Albania: IMF requests amendments to Albanian property tax

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Albania: IMF requests amendments to Albanian property tax

Asllani-Ndreka-Dorina

Dorina Ndreka

Property taxes in Albania are regulated by the law on the local tax system and consist of the building tax and the agricultural land tax. Subject to the property tax are all physical and legal persons, locals or foreigners, who own an immovable property (either agricultural land or a building). Taxpayers are determined based on legal documents that prove the ownership of the property.

Currently, the law defines specific criteria based on which the property tax is calculated in each case. The exploitation of the property is disregarded for purposes of tax calculation.

It is worth noting that Albania collects less than 1% of the country's GDP from property taxes, which is much less when compared with other developed countries, some of which collect 6% of budget revenues from property tax. Based on this, the IMF has asked the Albanian Government to introduce a new property tax in order to increase the budget revenue. This new property tax will become effective by 2017.

Pursuant to obligations undertaken towards the IMF, Albania will have to reform the property tax system in the next two years. Most of the changes will be related to the method under which the tax is calculated and paid. Currently, the level of the building's taxes is determined based on several factors. The first criterion is related to the city or municipality where the building is situated. There are three different zones: the first zone includes Tirana and Durrës while all other cities fall into one of the other two categories, depending on the city's size. In each zone the buildings are divided into three categories: the first one includes residential buildings; the second tax buildings used for commerce, services, and other purposes; and a third category for buildings situated in touristic villages. In rural areas, the property tax level is half of the appropriate level of the lowest building category situated in the centre municipality of the corresponding administrative region. The tax rate for a building varies from 5 ALL per year per square metre in rural areas up to 400 ALL per year per square metre in the capital.

For purposes of calculating tax on agricultural land, the Albanian territory is divided into four different sections based on the city's size. The land in each section is divided into 10 categories, based on which the respective property tax is defined. This tax ranges between 1,400 ALL per ha for each year in the small towns and up to 5,600 ALL per ha per year in the major cities.

Municipal or local councils are the competent authorities that decide on the tax base level applicable which can be 30 percentage points more or less than the prescribed indicative tax rate for the relevant category. For small business' taxpayers the tax rate can range between 30 percentage points below the indicative tax rate and 10 percentage points above the indicative tax rate.

The International Monetary Fund has considered the actual level of immovable property taxes insufficient and has requested from the Republic of Albania to introduced relevant changes. By 2017, new taxes will become applicable. The Albanian authorities will complete the fiscal cadastre for purposes of evaluating the proper tax for each immovable property.

The new tax system will be based on the electronic registration of all types of immovable properties in Albania via the cadastre's register. The register will be detailed and will include not only the owners, but also complete and accurate data of the properties. All the property taxes will be calculated based on the data provided by this register. The reform is expected to provide a final solution for the collection of immovable properties' taxes and to reduce the informality in this important sector of the Albanian economy.

Dorina Ndreka (tirana@eurofast.eu)

Eurofast

Tel: + 355 42 248 548

Website: www.eurofast.eu

more across site & bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The increasing sophistication of India’s taxation system has led to complexity across tax treaty benefits, permanent establishments, transfer pricing and more, say Sanjay Sanghvi and Ujjval Gangwal of Khaitan & Co
Multinationals will continue to shift profits out of Slovakia to EU member states despite pillar two’s implementation, according to the report
The firm’s final report outlined new mandatory staff training designed to enhance ethical conduct; meanwhile former PwC Australia partner Wayne Plummer has been cleared of wrongdoing
Goods and services key to Africa’s tax revenue; electronic exemptions come to Europe; UK private school VAT challenge reaches High Court
The private client practice joining Withers comprises eight lawyers, three paralegals and additional staff members
Overall tax revenues grew by over 10% in 2024 when discounting the 'distorted' Apple payout, the Irish government said
Skatteforvaltningen is being represented by international law firm Hughes Hubbard in its efforts to reclaim monies related to an alleged long-running international fraud
SafeSend automates the ‘last mile’ of the tax return, according to Thomson Reuters; in other news, law firm White & Case has expanded its global tax practice in the US
ITR’s most interesting stories of the year covered ‘landmark’ legal battles, pillar two, AI’s relationship with transfer pricing and more
Chinwe Odimba-Chapman was announced as Michael Bates’ successor; in other news, a report has found a high level of BEPS compliance among OECD jurisdictions
Gift this article