02
Thu, May
18 New Articles

Russia Offers Generous Tax Incentives to Tech Companies Amidst Tightening Control Over the Industry

Russia Offers Generous Tax Incentives to Tech Companies Amidst Tightening Control Over the Industry

Russia
Tools
Typography
  • Smaller Small Medium Big Bigger
  • Default Helvetica Segoe Georgia Times

Despite the severe damage inflicted by COVID-19 on the Russian economy, the government and businesses have agreed that the local IT sector needs state incentives and support. Calls for accelerated development and state support for the local IT sector were among the main messages of several state agencies when the Russian president and government announced a series of tax benefits for the IT industry.

Large-scale tax benefits for Russian IT companies were introduced on January 1, 2021, to create conditions for the development of domestic high-tech companies and increase the attractiveness of the Russian jurisdiction for international IT companies. First, these measures imply the provision of income tax benefits to two categories of companies working in the IT industry: Russian IT firms that develop and implement software, provide services for modification, adaptation, installation, testing, and maintenance of software and databases, as well as IT companies, which design and develop electronic component database products and electronic products. For such companies, the income tax rate was reduced from 20% to 3%. Similarly, social contributions were also reduced from 14% to 7.6%, an incentive aimed at easing the fiscal burden of wages on IT companies. These benefits are available to both Russian IT companies and local subsidiaries of foreign international or multinational businesses operating in the country.

As a tradeoff for these incentives, there is a limitation of the VAT exemption on the provision of exclusive rights and software licenses. Now, the exemption applies only to software that is included in the so-called Register of the Russian Software. Along with Russian businesses, the exemption is also available to local subsidiaries of foreign companies, but the latter’s shares in such local businesses should be less than 50%, while their revenues from licensing the software abroad should not be more than 30%.Companies that specialize in R&D operations are waiting for the expansion of the reduced income tax rate to their revenues, as the Russian IP Agency had recently expressed its intention to facilitate the provision of these tax incentives to all companies that generate income from their intellectual properties.

Together with the existing tax incentives for start-ups through the Skolkovo Innovation Center, the Russian IT sector is fully equipped with substantial fiscal stimulus, which makes it a prospective sector for investment.

This snapshot would not be complete without a review of international taxation practices, as Russia plans to be on par with global trends. Since Russia is striving to establish the most advanced tax practices, there are ongoing discussions and plans for it to join the OECD’s new taxation standards for digital businesses, thus adopting a single supranational minimum income tax rate. A final decision has not been taken on this issue and how it will work with the above incentives has yet to be defined. Russia has also consistently called on international IT companies to comply with its local data protection rules. As a step to strengthen its ability to monitor the localization of Russian users’ data, the government has adopted a law that requires foreign online companies with significant local users (defined as 500,000 or more Russian users per day) to have a physical presence in the country, effective from January 1, 2022. The law affects social networks, messengers, gaming services, search engines, online shops, hosting providers, advertising platforms, e-mail services, and several others.

Liability measures have been established for companies that do not have local official representative offices in Russia. Some of these measures are, comparatively, less stringent, such as informing the users of those companies’ resources about a violation of the Russian legislation by foreign entities. Other measures, on the other hand, prescribe quite severe penalties, for example, a complete blockage of the foreign entities’ resources in Russia.

Accordingly, companies that meet these conditions should be allowed to operate or be represented in Russia. In addition, an electronic form should be created on such companies’ official corporate websites to receive requests from Russian users. Moreover, such companies should register a personal account on the official website of the Russian agency responsible for Internet control, in order to receive requests/appeals from Russian state agencies.

By Olga Odintsova, Tax Counsel and Head of New Business and Product Development, CMS Russia

This Article was originally published in Issue 8.8 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

CMS at a Glance

CMS Sofia is a full-service law firm, the largest international law firm in Bulgaria and one of the largest providers of legal services in the local market as a whole. The breadth and depth of our practice means that our lawyers are specialised, with a level of specialisation that few of our competitors can match.

CMS Sofia is the Bulgarian branch of CMS, a top ten global legal and tax services provider with over 5000 lawyers in 43 countries and 78 offices across the world.

CMS entered the Bulgarian market as one of the first internationally active law firms in 2005 and is now among the most respected legal advisors in the country. We have 7 partners, 4 counsel and over 30 lawyers in our office in Sofia.

Our legal experts, who are rooted in Bulgaria’s local culture, can also draw on years of experience in foreign countries and are at home in several legal systems at once. We know the particularities of the local market just as well as the needs of our clients and combine both to achieve optimum solutions. Our lawyers are Bulgarian qualified and we also have English qualified experts – all of them regularly working on cross-border mandates.

In our work, we focus on M&A, Energy, Projects and Construction, Banking and Finance, Real Estate, Media, IP and IT law, Tax, Employment law, Competition, Procurement and any kind of Dispute resolution, including arbitration and mediation. What’s more, we also take care of the entire legal management of our clients’ projects.

Firm's website.