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Patent vs Copyright for Software in Belgium (2026): Tax vs Protection, a Practical Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The debate over patent vs copyright software Belgium has shifted dramatically since the programme bill of 17 December 2025 reintroduced computer programs into Belgium’s favourable copyright tax regime, effective from income year 2026. For the first time in several years, software developers, founders and their employers can once again allocate a portion of remuneration to copyright royalties taxed at a flat 15 %, rather than at progressive personal income tax rates that can exceed 50 %. This 2026 copyright change in Belgium does not, however, diminish the strategic value of patents for software that embodies a genuine technical innovation.

What it does is force every Belgian tech company to re-evaluate its IP protection strategy, its compensation structures and its compliance documentation, ideally before the first 2026 tax filings are due.

The Short Answer for Founders and CFOs

Most Belgian startups will rely on copyright as the baseline, it arises automatically, requires no registration and now carries a meaningful tax advantage. Layer trade-secret protections on top through confidentiality agreements and access controls. Pursue a patent only where the software produces a clear technical effect beyond ordinary computer implementation and the commercial value justifies the cost and public disclosure that a patent filing entails.

  • For cash-constrained founders: copyright plus the 15 % regime delivers immediate tax savings with minimal upfront cost. Ensure you have the right documentation and agreements in place before year-end.
  • For companies with novel, high-value technical solutions: a patent (Belgian national or European Patent Office route) provides a stronger monopoly position and may qualify for Belgium’s separate innovation income deduction (patent box), which can reduce the effective corporate tax rate to approximately 3.75 %.

What Changed in 2026: The Programme Bill and What It Means

Belgium’s favourable copyright tax regime was introduced in 2008, classifying qualifying copyright income as movable income taxed at a flat 15 % instead of progressive personal income tax rates. A 2023 reform, however, excluded the IT sector, specifically computer programs, from the scope of the regime. As from income year 2026, the tax legislator reversed course. The programme bill adopted on 17 December 2025 reintroduced software into the scope of the favourable tax regime for copyright income, creating what practitioners describe as a renewed opportunity for the IT sector.

Legislative Timeline

Date Change Practical Effect
2008 Introduction of the Belgian copyright tax regime (Art. 17, §1, 5° Income Tax Code) Copyright income taxed at flat 15 % as movable income; available to authors, developers and other creators.
2023 reform (income year 2023–2025) IT sector and computer programs excluded from the favourable regime Software developers and their employers could no longer allocate part of remuneration to copyright royalties under the 15 % rate.
17 December 2025 (programme bill) Computer programs reintroduced into scope of copyright tax regime From income year 2026, qualifying software copyright income again benefits from the 15 % flat tax rate, subject to new conditions including a 70/30 allocation rule.

Industry observers expect this reversal to trigger a wave of contract renegotiations, as employers and freelancers structure agreements to capture the tax benefit before the first 2026 filing deadlines. The practical effect will be most visible in the payroll arrangements of IT consultancies and in the licensing agreements between founders and their own companies.

How the Belgian Copyright Tax Regime Works: Scope, Tests and a Worked Example

Under the reinstated Belgian copyright tax regime, income derived from the transfer or licensing of copyrights on software is treated as movable income and taxed at a flat rate of 15 %. This rate applies to the portion of income that does not exceed 30 % of the employee’s or freelancer’s total remuneration, the so-called 70/30 rule. The copyright portion must genuinely relate to the transfer or licence of the creator’s copyright in the software, not to the performance of services.

Flat-Rate Expense Deductions

Before the 15 % rate is applied, the taxpayer may deduct flat-rate expenses from the gross copyright income. Historically, these deductions have been structured in tiers:

  • First bracket: 50 % flat-rate deduction on the first portion of qualifying copyright income.
  • Second bracket: 25 % flat-rate deduction on the next portion.
  • Above the ceiling: no flat-rate deduction; actual expenses may be claimed instead.

The effective tax rate on copyright income within the lower brackets can therefore fall well below the headline 15 %, often resulting in significantly lower taxation compared to personal income tax rates that reach 50 % (plus municipal surcharges).

Worked Example

Consider a software developer employed by a Belgian tech company with a total gross annual remuneration of €100,000. Under the 70/30 rule, a maximum of €30,000 can be allocated to software royalties in Belgium. After applying the flat-rate expense deduction (assuming 50 % on the first tier), the taxable copyright income is reduced. The 15 % rate then applies to this reduced base. Meanwhile, the remaining €70,000 is taxed at standard progressive rates. The net result is a meaningful reduction in the developer’s overall tax burden, early indications suggest savings in the range of several thousand euros per year, depending on exact income levels and municipal surcharges.

