Under Greek law, preferential tax regimes are those with a corporate tax rate equal to or less than 60% of Greece’s rate for legal persons or permanent establishments.
The Greek Public Revenue Authority (AADE) issued Decision No. A.1125 on 9 September 2025, setting out the jurisdictions classified as having a preferential tax regime for the 2023 tax year.
The classification applies in relation to specific tax rules, including restrictions on the deductibility of expenses incurred with residents of such jurisdictions.
Under Greek law, preferential tax regimes are those with a corporate tax rate equal to or less than 60% of Greece’s rate for legal persons or permanent establishments.
For 2023, the list covers 42 jurisdictions:
| Albania | Andorra | Anguilla | Bahamas |
| Bahrain | Barbados | Belize | Bermuda |
| Bonaire | Bosnia and Herzegovina | British Virgin Islands | Bulgaria |
| Cayman Islands | Cyprus | Gibraltar | Guernsey |
| Hungary | Ireland | Isle of Man | Jersey |
| Kosovo | Kyrgyzstan | Liechtenstein | Macau |
| Maldives | Marshall Islands | Moldova | Monaco |
| Mongolia | Montenegro | North Macedonia | Paraguay |
| Qatar | Saba | Saudi Arabia | St. Eustatius |
| Timor-Leste | Tokelau | Turkmenistan | Turks and Caicos Islands |
| UAE | Vanuatu |