CFE’s Tax Top 5 – 8 December 2025

BRUSSELS | 8 DECEMBER 2025

OECD Establish Framework for Automatic Exchange of Information on Immovable Property


Last week, twenty-six jurisdictions pledged to implement the new OECD framework for the automatic exchange of information on offshore real estate, marking an expansion of global tax transparency beyond financial accounts and crypto-assets. The initiative is set out in the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement on the Exchange of Readily Available Information on Immovable Property (IPI MCAA), designed to close long-standing gaps in cross-border tax reporting by enabling tax administrations to access electronically searchable and reliable data on foreign property holdings, transactions and related income. The framework responds to challenges faced by administrations, including limited visibility over cross-border immovable property ownership, rising levels of underreported foreign property and the use of real estate to shelter undeclared wealth.

The Framework provides two reporting modules: one covering ownership visibility through a one-off exchange of existing holdings and annual reporting of new acquisitions, and a second covering disposals and recurrent income to support enforcement of capital gains, rental and related taxes where relevant. Participation is voluntary and based on the provision of information on an “as is” basis, subject to confidentiality and data-protection safeguards and the requirement for jurisdictions to demonstrate foreseeable relevance when opting to receive information.

The Multilateral Agreement establishes a standardised minimum data set, including identifying information for legal and beneficial owners, property characteristics, transaction details and income data, with exchanges to be transmitted via the OECD Common Transmission System. One-off exchanges are due by the end of January following the agreement’s entry into effect, with annual exchanges targeted for 31 January each year and no later than 30 June. The framework also includes mechanisms to correct errors, safeguard confidentiality, address non-compliance and allow amendments.

The OECD expects the first exchanges to begin in 2029, noting that strengthened transparency in this area will help tax administrations verify the tax treatment of foreign property income and gains and assess the legitimacy of funds used for acquisitions.

Estonia Raises Implementation Concerns for the EU Pillar 2 Global Minimum Tax Directive


In a recent communication to the European Commission, Estonia’s Ministry of Finance has outlined its concerns regarding the implementation of Directive 2022/2523 and the evolving OECD Pillar Two rules. The letter argues that the rapid development of OECD technical standards, contrasted with the fixed obligations set out in the Directive, places the EU at a structural disadvantage. Although 137 jurisdictions endorsed Pillar Two in 2021, only 55 have implemented it by 2025, and only the EU has made implementation mandatory. Estonia notes that recent OECD changes, including carve-outs benefiting larger economies, risk undermining competitive neutrality and disadvantaging EU-based groups in global markets at a time of heightened competitiveness pressures.

The communication highlights that Article 32 of the Directive, originally intended to support simplification through safe harbours, now risks incorporating substantive changes from the OECD process into EU law without proper legislative scrutiny. Estonia argues that the scope and complexity of the developing rules exceed what should automatically be absorbed into the Directive, emphasising the need for full Member State participation in decisions affecting tax obligations and national budgets. Smaller administrations, it notes, lack the capacity to keep pace with the volume and speed of OECD rule-making, limiting their ability to assess wider system impacts.

Estonia further explains that, despite its ability to defer implementation until 2030, it must already begin preparing for complex and costly administrative requirements, even though expected revenue is minimal. The government points to other countries’ experience showing that the rules are expensive to administer, frequently adjusted and burdensome for both tax administrations and businesses. In the context of increased fiscal needs, including rising defence expenditure, Estonia considers the minimum tax an inefficient use of resources and potentially counterproductive to broader compliance priorities.

To address the misalignment between EU and OECD processes, Estonia proposes options including suspending the Directive until global rules stabilise, repealing it entirely, or amending Article 50 to provide a permanent derogation for Member States with very few ultimate parent entities. It argues that such a derogation would not undermine the integrity of Pillar Two, as the UTPR would continue to address undertaxed profits. The communication concludes by calling for a more proportionate and flexible EU approach that preserves competitiveness, reduces administrative burdens and supports efficient revenue collection across all Member States.

