Housing aid

Bëllegen Akt: Up to €40,000 Per Person in Tax Credit on Your Luxembourg Home — Still Available in 2026


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Bëllegen Akt: Up to €40,000 Per Person in Tax Credit on Your Luxembourg Home — Still Available in 2026

The Bëllegen Akt — literally "cheap deed" in Luxembourgish — is the country's most-asked-about housing tax aid, and it remains in force in 2026 after the broader package of housing-crisis tax reliefs expired on 30 June 2025. The credit allows buyers of their primary residence to benefit from a tax exemption of up to €40,000 per person, applied against registration duties.

How it works

When you buy a home in Luxembourg, you pay registration duty (the standard rate is 7%) plus transcription duty (1%). The Bëllegen Akt credit is applied against the registration-duty side, reducing or fully cancelling the registration component for primary-residence purchases. The credit is per person — meaning a couple buying jointly can each apply their own €40,000 credit — provided the buyers are the natural persons (not a corporate vehicle) and the property will be their main and habitual residence.

What you actually save

For an apartment priced at €700,000 — close to the median Luxembourg City apartment price — the standard registration duty is €49,000. A single buyer using the full Bëllegen Akt credit reduces that to €9,000. A couple jointly using both credits reduces it to zero, with €31,000 of unused credit on the registration side. For a more expensive property — say €1.2M — a couple's combined €80,000 credit reduces the €84,000 registration duty to €4,000. The savings scale with price, capped at the credit's per-person limit.

Who qualifies

Three conditions matter most. The buyer is a natural person, not a corporate or fund vehicle. The property is a primary, habitual residence — not a second home or rental investment. And the buyer commits to residing in the property for at least two years from acquisition; selling earlier triggers a clawback of the credit unless specific exceptions apply (job relocation, family reasons, etc., subject to administration).

What is unchanged in 2026

The Bëllegen Akt cap of €40,000 per person, the eligibility framework, and the clawback rules. What changed earlier — and is sometimes confused with the Bëllegen Akt — is the temporary investor reliefs (3.5% registration duty for second properties, 6% accelerated depreciation, capital-gains reductions) introduced for 2023-2025 and ended on 30 June 2025.

What else is still on the menu

The home-ownership incentive (€500-€10,000 depending on household composition and income), the State Guarantee mechanism for low-deposit borrowers, and various municipal-level subsidies all remain. The Bëllegen Akt is the headline; the rest is the supporting cast for first-time and primary-residence buyers in 2026.

Is the Bëllegen Akt still available in 2026?
Yes. The investor reliefs ended 30 June 2025, but the Bëllegen Akt buyer credit remains in force.
How much can a couple save?
Up to €80,000 combined against registration duties on a primary-residence purchase.
What happens if I sell early?
Selling within two years triggers a clawback unless specific exceptions apply (job relocation, family reasons).

See more on: Housing, Tax, Bellegen Akt, Luxembourg

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