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€100,000 EU VAT Franchise for Small Business in Luxembourg

Since 1 January 2025, small businesses in Luxembourg can sell into other EU countries without charging local VAT — as long as their EU-wide annual turnover stays below €100,000 AND they respect the national SME threshold of each destination country. This is the new cross-border SME VAT franchise (régime de franchise transfrontalier).


For sales outside the EU (USA, Dubai, UK, Switzerland, etc.), a completely different set of rules applies — usually more favourable, and not affected by this scheme.


30-second rule of thumb


  • Your clients are outside the EU (USA, UK, Switzerland, Dubai, etc.)? Don't worry about EU VAT. For B2B services, the place of supply is the client's country — no Luxembourg VAT to charge. Goods exports are zero-rated. Just invoice net with a note about the place of supply.
  • Your clients are only in Luxembourg? The new cross-border rules don't concern you. Use Luxembourg's own €50,000 SME franchise (with 10% tolerance = €55,000) for local sales, or register for normal VAT above that.
  • You sell into other EU countries? Two numbers to keep an eye on:
  • €100,000 — your total annual turnover across all EU Member States combined (current year plus prior year). Go above this, and you lose the EU cross-border franchise entirely.
  • Each destination country's national threshold. The lowest in the EU is Portugal at €15,000/year; most are in the €20,000–€25,000 range. Check the threshold for each country where you sell.


When to check: at a minimum, review your prior-year totals and your year-to-date per country when you plan the year — and once a quarter thereafter (quarterly reports to the AED are mandatory once you've opted in). If your sales to a single EU country are approaching €15,000–€25,000, check that country's threshold before your next invoice.


Where you sell

VAT regime

Inside Luxembourg

Luxembourg rules: €50,000 SME franchise (10% tolerance) or normal VAT (17%)

Other EU countries

EU cross-border SME franchise — if EU-wide turnover ≤ €100,000 and destination country's threshold is respected

Non-EU countries (USA, UK, Switzerland, Dubai, etc.)

Place-of-supply rules: for most B2B services, no Luxembourg VAT at all; goods exports zero-rated


Legal basis: Directive (EU) 2020/285, transposed by the Loi du 20 décembre 2024 (Mémorial A 574) — art. 57bis Loi TVA (national franchise), art. 57quater Loi TVA (outbound cross-border franchise for LU-established businesses). Art. 57ter covers the inbound case (EU-established businesses using LU's franchise) and is outside the scope of this article.


What changed on 1 January 2025


Before 2025: if you were a Luxembourg freelancer using LU's national SME franchise (under €50,000 turnover, no VAT on invoices), and you made even one sale to a German or French consumer, the destination country could require you to register for VAT there immediately. The LU franchise did not follow you across borders.


Since 1 January 2025: the EU introduced a cross-border SME franchise that extends the benefit of small-business VAT exemption into other Member States. If you qualify, you can sell B2C into Germany, France, Belgium, etc., without charging VAT in those countries and without registering there.


The two thresholds — both must be respected


To use the cross-border franchise, you must stay below two thresholds at the same time:


1. The EU-wide €100,000 ceiling


Your total annual turnover across all EU Member States (including Luxembourg) must not exceed €100,000 — looking at both the current calendar year and the prior calendar year.


2. The destination country's national SME threshold


Each Member State sets its own national SME threshold. You must also stay below that threshold in each country where you sell.


Both thresholds work together. If your EU-wide turnover is €80,000 (under €100k), but you sold €30,000 into Germany, you've exceeded Germany's €25,000 prior-year threshold. You lose the franchise in Germany only, not the whole scheme. You keep it in other countries where you're still under their threshold.


Luxembourg's own national franchise is separate


Don't confuse the two schemes:


  • Luxembourg national SME franchise (art. 57bis Loi TVA) — for sales inside Luxembourg. Threshold: €50,000, with a 10% tolerance (€55,000). Separate opt-in.
  • EU cross-border SME franchise (since 2025) — for sales into other EU countries. EU-wide ceiling €100,000 plus destination country's own threshold. Separate opt-in.


You can use both at the same time. A LU freelancer with €30k of local sales and €40k of sales into Germany/France can be exempt from VAT in Luxembourg (under €50k domestic) and exempt in Germany/France (under €100k EU-wide and under each national threshold).


