PUBLISHED April 28, 2026
Revenues Continue to Increase
According to “Die Staatseinnahmen steigen – der Überschuss schrumpft” published by Wort.lu, Luxembourg’s central government revenues increased moderately in the first quarter of 2026. Total revenues reached €7.92 billion by the end of March, representing an increase of €341 million, or 4.5% year-on-year.
Income Tax Supports Public Finances
The composition of revenue growth varied significantly across tax categories. Income tax receipts rose strongly by 8.1%, helping support overall revenue performance. This suggests that employment income and wage-related tax flows remained relatively solid during the quarter.
Corporate Tax Revenue Declines
In contrast, receipts from corporate taxation moved sharply lower. Revenue from corporation tax fell by 11.8%, offsetting part of the gains seen in personal taxation. As a result, total direct tax revenues remained broadly stable at €4.3 billion.
Indirect taxes showed much stronger momentum. Revenue from VAT and other indirect levies rose by 15.6% to €2.2 billion, led by a 17% increase in VAT receipts. This points to resilient consumption activity and stronger tax collection in transaction-based revenue streams.
Indirect taxes showed much stronger momentum. Revenue from VAT and other indirect levies rose by 15.6% to €2.2 billion, led by a 17% increase in VAT receipts. This points to resilient consumption activity and stronger tax collection in transaction-based revenue streams.
While revenues increased, expenditures grew much faster. State spending reached €7.86 billion, up 8.6% compared with the same period last year. This faster pace of spending growth significantly reduced the government’s fiscal cushion.
Because spending rose faster than income, Luxembourg’s budget surplus narrowed sharply. The first-quarter surplus fell to just €59 million, representing a €278 million decline year-on-year. The figures indicate growing pressure on public finances despite continued revenue expansion.
The latest numbers suggest Luxembourg still benefits from solid revenues, but balancing future budgets may become more challenging if expenditure growth continues at a faster pace than tax income. With external uncertainty still present, maintaining fiscal flexibility is likely to become an increasingly important priority for the remainder of 2026.
While revenues increased, expenditures grew much faster. State spending reached €7.86 billion, up 8.6% compared with the same period last year. This faster pace of spending growth significantly reduced the government’s fiscal cushion.
Because spending rose faster than income, Luxembourg’s budget surplus narrowed sharply. The first-quarter surplus fell to just €59 million, representing a €278 million decline year-on-year. The figures indicate growing pressure on public finances despite continued revenue expansion.
The latest numbers suggest Luxembourg still benefits from solid revenues, but balancing future budgets may become more challenging if expenditure growth continues at a faster pace than tax income. With external uncertainty still present, maintaining fiscal flexibility is likely to become an increasingly important priority for the remainder of 2026.