Turkey: Tax exemption introduced for private vessels

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

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

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

Turkey: Tax exemption introduced for private vessels

intl-updates-small.jpg
gozluklu.jpg
bicer.jpg

Burçin Gözlüklü

Ramazan Biçer

Turkey's wealthiest individuals have historically registered their private vessels in the countries where a tax exemption is available. There are also a plenty of private vessels used in Turkish coastal waters that carry a foreign country's flag.

Also, in some cases, wealthy people establish a foreign entity that holds private vessels in their books but these are actually for the personal use of Turkish citizens.

The main reason for such a practice is to benefit from certain tax exemptions, like the special consumption tax exemption on fuel purchases and motor vehicles tax exemption for foreign flags applied in Turkey. By doing so, substantial amounts of VAT and/or special consumption tax can also be avoided.

As this is a well-known fact, the Turkish government has decided to change its policy and has recently put into effect new regulations to attract the registration of private vessels in Turkey.

In this regard, Law No. 6670 introduced tax exemptions for private vessels registered abroad or carrying a foreign flag. This Law aims to stimulate such vessels to carry a Turkish flag and enables all sort of tax exemptions if they are imported and registered in Turkey.

Based on these facts, to benefit from tax exemption, a private vessel should meet the following conditions:

  • Be registered abroad or carry a foreign flag; or

  • Be imported and registered in Turkey.

Which private vessels are covered by the Law?

The Law provides tax exemptions for private yachts, cruisers, boats, and excursion ships registered abroad or carrying a foreign flag.

The Law covers the private vessels categorised in the GTIP numbers of 8901.10.10.00.11, 8901.10.90.00.11 and 89.03 under Turkish customs tariff schedule as of January 27 2017.

The scope of tax exemption

In case private vessels are transferred free of charge to individuals or corporates resident in Turkey, such a transaction will be exempted from all taxes and duties including inheritance and transfer tax and customs duties.

However, there is an exception for the exemption. In terms of such transactions, there will only be a single duty to be paid, which is a licence fee at registry. For 2017, licence fees at registration that apply to private vessels are as follows.

Vessel (size)

Fees (TRY)

From 5-9 metres

406.7

From 9-12 metres

813.7

From 12-20 metres

1,627.65

From 20-30 metres

3,255.60

Larger than 30 meters

6,511.60


If individuals or corporates pay these low license fees they will be able to raise the Turkish flag without any other taxes or duties.

No investigation or tax penalty will be applicable

For undeclared private vessels, the Law assures that there will be no investigations or tax penalties for the earlier periods for those who imported or registered these vessels in Turkey.

All investigations being currently carried out will be also abolished. In the same way, if a court case opened against a tax assessment before the introduction of the Law, such assessments will be also cancelled by the tax office provided that the plaintiff withdraws the open court case. However, the tax office will not refund the paid taxes due to earlier assessments.

In conclusion, we believe that it is a good opportunity for individuals and corporates resident in Turkey to import or transfer their private vessels abroad or those carrying a foreign flag without paying any taxes and duties.

Burçin Gözlüklü (burcin.gozluklu@centrumauditing.com) and Ramazan Biçer (ramazan.bicer@centrumauditing.com)

Centrum Consulting

Tel: +90 216 504 20 66 and +90 216 504 20 66

Website: www.centrumauditing.com

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

As AI becomes increasingly intuitive and idiot-proof, its tax applicability is becoming impossible to overstate
New data on public CbCR showed uneven adoption, as Singapore advanced pillar two compliance and firms expanded their tax capabilities
Nearly two years after its publication, the Corporate Tax Roadmap is reshaping the UK’s TP framework through incremental reforms focused on scope, transparency and earlier HMRC intervention
With a stark divergence between MNEs that prepared early and those rushing to catch up, advisers must remain agile with all manner of compliance risks
The EU agreed new cooperative and investigative measures to tackle VAT fraud, while Hungary faced legal action and Lavez Coutinho expanded its indirect tax team
The arrival of a team from Brazilian rival Costa Tavares Paes Advogados brings SiqueiraCastro’s tax headcount to seven partners and 30 associates
CSR initiatives can sometimes venture into virtue signalling, but Ryan’s tax literacy event for schoolchildren was a genuine and necessary endeavour
Grant Thornton advanced plans to integrate its Australian firm into its US arm, as tax developments spanned law firm hires, aviation levies and digital services taxes
A new focus on early intervention and increased AI use is transforming how tax authorities are approaching TP audits, though capacity-constrained jurisdictions risk falling behind
The French administration has used AI to detect undeclared swimming pools and verandas but always includes a human in the loop, the AI in Tax Forum heard
Gift this article