Updated: 26 June 2026
Non-Resident Airbnb Owner Tax in Greece
Short answer: non-resident owners have the same Greek short-term-rental obligations as residents — AMA registration, the AADE Short-Term Stay declaration per booking, the monthly TAKK fee and annual income tax — all filable online.
Your obligations as a non-resident owner
Renting a Greek property short-term means registering it in the AADE registry (AMA), filing each booking's Short-Term Stay declaration with the net rent, and remitting the TAKK climate-resilience fee monthly. Income is also declared annually.
Managing it remotely
You don't need to be in Greece. Connect your channel manager, and bookings sync automatically while AADE & TAKK declarations are prepared with correct amounts and deadlines — so cross-checks (incl. DAC7) line up with what platforms report.
Automate your declarations
GreekStay Manager connects to Airbnb, Booking & your channel manager and auto-prepares your AADE & TAKK filings — correct amounts, on time.
Frequently asked questions
- Do non-resident Airbnb owners pay tax in Greece?
- Yes. Income from a Greek property is taxed in Greece. You must register the property (AMA), file the Short-Term Stay declaration per booking, remit the TAKK fee monthly, and declare income annually.
- Can I file everything from abroad?
- Yes. Filings are done online via myAADE with your TaxisNet credentials. Software like GreekStay lets you manage it remotely and automatically.
- What is TAKK?
- The climate-resilience fee charged per guest night — €8/€2 for apartments (high/low season) and €15/€4 for large detached houses, remitted monthly.
Informational content, not tax advice. Confirm current amounts/deadlines with AADE or an accountant.