Bavaria: Füracker: Bavaria extends the deadline for property tax returns

Almost a third of all property tax returns in Bavaria are still missing.

Bavaria: Füracker: Bavaria extends the deadline for property tax returns

Almost a third of all property tax returns in Bavaria are still missing. Bayern is now surprisingly announcing a further extension of the deadline.

Munich (dpa / lby) - Bavaria is single-handedly extending the deadline for submitting property tax returns. Property owners should have three months more time, i.e. until the end of April, as Finance Minister Albert Füracker (CSU) said on Tuesday after a cabinet meeting in Munich. One wants to give relief again, especially for the tax consulting professions. You do not want to annoy anyone, but to carry out the entire tax process properly.

Bavaria is reacting to the sluggish submission of the declarations. Most recently, the data from almost a third of all property owners was still missing in Bavaria - although the rates are quite similar nationwide. Up to and including Monday, more than 4.3 million property tax returns were submitted throughout Bavaria. This corresponds to around 68 percent of the total declarations to be made, as the Ministry of Finance announced on Tuesday.

Originally, the deadline for submitting the new property tax returns was the end of October 2022. This period was then extended throughout Germany up to and including January 31st. There was no further nationwide extension of the deadline until recently. And the Bavarian decision is now very surprising.

Shortly before the expiry of the previous deadline, Füracker had only emphasized that there were no immediate sanctions if someone did not submit their property tax return on time. "No one has to fear that there will be a penalty tomorrow, not even in the next few days or weeks," Füracker said on Bavarian radio on Tuesday morning.

From 2025, the property tax for well over six million economic units in Bavaria will be calculated on a new assessment basis. The background is a decision by the Federal Constitutional Court in 2018, according to which the previous assessment basis in Germany is unconstitutional. In Bavaria, the recalculation is based on a separate model because the state government finds the federal model "too bureaucratic".