Turkey’s Law No. 7582, published in the Official Gazette on 4 June 2026, has introduced two measures that fundamentally change the tax landscape for individuals relocating to the country: a 20‑year exemption from Turkish income tax on qualifying foreign‑source income and a time‑limited Asset Peace (Varlık Barışı) regime that allows offshore and undeclared domestic assets to be regularised through authorised banks and brokerages. The foreign‑income exemption is available to individuals who become Turkish tax residents and who were not resident or subject to tax in Turkey during the preceding three calendar years, while the Asset Peace repatriation window closes on 31 July 2027.
Together, Turkey’s 20‑year foreign‑income exemption and Asset Peace provisions create a combined incentive structure, reduced ongoing taxation on worldwide earnings plus a one‑off mechanism to declare offshore assets at rates as low as 0 %, that positions the country as a serious competitor to established non‑dom regimes in Europe and beyond.
Key takeaways at a glance:
Law No. 7582 was adopted by the Turkish Grand National Assembly and published in the Official Gazette on 4 June 2026 (Gazette No. 33270). The legislation amends several existing statutes, most importantly the Income Tax Law (Gelir Vergisi Kanunu), to insert a new temporary provision granting the Turkey 20‑year foreign income exemption and to establish a fresh iteration of the Asset Peace framework. The Turkish Revenue Administration (Gelir İdaresi Başkanlığı) confirmed the law’s entry into force through a formal announcement and has issued implementing guidance clarifying procedural requirements for both measures.
For practitioners, the statutory text is the controlling authority. Interpretive guidance from the Revenue Administration and from implementing communiqués should be monitored closely, as further procedural detail, including form templates and bank reporting obligations, may evolve before the 31 July 2027 deadline.
The two pillars of Law No. 7582 operate in tandem but address different objectives:
Industry observers expect these combined provisions to attract high‑net‑worth individuals from jurisdictions that have recently tightened non‑dom rules, notably the United Kingdom and, to a lesser extent, Portugal, as well as members of the Turkish diaspora holding substantial assets abroad. The likely practical effect will be a significant influx of capital declarations before the repatriation window closes on 31 July 2027.
Eligibility for the exemption hinges on two interlocking requirements: becoming a Turkish tax resident and satisfying a three‑year lookback test that confirms prior non‑residency.
Tax residence under Turkish law. An individual becomes a tax resident in Turkey if they establish their legal domicile (ikametgâh) in the country or remain in Turkey for a continuous or aggregate period of more than six months within a calendar year. Temporary absences for travel do not interrupt the six‑month count. In practical terms, securing a residence permit and registering an address with the population directorate (Nüfus Müdürlüğü) will typically trigger domicile‑based residence, while physical presence exceeding six months triggers presence‑based residence.
Three‑year lookback rule. The individual must not have been resident in, or subject to, Turkish income tax during the three calendar years immediately preceding the year in which they become tax resident. This means an individual establishing residence in 2026 must demonstrate that they were not a Turkish tax resident in 2023, 2024 or 2025 and were not otherwise liable to Turkish income tax during those years.
Documenting non‑residency. The following checklist identifies the types of evidence advisers should assemble to support a claim of prior non‑residency:
Practical residency scenarios. A digital nomad who has lived in Portugal for the last four years and now relocates to Istanbul will satisfy both tests, provided they establish Turkish domicile or exceed six months of physical presence and can evidence non‑residency in Turkey for 2023–2025. A retired executive returning to Turkey after a decade abroad meets the criteria straightforwardly. An employee on a short‑term assignment, however, should exercise caution: if their stay is characterised as temporary under Turkish law, they may not qualify as a full tax resident, and consequently may not trigger the exemption.
The Asset Peace regime under Law No. 7582 covers a broad range of asset categories. Declarations may be made in respect of:
All declarations must be made through an authorised Turkish bank or brokerage house. The declarant identifies the asset, provides supporting valuation documentation, and the financial intermediary processes the declaration and collects the applicable one‑off tax.
