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WORKING IN SWEDEN

EXPLAINED: Which foreigners are eligible for Sweden’s ‘expert tax’ relief?

Foreign citizens in Sweden carrying out particularly expert work or who earn above a certain level may qualify for up to 25 percent tax relief on their income earned in Sweden. How do you know if you qualify?

EXPLAINED: Which foreigners are eligible for Sweden's 'expert tax' relief?
If you qualify, you should get your application in fast - you only have three months from the day you started your job to apply. Photo: Henrik Montgomery/TT

Firstly, you don’t qualify for the tax cut automatically – you have to apply to Forskarskattenämnden, the Taxation of Research Workers Board – before the Swedish Tax Agency can apply any discounts to your tax.

Despite the name of the board (and the name of the tax), you don’t actually have to be a researcher or expert in order to qualify.

Essentially, there are two routes to qualifying – through your tasks and expertise or through your income. 

Via tasks and expertise

Under the first rule, you need to be an expert, researcher or key worker in the eyes of the law, which usually means that the board will take a look at the required expertise for the position, usually assessing whether the nature of your work is such that it would be difficult to recruit comparable staff from within Sweden. 

It’s not sufficient for there to be a general labour shortage, but you also need to carry out highly specialised work, and this applies for both researchers and experts – although researchers in general can qualify if they have completed one or two years of postdoctoral research, while experts do not need academic qualifications at the same level. 

Usually for experts, they are working in roles with a high degree of technical expertise: the board lists “industrial technicians dealing with advanced product development and the application of new technology” as an example.

Researchers, on the other hand, must be carrying out qualified research or development tasks at a high enough level that it would be difficult to source this expertise from within Sweden – usually defined as independent research (PhD students and new PhD graduates don’t qualify).

As far as other key workers are concerned, this applies to people who hold a key position in a company, usually by holding a management role in a business with responsibility for general management and administration, like a CEO.

It’s not enough to just be a manager of a small team within a company – your role needs to be decisive for the operations of the company as a whole, and it needs to be a for-profit company, not a charity or foundation.

Via your income

The second route to qualifying is much simpler – you just need to have a high enough salary, which in 2024 was a whopping 114,611 kronor, more than three times Sweden’s 34,200 kronor median salary.

This has to be your actual salary each month, and doesn’t include things like fuel or travel benefits or annual bonuses, although regular monthly benefits included in your contract like a company car or a housing allowance do count.

You need to earn at least this amount each month to continue qualifying for tax relief – although sick leave, parental leave or other temporary absences don’t affect this.

Are there any other rules?

Yes. Both routes require you to meet five further conditions.

You cannot be a Swedish citizen and you must not have been listed as a resident in Sweden at any time in the five years prior to your application.

You also can’t have plans to stay in Sweden for more than seven years (although you won’t be penalised later if you do end up changing your mind and staying longer), and you need to work for a Swedish employer, or a foreign employer permanently established in Sweden.

Finally, you must submit your application for expert tax relief to the Taxation of Research Workers Board no later than three months after the date you began working in Sweden. If this deadline has already passed, then you can’t apply for the tax relief later – the board doesn’t accept late applications.

How do I apply?

You can apply by yourself or your employer can apply on your behalf – and you don’t need a personal number or coordination number to apply.

Whoever is applying will need to fill out the relevant form and send it to the board via email to [email protected]. You can also send it via post to the address on the form.

Bear in mind that the board needs to receive your application no later than three months after the day you start, so make sure to allow for time for it to arrive if you choose to send it via post.

How long does it last?

If you fulfil all the requirements and you are successfully granted expert tax relief, it’s valid for seven years from the time you started working in Sweden. 

If you’re granted tax relief and start a new job later on, you can apply for tax relief in your new role as well if you meet all the requirements, as long as your first tax relief decision is still valid. 

You’ll need to still meet the requirement for not planning on staying in Sweden for more than seven years, so the end date (if there is one) for your new job cannot extend past the date at which your tax relief would cease to be valid – although it can still be granted for a permanent position.

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For members

PROPERTY

For sale: Swedish land for 1 krona per square metre – on one condition

Located on the southern shore of the EU's largest lake, Götene municipality, which is struggling with an ageing population and low birth figures, is looking to tempt more people to move to the area by offering heavily discounted plots of land.

For sale: Swedish land for 1 krona per square metre – on one condition

The housing market in Götene, as far as new-builds are concerned, has been slow since the economic downturn, municipal chairman Johan Månsson told The Local.

The new campaign, which allows buyers to pay just one krona per square metre of land, is an attempt to give it a nudge in the right direction.

“It costs a lot of money to build a house, and the price of land isn’t the be all and end all, but it’s an important part of that,” Månsson said.

“If this campaign means that a family, for example, has the courage to build a house here despite the current economic situation, that would be fantastic.”

Interest rates are starting to drop in Sweden, but despite this, families are still being cautious when it comes to the property market.

“Extraordinary times call for extraordinary solutions, like this campaign,” he said.

Hällekis, where two of the one krona per square metre plots have already been sold. Photo: Götene Municipality

The campaign has been in place for roughly one month.

“I can’t describe it as anything other than a success,” Månsson said, adding that estate agents responsible for selling the plots of land have seen a lot of interest, despite the fact that some of the plots in question had already been on the market for a long time – up to 40 years in some cases.

“Some of these plots have been on sale for many years, often many decades, as they’ve more or less been forgotten about.”

He added that they have had almost 20 expressions of interest, selling three plots in the last month or so.

“We’ve really succeeded. If just one family moves here, then we’ve recouped the cost of this campaign many times over. Every new taxpayer is an important economic asset for a small municipality like Götene.”

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Far from all the municipality’s plots are for sale, rather those included in this campaign are what Månsson refers to as strötomter, single plots which are scattered all over the municipality and are primarily located in built-up areas.

“They’re not whole housing estates or plots on new housing estates,” he said. “Most of them are in smaller areas where there hasn’t been a great deal built in recent decades.”

You can take a look at available plots in Götene municipality here, with many selling at a 98 or 99 percent discount. Scroll down and click on Tryck här för att se aktuella tomter i…, with plots of land divided up by town or settlement.

Götene municipality is a popular area for tourists from Sweden and elsewhere, and there are no barriers for foreigners interested in moving to the area.

“Absolutely anyone is welcome to buy one of the plots,” Månsson said. “There are no rules or requirements as to who is allowed to buy one. It would be absolutely fantastic if we could get people from abroad interested in buying plots here, too.”

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The only requirement for interested buyers is that they must begin construction on their plot within two years of the purchase date, otherwise it will be given back to the municipality.

The campaign will be running throughout 2024 and 2025, Månsson said.

“After that it probably won’t be continued, as the economy will most likely go back to normal. But, of course, we’ll discuss that in the future.”

Götene isn’t the first municipality to offer plots of land at such a discount.

Hylte municipality, around three hours to the south, launched a similar campaign earlier this year, offering 54 plots of land for just one kronor per square metre.

Hylte, like Götene, is a small municipality in need of new residents. Ronny Löfquist, chairman of Hylte municipality, described their campaign to public broadcaster SVT as a “great success”.

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