Sono solo curioso di sapere come faresti per capire i costi aggiuntivi di elettricità e usura e così via. Non sono sicuro di cosa devo pensare e come calcolare tutto correttamente e fornire prove. Sembra molto.

    Inoltre non ottengo la detrazione automatica da 750 €. Non è nuovo o vero? La detrazione del lavoro di casa/lavoro remoto non era in cima ai 750 €?

    So The Automatic Tax Deduction For Home Office/Remote Work Goes Away – How Are You Going To Deal With It?
    byu/Cool_Hour inFinland



    di Cool_Hour

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    7 commenti

    1. Majestic-Rock9211 on

      In my opinion it should be the employer that pays to the employee for outsourcing ”production facilities’ – it’s not the tax system that should reimburse it!

    2. AbilityScared5857 on

      Well. First I wait that law to bite, and then I eat the L.

      What else is there to do?

    3. prkl12345 on

      Suck it up, what else can I do ?

      It’s still cheaper to work as much from home as possible compared to commuting to office 70km round-trip every day.

    4. Rusalkat on

      In other countries it is done the way, that you take all the house related running costs: electricity, water, insurance, cleaning, heating, house tax etc. have a map how many sqm your office is of the whole flat and the calculate that part from all the costs. Excel helps.

    5. ThePokeLord on

      The irony in this is that my workplace announced that they are considering to reduce the number of office from next year so that there will be seat only for 50% of people and every day half staff will be in smart working 🥲. Great timing. So I will be forced to work from home and doing it at my own expenses.

    6. Cool_Hour on

      Here’s how far I have got in figuring out the thing: From what I understand, starting in 2025 you can still deduct *actual costs* — things like part of your rent, electricity, internet, maybe some equipment, etc. — but only if you keep receipts and can justify the work use.

      Here’s a rough example I came up with – maybe people can tell me if this seems about right:

      – 6 m2 home office in a 60 m2 apartment → 10% of the space

      – 1000€/month rent → 12000€/year → 10% = 1200€ deductible rent

      – Electricity: 900€/year → 10% = 90€

      – Internet: 30€/month → 360€/year → say 30% used for work → 108€

      – One-time purchase of a chair: 250€

      So total potential deductions would be:  

      **1200€ + 90€ + 108€ + 250€ = 1648€**

      Now here’s the part I’m *not 100% sure about*:

      Apparently there’s an automatic 750€ deduction that everyone with salary income gets. So it seems that you only benefit from any deductions beyond that.

      That would mean:  

      **1648€ – 750€ = 898€** of “real” deductible amount

      And if your tax rate is, say, 25%, your actual tax saving would be:  

      **898€ × 0.25 = 224.5€**

      > (Basically: deductions reduce your *taxable income*, not your taxes directly — so you save a percentage of the deductible amount, depending on your tax rate. It’s like if you made less taxable income.)

      You would not need to hand in the receipts immediately, but have them handy. Receipts in our example would be:

      – transaction receipts from the bank for the rent paid (or rental contract plus bank statements)

      – yearly electricity bill

      – monthly internet bill

      – bill for the chair

      Some open questions:

      – Does this sound about right?

      – Is this how the 750€ works?

      – Anybody know how to enter these details into the system?

      – Are these kinds of estimates okay, or do you need to get much more precise?

      – How do you reason them in the tax return? E.g. is it enough to just say: “the home office is 10% of the living space and is used mainly for work, therefore I deduct those 10%”?

      – If you’re living with a partner, I assume that would reduce the share you can deduct — for example, if you split the rent 50/50, you’d only apply your 10% to your own half of the rent (i.e. 10% of 500€, not 1000€).

      – Is it worth the effort if you’re not deducting that much more than the flat-rate used to be?

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