DAC6, DAC7, DAC8 and minimum-tax reporting now reach the daily records of small businesses.
A founder sells through a digital marketplace. Orders move, stock leaves, cash should follow. Then the platform asks for cleaner tax data: identity details, tax residence, a matching tax number, and a seller record that agrees with the books. Nothing dramatic happens. Work simply slows until the file lines up.
The economic route comes first
That is the real shape of EU tax cooperation today. It is no longer only a conversation between authorities. It starts in company records, then moves through reporting duties, automatic exchange, risk selection and proof of delivery.
The Dutch legal floor is clear. The Wet op de internationale bijstandsverlening bij de heffing van belastingen governs mutual assistance and exchange of tax information. VAT, excise and customs sit under separate cooperation regimes. The Director-General of the Belastingdienst is appointed as competent authority for this framework.
Rijksoverheid places international information exchange inside the Dutch approach to tax avoidance and tax evasion. In practice, that becomes forms, portals, deadlines, reference numbers and data checks. For a small business, the distance to The Hague becomes short once a record is missing.
The Dutch machine has names
DAC6 has applied since 1 January 2021 for reportable cross-border arrangements. Intermediaries, and in some cases taxpayers, must report within 30 days when an arrangement is reportable. The duty covers several taxes, including corporate income tax, income tax, wage tax, dividend tax, and inheritance and gift tax.
The Belastingdienst sends DAC6 reports to a European database that is available to EU member state tax authorities. Its algorithm register also describes a DAC6 risk-selection tool with decision rules and risk scores. It is not self-learning, but it still sorts attention.
For a small firm, the lesson is simple. The company may sit outside the direct reporting duty and still end up inside the evidence chain. A client file, a platform trail or an adviser workflow can become the place where the question is first answered.
Platform work is now tax work
DAC7 is the clearest example. Since 1 January 2023, reporting platform operators have had to collect, verify and report information on reportable sellers and relevant activities. The reported information is exchanged automatically with relevant EU tax authorities. Sellers also have to be told which data is passed on.
Legal form is not the whole story
That changes the daily work of platform sellers. Turnover, activity periods, identity details and tax residence data need to line up. If the seller record says one thing and the platform trail says another, the problem is not theoretical. It lands in onboarding, reconciliation and follow-up.
A seller may think the platform handles everything. That is a mistake. The company still needs someone who owns the data, someone who checks it, and someone who can explain why the numbers match. If those roles are unclear, the file becomes thin exactly when the authority asks for proof.
Crypto has entered the same lane
DAC8 pushes the same logic into crypto. The Dutch implementation law was signed on 1 April 2026 and is valid from 11 April 2026. Belastingdienst guidance of 28 May 2026 says data collection starts on 1 January 2026, with the first reporting deadline on 31 January 2027.
Affected crypto service providers and operators must identify and verify customers, determine tax residence through self-certification, and tell customers which data is reported to the Belastingdienst. The reporting set includes identifying information, tax residence, tax identification number, exchange transactions, certain transfers and retail payment transactions above the CARF threshold.
For crypto users, the tax treatment still depends on their own situation. The practical change is visibility. More data now has a route, and that route leaves a trace.
Minimum tax looks large, but the record work is local
Minimum tax sounds like a multinational subject, and it is. The Wet minimumbelasting 2024 applies to multinational and domestic groups with annual revenue of at least €750 million, measured through the consolidated financial statements of the ultimate parent entity. The rate is 15 percent.
Dutch group entities within scope must file a bijheffing-informatieaangifte for each reporting year, unless the return is filed abroad and received by the Belastingdienst through international exchange. Even then, a Dutch notification may still be needed. Rijksoverheid also links DAC9 to amendments of the WIB and the Wet minimumbelasting 2024 for minimum-tax data exchange.
Smaller Dutch teams inside such groups can still carry the work. A local finance unit prepares data. An administrative service provider builds the pack. A software supplier keeps the route open. A founder serving a large client is asked for tax data earlier, with less patience for missing fields.
The calendar matters just as much as the rule. For the first reporting year from 1 January 2024 to 31 December 2024, the Belastingdienst gives a BIA or notification deadline of 30 June 2026 and a tax return and payment deadline of 31 August 2026. For the second reporting year, the BIA or notification deadline is 31 March 2027.
Follow one revenue stream
The Belastingdienst technical support page for BIA delivery shows the operational side of that work: planning, products, release notes, software support and delivery questions. Sending the data and proving accepted delivery are two different control points.
What needs to sit on the desk
Return to the founder at the marketplace. The right question is not panic. It is ownership. Who collects the data in this business? Who checks it? Who sends it? Is it the founder, the bookkeeper, the adviser, the platform contact, the software provider or the group tax team?
If nobody can answer, the reporting duty sits in one place while the evidence sits somewhere else. That is where small-company administration starts to strain. The ledger may be correct, while the reporting file is thin. The invoice may exist, while the tax residence check is missing.
The business also needs to know its routes. Some data goes through a Belastingdienst portal. Some goes through software. Some goes through an adviser. Some goes through a platform. Some comes back through a foreign group report, while a Dutch notification still remains.
Each route needs its own trail: what was assessed, what was sent, when it was sent, which reference number came back, and whether the report was accepted or still needed follow-up.
Where compliance meets cash
This is where compliance meets cash. Extra adviser time, slower onboarding, software changes and late reconciliations all cost money. They also cost attention. A small company that waits until the tax question arrives may find that the missing piece is not tax at all.
It may be an old customer record, a seller identity check, a self-certification, a portal login or a status confirmation. These are ordinary records. Under administrative cooperation, ordinary records become the first layer of proof.
The business lesson is already clear. Tax cooperation is no longer only a matter between authorities. It is built from company data before the authority asks a question.
Good records will not make every rule simple. They will make the next question shorter, cleaner and less dependent on memory. For a small business, that is not bureaucracy for its own sake. It is a way to keep work moving when the tax system asks the company to prove what it already thought it knew.
Referenced in the article
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