you have sold shares in a corporation.
  • If the sale resulted in a capital gain or loss.
Where can you find the information?

The amount of the capital gain or loss can be found in your sales documents or, if necessary, in a profit calculation documenting the sale of the shares in the corporation.

Business tax assessment amount (Gewerbesteuermessbetrag)

Enter here the business tax assessment amount.

Business tax (Gewerbeertragsteuer, abbreviation: GewSt) is collected as a business income tax on the objective earning power of a business.

Based on the company's business income, a tax assessment amount, known as the business tax assessment amount, is determined. This amount is determined by the tax office by issuing a business tax assessment notice (basic notice for business tax).

Business tax is the most important source of income for municipalities in Germany.

Business tax to be paid for 2025

Enter here the business tax to be paid which you paid in the tax year 2025.

The business tax to be paid consists of

  • the advance business tax payments and
  • the final payment after submission of the business tax return.