The headline declaration rate under Asset Peace Turkey is 5 %, but the law provides significant incentives for declarants who commit to holding the declared assets in Turkey for specified periods. The rate steps down in proportion to the length of the holding commitment, reaching 0 % for assets committed to Turkish government debt instruments, sukuk or five‑year time deposits. The statutory framework also provides that the base rate may increase by half a percentage point for declarations made during certain later filing windows, creating an additional reason to declare early within the repatriation window.
| Declaration Option | Effective Tax Rate (Nominal) | Minimum Holding / Commitment |
|---|---|---|
| Standard declaration to bank/broker (no commitment) | 5 % (subject to half‑point increases for later filing windows) | None (immediate) |
| Commitment to government debt instruments / sukuk / 5‑year deposit | 0 % | 5 years (formal commitment required) |
| 4‑year commitment | 1 % | 4 years |
| 3‑year commitment | 2 % | 3 years |
| 2‑year commitment | 3 % | 2 years |
| 1‑year commitment | 4 % | 1 year |
The statutory window for Asset Peace declarations runs until 31 July 2027. This is a hard legislative deadline. Declarations made after this date will not benefit from the preferential rate structure. Individuals who intend to declare offshore assets under this regime should plan their filings well in advance, particularly where complex multi‑jurisdictional asset structures require coordination with foreign banks and custodians.
The process of filing an Asset Peace declaration involves several discrete steps. A disciplined timeline reduces the risk of missing the 31 July 2027 deadline and ensures procedural compliance with Turkish Revenue Administration guidance.
Step‑by‑step procedure:
Indicative timeline: For a straightforward cash declaration, the process from initial counsel engagement to completed declaration may take two to four weeks. For complex portfolios involving securities, property or multi‑jurisdictional custodians, allow eight to twelve weeks. Given the 31 July 2027 deadline, individuals with complex structures should begin preparations no later than early 2027.
Understanding the interaction between the Asset Peace one‑off tax, the 20‑year foreign‑income exemption, and an individual’s ongoing reporting obligations is critical for compliant planning.
Is foreign income taxable in Turkey? Under standard Turkish tax law, resident individuals are taxed on their worldwide income. However, for individuals who qualify for the Turkey 20‑year foreign income exemption under Law No. 7582, foreign‑source income and gains earned outside Turkey are exempt from Turkish income tax for the full 20‑year period. This exemption covers all standard income categories sourced abroad, dividends, interest, capital gains, rental income, employment income earned abroad, and royalties, provided the income is genuinely foreign‑sourced.
Worked examples:
Double taxation treaty considerations. Turkey maintains an extensive network of double taxation agreements. The exemption does not override treaty obligations in the source country. Where a DTA applies, the source country typically retains the right to tax certain income categories (dividends, interest, royalties, immovable property income). Because the income is exempt in Turkey, no Turkish foreign‑tax credit arises, meaning the source‑country tax is the final cost. Advisers should model the net tax position under each relevant DTA before relocation.
Reporting. Even where income is exempt, qualifying individuals should confirm whether Turkish filing obligations, including the annual income tax return, still apply. Early indications suggest that exempt income must be disclosed in the return but is excluded from the taxable base; however, implementing communiqués from the Revenue Administration should be monitored for definitive guidance.
The Asset Peace regime provides a powerful regularisation mechanism, but it does not eliminate all compliance risk. Advisers and declarants should be alert to the following hazards:
Mitigation checklist: engage specialist Turkish counsel before any declaration; prepare robust source‑of‑funds documentation; stage declarations to manage bank KYC workflows; and confirm exit‑tax and reporting obligations in every relevant source jurisdiction.
Turkey’s 20‑year foreign‑income exemption and Asset Peace regime represent a rare alignment of long‑term tax relief and short‑term repatriation incentives. For individuals who satisfy the three‑year lookback test and are willing to establish Turkish tax residence, the combined benefit, two decades of exemption on foreign‑source income plus the ability to declare offshore assets at rates as low as 0 %, is substantial. The critical constraint is time: the Asset Peace declaration window closes on 31 July 2027, and the half‑point rate increases for later filing periods mean that acting sooner yields better outcomes.
Wealth managers, tax advisers and high‑net‑worth individuals should begin eligibility assessments and asset inventories now, and should engage qualified Turkish tax counsel to navigate the procedural and compliance requirements of Turkey’s 20‑year foreign‑income exemption and Asset Peace framework before the opportunity expires.
Last reviewed: 17 July 2026. This article will be updated if new implementing communiqués are issued by the Turkish Revenue Administration.
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