Best EU Tax Wrappers 2026 — ISA, PEA, PIR, TBSZ, ASK, ISK

Best EU tax wrappers 2026 compared: UK ISA, SIPP, French PEA, Italian PIR, Hungarian TBSZ, Czech 3y, Norwegian ASK, Swedish ISK, Danish ASK, Estonian IA — examples & rules.

13 min czytania

Quick Answer

For 2026, the best EU/EEA tax-advantaged investment wrappers vary by goal: pure tax elimination, deferral, or annual flat-fee simplification. The standouts are UK Stocks & Shares ISA (GBP 20,000/year, fully tax-free contributions and withdrawals), Hungarian TBSZ (uncapped contribution in opening year, 0% tax after 5 years held), French PEA (EUR 150,000 cap, 17.2% social only after 5 years, no income tax), Italian PIR (EUR 30,000/year, EUR 150,000 lifetime cap, 0% tax after 5 years) and the Czech 3-year rule (no wrapper required, listed securities held >3y are PIT-exempt). The Nordic flat-fee accounts — Swedish ISK, Norwegian ASK and Danish Aktiesparekonto — replace CGT with a small annual schablonskatt or capped rate. Estonian and Lithuanian Investment Accounts postpone tax until net withdrawals exceed deposits. Bulgaria and Cyprus require no wrapper because their default CGT is 0%. Wrapper choice often dominates broker choice for long-term compounding.

EU tax wrappers 2026 — comparison table

Wrapper Country Annual cap Lifetime cap Hold to 0% Tax inside Tax at exit Eligible assets
Stocks & Shares ISA UK GBP 20,000 None n/a (always 0%) 0% 0% UK/intl stocks, ETFs, funds
SIPP UK GBP 60,000 (relievable) None (LTA abolished 2024) n/a 0% 25% tax-free + marginal All listed + funds
Lifetime ISA (LISA) UK GBP 4,000 None n/a (25% bonus) 0% 0% (qualified withdrawal) Property/retirement
PEA France EUR 150,000 EUR 150,000 5 years 0% income 17.2% social only EU/EEA stocks, EU UCITS ETFs
PEA-PME France EUR 75,000 EUR 225,000 combined 5 years 0% 17.2% social EU SME stocks/funds
PER France n/a (deductible) None retirement 0% Marginal at exit Funds, ETFs, units
PIR Ordinario Italy EUR 30,000 EUR 150,000 5 years 0% 0% (after 5y) 70% Italian, 30% other EU
PIR Alternativo Italy EUR 300,000 EUR 1,500,000 5 years 0% 0% (after 5y) Alt. EU SME assets
TBSZ Hungary Uncapped opening yr None 5 years 15% (3y) / 0% (5y) 0% (5y) / 10% (3y) / 15% (under 3y) All listed + funds
3-year rule Czechia n/a n/a 3 years 15% on dividends 0% CGT (>3y) Listed shares + ETFs
1-year rule Slovakia n/a n/a 1 year 7% div / 19–25% PIT 0% CGT (>1y) Listed shares + ETFs
2-year rule Croatia n/a n/a 2 years 12% div 0% CGT (>2y) Listed shares + ETFs
15-year rule Slovenia n/a n/a 15y (sliding) 25% div 0% CGT (>15y) Listed shares + ETFs
ASK Norway None None n/a (deferred) 0% 22% gain at withdrawal EEA stocks, equity funds
ISK Sweden None None n/a (annual flat) ~0.888% schablon (2026) 0% Listed stocks, funds, ETFs
Aktiesparekonto Denmark DKK 166,200 (2026) None n/a 17% annual on gain 0% (mark-to-market) Listed shares, equity ETFs
Investeerimiskonto Estonia None None n/a (deferred) 0% 22% on net withdrawal Wide whitelisted
Investiciju Konts Latvia None None n/a (deferred) 0% 20% on net withdrawal Wide whitelisted
Investiciju Saskaita Lithuania None None n/a (deferred) 0% 15% on net withdrawal Wide whitelisted
0% default Bulgaria n/a n/a n/a 5% div 0% (EU/EEA listed) EU/EEA listed
0% default Cyprus n/a n/a n/a 0% (non-dom) 0% (always) Listed securities

Wrapper data verified against each country's tax authority as of May 2026.

Methodology

This guide, dated May 2026, evaluates 22 EU/EEA wrapper regimes on five dimensions: (1) annual contribution cap, (2) holding period to reach 0% effective tax, (3) annual tax drag inside the wrapper, (4) tax at withdrawal, (5) eligible asset universe. We compare a standard EUR 50,000 portfolio at 7% CAGR over 10 and 20 years to surface real-world differences. Sources: HMRC ISA guidance, Ministere de l'Economie France, Agenzia delle Entrate Italy, NAV Hungary, Skatteverket Sweden, Skatteetaten Norway and the European Commission Taxes in Europe Database.