Software Patentability in Belgium and the EU: Legal Standard and EPO Practice

While copyright protects the expression of software, the source code, object code and program structure, a patent protects the underlying technical solution. Under Article 52 of the European Patent Convention (EPC), computer programs “as such” are excluded from patentability. However, the European Patent Office (EPO) has consistently held that software-related inventions are patentable when they produce a further technical effect beyond the normal interaction between a program and the hardware on which it runs.

The Technical Effect Test

The EPO’s Board of Appeal has developed a body of case law clarifying when software crosses the threshold from unpatentable program to patentable invention. The key question is whether the claimed invention makes a technical contribution to the prior art. Indicators that favour patentability include:

  • Control of a physical process: software that governs an industrial process, controls machinery or manages a technical system.
  • Improved hardware performance: code that reduces memory usage, speeds up data processing or optimises signal transmission in a novel way.
  • Novel data-processing architecture: a new method of organising or encrypting data that solves a concrete technical problem.

Conversely, software that merely automates a business method, performs mathematical calculations without a technical application or presents information in a new way will generally not qualify.

Belgian Procedural Realities

Belgium does not conduct substantive examination of patent applications filed nationally. A Belgian patent can be obtained relatively quickly but offers limited presumption of validity. For robust protection, most practitioners recommend filing through the EPO, which conducts a thorough examination. The cost, however, is substantially higher, typically tens of thousands of euros over the prosecution lifecycle, compared to the zero registration cost of copyright.

Patent vs Copyright for Software: Core Differences in Belgium

Choosing between patent and copyright protection, or combining both, requires a clear understanding of what each right covers, how long it lasts, what it costs and how it interacts with Belgium’s 2026 tax landscape. The comparison table below summarises the key differences and adds trade-secret protection as a third pillar that many tech companies rely on in practice.

Feature Patent Copyright Trade Secret
What it protects Technical solution / invention (defined by patent claims) Expression of code and program structure (source code, object code) Confidential know-how, algorithms, data sets, processes
Duration Up to 20 years from filing date Author’s life + 70 years (economic rights) Indefinite, as long as secrecy is maintained
Registration / Formalities Formal filing required (national or EPO) Automatic, no registration required None, but documentation of measures required
Disclosure required Yes, full public disclosure of the invention No No, disclosure destroys the right
Enforcement scope Blocks anyone from using the patented technique, even independent developers Only prevents copying or adaptation of the protected expression Actionable against misappropriation, not independent discovery
Cost and time High (€15,000–€50,000+ over prosecution; years to grant) Minimal upfront; enforcement costs if litigation needed Low (primarily internal policies and NDAs)
Tax treatment (Belgium 2026) Separate innovation income deduction (patent box), effective rate ~3.75 % on qualifying profits 15 % flat tax on qualifying copyright income (subject to 70/30 rule and caps) No specific favourable tax regime
Best suited for Companies with novel technical innovations, strong R&D budgets, and exit or licensing strategies All software creators, baseline protection plus tax optimisation for individuals and employees Proprietary algorithms, data assets, pre-patent-filing innovations

Key takeaway: copyright and trade secrets are non-exclusive, they can and should be layered. A patent adds a powerful but expensive third layer. The choice is not either/or but which combination fits the company’s stage, budget and commercial objectives. For a deeper comparison of how to protect intellectual property across borders, founders should consider the enforcement dimension early.

Practical Decision Framework for Belgian Tech Companies and Startups

A clear patent strategy for startups in Belgium begins with a structured decision process. The following textual flowchart guides founders through the key questions.

Decision Flowchart

  1. Does your software solve a technical problem in a novel way? If no → rely on copyright + trade secret. If yes → proceed to step 2.
  2. Is the technical solution commercially valuable enough to justify €20,000+ in patent costs and public disclosure? If no → rely on copyright + trade secret, and document your innovation for potential future filing. If yes → proceed to step 3.
  3. Will your competitors be able to reverse-engineer the solution from your product? If yes → strong case for patent (trade secret alone will not protect you). If no → consider whether trade-secret protection is sufficient, and weigh patent filing against the value of maintaining secrecy.
  4. Are you planning a licensing strategy, exit or fundraise where a granted patent adds enterprise value? If yes → file at the EPO for robust, examined protection. If no → copyright + trade secret may suffice for operational protection.