FISC Hearing on Taxation of Ultra-High-Net-Worth-Individuals


The European Parliament’s FISC Subcommittee will hold a public hearing on 11 December 2025 to examine the taxation of ultra-high-net-worth individuals. Speakers will include Dr Benjamin Angel (European Commission, DG TAXUD), Dr Kurt Van Dender (OECD), Prof. Dr Gabriel Zucman (European Tax Observatory) and Dr Michael Christl (Tax Foundation Europe).

The session will focus on fairness concerns in the tax system and the need for policies that support more equitable growth. Experts are expected to outline how ultra-high-net-worth individuals minimise tax liabilities through legislative gaps, offshore structures and aggressive planning arrangements, and to assess the role of transparency mechanisms such as public registers and global reporting standards in improving detection, compliance and enforcement.

The discussion will also examine the tools and administrative resources required to strengthen tax authorities’ ability to address avoidance risks. Panellists will consider how enhanced cross-border cooperation could help close structural gaps in the international tax framework that enable tax avoidance and financial opacity, with a view to supporting more coherent and resilient global tax governance.

European Commission Launches Package to Integrate EU Financial Markets 


The European Commission has presented a legislative package designed to remove structural barriers in EU financial markets and advance the Savings and Investments Union strategy. The initiative aims to respond to fragmentation that limits competitiveness, with the Commission emphasising that deeper market integration is essential to support investment, competitiveness, and the green, digital and security transitions. By simplifying access to capital markets and reducing cost differentials between domestic and cross-border activity, the reforms aim to create a single financial market that operates more efficiently and provides better wealth-building opportunities for citizens and improved financing conditions for businesses.

The legislative package introduces measures to reduce regulatory and supervisory divergence across Member States. It proposes enhanced passporting for Regulated Markets and Central Securities Depositories, the creation of a Pan-European Market Operator status to consolidate authorisations under a single licence, and streamlined rules for the cross-border distribution of Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities and Alternative Investment Funds. To support innovation, the package would adapt the regulatory framework for distributed ledger technology by amending the DLT Pilot Regulation to increase proportionality, relax operational limits and provide greater legal certainty. Supervisory reforms would transfer direct oversight of significant trading venues, Central Counterparties, Central Securities Depositories and all Crypto-Asset Service Providers to ESMA, alongside a strengthened coordination role in the asset management sector.

The package also contains broad simplification measures aligned with previous Savings and Investments Union initiatives. These include converting directives into directly applicable regulations, reducing national options and discretions to prevent gold-plating, and streamlining level-2 empowerments to achieve a more coherent framework.

The reforms follow calls from the European Council and Parliament in 2025 to advance capital market oversight, remove cross-border barriers and update rules for new technologies. The proposals will now be negotiated by the Parliament and the Council, with the Commission underscoring the need to maintain the unity of the package to ensure coherent reform across the entire investment chain.

OECD Consultation & Publication Updates 


OECD Public Consultation on the Global Mobility of Individuals
The OECD Inclusive Framework has launched a public consultation concerning the tax implications of global mobility, reflecting changes in working patterns enabled by technology, including remote and cross-border work.

At its April 2025 Plenary, Members agreed to take an evidence-based, phased approach to examining whether existing tax rules create challenges or barriers to these new forms of mobility, and to assess how such rules interact with opportunities for businesses, workers, investment and growth. Recognising the diversity of experiences across sectors and regions, the Inclusive Framework is seeking broad stakeholder input to inform the scope and prioritisation of its future work.

To support this process, the OECD has released a public consultation document setting out initial areas of potential concern and inviting views from multinational enterprises, individuals, NGOs, academia and other interested parties. A public consultation meeting on the topic will take place on 20 January 2026, with registration details to follow on the OECD website.

Stakeholders are encouraged to provide written responses to the consultation questions by 22 December 2025, submitted by email to the OECD Secretariat and addressed to the Director of the Centre for Tax Policy and Administration. All submissions will be made public, and contributors submitting on behalf of a coalition or another party must identify all represented individuals or entities.