How to opt in from Luxembourg


  1. Log in to MyGuichet LU (authenticated, with LuxTrust or Luxembourg eID).
  2. File a prior notification (notification préalable) with the AED, listing the Member States where you plan to use the franchise.
  3. The AED issues you a special VAT identifier ending in the suffix "EX" (for example, something of the form LU12345678EX). This EX number confirms your cross-border franchise status.
  4. File quarterly reports through MyGuichet LU, within one month of the end of each quarter, showing your turnover in Luxembourg and in each EU Member State. Your exact filing landscape depends on which regimes you use:
  • National-only franchise (LU-sited sales only, no cross-border election): no periodic VAT returns — you file an annual simplified declaration before 1 March via eCDF.
  • Cross-border franchise (this article): prior notification + quarterly EX reports via MyGuichet LU.
  • Mixed regimes (part franchise, part normal VAT): standard VAT returns, with franchise turnover reported in box 481.
  1. You can opt out at any time by filing an exclusion request with the AED.


Quarterly reports are mandatory. Missing them can cost you the franchise. Set a calendar reminder: end of March → report due by end of April; end of June → end of July; and so on.


Franchise or normal VAT registration?


Being under a threshold does not automatically mean the franchise is the right choice. Opting into the franchise (LU national or EU cross-border) is a trade-off:


  • ✅ No output VAT to charge or declare on franchised sales
  • ✅ Simpler admin — no standard VAT returns on those operations
  • No input VAT recovery on your LU business costs — office rent, software subscriptions, equipment, accountant fees, co-working, professional services


The franchise usually wins if your business is pure services with minimal overhead — solo coach, writer, translator working from home.


Normal VAT registration usually wins if:


  • You have significant input VAT costs (office, equipment, software, advertising, professional services)
  • Your output VAT would be €0 anyway — for example, B2B services to non-EU clients, or exports of goods. In that case the franchise adds nothing and blocks your input VAT recovery
  • You expect to grow through the thresholds soon anyway — easier to set up once than switch regimes


Over a full year, franchise vs normal is a cash-and-admin choice, not a "pay less VAT" choice. The output VAT you don't charge is also VAT your B2B customers aren't reclaiming further down the chain.


When you exceed a threshold


If you exceed the €100,000 EU-wide ceiling


  • The exemption ceases the day after the ceiling is exceeded.
  • You must notify the AED within 15 working days.
  • From that point on, standard VAT rules apply in each country where you sell. You may need to register for VAT in those countries (or use the One Stop Shop (OSS) scheme for B2C distance sales).


If you exceed a destination country's national threshold


  • You lose the exemption in that country only.
  • You keep the franchise in other countries where you're still under their national threshold and under the €100k EU ceiling.
  • Under Directive 2020/285, a default tolerance of 10% applies: if your in-country turnover exceeds the national threshold by no more than 10%, you can continue to benefit from the franchise until the end of the calendar year. Each Member State may extend this tolerance up to 25% at its option. Luxembourg applies the 10% default; other countries vary.
  • Note: the €100,000 figure is the EU-wide cross-border ceiling, not a per-country cap. Breaching €100,000 EU-wide ends the franchise everywhere (see above).


What counts as "EU sales" — and what doesn't


Only sales where the place of supply (for VAT purposes) is in another Member State count toward the €100,000 ceiling and the destination country's threshold. Sales outside the EU are a different story.


Selling outside the EU: USA, Dubai, UK, Switzerland


For sales to countries outside the EU, the cross-border SME franchise does not apply — and usually doesn't need to, because the place-of-supply rules often mean no EU VAT is due in the first place.


After Brexit (1 January 2021), the UK is treated as non-EU for VAT purposes. Switzerland was never in the EU VAT system. USA, Dubai (UAE), and all other non-EU countries follow the same place-of-supply logic.


B2B services to non-EU clients (consulting, IT, design, translation, etc.)


Under the general rule (art. 17 Loi TVA, EU art. 44), the place of supply is the client's country. So:


  • No Luxembourg VAT is due.
  • You issue your invoice net of VAT.
  • Add a note on the invoice: "VAT not applicable — place of supply outside EU / prestation située hors champ d'application de la TVA luxembourgeoise."
  • The client handles any local tax obligations in their own country.


