The Greek government is planning a major digital crackdown on tax evasion, outlining a suite of new regulatory measures in its 2026 Draft Budgetary Plan that will extend mandatory electronic invoicing to all businesses and create a new centralized database for property ownership.
The plan, which has been submitted to Brussels, includes the launch of a new digital platform called MIDAS (Property Ownership and Management Registry) by the end of 2026.
This registry will consolidate property data to enhance tax administration and reduce the number of undeclared assets.
Other key initiatives include expanding the digital submission of delivery notes and implementing a Digital Customer Registry for the events industry to curb fraud.
The government will also deploy advanced business intelligence and data analysis systems to proactively identify and predict tax non-compliance.
The plan also calls for comprehensive legislation on the taxation of cryptocurrencies, aligned with E.U. capital markets rules, which is expected to be finalized by 2026.
Additionally, Greece will implement the E.U. directive ensuring a minimum 15% tax for multinational corporations.