Sugar tax - KPMG Poland (2024)

Sugar tax - KPMG Poland (1)

The tax will be levied on beverages containing sugars, caffeine or taurine placed on the domestic market.

The sugar tax is settled monthly and remitted by the 25th day of the subsequent month.

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A new foodstuffs fee, commonly referred to as the sugar tax, became effective on 1 January 2021. Levied on beverages containing sugars, caffeine or taurine placed on the domestic market, the new tax has been introduced under the Act of 14 February 2020 amending certain acts in connection with promotion of healthy consumer choices (Polish Journal of Laws, item 1492), which brought a raft of important changes to a number of regulations.The essential part of provisions imposing the sugar tax has been delivered by the Act of 11 September 2015 on Public Health (Polish Journal Of Laws of 2021, item 183, as amended), as in effect from the beginning of this year, where the components and the method of collection of the new levy have been set out

Subject of taxation

The sugar tax is due on beverages containing:

  • sugars (monosaccharides or disaccharides),
  • substances used for their sweeting properties (sweeteners),
  • caffeine or taurine.

Nevertheless, the new regulations provide for a number of exemptions, meaning that the fee will be charged on beverages being:

  • medical devices;
  • dietary supplements;
  • food for special medical purposes, infant formulas, and follow-on formulas;
  • excise goods;
  • juice-based beverages (i.e. beverages in which the mass proportion of fruit, vegetable or fruit/vegetable juice constitutes not less than 20 percent of ingredients, and in which the sugar content is less than or equal to 5 g per 100 ml of beverage),
  • carbohydrate electrolyte drinks, in which the content of sugars is lower or equal to 5 g per 100 ml of beverage
  • milk beverages (with milk at the first place of the list of ingredients).

Taxable activities and taxpayers

The fee is charged to entities placing the above-listed types of beverages on the domestic market, which in practice means selling beverages to the first point where retail sales take place. Importantly, if beverages are sold to an entity involved with both retail and wholesale trade, the sugar tax will be payable on all sales made to such a purchaser.

The sugar tax will be levied on entities or individuals selling beverages to retail outlets or conducting retail sales, i.e.:

  • manufacturers,
  • entities purchasing beverages within the frames of intra-Community acquisition of goods,
  • ordering parties, where the composition of the beverage covered by the fee constitutes part of the contract concluded with the producer for the production of the beverage for the ordering party.

The sugar fee is a single-phase tax, meaning that it is collected only once and that the beverages on which it has been levied will not be subject to a second payment at any further stage of trading.

Tax basis and calculation method

The fee has a fixed and variable component.

The fixed component amounts to PLN 0.50 for the content of sugars in an amount equal to or less than 5 g in 100 ml of beverage or for the content of at least one sweetener (in any amount),

In turn, the variable component of the fee amounts to PLN 0.05 for each gram of sugar above 5g/100ml, expressed per litre.

Moreover, PLN 0.01 per litre is added for beverages containing caffeine and/or taurine.

Importantly, there exists a category of beverages to which only the variable tax amount is applied, meaning beverages in which the mass proportion of fruit, vegetable or fruit/vegetable juice constitutes not less than 20 percent of ingredients, as well as carbohydrate electrolyte drinks, in which the content of sugars is above 5 g per 100 ml of beverage.

The fees add up, yet the maximum amount of fee cannot exceed PLN 1.2 per 1 litre of beverage.

Payment, information on the amount due and competent tax authorities

The sugar tax is settled monthly and remitted by the 25th day of the subsequent month to an individual tax account. The tax is settled via CUK-1 form, a type of tax return in which information on the amount due must be provided. The form is submitted electronically and authenticated by a qualified digital signature, via dedicated website of the Ministry of Finance, with no possibility of submitting it on paper.

Where the tax is not paid on time, sanctions may be imposed. The competent authority may, by way of decision, impose on the payer a sanction fee in the amount corresponding to 50 percent of the amount of the fee due.

A tax authority competent for sugar tax-related matters is the head of the tax office competent for the place of residence or seat of the taxpayer.

Interpretation doubts and overall legal assessment

In fact, the first couple of months of applying the new levy brought an important struggle in terms of settlements, stemming mainly from the wording of the provisions on the sugar tax, but also because of how the method of its calculation was presented by the Ministry of Finance.