This means a Luxembourg IT consultant invoicing a US company has €0 LU VAT to charge or declare on those sales.


B2C services to non-EU consumers


More nuanced:


  • General rule (art. 18 Loi TVA): place of supply = supplier (Luxembourg) → LU VAT applies.
  • Exception for intellectual and intangible services (art. 19 Loi TVA, EU art. 59): for specific services supplied to non-taxable persons outside the EU, place of supply = customer's country → no LU VAT.


The art. 19 list includes:


  • Consulting, legal, accounting, engineering services
  • Advertising
  • Data processing, provision of information
  • Licensing of copyrights, patents, trademarks
  • Financial and insurance services
  • Provision of personnel
  • Rental of movable tangible assets (except means of transport)
  • Electronically supplied services (software, SaaS, online content)


If your service to a non-EU consumer falls in this list — no LU VAT. If it doesn't — LU VAT applies (unless you're exempt under a different scheme).


Telecoms, broadcasting, and electronically supplied services to non-EU B2C consumers follow their own place-of-supply rules (use and enjoyment, OSS). Electronic services are in the list above because they overlap; telecoms and broadcasting are treated separately and are not part of the art. 19 "intellectual services" list.


Goods exported to non-EU countries


Exports of goods are zero-rated (0% VAT) under art. 43 Loi TVA, with export proof required (customs declaration / EX-A document). You charge €0 VAT, but the sale is still a "Luxembourg taxable operation" that sits in your VAT return at 0%.


Switzerland — watch for their local threshold


Switzerland has its own VAT system. Foreign businesses must register for Swiss VAT once their Swiss-located turnover is reasonably expected to reach CHF 100,000 within the next 12 months. Foreign businesses without a Swiss establishment must also appoint a Swiss fiscal representative (Steuervertreter) for registration. This is separate from anything on the Luxembourg side.


How non-EU turnover affects your Luxembourg thresholds


This is the question that catches people off guard. Even if non-EU sales don't trigger EU VAT, they may still count toward Luxembourg's domestic thresholds.


Luxembourg threshold

Does non-EU turnover count?

€50,000 SME franchise (art. 57bis Loi TVA)

Exports of goods count — they are LU-sited zero-rated supplies under art. 43. B2B services to non-EU clients do not count — they are outside LU VAT scope (place of supply is the client's country)

€100,000 accounting threshold (simple cash-basis ledger vs double-entry)

Yes — all turnover counts, regardless of destination

€500,000 cash-basis VAT regime (optional opt-in)

Yes — all turnover counts, regardless of destination


So a freelancer with €200k USA turnover and €0 EU turnover:


  • EU cross-border franchise: not relevant (no EU sales)
  • LU national franchise (€50k): technically eligible (the €200k of out-of-scope B2B services doesn't count toward the €50k), but not the right choice here — with €0 output VAT on her sales anyway, the franchise only blocks her input VAT recovery. Normal VAT registration wins (see the section above on franchise vs normal)
  • Double-entry bookkeeping: mandatory (turnover is over €100k)
  • Cash-basis VAT regime: available (turnover under €500k)
  • LU VAT registration: normal regime recommended — lets her reclaim input VAT on LU business costs (office, software, equipment) while her output VAT stays at €0


Worked examples


Example 1 — Designer selling to German consumers


Anna is a freelance web designer in Luxembourg. She earns €15,000 from LU clients and €10,000 from German consumers.


  • EU-wide turnover: €25,000 → under €100,000 ✅
  • Sales to Germany: €10,000 → under Germany's €25,000 prior-year threshold ✅
  • She opts into the EU franchise, gets an EX number, files quarterly reports.
  • No German VAT charged, no German VAT registration needed. She can also use the LU €50k franchise for her LU sales.


Example 2 — E-commerce seller, growing fast


Marc sells handmade products across the EU via his online shop. Year-end turnover: Luxembourg €8,000, Germany €30,000, France €40,000, Belgium €20,000.


  • EU-wide turnover: €98,000 → under €100,000 ✅ (just barely)
  • Germany: €30,000 → over Germany's €25,000 prior-year threshold ❌
  • He loses the franchise in Germany only — must register for German VAT on those sales (or use OSS). He keeps the franchise in France and Belgium (still under their thresholds).


