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SELF-EMPLOYED

Self-employed in Spain: Four ‘unknown’ ways the taxman spies on you online

Spanish tax authorities no longer just keep an eye on your bank transactions to check that you're declaring all your income as an "autónomo", they also monitor what you do on social media and online as a whole.

Self-employed in Spain: Four ‘unknown’ ways the taxman spies on you online
Spanish tax authorities are keeping tabs on what self-employed workers post on social media. Photo: Gabriel Benois/Unsplash

As anyone self-employed in Spain knows, the tax system can be a little complicated at times. 

Knowing when and exactly how much you’ll need to pay, or if you’ve overpaid or underpaid and how much you’re owed by the tax authorities (known as la hacienda in Spain) can be a headache – and that’s if you’ve declared everything you should.

Spain’s tax rates for the self-employed, including both income tax and the monthly social security charge, are some of the highest in Europe. This presents some temptations for some self-employed people.

Now, most self-employed people and small businesses owners in Spain of course declare (and pay) their fair share. But there are those that don’t, and there are some declare most of their income but find ways to move around or hide some of it in order to try and save money.

During the annual tax return season, self-employed people must fill out their tax information themselves so they are trusted to tell the truth. It can be a bit of a bureaucratic nightmare, especially if you aren’t a native Spanish speaker.  That’s why many opt to hire a gestor to take care of these things for them.

READ ALSO: What does a ‘gestor’ do in Spain and why you’ll need one

One of the biggest worries for self-employed people is that once they’ve submitted their tax return, then begins a long checking and cross referencing process to make sure the information is correct and you aren’t dodging any tax or hiding any income. They check bank statements, coordinate with the banks themselves, and make sure everything is properly declared and that you’ve crossed all your T’s and dotted all your I’s. 

But it recently emerged in Spain that the tax authorities are also using a new way to keep an eye on the self-employed: social media. 

Speaking to Autónomos y Emprendedores, a self-employed business newspaper and website, Hacienda officials admitted that they at times check Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and Facebook profiles and even Google reviews can be used to detect discrepancies and possible indications of tax fraud.

Officials from Spain’s Tax Officials Union (Gestha) explained to the website that although social media stalking doesn’t “form part of the main line of investigation”, social media accounts are checked by the authorities as a way of detecting any discrepancies between what’s officially presented in tax returns and the lifestyle posted online.

READ ALSO: How does Spain know if I’m a tax resident?

One example given was that of an event photographer who uploads more work to Instagram than he or she declares, “or a hotel establishment that declares a certain level of income, and it is clear from reviews and customer comments that they are more successful than they appear to be”.

This means that seemingly harmless posts online can be interpreted as evidence of undeclared income, leading to penalties and even tax audits in extreme cases.

So, how do they do it?

The tax authorities in Spain reportedly look out for four keys things online:

Advertising and promotions: Officials study offers and discounts advertised online to check that income is correctly declared.

Comments and reviews: Hacienda even checks comments like Google reviews and other interactions businesses have with customers to find undeclared sales or services.

Lifestyle and wealth: Officials are even checking photo uploads and social media posts about travel, cars or luxury items that may raise suspicions about a possible gap between your lifestyle and what you declared in your tax return — so that selfie from Dubai could cost you if you’ve underreported your income in your tax return.

Prize giveaways: Small businesses doing draws like raffles and other prize giveaways have tax obligations and evidence of these posted online will checked to ensure that they’re being declared and complied with.

READ ALSO: When do banks inform Spain’s Hacienda tax office of your transactions?

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TAXES

EXPLAINED: How Spain’s new Social Security app works

Whether you're self-employed, an artist, a student or a domestic worker, Spain's new social security app aims to simplify and streamline bureaucratic processes you might need to do when it comes to managing your working life and pension.

EXPLAINED: How Spain's new Social Security app works

Spain’s Social Security Ministry has launched a new free mobile app aimed at simplifying and synchronising tax, pension and working life procedures, allowing you to better access records and update information.

The app is specifically aimed at easing the bureaucratic burden on the self-employed, domestic workers, artists and young people studying or doing work experience.

Spain’s Minister for Inclusion, Social Security and Migration, Elma Saiz, presented the app this week, stating that it represents “a great step forward for citizens to have a closer and more fluid relationship with Social Security.

Through this application, personal data can be updated and verified; detailed information on contribution bases can be accessed and your Work Life report can be easily downloaded, among many other services.”

In Spain, your ‘Working Life report’ is known as el informe de vida laboral. According to the Social Security website, it is “a document that contains information on all the periods contributed by the worker to the Spanish Social Security system.” In other words, all the information on your entire employment history in Spain.

READ ALSO: How to check how long you have left to get a pension in Spain

The app essentially moves over the various processes usually done on the Social Security portal or in Spain’s social security offices so users can receive a more personalised service including tailored alerts and the ability to download documents to their mobile phones in offline mode.

It also allows users to easily check the details of their working life including for who and for how long they’ve worked somewhere, the type of contract they have, the working day or the relevant collective bargaining agreement, as well as information on contribution bases and how much they are owed in the event of sick leave and for calculating your pension.

How do I access and use the app?

First you’ll need to download the app from the Google Play or Apple App store. Once you’ve downloaded it to your phone, there are three ways to log-in in and register:

  • Permanent Cl@ve
  • Digital certificate (Android only)
  • SMS

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Once registered and logged in, push notifications can be turned on as well as a biometric access — either fingerprint or facial recognition.

Once this has been done, you can access your personal information, whether it be working or pension matters, and all the normal procedures you’d previously do via the portal can be carried out and all this information can be downloaded in files.

What can you do with the app?

As mentioned earlier, the new app basically aims to streamline the processes you’d normally do via the Social Security Ministry portal or in person.

This includes checking your social security number or requesting one, consulting your tax contribution bases and employment history, updating your personal details, or managing tasks for the self-employed, domestic workers artists or young people doing work experience, such as registering or deregistering as economically active and downloading supporting documents.

READ ALSO: How to de-register as self-employed in Spain

Focus on young people, freelancers, artists and domestic employment

The application offers four different profiles to use the app: self-employed, domestic employment (for both employees and employers), artists and trainees.

The autónomo profile allows you to access all the information and procedures available if you are registered or are about to start self-employment, including registration and de-registration, modifying your contribution base, consulting tax receipts, and estimating your contributions according to your income, among other things.

In the domestic employment section, whether you yourself work domestically or are going to hire someone to work at home, you can consult all the necessary information such as calculating the contributions to be paid, registering and de-registering, updating the salary information and the working hours of the employee, or consulting payslips issued.

READ ALSO: The rules for hiring a domestic worker in Spain

For artists, you can manage your inactivity, request a refund of income from contribution bases or deregister from the working artists’ register.

For students doing internships or work experience (alumnos en prácticas in Spanish) the app is useful for both those about to start their internships and for those who’ve already started them, with access to their personal profile, a guide to resolve doubts, information to find out about the benefits of pensions contributions and they can carry out procedures such as requesting the social security number, downloading the Work Life Report and consulting contribution bases.

READ ALSO: How self-employed workers in Spain can get a better pension

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