Flat-rate business expense allowance generally refers to a standardized deduction option for business expenses: instead of collecting evidence for every single expense, a flat amount or a percentage of the business income may be claimed as a business expense—provided that the respective tax law allows a flat-rate treatment for the specific case. For freelancers and small business owners this is a simplifying alternative to keeping individual receipts, but it is only applicable in the cases regulated by law.
Legal basis and distinction
The term itself is not a single, uniform tax concept but a collective term for various statutory flat-rate provisions in German tax law. Certain flat-rates are anchored in the Income Tax Act (EStG) or in sector-specific regulations; the Value Added Tax Act (UStG) contains other simplifications (e.g., the small business scheme) that do not, however, constitute a flat-rate business expense allowance in the narrow sense. It is important to distinguish this from other flat-rate amounts such as the employee standard deduction for work-related expenses (Werbungskostenpauschbetrag) or tax-free allowances (e.g., per diem meal allowances): the flat-rate business expense allowance concerns solely the deductibility of business expenses.
Practical application in bookkeeping
Whether and how a flat-rate business expense allowance is applied in bookkeeping depends on the specific statutory provision and the chosen profit determination method (cash-basis profit calculation (EÜR) vs. double-entry bookkeeping).
Recording in the cash-basis profit calculation (EÜR)
- If a flat-rate is provided for, record the income in full on the income side.
- The flat-rate is shown as an item under business expenses or as “other operating expenses” in the EÜR.
- Receipts for individual items generally do not need to be submitted, unless the provision requires a minimum level of documentation.
Example calculation
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Income | 50.000 € |
| Flat-rate business expense allowance (e.g., 20%)* | -10.000 € |
| Profit | 40.000 € |
*The percentage is fictitious; actual percentages or lump sums depend on the legal regulation for the respective area.
Advantages and disadvantages and concrete use cases
For many small businesses and freelancers a flat-rate is attractive because it reduces the effort and cost of collecting receipts. At the same time, using a flat-rate carries risks if the allowance is lower than the expenses actually incurred.
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Advantages:
- Simple handling in bookkeeping
- Reduced documentation effort in tax audits (depending on the regulation)
- More predictable tax burden
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Disadvantages:
- No deduction for actual higher expenses
- Possible restrictions regarding trade tax or social security reporting
- Only provided by law in certain sectors/situations
Concrete cases: A part-time designer with modest material costs benefits if the flat-rate covers their actual expenses. A craft business with high machinery and subcontracting costs is usually better off with individual evidence.
Notes for tax returns and tax audits
Only apply a flat-rate business expense allowance if the specific tax provision expressly permits it. In the tax return the allowance is reported in the profit determination (EÜR or Annex G/F when using the income surplus calculation) or taken into account as the corresponding item in accounting.
- Documentation: Record why the flat-rate was applied (legal basis, period).
- Tax audit: Auditors will require proof that the flat-rate was applied in compliance with the rules; therefore keep the legal basis and, if necessary, calculation records available.
- Effects: Check impacts on trade tax, VAT advance returns and social security obligations.
Conclusion: The flat-rate business expense allowance is a useful simplification tool, but not a universal solution. Check the relevant statutory rules before applying it or consult a tax advisor to avoid tax disadvantages.