Three Scenarios

  • SaaS startup (CRM platform): The software automates sales workflows, useful, but not technically novel in the patent sense. Recommendation: copyright baseline, 15 % tax regime for developer royalties, strong NDAs and confidentiality clauses in employment contracts.
  • Embedded-systems startup (industrial IoT sensor firmware): The firmware implements a novel signal-processing algorithm that reduces energy consumption. Recommendation: file at the EPO for patent protection on the algorithm; use copyright for the code itself; layer trade-secret protection for manufacturing know-how. Explore both the patent box and the copyright regime for different income streams.
  • AI model developer (machine-learning inference engine): The model architecture is novel, but patentability of AI-related inventions remains uncertain at the EPO. Recommendation: rely on copyright + trade secret as the primary protection strategy; consider a patent filing only if the model produces a clearly defined technical effect (e.g., improved medical-imaging diagnosis); structure developer contracts to qualify for the copyright tax 15 % regime in Belgium.

Compliance Checklist: How to Qualify for the Copyright Regime (Step-by-Step)

Qualifying for the 15 % copyright tax regime requires more than simply relabelling salary as royalties. Belgian tax authorities are expected to scrutinise arrangements carefully. The following checklist covers the essential steps to qualify for the copyright regime in Belgium.

  1. Confirm eligibility: the beneficiary must be a natural person (employee, director or self-employed) who is the original author or co-author of copyrightable software. Copyright in software must genuinely exist, the code must reflect the author’s own intellectual creation.
  2. Draft a written copyright transfer or licence agreement: between the author and the employer or company. The agreement must clearly describe the scope of rights transferred (reproduction, adaptation, communication to the public) and allocate a specific portion of the remuneration to the copyright transfer.
  3. Respect the 70/30 allocation rule: the copyright portion must not exceed 30 % of the author’s total remuneration. Exceeding this threshold risks recharacterisation of the full amount as professional income.
  4. Apply the correct withholding tax: the payer (employer or company) must withhold 15 % on the copyright portion and report it as movable income on the relevant tax filings. Standard payroll withholding applies to the remaining 70 %.
  5. Maintain contemporaneous documentation: keep records that demonstrate the software was actually created by the individual, that the transfer agreement was in place before or at the time of payment, and that the allocation reflects economic reality.
  6. Review transfer pricing implications (group companies): if the copyright transfer occurs between related parties (e.g., founder and own company), the royalty rate must be at arm’s length. Excessive royalties risk adjustment by the tax administration.
  7. Monitor annual caps and bracket thresholds: the flat-rate expense deductions are subject to annually indexed ceilings. Confirm current thresholds with a tax adviser each year.

Documentation checklist, bring to your first consultation:

  • Current employment or management agreement
  • Description of software created (functional and technical overview)
  • Existing IP assignment or licence clauses
  • Payroll breakdown (gross remuneration, bonuses, benefits)
  • Prior tax returns and any existing copyright agreements
  • Corporate structure chart (if group companies are involved)

Licensing, Assignments and Contract Drafting Tips

The way software royalties in Belgium are structured contractually determines whether they qualify for the 15 % regime, and whether IP rights are properly secured. Industry observers expect increased scrutiny of agreements that appear designed purely for tax optimisation without genuine substance.

Key Contract Clauses to Include

  • Copyright assignment vs licence: a full assignment transfers all economic rights to the company permanently. A licence retains ownership with the author but grants usage rights. Both can qualify for the regime, but the choice affects control, exit negotiations and investor expectations. Founders selling to investors should consider whether a full assignment is commercially necessary.
  • Moral rights acknowledgement: under Belgian law, moral rights (including the right of attribution and the right to object to distortion) cannot be waived entirely. Include a clause in which the author acknowledges the company’s right to modify the software operationally, while preserving core moral rights.
  • Royalty allocation methodology: specify how the 30 % copyright portion is calculated. Tie it to defined deliverables (e.g., specific software modules or releases) rather than a blanket percentage of salary.
  • Confidentiality and disclosure restrictions: when patent protection is not pursued, confidentiality clauses become the primary defence against competitors. Include post-termination confidentiality obligations and restrict disclosure of proprietary algorithms or architectures.
  • IP warranties and indemnities: particularly important for investor due diligence. The author warrants originality and non-infringement; the company assumes enforcement responsibility.

Risks, Enforcement and Audit Traps

The reintroduction of software into the copyright tax regime creates genuine opportunities, but also genuine risks. The likely practical effect of the 2026 changes will be increased audit activity as tax authorities verify compliance with the new rules.

