Albania: DTA between Albania and Iceland becomes effective

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

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

Albania: DTA between Albania and Iceland becomes effective

Asllani-Ndreka-Dorina

Dorina Asllani Ndreka

Albania and Iceland signed an agreement for the avoidance of double taxation and the prevention of tax evasion regarding income tax (DTA) on September 26 2014, which was ratified by both countries and entered into force on January 6 2016. Under the treaty provisions, its general implementation has begun as of January 1 2017.

The treaty is the first of this kind between the two countries double taxation of income tax and tax evasion in both countries. The treaty will also be applied to any similar or identical tax that may be imposed in the future by the partner countries.

The agreement creates the legal framework for the information exchange and the cooperation between tax authorities of both countries, as a guarantee for the implementation of the agreement provisions.

The taxes covered in the treaty include personal income tax, corporate profit tax and tax on small business activities in Albania. Whereas, in Iceland, it covers the state income tax and the municipalities' income tax. The competent authorities of both countries will notify each other for any essential change regarding their tax legal framework.

A permanent establishment, as defined by the DTA, will include any construction/building/installation project (or related supervisory activities), the duration of which exceeds six months in a 12-month period. The same duration rule is applicable to the provision of services through personnel engaged for such purpose (aggregate duration exceeding six months).

The withholding tax rate for dividends has been defined as 10% in all cases, except in those cases where there is at least 25% ownership in which case a 5% rate will apply. The standard 10% rate will also apply to interest and royalties payments.

In case a resident of one of the contracting states has income, which in accordance to this treaty's provisions may be taxed in the other contracting state, then the first contracting state will allow a deduction from the resident's tax liability. The deduction is equal to the tax amount paid for this specific income in the other state. However, such a deduction will in no case exceed the income tax calculated before the deduction.

Albania and Iceland are trying to revive their commercial relations. Albania has signed the free trade agreement with EFTA countries, which includes Iceland. The DTA will be of additional help in achieving this objective.

Dorina Asllani Ndreka (tirana@eurofast.eu)

Eurofast

Tel: + 355 (0) 42 248 548

Website: www.eurofast.eu

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The report is solid and balanced as it correctly underscores the ambitious institutional redesign that Brazil has undertaken in adopting a dual VAT model, experts tell ITR
The Brazilian law firm partner warns against going independent too early, considers the weight of political pressure, and tells ITR what makes tax cool
The lessons from Ireland are clear: selective, targeted, and credible fiscal incentives can unlock supply and investment
The ITR in-house award winner delves into his dramatic novelisation of tax transformation, and declares that 'tax doesn’t need AI right now'
Recent news of job cuts at EY is symptomatic of how the PwC controversy has tarnished the reputation of the entire ‘big four’
Experts reportedly discussed extending the safe harbour to 2027 to give countries more time to legislate; in other news, Baker McKenzie and Greenberg Traurig made senior tax hires
Awards
Submit your nominations to this year's WIBL Americas Awards by January 23
Recent changes in UK tax rules and cross-border requirements are generating high demand for specialist advice, according to MHA
Hany Elnaggar examines how Gulf Cooperation Council countries are internalising transfer pricing norms within evolving fiscal systems shaped by both Islamic and international influences
Where a TP study of comparables produces an arm’s-length range, and the taxpayer’s filed position is outside that range, HMRC will adjust to the median by default
Gift this article