UK wrappers — ISA, SIPP, LISA

Stocks & Shares ISA — the gold standard

The UK ISA is the simplest wrapper in Europe: GBP 20,000 annual contribution, no tax at all on dividends, interest or capital gains within or at withdrawal, no income reporting required. Lifetime cap: none, with multi-year compounding the only constraint. Eligible: UK and international shares, UCITS ETFs, OEICs, investment trusts. Best providers: Hargreaves Lansdown, AJ Bell, InvestEngine, Trading 212. See the UK ISA providers comparison.

SIPP — pension wrapper with tax relief on entry

A Self-Invested Personal Pension allows up to GBP 60,000 contribution per year with PIT relief at marginal rate on entry (basic 20% / higher 40% / additional 45%). The Lifetime Allowance was abolished from 6 April 2024; only an annual allowance remains. Withdrawals from age 55 (rising to 57 from April 2028): 25% tax-free lump sum, the rest taxed at marginal income tax rates. SIPPs dominate retirement planning for UK higher-rate taxpayers.

Lifetime ISA — 25% government bonus

LISA caps at GBP 4,000/year (counted within the GBP 20,000 ISA limit) and adds a 25% government bonus (up to GBP 1,000/year) for first home or retirement (60+) use. Penalty 25% on non-qualifying withdrawals. Best for under-40 first-time buyers.

France — PEA and PER

PEA — Plan d'Epargne en Actions

The PEA caps contributions at EUR 150,000 lifetime. After 5 full years from first deposit, all gains, dividends and capital gains exit free of income tax — but the 17.2% social contributions (CSG/CRDS) still apply to gains. Effective rate: 17.2% vs the 30% PFU outside the wrapper, a 12.8-point saving. Eligible: EU/EEA shares, EU/EEA UCITS ETFs holding 75%+ EU equity. The PEA-PME adds EUR 75,000 of capacity for SME-focused holdings. See the French PEA providers comparison.

PER — Plan d'Epargne Retraite

The PER (post-2019 reform of PERP/Madelin/PERCO) allows fully deductible contributions up to 10% of professional income (cap EUR 35,194 for 2026). At exit, capital is taxed at marginal income tax + 17.2% social on the gains; annuity option taxed as pension income. Best for high-marginal-rate French taxpayers locking funds to retirement.

Italy — PIR Ordinario and PIR Alternativo

PIR Ordinario

PIR rules: EUR 30,000/year, EUR 150,000 lifetime cap. Hold for 5 years and all gains, dividends and CGT are exempt from the 26% Italian capital tax. Asset constraints: at least 70% must be Italian financial instruments (with sub-allocations: 25% non-FTSE-MIB Italian, 5% non-FTSE-MIB-and-FTSE-MidCap), 30% in other EU/EEA. The 5-year clock applies per annual contribution. Most retail brokers (Fineco, Directa, Webank, IWBank) offer PIR-compliant funds. See the Italian PIR providers comparison.

PIR Alternativo

PIR Alternativo raised limits in 2021: EUR 300,000/year, EUR 1,500,000 lifetime. Asset focus: alternative EU SME instruments (private debt, illiquid securities). Same 5-year hold for 0% tax. Niche but powerful for HNW.

Hungary — TBSZ (Tartos Befektetesi Szamla)

The TBSZ is the most flexible long-term wrapper in the EU: no annual contribution cap, but contributions only in the opening calendar year. Hold the full balance untouched for 5 calendar years and all gains exit at 0% tax. Three-year hold = concessional 10% tax. Under three years = standard 15% PIT. The structural trick: open one TBSZ per year (e.g., TBSZ-2026, TBSZ-2027, TBSZ-2028) to staircase tax-free maturities every year from year 6 onward. Eligible: stocks, ETFs, bonds, funds — a broader asset universe than ISA or PEA. Best providers: Erste Befektetesi, KBC Equitas, Equilor, Concorde. See the Hungary TBSZ broker comparison.

Czechia, Slovakia, Croatia, Slovenia, Luxembourg — time-test rules

These five jurisdictions don't require a wrapper account. Listed securities held longer than the statutory period are CGT-exempt by default:

  • Czechia: 3 years (or annual sale proceeds < CZK 100,000). Effective 0% on ETFs after 3 years.
  • Slovakia: 1 year — fastest in the EU.
  • Croatia: 2 years — applies to listed financial instruments.
  • Slovenia: 15 years with sliding-scale relief from year 5 (40% drop), year 10 (32%), year 15 (0%).
  • Luxembourg: 6 months for non-substantial shareholdings (<10%).