Germany's regime is stricter than Luxembourg's. German Kleinunternehmer status requires both prior-year turnover ≤ €25,000 and current-year turnover ≤ €100,000. Breaching the €100,000 current-year ceiling triggers immediate loss of franchise status — no tolerance margin, unlike LU's 10%.


Example 3 — LU freelancer with 100% USA turnover


Sofia is an IT consultant in Luxembourg. Her only client is a US company. Annual revenue: €200,000.


  • EU cross-border franchise: not relevant (no EU sales).
  • The €200,000 is outside EU VAT scope (B2B service, place of supply = US). No LU VAT to charge or declare.
  • LU accounting: must keep double-entry books (over €100k).
  • LU income tax: progressive personal income tax on the €200k profit (same as any sole proprietor).
  • Invoice wording: "VAT not applicable — place of supply outside EU."
  • LU CCSS: contributions still due on the full net profit.


Example 4 — Franchise vs normal: same turnover, different answer


Emma and Léa both freelance from Luxembourg. Same turnover: €35,000 from LU clients + €10,000 from German clients = €45,000 total. Both are under the LU national franchise threshold (€50,000) and under the EU cross-border ceiling (€100,000 EU-wide, Germany's €25,000 prior-year threshold respected). Both are eligible for both franchises.


Emma writes and translates from home. Her LU business costs are about €1,000/year (home internet, software subscriptions, a few books).


  • Franchise costs her ~€170 of input VAT she would otherwise reclaim (€1,000 × 17%)
  • But it saves her quarterly VAT returns and the admin of charging 17% VAT on every invoice
  • Franchise wins — simpler admin, minimal input VAT given up


Léa runs a small design studio. Her LU costs are about €15,000/year — co-working fees, design software (Adobe, Figma), equipment (laptop, tablet, 5K monitor), accountant.


  • Franchise would cost her ~€2,550 of unrecoverable input VAT (€15,000 × 17%) every year
  • That's real money out of her pocket
  • Normal VAT registration wins — she reclaims €2,550/year of input VAT and accepts the quarterly-return overhead


Same turnover, different answer. The deciding factor was input VAT on LU business costs, not output turnover.


Quick reference — national SME thresholds (2025/2026)


Thresholds shift frequently. Always verify the current figure on ec.europa.eu/national-vat-rules before acting.


Country

Threshold (2025/2026)

Luxembourg

€50,000 (10% tolerance → €55,000)

Germany

€25,000 (prior year) / €100,000 (current year)

France

€85,000 goods / €37,500 services

Belgium

€25,000

Netherlands

€20,000

Austria

€55,000 (gross, from 1 Jan 2025)

Spain

No threshold — mandatory registration

Italy

€85,000 (regime forfettario)

Portugal

€15,000

Ireland

€85,000 goods / €42,500 services


Quick reference


Question

Answer

When did the EU cross-border SME franchise start?

1 January 2025

What's the EU-wide turnover ceiling?

€100,000 (current + prior year)

Does the LU €50k franchise still exist?

Yes — separate scheme for LU-sited sales

Can I use both schemes at once?

Yes

How do I opt in for cross-border?

Prior notification via MyGuichet LU; AED issues an EX number

How often do I report?

Quarterly, within 1 month of quarter end

What happens if I exceed €100k EU-wide?

Exemption ceases the day after. Notify AED within 15 working days

What happens if I exceed a destination country's threshold?

Lose the franchise in that country only

Do sales to USA/UK/Switzerland count toward €100k?

No — the scheme is EU-only

Do non-EU B2B services owe LU VAT?

No — place of supply is the client's country

Do non-EU goods exports owe LU VAT?

No — zero-rated, but export proof required

Does non-EU turnover count toward the €100k LU accounting threshold?

Yes — all turnover counts regardless of destination




The world needs more people who solve problems for a living. Bravo — keep showing up.
🙌💜 Your BravoLisa Team


This article is for general information purposes only and does not constitute professional tax, legal, or accounting advice. Every situation is different — consult a qualified professional (tax adviser, accountant, or lawyer) for advice specific to your circumstances. BravoLisa does not accept liability for decisions made based on this information.


Last updated: April 2026. Rates and thresholds may change — always verify with the relevant authorities for the most current figures.

Updated on: 21/04/2026

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