Choosing a Greek tax representative.
Every non-resident Greek property owner needs one. What they actually do (and don't), what to pay, the questions to ask, and the warning signs that should make you walk. A 2026 practical guide.
If you own Greek property and don't live in Greece, the Greek state will not communicate with you directly in any practical sense. AADE doesn't email overseas. Letters from the tax office, building communications from the διαχειριστής, water and power bills, ENFIA assessments — all of these are issued to a Greek address and processed by a Greek-speaking professional. The legal mechanism for handling this is the tax representative (φορολογικός εκπρόσωπος), a Greek-resident individual or firm formally registered with AADE as the contact point for your Greek tax affairs.
Getting the choice right matters more than diaspora owners usually realise. The wrong representative quietly mishandles bills, lets paperwork drift, and silently incurs penalties on your behalf for years. The right one is one of the most useful relationships you have in Greece. This article walks through how to choose.
What a Greek tax representative actually is
A φορολογικός εκπρόσωπος is a person with a Greek ΑΦΜ and Greek tax residency who is formally registered with AADE as your point of contact. Their name appears on your AADE personal portal as your representative. They:
- Receive all official tax correspondence on your behalf
- Have authority to file your tax declarations (E1 annual income tax, E2 rental income, E9 property declaration)
- Submit objections, appeals, and correspondence to AADE
- Are the legal recipient of audit notices
- Coordinate ENFIA and any tax settlements
The role is regulated. Tax representatives must themselves be in good standing with AADE — they cannot have personal tax debts above defined thresholds, and they take on a degree of liability for the accuracy of declarations they sign on your behalf.
What a tax representative is NOT
Common diaspora confusion: people merge tax representation with several other distinct roles. They're separate.
- A lawyer (δικηγόρος). Handles property transactions, contracts, inheritance, disputes. Many tax representatives are accountants, not lawyers.
- A notary (συμβολαιογράφος). A public official who notarises property transfers. Engaged transactionally, not as an ongoing relationship.
- A property manager. Handles operational care of the property — bills, contractors, building meetings, physical oversight. Some tax representatives offer this; many don't.
- An accountant (λογιστής). Often the same person as the tax representative, but conceptually distinct. The accountant prepares the numbers; the representative formally submits them to AADE. In most diaspora setups one accountant plays both roles.
This distinction matters because it tells you what you're shopping for. If you have a property manager and need someone for AADE filings, you need a tax representative or accountant. If you have an accountant who only does numbers and isn't registered as your representative, you may still need to designate one.
Who can be a Greek tax representative
The candidate pool, in rough order of how diaspora owners commonly choose:
- Greek-resident accountant. Most common choice. Professionally qualified, regulated, used to AADE workflows. Costs €300–€1,500/year for a simple property file.
- Greek-resident lawyer who also does tax work. Less common for ongoing representation but common where the lawyer has handled the original property purchase or inheritance. More expensive.
- Family member resident in Greece. Common in older diaspora setups — a sibling, cousin, or aunt with a Greek ΑΦΜ acting informally. Legally valid but increasingly unsuitable: AADE communication is now electronic, technically dense, and time-sensitive. Family members rarely have the bandwidth or expertise to manage it properly. We strongly recommend against this except for the simplest cases.
- Specialised diaspora tax-services firm. A small number of Athens-based firms specialise in non-resident owner representation. Often more expensive but built around the diaspora workflow — English-language communication, scheduled summary reports, structured document handling.
What you should expect to pay
Tax-representative fees in 2026 vary widely. As a rule of thumb:
- Bare minimum representation (registered on file, processes ENFIA and one E1 filing annually): €250–€500/year
- Standard representation (above + handles a few utility direct debits, manages basic E9 updates, responds to AADE correspondence): €500–€1,000/year
- Full-service representation (above + rental income (E2) declarations, ongoing audit defence, more complex inheritance follow-through): €1,000–€2,500/year
- Premium / diaspora-specialist firm (above + structured reporting in English, dedicated relationship manager, broader advisory access): €2,000–€4,500/year
Extras beyond the annual fee that almost always apply: one-off filings (inheritance returns, sale-related tax certifications) are billed separately, typically €300–€2,000 each depending on complexity.
