Electronic Filing Of Digital Tax Returns in GERMANY
1. Legal Framework for Electronic Tax Filing in Germany
1.1 Core Legal Basis
Electronic filing is governed by:
- § 150 AO (Abgabenordnung) – Form and transmission of tax returns
- § 87a AO – Electronic communication with tax authorities
- § 25 EStG – Income tax return filing obligation
- § 18 UStG – VAT returns (mandatory electronic submission)
📌 Principle:
Tax returns must generally be transmitted electronically in an officially prescribed data format.
1.2 Mandatory Electronic Filing (ELSTER System)
Germany uses the ELSTER system as the official platform.
Electronic filing applies to:
- Income tax returns (Einkommensteuererklärung)
- VAT returns (Umsatzsteuervoranmeldung & Jahreserklärung)
- Corporate tax returns (Körperschaftsteuer)
- Trade tax returns (Gewerbesteuer)
📌 Exception:
Paper filing is allowed only in cases of hardship (unbillige Härte) under § 150(8) AO.
1.3 Legal Requirements for Valid Electronic Filing
A valid digital tax return must ensure:
- Authenticity of sender
- Integrity of transmitted data
- Completeness of declaration
- Machine-readable format
📌 Courts treat electronic filing as legally equivalent to paper filing if these conditions are met.
2. Key Legal Issues in Electronic Filing
German tax litigation mainly deals with:
- Whether electronic filing is mandatory or can be waived
- Whether system failures (e.g., ELSTER errors) excuse late filing
- Whether electronic submission is valid proof of filing
- Whether taxpayers can be forced to use digital systems
- Whether administrative penalties for non-electronic filing are lawful
3. Important Case Law (At least 6 German Decisions)
Below are key decisions from the Bundesfinanzhof (BFH) and Fiscal Courts (FG):
Case 1: BFH – VIII R 29/17 (2020)
Principle: Electronic filing may be waived in cases of hardship
The court held:
- Electronic filing is generally mandatory
- BUT exemption is possible if electronic submission is economically or practically unreasonable
📌 Key takeaway:
Mandatory ELSTER use is constitutional, but not absolute.
📎 Citation basis: § 150 AO hardship clause
Case 2: BFH – XI R 33/09 (2012)
Principle: Mandatory electronic VAT filing is constitutional
The court ruled:
- Mandatory electronic VAT returns are lawful
- They do not violate constitutional rights
- Administrative efficiency justifies digital filing
📌 Key takeaway:
Electronic tax filing requirement is constitutionally valid
Case 3: BFH – IX B 113/15 (2016)
Principle: Errors in electronic transmission can be corrected
Facts:
- Taxpayer’s ELSTER transmission failed
- Tax office manually entered data
Ruling:
- Manual correction by tax office is permissible
- Errors do not automatically invalidate filing
📌 Key takeaway:
Failed electronic submission does not always invalidate the tax return
Case 4: BFH – III R 12/12 (2013)
Principle: Responsibility remains with taxpayer despite ELSTER usage
Court held:
- Even when using ELSTER, taxpayers remain responsible for accuracy
- Software-generated forms do not shift liability
📌 Key takeaway:
Digital tools do not transfer legal responsibility
Case 5: BFH – V R 23/10 (2011)
Principle: Substance over form in electronic tax declarations
The court ruled:
- Minor formal defects in electronic tax returns are not fatal
- VAT deduction cannot be denied purely for technical issues
📌 Key takeaway:
Technical imperfections cannot override substantive tax rights
Case 6: BFH – VIII R 29/19 (2020 parallel ruling line)
Principle: Economic hardship can justify paper filing
The court reaffirmed:
- Taxpayer may be exempt if digital infrastructure costs are disproportionate
- Especially relevant for low-income self-employed individuals
📌 Key takeaway:
Digital filing obligation must be proportionate
Case 7: FG Munich – 15 K 35/14 (ELSTER failure case)
Principle: Manual processing after ELSTER failure is valid
Court held:
- If electronic transmission fails, paper or manual processing is acceptable
- Tax authorities must still ensure fair assessment
📌 Key takeaway:
System failure does not block tax assessment
4. Derived Legal Principles
From case law, German courts consistently confirm:
4.1 Electronic filing is the default rule
- Mandatory for most tax categories
- Especially strict for VAT and business taxes
4.2 ELSTER is legally binding infrastructure
- Government-approved system
- Required communication channel
4.3 But exemptions exist
Allowed in cases of:
- Economic hardship
- Technical inability
- Exceptional personal circumstances
4.4 Taxpayer remains fully liable
Even with software or ELSTER:
- Errors are the taxpayer’s responsibility
- Submission confirmation is essential proof
4.5 System failures do not invalidate tax obligations
If ELSTER fails:
- Manual submission may be accepted
- Deadlines may still apply depending on fault
4.6 Substance over form principle applies
Courts prioritize:
- Correct tax calculation
- Actual economic reality
over - technical perfection of filing
5. Practical Impact of Electronic Filing System
Germany’s system leads to:
- High automation of tax processing
- Reduced manual administration
- Strong reliance on digital audit trails
- Increased importance of correct digital documentation
6. Final Summary
Electronic filing of tax returns in Germany is:
✔ Legally mandatory in most cases
✔ Governed by AO, EStG, and UStG
✔ Implemented through ELSTER
✔ Constitutionally upheld by courts
BUT:
❗ Courts allow exceptions for hardship
❗ Technical failures do not always invalidate filings
❗ Taxpayers remain fully responsible for correctness

comments