After you buy shares in a housing company or real estate company that entitle you to own a parking space, storage room, business premises or other space, complete the transfer tax return and pay the tax.
If you are a buyer of “new construction”, see this guidance
Parking space and other spaces – how much is the tax?
Transfer tax is 1.5% of the price (including any other consideration that had been agreed) and the unpaid part of any housing-company loan.
The “debt-free price” (velaton hinta; skuldfritt pris) contains both the price of the space itself and the part representing the housing-company loan, if any. In other words, transfer tax is collected on the debt-free amount even though you might actually pay up the specific part of the housing-company loan when you sign the contract. It is not important whether you pay up the specific part of the housing-company loan when you sign the contract or whether you pay it in small instalments every month.
You can use the transfer tax calculator to help with your calculations.
Example: Sandy buys a parking space paying €10,000 for it. This the “selling price” – myyntihinta – as advertised. There is a loan balance of €2,000 allocated by the housing company to the shares that entitle Sandy to the parking. This means that the debt-free price is €12,000. The €12,000 is the base for transfer tax. Accordingly, the tax is 1.5% × €12,000 = €180. It makes no difference whether Sandy pays off her part of the company loan when buying the parking space, or gradually as part of the monthly charge.
The first-time homebuyer’s exemption does cover parking spaces
The first-time homebuyer's tax exemption which was available for purchases up to 1 January 2024, only applies to a permanent home. When you buy your first home, you may also buy a parking space or storage room together with it. Nevertheless, they are left outside the exemption if the shares for parking and storage spaces can be sold separately (there are specific series of shares for them).
Read more about first-time homebuyers’ exemption from transfer tax (in Finnish and Swedish, link to Finnish).
Frequently asked questions