Enhanced Monitoring Report on Exchange of Information on Request Standards
The OECD’s 2025 Enhanced Monitoring Report was published last week, setting out the progress made by 25 jurisdictions in implementing the standard on transparency and exchange of information on request (EOIR).

The report notes steady improvement in the availability of beneficial ownership information, with most jurisdictions adopting multi-pronged approaches that involve legal entity obligations, central registers and strengthened anti-money laundering frameworks. However, effectiveness varies, and many registers still require further work to ensure accuracy, timely updates and comprehensive coverage. The report identifies ongoing challenges around inactive entities, with several jurisdictions unable to demonstrate that ownership and accounting information is reliably available for companies that remain legally active despite long-term non-compliance.

Jurisdictions have made progress addressing the 125 “in-box” recommendations issued in earlier peer reviews. Around 29% of recommendations are now considered provisionally addressed, while more than half are in the process of being implemented. A smaller proportion, 18 recommendations, remain unaddressed, prompting closer monitoring and an obligation on five jurisdictions to submit detailed schedules for remediation by March 2026. In some instances, jurisdictions that have improved their legal frameworks have received new recommendations focused on demonstrating effective implementation in practice, particularly in relation to beneficial ownership supervision.

The report highlights generally positive trends in exchange of information in practice. Across 2023–2024, the monitored jurisdictions received over 11,600 requests, responding to 76% within 90 days and a further 14% within six months. Seven jurisdictions have had recommendations on timeliness provisionally addressed following the introduction of better monitoring tools, staff training and improved communication procedures. Nonetheless, delays remain in some cases, and peer feedback indicates that communication difficulties — particularly regarding status updates and clarifications — still impede effective cooperation.

Peer input has increased significantly, with 802 submissions from 52 jurisdictions, over three-quarters of which reflect general satisfaction with EOIR performance. Around 12% raised concerns requiring a response, and in three cases these highlighted systemic issues that resulted in new recommendations. Two jurisdictions showed backsliding on timeliness compared with earlier reviews, leading to additional monitoring obligations and annual reporting requirements.

Future monitoring rounds will continue in 2026 and 2027, with most jurisdictions expected to report next in 2028.

2025 Update to Peer Review of the Automatic Exchange of Financial Account Information
The 2025 update of the OECD’s Automatic Exchange of Financial Account Information Peer Review Report was also made available last week, and outlines continued global progress in implementing the Common Reporting Standard, with 118 jurisdictions assessed and 116 operating fully or substantially compliant legal frameworks.

The report confirms that over 97% of jurisdictions have now implemented the necessary domestic and international legislation to enable automatic exchange, although four jurisdictions remain “Not in Place” due to missing or significantly deficient frameworks. In practice, 108 jurisdictions have undergone effectiveness reviews, with 63% rated “On Track” and a further 18% “Partially Compliant”, while 19% were found to have fundamental deficiencies in administrative compliance systems. The report highlights steady improvements in data quality, including greater use of Tax Identification Numbers and a sharp reduction in undocumented accounts, but also notes ongoing challenges in ensuring consistent due diligence by Reporting Financial Institutions.

The Global Forum launched a second round of effectiveness reviews, including onsite visits in 99 early-adopter jurisdictions, focusing particularly on monitoring, verification and enforcement activities. Jurisdictions have significantly expanded risk-based compliance strategies, data quality checks and enforcement measures, with more than 4,400 penalties applied for non-compliance since 2022. The total number of accounts reported has risen sharply, reflecting both compliance activities and broader uptake of reporting obligations. The report also tracks implementation of the amended CRS adopted in 2023, which introduces digital money products, enhanced reporting fields and a new XML Schema. Around two-thirds of jurisdictions plan to begin exchanges under the amended standard in 2027, with others using a transitional period. More than 60 jurisdictions have signed the required CRS MCAA Addendum, although work on domestic legislation and IT upgrades is ongoing.


The selection of the remitted material has been prepared by:
Dr. Aleksandar Ivanovski & Brodie McIntosh