Deloitte creates: Deloitte North West Europe

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

Deloitte creates: Deloitte North West Europe

In a move that will bolster investment for clients, talent and building capacity, Deloitte has combined its member firms in Belgian, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden with its UK and Swiss firm to create Deloitte North West Europe.

An additional €200 million ($223 million) will be invested across the region over the next three years with an estimated €5 billion in annual revenue being generated. Deloitte North West Europe will begin operating on June 1 2017 and will have 28,000 partners and employees. It will account for 20% of all revenue within Deloitte's global network. 

Deloitte has more than 244,400 professionals at member firms in more than 150 countries and territories. Its revenues for fiscal year 2016 were $36.8 billion. 

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The controversial deal will allow US-parented groups to be carved out from key aspects of pillar two
Awards
ITR invites tax firms, in-house teams, and tax professionals to make submissions for the 2027 World Tax rankings and the 2026 ITR Tax Awards globally
Pillar two was ‘weakened’ when it altered from a multinational convention agreement to simply national domestic law, Federico Bertocchi also argued
Imposing the tax on virtual assets is a measure that appears to have no legal, economic or statistical basis, one expert told ITR
The EU has seemingly capitulated to the US’s ‘side-by-side’ demands. This may be a win for the US, but the uncertainty has only just begun for pillar two
The £7.4m buyout marks MHA’s latest acquisition since listing on the London Stock Exchange earlier this year
ITR’s most prolific stories of the year charted public pillar two spats, the continued fallout from the PwC Australia tax leaks scandal, and a headline tax fraud trial
The climbdowns pave the way for a side-by-side deal to be concluded this week, as per the US Treasury secretary’s expectation; in other news, Taft added a 10-partner tax team
A vote to be held in 2026 could create Hogan Lovells Cadwalader, a $3.6bn giant with 3,100 lawyers across the Americas, EMEA and Asia Pacific
Foreign companies operating in Libya face source-based taxation even without a local presence. Multinationals must understand compliance obligations, withholding risks, and treaty relief to avoid costly surprises
Gift this article