×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Tuesday
09
Dec 2025
weather symbol
Athens 12°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> Economy

How much young people, families with 3+ children, and freelancers will gain from 2026 – Up to €5,000 relief for the middle class

Finance Minister Kyriakos Pierrakakis will announce at 11:00 how the €2.5 billion in benefits announced by the Prime Minister will be distributed

Newsroom September 8 08:03

Middle-class taxpayers will see tax relief of up to €5,000 annually — or even more for families with three, four, or more children — thanks to the new tax cuts unveiled by the Prime Minister at the Thessaloniki International Fair (TIF). Pierrakakis is expected to present the detailed measures today at 11:00.

The cuts focus mainly on direct taxes, with special emphasis on families with children. VAT will also be reduced by 30% in at least 20 Aegean islands. Property owners and income earners will see tax rate reductions of up to 10 points.

Freelancers Among the Big Winners

Freelancers will also benefit from the new measures. For the first time, those with three or more children will receive tax relief for dependents.

Even freelancers taxed under imputed income rules will see their burdens canceled if they have at least three children.

From January 1, 2026, under the new tax scale:

  • Professionals with three children will save €1,300 annually if taxed on €20,000 income, offsetting much of the burden from imputed taxation.
  • Those with four children will enjoy a €20,000 tax-free threshold in 2026 (currently zero).
  • For salaried workers and pensioners, the benefit is even greater, as they keep existing child tax deductions. For example: €27,100 tax-free income for four children, €29,000 for five children, and more than €30,000 for six children.

This means many who were taxed on €10,000–15,000 of imputed income despite declaring zero earnings will now owe no tax at all.

A New Age-Based Tax Scale

For the first time in Greece, income tax will not only depend on earnings but also on age. The Prime Minister announced a new tax scale for young people:

  • All taxpayers under 25 will pay no income tax unless they earn more than €20,000 annually. Students and young workers will no longer face tax or imputed income burdens.
  • Taxpayers aged 26–30 will pay only half the normal tax rate. For this five-year period, income tax and payroll withholding will be reduced by up to 60%. The first €20,000 of income will be taxed at 9% instead of 22%.

Broader Taxpayer Benefits

All taxpayers will gain from additional measures, including:

>Related articles

Copernicus: 2025 is on track to become the second-warmest year ever recorded

See which European country spent the most on OnlyFans in 2025 – and where Greece ranks

Oncology patients’ appointments at PAGNI cancelled due to farmers’ occupation of the airport: The necessary radiopharmaceutical never reached Heraklion

  1. Lower tax rates by 2–5 points:
    • Savings start at €200 for incomes of €20,000, reaching €1,600 for incomes above €60,000.
    • Families with one child save €400–2,000.
    • Families with two children save €600–2,400.
    • Families with three children save €1,300–3,800.
    • Families with four children save €1,800–5,300, with even higher savings for larger families.
  2. 30% reduction in imputed values for cars and homes.
  3. Two-year exemption from imputed income for mothers with a newborn child.
  4. 50% reduction in ENFIA property tax for primary residences in villages.
  5. 30% VAT reduction in 19+ Aegean islands.
  6. 50% reduction in imputed income for professionals in small villages and settlements.

Additional measures include pension increases (half in 2026, full in 2027), new housing policies, wage increases for Armed Forces personnel, one month’s free rent support, and a €250 annual bonus for pensioners, starting October–November 2025 and recurring permanently each year.

Fiscal Cost of the Package

According to the General Accounting Office, the new tax relief package will cost the state €1.25 billion in 2026 (mainly due to reduced payroll withholdings starting in January). The cost will rise to €1.6 billion in 2027, once reduced assessments are issued for professionals’ 2026 incomes.

Overall, the full Mitsotakis package will cost €1.75 billion in 2026, reaching €2.5 billion annually from 2027 onwards, once all measures are fully implemented.

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#economy#greece#middle class
> More Economy

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Jennifer Lopez: Ex-husband launches new attack, accuses her of infidelity with Diddy

December 9, 2025

Copernicus: 2025 is on track to become the second-warmest year ever recorded

December 9, 2025

Zelensky says he is ready for elections

December 9, 2025

See which European country spent the most on OnlyFans in 2025 – and where Greece ranks

December 9, 2025

Tractors on the roads: truths and lies about the farmers’ roadblocks

December 9, 2025

Oncology patients’ appointments at PAGNI cancelled due to farmers’ occupation of the airport: The necessary radiopharmaceutical never reached Heraklion

December 9, 2025

Turkstream’s managing company will move its headquarters to Budapest to circumvent sanctions

December 9, 2025

Outstanding Dublin III cases for the potential return of thousands of migrants from Europe to Greece are being wiped clean – What the agreement provides

December 9, 2025
All News

> Economy

Hatzidakis: Greece is currently one of the strongest economic upheavals in Europe

Greece is recording "the fastest reduction in public debt in the history of the Eurozone", the deputy prime minister said at the Capital Link conference lunch

December 9, 2025

The three women from Chios who are shaking up the shipping industry

December 9, 2025

RockFire project in Laconia on the radar of Metlen and Hellenic Gold

December 9, 2025

AADE opens tax inspectors’ assets after named complaints

December 9, 2025

Traffic fees: Clarifications of the Hellenic Revenue Service that vehicle owners need to know

December 9, 2025
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2025 Πρώτο Θέμα