Intrastat Thresholds

Intrastat returns are statistical reports due in every Member State when the value of the goods arrived or dispatched from or to another EU country exceed the applicable threshold.

Thresholds are calculated annually on a calendar-year basis

After exceeding a country’s threshold, a business must keep filing Intrastat returns until it completes a full January–December period below that threshold.This situation is uncommon, as some countries allow simplifications for one-off transactions.

Example

A one-off acquisition of €500,000 in Spain in June 2023 triggers Intrastat filing obligations.Nil returns must continue until January 2025, when the December 2024 return is submitted.

Intrastat/ESL Reporting Updates

Exceptionally, Italy uses a unique Intrastat system. Some countries have merged Intrastat and ESL into a single return. From 2025, Estonia no longer requires arrival reporting, as existing data is considered sufficient for statistical purposes.

Transition to modernized Intrastat

A new Intrastat regulation introducing major updates took effect in January 2022.

Intrastat Threshold
Per Country

Select a country
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
united kingdom flag
United Kingdom
Arrivals
500,000 £
Dispatches
250,000 £
Northern Ireland (NI) - EU countries only

FAQs

Changes in Intrastat thresholds 2025

The following countries have updated their Intrastat threshold in 2025: Bulgaria, Cyprus, Estonia, Hungary, Ireland, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal and Slovenia.

Combined Nomenclature 2025

Like every year, the European Commission has published the Combined Nomenclature applicable from January 2025.

How can Marosa help you?

Marosa can help you comply with your Intrastat obligations in all EU countries. Also, when we handle the VAT compliance obligations of companies that are involved in intra-Community trade, we always monitor the Intrastat thresholds to make sure we start submitting this return when required.

How to calculate Intrastat thresholds?

These thresholds are calculated on an annual basis and separately for the dispatches and arrivals flow. This means that you must check if your intra-Community supplies and acquisitions exceeded the correspondent thresholds during the calendar year. In the affirmative case, you must submit Intrastat returns from the month you exceeded the relevant threshold.

What are Intrastat thresholds?

When we talk about Intrastat thresholds, we refer to the thresholds established by each EU country to exempt businesses performing a lower number of intra-Community transactions from the obligation of submitting Intrastat returns.

Typically, we will see a different threshold amount for dispatches than for arrivals, although in some countries, this is the same amount – e.g., Austria, Malta, Czech Republic, Finland, or Spain.

The Netherlands and France do not have Intrastat thresholds exemption. Instead, they will notify the taxpayers that are subject to the submission of the Intrastat returns. In order to determine if a company must start submitting Intrastat returns, The Statistics authorities will check and monitor on a monthly basis the amounts of intra-Community transactions performed by the Dutch and French taxpayers based on their VAT returns.

Latest news

finland city view

Finland Updates Tax Payment Process

Learn about Finland’s tax payment process effective November 2025, including the introduction of a single tax reference number for companies and key changes affecting refunds, interest, and MyTax features.

Verifactu in Spain: Complete Guide

Spain has introduced a certified billing obligation called Verifactu. The obligation is postponed to 1 January 2027 for the first group of taxpayers, and to 1 July 2027 for the rest of taxpayers in scope.

E-invoicing in Belgium: Complete Guide

Belgium plans to make B2B e-invoicing in domestic transactions mandatory by January 2026. Real-time reporting expected by 2028. Learn more about the current status and next steps for this implementation.

ireland city view

Ireland Revenue Introduces Variable Direct Debit (VDD) for VAT Payments

Ireland is replacing Fixed Direct Debit with Variable Direct Debit for VAT from August 2025. Learn how the new system works.

london view

The UK Confirms Mandatory E-Invoicing by 2029

Discover how the UK will introduce mandatory e-invoicing for all VAT invoices by 2029. Learn about the benefits, timeline, and what businesses need to do to prepare under the government’s new digital transformation plans.

poland city view

E-Invoicing in Poland: Complete Guide to KSeF

Poland takes a step forward on e-invoicing introducing The National e-Invoicing System (KSeF) as a voluntary solution. The mandatory implementation was delayed to year 2026.

sweden city view

Temporary VAT Reduction on Food in Sweden

Sweden plans a temporary VAT cut on food from 12% to 6% between April 2026 and December 2027 to support households amid high prices. Learn how this change impacts consumers and businesses.

Berlin view

E-Invoicing in Germany: Complete Guide

Germany approves the B2B e-invoicing mandate. The obligation will be rolled out in phases, starting by January 2025. There is no digital reporting foreseen at the moment.

finland city view

Finland Removes the Obligation to Submit Intrastat Arrivals from January 2026

Finland will remove the obligation to submit Intrastat arrivals from January 2026. Learn how the change affects reporting requirements, thresholds, and what businesses need to prepare for the new Intrastat rules.

european union flag

EU Removes the Customs Duty Exemption for E-Commerce: What Changes in 2026?

The EU will remove the EUR 150 customs duty exemption for e-commerce imports from 2026. Learn how this change affects low-value parcels, duty collection, and the wider EU Customs Reform.