Citat:
Nej, villaägarna har rätt och slemmet fel.Måste erkänna att jag hade fel.
Får skylla på källan, villaägarnas undersökning rörande fastighetsskatter.
https://www.villaagarna.se/Global/Dokument/Utredningar/2011/Internationell%20j%C3%A4mf%C3%B6relse%20av%20fasti ghetsskatter.pdf
Kontrollerade för säkerhets skull med min tyske bekant i branschen och han verifierade att dina uppgifter är riktiga.
Tack för att du grävde fram de korrekta uppgifterna slemhog.
Får skylla på källan, villaägarnas undersökning rörande fastighetsskatter.
https://www.villaagarna.se/Global/Dokument/Utredningar/2011/Internationell%20j%C3%A4mf%C3%B6relse%20av%20fasti ghetsskatter.pdf
Kontrollerade för säkerhets skull med min tyske bekant i branschen och han verifierade att dina uppgifter är riktiga.
Tack för att du grävde fram de korrekta uppgifterna slemhog.
Här kan man se en tråd där tyskar säger hur det är för privatbostäder. https://www.toytowngermany.com/forum/topic/196372-property-tax-in-germany/
Här är en beskrivning från tråden:
Citat:
432 EUR blir något i stil med 3800 SEK/år. Dvs hälften av vad vi utsätts för i Sverige.
Annual Grundsteuer is calculated as the assessed value of the property (the "Einheitswert") on January 1st 1964 (!) multiplied by the "Grundsteuermesszahl" (2.6 ‰ for a single family house up to €38,346.89 Euro (75.000 DM) value, thereafter 3.5 ‰, 3.1 ‰ for double occupancy houses and 3.5 ‰ for everything else), multiplied by the "Hebesatze" - a multplicator determined by the local council.
Key to the calculation is the "Einheitswert" - which as it represents the notional value 46 years ago is way under the commercial value. As a very, very rough guide, and depending on the location, house prices have increased by a factor of 5 since then, so a €200,000 house now would be notionally valued at €40,000 for the purposes of Grundsteuer.
A local council migt determine a typical Hebesatz of 350%, so the calculation for a double occupancy house valued (in 1964!) at €40,000 would be:
40,000 x (3.1 / 1000) x (350 / 100) = €434 per year.
If you think this is cheap you have to ask what this tax contributes to. The answer is "not much" as the local councils reel in most of their income from a cut of income tax and locally generated business taxes.
Key to the calculation is the "Einheitswert" - which as it represents the notional value 46 years ago is way under the commercial value. As a very, very rough guide, and depending on the location, house prices have increased by a factor of 5 since then, so a €200,000 house now would be notionally valued at €40,000 for the purposes of Grundsteuer.
A local council migt determine a typical Hebesatz of 350%, so the calculation for a double occupancy house valued (in 1964!) at €40,000 would be:
40,000 x (3.1 / 1000) x (350 / 100) = €434 per year.
If you think this is cheap you have to ask what this tax contributes to. The answer is "not much" as the local councils reel in most of their income from a cut of income tax and locally generated business taxes.