The key issue was the interpretation of the regulations available on the government websites, pursuant to which the maximum amount of the fee was PLN 1.2 per 1 litre of drink. It seemed to clearly indicate that the maximum amount of the fee applied to a given (type of) beverage - i.e. the fee calculated for a specific beverage could not exceed PLN 1.2 per litre.

Unfortunately, the information published by the Ministry of Finance and the CUK form itself were based on a quite different assumption, i.e. that the maximum rate introduced by the cited provision should be applied collectively to all beverages placed on the market by the taxpayer in a given period, which means that the rate applied to individual beverages may exceed the provided threshold. Clearly, in many cases, following such an approach led to increasing the fee, due to the 'averaging' of the fee for individual beverages.

When this article was being written, the method of sugar tax calculation provided via governmental websites has been already updated to reflect what in our opinion is the correct interpretation of the provision in question. On the one hand, this is definitely a positive change, yet on the other, because of such situations, tax authorities definitely do not garner the trust of taxpayers, who may now wonder how the updated approach of the Ministry of Finance will affect their current settlements.

The plethora of different measurement units used definitely does not make the task any easier for taxpayers. On several pages of the Act, which, in theory, should provide a precise description of how the levy should be calculated, and in the structure of the CUK-1 form itself, such units as: mg, g, ml (also present in its multiple - 100 ml) and litre are simultaneously used. As a result, fee calculation becomes a complex mathematical task, with the number of zeros to enter in a specific field of the CUK-1 form being a challenge for many taxpayers.

The level of complexity thereof is best evidenced by the data presented by the Ministry of Finance in relation to the CUK-1 declarations submitted for the first fee period: according to the information made available to the press, as of 28 February 2021, less than 30% of taxpayers submitted the form correctly. The Ministry’s interpretation of “correct submission” at that time, however, remains a matter of conjecture.

Authors:

Zbigniew Sobecki, Manager, Indirect Tax Services, KPMG in Poland
Rafał Roczniak, Manager, Indirect Tax Services, KPMG in Poland

Frontiers in tax. Polish edition | June 2021

Sugar tax - KPMG Poland (2)

This issue of the Magazine explores the key VAT-related changes, including introduction of a new type of e-invoice, commonly referred to as structured invoice, the SLIM VAT package, the VAT e-Commerce package, along with the latest developments related to the sugar tax.

In this issue:

  • Introduction – Tomasz Bełdyga
  • Structured invoice: a new VAT invoicing scheme – Łukasz Daniek
  • VAT-slimming in practice – Tomasz Piotrowski
  • The next edition of the SLIM VAT package – Natalia Kłoś, Patryk Roratowski
  • The VAT E-Commerce Package: VAT Changes for B2C Trade– Izabela Jędra, Kamil Chmielewski
  • VAT E-Commerce Package: Marketplaces and the new roles they are about to assume – Izabela Jędra, Kamil Chmielewski
  • A draft Decree on amending the extended SAF_T file (JPK_VAT) – Izabela Jędra, Kamil Chmielewski
  • Reverse charge on VAT: a landmark ruling of CJEUMarek Bielawski
  • Sugar tax – Zbigniew Sobecki, Rafał Roczniak
Please login or register to download the PDF file

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Frontiers in taxFrontiers in taxArticles are written by KPMG experts, who use their expertise to address issues that companies must deal with on a daily basis.Articles address issues that companies must deal with on a daily basis.
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Sugar tax - KPMG Poland (2024)

FAQs

How much is the sugar tax Poland? ›

The fixed component amounts to PLN 0.50 for the content of sugars in an amount equal to or less than 5 g in 100 ml of beverage or for the content of at least one sweetener (in any amount), In turn, the variable component of the fee amounts to PLN 0.05 for each gram of sugar above 5g/100ml, expressed per litre.

How to calculate sugar tax? ›

18p per litre on soft drinks containing between 5g and 8g of sugar per 100ml. 24p per litre on soft drinks containing more than 8g of sugar per 100ml.

Does a sugar tax work? ›

A new study has found that sugary drink purchases declined by 33 percent following the implementation of a sugar-sweetened beverage tax in five US cities, suggesting that this tax may spur health and cost-saving benefits.