  • Characterisation disputes: the tax administration may challenge arrangements where the copyright portion appears disproportionate to the actual creative contribution, or where the agreement was signed after payments were already made.
  • Employee vs contractor authorship: under Belgian copyright law, the employer does not automatically own the copyright in software created by an employee. An express written assignment is required. Failure to secure this can undermine both the tax claim and the IP position.
  • Patent disclosure trade-off: filing a patent publicly discloses the technical solution. If the patent is not granted, the disclosure cannot be retracted, and trade-secret protection is lost. Conduct a thorough patentability assessment before filing.
  • Cross-border licensing pitfalls: if software royalties are paid across borders (e.g., a Belgian subsidiary licensing from a foreign parent), withholding tax obligations and double-taxation treaty provisions must be considered separately from the domestic 15 % regime.
  • Record-keeping failures: maintain version-control logs, Git commit histories and project documentation that demonstrate individual authorship and the timeline of creation. These records are the first line of defence in both tax audits and IP disputes.

Practical Next Steps

The window to structure patent vs copyright software Belgium strategies for income year 2026 is open now but will narrow as filing deadlines approach. Founders, CFOs and in-house counsel should act promptly to capture the available benefits and mitigate risks.

Preparation checklist for your first IP and tax consultation:

  1. Gather all existing employment contracts, management agreements and IP assignment clauses.
  2. Prepare a list of software products or modules created by each individual author.
  3. Compile payroll data and current compensation structure.
  4. Document any existing patent filings or trade-secret protections in place.
  5. Identify cross-border licensing arrangements that may affect withholding obligations.
  6. Bring your corporate structure chart, particularly if group companies are involved.

For tailored guidance on structuring IP protection and copyright tax compliance in Belgium, consult a qualified Belgian IP lawyer through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory. Additional resources on cross-border IP strategy are available in the International Intellectual Property guide.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Stephanie Sarlet at Pitch.law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. FPS Economy, What rights can be used to protect software?
  2. Simont Braun, Copyright Income and Software Development: A Renewed Opportunity for the IT Sector
  3. Deloitte Belgium, Reintroduction of the copyright tax regime for IT professionals
  4. Pitch.law, Copyright tax regime
  5. European Patent Office (EPO)
  6. ICT Rechtswijzer, The protection of software in Belgium
  7. ICT Rechtswijzer, The copyright tax regime in Belgium
  8. Tentoo, Copyrights in Belgium 2026: 70/30 Rule & IT Sector Updates
  9. Accountable, Everything you need to know about copyright in Belgium

FAQs

What exactly changed in Belgium's 2026 copyright tax regime for software?
The programme bill of 17 December 2025 reintroduced computer programs into the scope of Belgium’s favourable copyright tax regime, effective from income year 2026. Software had been excluded from the regime since a 2023 reform. Qualifying copyright income from the transfer or licensing of software rights is once again taxed at a flat 15 %, subject to the 70/30 allocation rule and applicable expense deductions.
Software is automatically protected by copyright under Belgian law, no registration is required. For most startups, copyright combined with trade-secret measures provides adequate protection and now carries a tax advantage. Patents should be pursued when the software embodies a genuine technical innovation (not just a business method) and the commercial value justifies the cost and public disclosure involved in the patent process.
You must be a natural person who is the original author of copyrightable software. A written copyright transfer or licence agreement must be in place with the paying entity. The copyright portion cannot exceed 30 % of total remuneration. The payer must apply 15 % withholding on the copyright portion and maintain documentation demonstrating that the allocation reflects economic reality and genuine creative work.
The primary risk is recharacterisation by the Belgian tax authorities: if the arrangement lacks substance, for example, if the agreement is backdated, the allocation exceeds 30 %, or the individual did not genuinely create the software, the full amount can be reclassified as professional income and taxed at progressive rates. Additionally, investors conducting due diligence may question whether IP assignments are properly documented and whether royalty rates are arm’s length.
Patenting is typically worthwhile when three conditions align: the software solves a technical problem in a novel way (meeting the EPO’s technical effect test), the commercial value of the innovation is high enough to justify prosecution costs of €20,000 or more, and the company’s business model involves licensing, an exit strategy or operating in a market where competitors could reverse-engineer the solution.
Belgium does not conduct substantive patent examination at the national level. The EPO, by contrast, applies a rigorous technical-effect test developed through decades of Board of Appeal case law. Filing through the EPO provides a more robust granted patent that is harder to challenge. Belgian practitioners generally recommend the EPO route for software-related inventions where strong, enforceable rights are needed.
Yes, provided the assignment is documented in a written agreement that pre-dates or accompanies the payment, the royalty allocation does not exceed 30 % of total remuneration, and the rate is at arm’s length. Special care is needed when the author is also a shareholder or director of the receiving company, as the tax authorities will scrutinise related-party arrangements more closely.

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Patent vs Copyright for Software in Belgium (2026): Tax vs Protection, a Practical Guide

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