Péter Magyar, leader of the opposition Tisza Party in Hungary, has presented a detailed tax plan that promises lower taxes for minimum wage earners and those earning below the median salary, while introducing a wealth tax for the country’s richest citizens.

Income tax relief for low and middle earners

Under the proposal, the personal income tax for minimum wage workers would be reduced from the current 15 percent to 9 percent through tax credits. This would amount to an annual saving of HUF 240,000 (EUR 605). Those earning below the median wage – currently HUF 625,000 (EUR 1,575) gross per month – would also benefit from tax relief.

According to Péter Magyar:

  • a gross monthly salary of HUF 420,000 (EUR 1,058) would mean HUF 15,000 (EUR 38) less tax,
  • at HUF 500,000 (EUR 1,260) the saving would be HUF 10,000 (EUR 25),
  • while at HUF 625,000 (EUR 1,575) workers would still save HUF 5,000 (EUR 13) per month.

For those earning above the median, the current 15 percent rate would remain unchanged. “The Tisza government will not raise any tax on wages,” Magyar stressed.



Wealth tax for billionaires

The Tisza Party also plans to introduce a 1 percent annual wealth tax on assets exceeding HUF 5 billion (EUR 12.6 million), meaning a contribution of HUF 50 million (EUR 12,600) per year. Péter Magyar argued that this would generate almost the same revenue as the personal income tax cuts for two million Hungarians.

“The wealthiest one percent own one-third of the country’s assets. They must take greater responsibility in social solidarity,” he said.

Lower VAT and zero tax on medicines

The party’s program also includes significant VAT cuts: from 27 to 5 percent on healthy food and firewood, while medicines would become entirely VAT-free.

National Asset Recovery Agency

Magyar announced plans to establish a new body, the National Asset Recovery and Protection Agency, which would focus on reclaiming assets accumulated by “Orbán’s oligarchs”.

Fidesz criticises, Péter Magyar responds

The announcement follows reports by news site Index, which claimed, based on a leaked memo, that the Tisza Party was planning massive tax hikes. The party called the report a lie. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and Minister János Lázár also criticised Péter Magyar, who responded by publishing his detailed tax plan.

Read more news about the Tisza Party on Daily News Hungary.

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