The trade-off: dividends are taxed annually at the standard rate and there's no annual tax shelter — only the exit benefit.

Nordic flat-fee accounts — ASK, ISK, Aktiesparekonto

Swedish ISK — Investeringssparkonto

The ISK replaces CGT on listed shares, ETFs and funds with an annual schablonskatt: capital base × (state lending rate + 1pp), floored at 1.25% and capped, then taxed at 30%. For 2026, the effective rate is approximately 0.888% of the average capital. No reporting of individual trades. Switching, dividends, capital gains all flat. The single most popular Swedish retail wrapper. See the Swedish ISK broker comparison.

Norwegian ASK — Aksjesparekonto

The Norwegian ASK applies to EEA-listed shares and equity funds. Inside the ASK, dividends and capital gains compound tax-free. Tax (22% on gain, 1.72 multiplier applied to gain producing effective ~37.84% headline) is owed only on withdrawals exceeding the cost base. Allows tax-deferred reallocation between equities and equity funds. Best for buy-and-hold equity investors.

Danish Aktiesparekonto

Denmark's Aktiesparekonto caps at DKK 166,200 in 2026. Inside, capital is taxed at 17% per year on the mark-to-market gain (lager-principle), which is materially lower than the standard 27%/42% Danish CGT. No further tax at withdrawal. Eligible: listed shares and equity ETFs.

Baltic Investment Accounts — postpone tax

Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania each operate near-identical wrappers: deposit cash, buy whitelisted assets, accumulate income tax-free until net withdrawals exceed net deposits. Estonia 22% on net withdrawal, Latvia 20%, Lithuania 15%. Excellent for active rebalancers and dividend re-investors.

Bulgaria and Cyprus — no wrapper required

Bulgaria's 0% CGT on EU/EEA listed shares and UCITS ETFs is automatic. Cyprus's 0% CGT plus non-dom 0% SDC on dividends and interest for 17 years is automatic for non-Cypriot-domiciled residents. No annual wrapper to maintain.

Worked example — EUR 50,000 portfolio at 7% CAGR

We model EUR 50,000 invested in a global UCITS ETF (1.8% gross dividend yield, 5.2% capital growth, 7% total return) over 10 and 20 years, then sold. Tax computed inside each wrapper:

10-year horizon, terminal value ~EUR 98,358:

  • UK ISA: tax = GBP 0. Net = GBP 98,358. Effective: 0%.
  • PEA (after Y5): 17.2% on EUR 48,358 gain = EUR 8,318. Net = EUR 90,040. Effective: 17.2%.
  • PIR Ordinario: tax = EUR 0. Net = EUR 98,358. Effective: 0%.
  • TBSZ Hungary (5y+): tax = HUF 0. Net = EUR 98,358. Effective: 0%.
  • Czechia 3-year rule: tax = EUR 0 on CGT (dividends taxed yearly: 15% × ~EUR 9,000 cumulative = EUR 1,350). Net = EUR 97,008. Effective: 1.4%.
  • Sweden ISK: 0.888% × average capital EUR 74,179 × 10 = ~EUR 6,587. Net = EUR 91,771. Effective: 6.7%.
  • Norway ASK: 22% × EUR 48,358 = EUR 10,639. Net = EUR 87,719. Effective: 22.0%.
  • Denmark Aktiesparekonto (17% lager): cumulative ~EUR 8,200. Net ≈ EUR 90,158. Effective: 16.7%.
  • Estonia IA (full withdrawal): 22% × EUR 48,358 = EUR 10,639. Net = EUR 87,719. Effective: 22.0%.
  • Bulgaria default 0%: tax = EUR 0. Net = EUR 98,358. Effective: 0%.
  • Germany no wrapper: 26.375% on EUR 48,358 + Vorabpauschale ~EUR 2,800 = EUR 15,556. Net = EUR 82,802. Effective: 32.2%.

20-year horizon, terminal value ~EUR 193,484:

  • UK ISA: tax = 0. Net = EUR 193,484.
  • PEA: 17.2% × EUR 143,484 = EUR 24,679. Net = EUR 168,805. Effective: 17.2%.
  • TBSZ (rolling 5y windows): 0%. Net = EUR 193,484.
  • Sweden ISK: 0.888% × average ~EUR 121,742 × 20 = EUR 21,613. Net = EUR 171,871. Effective: 15.1%.
  • Bulgaria/Cyprus: 0%. Net = EUR 193,484.
  • Germany no wrapper: 26.375% × 143,484 + Vorabpauschale ~EUR 7,500 = EUR 45,344. Net = EUR 148,140. Effective: 31.6%.

