Spanish court orders €55mil tax refund to Shakira 

Spanish court orders €55mil tax refund to Shakira 

The court found tax authorities had failed to prove that Shakira had spent more than 183 days in Spain in 2011, the legal threshold requiring residents to pay personal income tax in the country.

The ruling comes as Shakira is set to wrap up her record-breaking ‘Women Don’t Cry Anymore’ world tour with a concert residency in Madrid starting in September. (EPA Images pic)
MADRID:
A Spanish court has ordered the tax authority to refund Colombian pop star Shakira more than 55 million euros (US$64 million) improperly collected in a dispute over her 2011 taxes, according to a ruling seen Monday.

The National Audience said tax authorities had failed to prove that the “Hips Don’t Lie” singer spent more than 183 days in Spain in 2011, the legal threshold requiring residents to pay personal income tax in the country.

“On the contrary, the court found that Shakira spent 163 days in Spain and that the tax authorities had therefore failed to prove that the singer had the centre of her economic interests in Spain,” according to the ruling issued last month which was seen by AFP on Monday.

The court ordered “the reimbursement of the sums paid, together with legal interest”, cancelling the tax assessments and multi-million-euro fines imposed by the tax authorities, which had considered the singer a tax resident in Spain in 2011.

The ruling comes as Shakira is set to wrap up her record-breaking “Women Don’t Cry Anymore” world tour with a concert residency in Madrid starting in September.

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