Well, from what I read you can not earn more than 100k€ per year, but from that first 100k€ only 20% is taxed at 20%. First there are differences between If you earn say €80.000 the tax rate will be as follows:
Income 80.000€ – normalized expenses 64.000€ = tax base 16.000€ x tax rate 20% = tax 3.200€.
The website where I found this then says the following:
“Once sole proprietors are already conducting business, they︀ have to be cautious of another condition. If they want to remain in the taxation︁ system for normalized expenses, they cannot surpass €300.000 income in two consecutive tax years (so︂ €150.000 per year).”
How this works is unclear to me, but I guess if in︃ the second year:
Income €140.000 – normalized expenses €100.000 (capped at €80.000) = tax base €60.000 x tax rate 20% = tax €12.000.
Slovenia has︄ some interesting benefits, first if you are an EU-national you can of course enter without︅ any hassle, second of all the costs of starting a “sole trade (s.p)” company are︆ €0.00.
It is quite vague, and most recent sources don't mention this structure. Maybe because︇ it attracted some ire from the local population. If I look here for example:
Registration of a sole trader (s.p.) | SPOT - Slovenian Business Point the documents under “Legal︈ Basis” seem to be removed which is quite strange if you ask me.
This site︉
Sole proprietorship and flat-rate taxation in Slovenia/EU - Data d.o.o. has been updated as recently︊ as April 2021, so it seems the structure still exists. Perhaps there is somebody on︋ this forum actively utilizing this structure who can enlighten us.
Sources:
https://spot.gov.si/en/info/https://spot.gov.si/en/info/company-registration/register-as-a-sole-trader-s-p-in-slovenia/