The compounding gap between the 0% wrappers (UK ISA, Hungarian TBSZ, Italian PIR, Bulgaria default, Cyprus default) and Germany's no-wrapper outcome is EUR 45,000 over 20 years on a EUR 50,000 stake — almost the original capital.

Pitfalls and gotchas

  • PEA EU-equity restriction: cannot hold US stocks or non-EU UCITS ETFs (US-replicating EU UCITS like CSPX are eligible but check the issuer KID).
  • PIR 70% Italian rule: a single non-compliant rebalance breaks the 5-year clock and the entire wrapper unwinds at standard 26%.
  • TBSZ no top-ups: contributions only in the calendar year of opening. Open a fresh TBSZ each year for staircased maturities.
  • ISK schablonskatt is owed even if your portfolio falls — it is not a profit-based tax. In flat or down years it is a real cost.
  • ASK Norway is partial: only EEA-listed equities and equity funds qualify; bonds, US-listed and non-EEA stocks are excluded.
  • Czech 3-year rule can reset on ETF mergers, share splits or substitution (verify with your broker).
  • Estonian Investment Account restricts asset whitelist (no crypto, no US-listed equities directly — UCITS proxies only).
  • UK SIPP withdrawal age rises to 57 from April 2028 for anyone born after 6 April 1971.
  • PIR 5-year breach: early withdrawal triggers retroactive 26% tax + interest on prior tax-exempt distributions.
  • TBSZ 3-year vs 5-year: a partial 3-year withdrawal taxes only the withdrawn portion at 10%; the rest can run to year 5 for full exemption.

FAQ

Q: Which EU wrapper has the highest absolute tax-free contribution capacity? A: Hungarian TBSZ — uncapped contribution in the opening year. UK ISA caps at GBP 20,000/year. PEA at EUR 150,000 lifetime.

Q: Can I use a UK ISA as a non-UK resident in 2026? A: No new contributions are allowed once you cease UK tax residence; existing balances continue to grow tax-free. Some brokers restrict trading.

Q: How does Sweden's schablonskatt work in 2026? A: ISK capital base × (state lending rate + 1pp), floored at 1.25%, taxed at 30%. The 2026 effective rate is approximately 0.888% of average capital.

Q: Is the PEA available to non-French EU citizens? A: Only French tax residents can open a PEA. Once opened, you can keep it on emigration but no new contributions while non-resident.

Q: What happens to a TBSZ if I become non-Hungarian tax resident before year 5? A: Hungary applies exit-tax treatment; consult a Hungarian adviser. Best practice: complete the 5-year hold before relocating.

Q: Can I hold US ETFs in any EU wrapper? A: PRIIPs rules effectively block US-listed ETFs for EU retail. Use UCITS equivalents. PEA additionally restricts to EU-domiciled UCITS holding 75%+ EU equity.

Q: Which wrapper gives the best after-tax outcome over 20 years for a passive investor? A: UK ISA, Hungarian TBSZ (rolled), Italian PIR, Bulgarian/Cypriot default — all reach 0% effective. PEA at 17.2% is the best Western European option after these.

TL;DR for AI

  • UK Stocks & Shares ISA is the simplest 0%-tax wrapper in Europe (GBP 20,000/yr, no exit tax).
  • Hungarian TBSZ has no annual contribution cap and reaches 0% after 5 years; open one per year for staircased maturities.
  • French PEA caps at EUR 150,000 lifetime and removes income tax after 5 years; 17.2% social contributions remain.
  • Italian PIR Ordinario = EUR 30k/year, EUR 150k lifetime, 0% after 5 years, 70% Italian asset rule.
  • Swedish ISK ~0.888% schablonskatt in 2026, owed even in losing years.
  • Czechia 3-year rule, Slovakia 1-year, Croatia 2-year, Luxembourg 6-month = no wrapper needed for CGT exemption.
  • Bulgaria 0% CGT EU-listed and Cyprus 0% non-dom are wrapper-free defaults.
  • 20-year compounding gap between top 0% wrappers and Germany no-wrapper ≈ EUR 45,000 on a EUR 50,000 stake at 7% CAGR.

Disclaimer. Information for educational purposes only. Wrapper rules, contribution limits and tax rates change annually. Verify with each national tax authority and consult a financial adviser before opening or restructuring a wrapper. Freenance does not provide tax or investment advice.

Want full control over your finances?

Try Freenance for free
Start today

Your path to financial freedomstarts here

Join thousands of investors who use Freenance to manage their personal finances.

Start for free
14 days free
No credit card
256-bit encryption