Standard tax rate (on UoP) is 12% up to ~30k USD, the rest is taxed 32%. On top of that, the employer pays a social security fee, its rate rises proportionally to income.
As an one-person business, you have two most popular options:
- 12% flat tax rate on income, with a flat rate social security fee; (1)
- 19% flat tax rate on revenue. The social security fee is dependant on income, but it's less than on UoP. You can write off expenses in this scenario, so the actual tax rate is actually lower. People generally try to write off as much as they can - for example, the tax agency is OK with programmers buying multiple bikes as a means of "transport to clients" ;)
You can also write off VAT in both scenarios, effectively making a lot of major purchases (desks, chairs, phones, etc) way cheaper. There's also a 5% tax rate, called IP Box, but it's tricky and doesn't apply for every scenario, so I'm taking this aside.
With the employer spending 5k EUR per month (21,7k PLN), you're left with:
- 14,6k PLN on UoP
- 18,5k PLN on 12% tax
- 16,7k PLN on 19% tax, out of which you can potentially recover 3,9k PLN
It's easy to see why software developers choose to start a one-person business. It's worth to jump through the hoops to save on taxes.
(1) There are actually 3 levels dependant on income, but it's lower than the UoP fee for basically most software developers
Because they need to keep some gaps in the tax law to allow their friends to pay less taxes than normal people.
The US famously had a huge amount of tax law exemption just because of corruption. Nowadays you need an international setup to achieve the same, because the same old tricks have been used by many and there was enough political pressure to change it.
Some countries simply just didn't go through enough scandals of finding out how all well networked people pay almost zero taxes and therefore still have some relatively simple setups to pay little taxes.
A separate matter is countries trying to desperately attracting businesses and creating tax benefits only for wealthy expats, but not for their own people.
> Because they need to keep some gaps in the tax law to allow their friends to pay less taxes than normal people.
The self-employed in Poland provide almost 30% of total budget revenue from income tax [1]. (This statistic is somewhat dated, but I don't believe it's changed drastically since). That's a lot of "friends" and "wealthy expats".
It certainly helps the IT sector to stay globally competitive, also attracting foreign talent (hence plenty of programmers from eg. Ukraine, particularly these days).
Being self-employed has its own downsides - if anything goes south (as in, you did something terribly wrong, there's graphite on the ground, and you're held financially responsible for the outcome), you are liable down to your very last penny, in theory at least.
By comparison, if you're on a contract of employment, you're only liable up to the equivalent of your three salaries, even if your negligence has caused damages in the millions.
You are not protected by the labor law (by contrast, getting fired on an employment contract runs into plenty of legal protections should you choose to dispute it).
It makes sense to me that accepting greater responsibility - as a one-man company - gets compensated somehow, like in the form of lesser tax burdens.
Standard tax rate (on UoP) is 12% up to ~30k USD, the rest is taxed 32%. On top of that, the employer pays a social security fee, its rate rises proportionally to income.
As an one-person business, you have two most popular options:
- 12% flat tax rate on income, with a flat rate social security fee; (1)
- 19% flat tax rate on revenue. The social security fee is dependant on income, but it's less than on UoP. You can write off expenses in this scenario, so the actual tax rate is actually lower. People generally try to write off as much as they can - for example, the tax agency is OK with programmers buying multiple bikes as a means of "transport to clients" ;)
You can also write off VAT in both scenarios, effectively making a lot of major purchases (desks, chairs, phones, etc) way cheaper. There's also a 5% tax rate, called IP Box, but it's tricky and doesn't apply for every scenario, so I'm taking this aside.
With the employer spending 5k EUR per month (21,7k PLN), you're left with:
- 14,6k PLN on UoP
- 18,5k PLN on 12% tax
- 16,7k PLN on 19% tax, out of which you can potentially recover 3,9k PLN
It's easy to see why software developers choose to start a one-person business. It's worth to jump through the hoops to save on taxes.
(1) There are actually 3 levels dependant on income, but it's lower than the UoP fee for basically most software developers