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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

For every €100 a Greek self-employed makes, €82 go to taxes and contributions

Greeks will work an average of 203 days this year to pay taxes to the state and social insurance contributions, according to research conducted by the Dragoumis Center for Liberal Studies (KEFIM) to raise awareness about tax freedom day – the first day of the year in which a country has theoretically earned enough income to pay its taxes.

In the case of Greece, this day will be on July 23, which means that Greeks will have worked 15 days more than last year, when tax freedom day arrived on July 7. The only two European Union countries in which tax freedom day will arrive after that in Greece are France and Belgium.

Cyprus celebrated its tax freedom day on March 29, while Malta and Ireland did the same on April 18 and 30 respectively. Bulgaria was next on May 18 before Finland on June 22.

KEFIM, which conducted research into the topic for a third straight year, said citizens are working an increasing number of days each year to meet their tax obligations and, compared to 2006, Greeks now work two months more to this end.

Referring to the results of the research, financial analyst and member of KEFIM’s scientific council Miranda Xafa said the “government managed to achieve a primary surplus by tax hikes and not through spending cuts.”

Xafa also said that for every 100 euros a self-employed professional makes, 82 go toward tax and and other contributions.

New Democracy vice president Adonis Georgiadis said that Greece had “lost another month because of overtaxation.” “Our aim when we become the government is to reverse the trend,” he said.(kahtimerini)

3 COMMENTS

  1. For every 100 EUR a Greek declares is the more accurate headline.

    It’s a vicious circle. Taxes are way too high in Greece, but evading taxes makes the problem worse as the government needs to collect revenues, so raises taxes in places where it can collect it very easily, for example, fuel.

  2. Syrizee you are wrong again. Things are exactly the opposite. What one declares has little to do with what he is taxed on, because taxation during the German occupation has been divorced from real income. Have you not heard of the infamous “tekmiria”, the most prominent symbol of economic fascism in the country? There are cases where not only 82% of income goes to the thieves (they call them “taxes”) but sometimes more than 100%.
    Taxes under the present occupation regime are not a means of revenue for the state, but a way to seize the assets of every citizen in the country.

  3. And then there are those who think it is an advantage to stay in the Euro!! Would like to know what has improved in the last 9 years for the people (isn’t that the objective of “dhimokratia”?), not for the government or bankers?

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