What is the sugar tax in Portugal? ›

Portugal: A two-tiered SSB tax was introduced in Portugal in 2017 of €0.8/L and €0.16/L increases in average prices for drinks with sugar contents of <80 g/L and ≥80 g/L. Close to 100% of the tax was passed through to consumers.

Does Poland have a sugar tax? ›

In Poland, the sugar fee was introduced under the act of 14 February 2020 and has been in effect since 1 January 2021. The amount of the sugar fee depends on the content of sugar or other sweetening substances in the product.

What is tax 12% in Poland? ›

The 12% rate is used if the tax base does not exceed PLN 120 000. The 32% rate is used if the tax based exceeds this amount. The tax 12 % is additionally reduced by a degressive tax-reducing amount 3600 zl. The types of income taxed in this manner include: income from employment, old-age pension or economic activity.

What is the sugar tax in the US? ›

In the U.S., no state currently has a statewide soda tax, though Washington state implemented an unpopular $0.02 per ounce soda tax in 2010. Several cities including Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., and Seattle levy local taxes on soft drinks.

What are the pros and cons of sugar tax? ›

Taxes that target high-sugar drinks provide the most sugar reduction relative to the economic burden placed on consumers. Taxes based on sugar content minimize the cost of reducing sugar in soft drinks. But taxes based on volume or price minimize the cost of raising revenue by taxing sweetened beverages.

What was taxed in the sugar tax? ›

The Sugar Act also taxed numerous foreign products, including wine, coffee, and textiles, and banned the direct shipment of several important commodities such as lumber to Europe, upsetting the balance of trade for merchants in Northern seaports.

Why is sugar tax a good idea? ›

Increases awareness about the harmful effects of sugary drinks. Discourages consumption of sugary drinks by raising their prices. Shifts beverage sales to healthier products. Encourages industry to produce and promote healthier beverage options.

What are the negative effects of a sugar tax? ›

One drawback to SSB taxes is that they disproportionately burden lower‐income populations. This problem can be offset, however. Given that the poor have the greatest burden of chronic disease associated with poor diet, they stand to gain the most from public health policies to improve diets.

Why sugar taxes don t work? ›

Several studies show that consumers just purchase soda in nearby places that don't have soda taxes. A 2020 study found a stunning 46 percent reduction in sales of taxed beverages in response to Philadelphia's 1.5-cents-per-ounce tax, but more than half of that sales reduction was offset by cross-border shopping.

What is Europe sugar tax? ›

By the end of 2019 the proposal of a tax on the consumption of sweetened soft drinks equal to 10 Euros per hectolitre in the case of finished products and 0.25 Euros per kilogram in the case of products to be diluted has been officially approved; its official start has been then postponed to 1 January 2022.

Is there a sugar tax in Brazil? ›

There is a tax on manufactured products, including SSBs in Brazil. However, in 2016 and 2018, the Brazilian federal government decreased the tax rate, bucking global trends. The SSB industry has criticised such policies, and current tax levels are too low to reduce consumption sufficiently to prevent harm.

What is the sugar tax in Finland? ›

The candy tax, implemented in Finland in 2011 for candies, ice creams, and sodas, was raised at the beginning of 2012 but was ultimately repealed at the start of 2017. Currently, only the soda tax remains, differentiating between sugary and sugar-free drinks.

How much tax do you pay in Poland? ›

Income tax scale in 2022
Annual IncomeIncome Tax
0 PLN - 120,000 PLN12% minus tax reducing amount (3,600 PLN, 300 PLN every month)
over 120,000 PLN3,600 PLN + 32% of the surplus over 120,000 PLN

What is the tax on goods in Poland? ›

VAT rates. The VAT rates are 23% (standard rate), 8%, 5%, 0%, and exemption. The standard 23% VAT rate generally applies to the supply of all goods and services, except for those that are covered by special VAT provisions that provide other rates or treatments.

How much tax does Poland have? ›

Personal income tax rates. * In the case of income up to PLN 120,000, the tax is 12% minus the amount decreasing tax, which is PLN 3,600 (i.e. 12% of PLN 30,000, which is the tax-free amount of income). The tax-free amount is set at PLN 30,000.

What is the duty tax in Poland? ›

The duty rates applied to imports into Poland typically range between 0% (for example books) and 17% (for example Wellington Boots). Some products, such as Laptops, Mobile Phones, Digital cameras and Video Game consoles, are duty free.

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