Uruguay · Wealth
Key Facts
The tax. Residents’ foreign capital income is taxed at 12 percent, in force since January 2026.
The 8 percent option. A definitive withholding of 8 percent can settle the bill and remove filing.
Real or notional. Taxpayers elect each year between actual income and a notional base.
The look-through. Offshore-entity income is attributed to owners holding 5 percent or more.
The holiday. New residents can still claim a tax holiday, but the terms now favour the 183-day route.
Uruguay’s new tax on residents’ foreign income is not one flat rule but a set of choices — and for wealthy new arrivals with offshore assets, those choices can move the bill materially. Here are the levers that matter.
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The headline rate, and the 8 percent shortcut
Since January 2026, Uruguay taxes residents’ foreign capital income — interest, dividends, rents and gains from abroad — at 12 percent. The change ended the old treatment that left much foreign income untaxed.
Where a Uruguayan bank or broker acts as withholding agent, the rate can drop to 8 percent, taken at source. That withholding is definitive: it settles the tax and removes the need to file, a simpler route for many.
Real or notional: an annual choice
Taxpayers can elect each year between the real method, taxing actual income, and a notional method that taxes a fixed share of the transaction. For a sale of foreign property, the notional base is 15 percent of the sale price, giving an effective rate of about 1.8 percent of the price.
For other asset sales, the notional base is 20 percent, or roughly 2.4 percent of the price. Because the election is annual and applies across your income, it is worth modelling both each year to see which is cheaper.
The look-through on offshore structures
The rules attribute a foreign entity’s passive income directly to its Uruguayan-resident beneficial owner, unless the holding is below 5 percent. That closes the route of parking foreign earnings in an offshore company to defer Uruguayan tax.
Income is treated as earned when the first entity receives it, not when it reaches you. Anyone using holding companies or trusts should map how the look-through applies before year-end.
Trusts and estate planning
The decree also addresses trusts and estates. Tax advisers note it carves out certain transfers whose effect is conditional on the holder’s death, where the beneficiary keeps substantially all of the interest, a deliberate opening for estate planning.
These mechanics are technical and fact-specific, so anyone with a trust or a cross-border estate should confirm the treatment with a Uruguayan tax lawyer, and, for US persons, a cross-border adviser.
The tax holiday, reshaped
New residents can still claim a tax holiday on foreign income, but the terms have shifted. Those who qualify for residency by spending 183 days a year in Uruguay can take the holiday without investing, provided they meet the day count each year.
Those who qualify by other routes must invest — broadly, property above roughly US$2 million or a qualifying fund of about US$100,000 a year — to access it. After the holiday, fixed-amount options exist for those who want certainty.
Who should model this now
The people who gain most from planning are higher-net-worth newcomers with offshore portfolios, property abroad or estate structures. The 8-versus-12 percent choice, the real-versus-notional election and the holiday terms interact, and small differences compound at scale.
None of this is tax advice, and the figures turn on your own situation. A Uruguayan tax specialist is the reliable way to model the options before you commit.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is foreign income taxed in Uruguay now?
Residents’ foreign capital income is taxed at 12 percent, or 8 percent if a local agent withholds it, in force since January 2026.
What is the real-versus-notional choice?
Taxpayers elect each year between taxing actual income and a notional base, 15 percent of the price on foreign property sales and 20 percent on other assets.
Does the tax reach offshore companies?
Yes. A look-through attributes a foreign entity’s income to a resident owner holding 5 percent or more.
Can new residents still avoid the tax?
New residents can claim a tax holiday, without investment if they qualify by the 183-day route, or with investment by other routes.
Do I need an adviser?
For offshore structures, trusts or estates, yes. The mechanics are technical; confirm with a Uruguayan tax lawyer and, for US persons, a cross-border adviser.
View original source — Rio Times ↗