The €250-bare-minimum tier is, in practice, where most under-served diaspora owners are. It's cheap and superficially functional but tends to result in slow response times, missed E9 updates, and bills that get paid late or wrong. We'd argue the standard tier is where the value actually begins.
The questions to ask before appointing
A short interview before you commit. Things to confirm:
- "Are you registered with AADE in good standing?"
- "How many non-resident clients do you currently serve?" (Look for ≥ 10; under that, you'll be a learning case.)
- "What's your typical response time to a client email?" (Industry decent: 48 hours business days.)
- "Do you communicate in English, or will I need Greek?" (Many fine Greek accountants only function in Greek; if your Greek is rusty, this matters.)
- "Do you provide an annual written summary of all filings, payments and AADE correspondence?" (Bare-minimum firms don't; you should expect this.)
- "What's your fee structure — annual flat, hourly, or hybrid?" (Annual flat is cleanest for diaspora; hourly bills can quietly compound.)
- "Will I receive copies of all AADE correspondence directly, or only filtered through you?" (You want direct copies. Period.)
- "How do you handle handover if I decide to change representatives?" (Should be straightforward; resistance here is a flag.)
The red flags — when to walk
Cumulative warning signs from years of post-mortem audits:
- Cash-only fees, no invoice. Illegal in Greece and immediate disqualifier.
- Resistance to providing copies of AADE filings. The work the representative does is by definition your work; the documents are yours by right.
- No written engagement letter. Even for a €400/year arrangement, you want defined scope on paper.
- Refuses to share login access (read-only) to your AADE personal portal. You should be able to see your own tax state. Some representatives hide this; it's not acceptable.
- Says they "handle everything" without being clear on what's excluded. Vague scope creates billing surprises.
- Long radio silence followed by panicked late requests. If the first you hear about a filing deadline is two days before, your representative is operating reactively, not proactively. You will pay penalties for this.
- Recommends "informal" arrangements to reduce tax. Greek tax law has tightened materially since 2015. Any representative suggesting workarounds that sit outside the formal rules is exposing you, not them. Walk.
- Won't tell you exactly which AADE filings are due when. A competent representative can produce your annual filing calendar in two minutes.
How to formally appoint or change a tax representative
The mechanism is straightforward:
- You and the prospective representative sign an appointment form (form Δ210 or equivalent — your representative will provide it)
- The form is submitted to your local tax office (ΔΟΥ) — typically the ΔΟΥ for the area of your Greek property
- AADE updates your personal portal showing the new representative
- From that point, all official communication routes through them
Changing a representative is the same process in reverse — file a termination of the existing appointment alongside the new one. There is no penalty for changing, and you don't owe the old representative ongoing fees beyond what they've actually done.
What this looks like in practice for diaspora property owners
For a Greek-Australian or Greek-American owner with one Greek apartment and no rental income:
- Annual cost: €500–€900
- Your work load: forwarding occasional emails, signing the odd document
- What they do: file your annual E1 income-tax declaration (showing no Greek income or only minimal interest income), handle ENFIA settlement, keep your E9 up to date, deal with any AADE correspondence
- What you should receive: an annual end-of-year written summary (ideally in English) showing filings done, payments made, current state of your AADE position
For owners with rental income (long-term residential or STR) the volume of work grows because monthly or annual rental declarations (E2) get added. Expect fees to scale up by €500–€1,500/year depending on volume.
How home watch fits — and where it doesn't
We're a home-watch and property care service, not a tax-representation firm. We don't file your AADE declarations. What we do is operate alongside your tax representative as the on-the-ground arm:
- Receiving physical mail at the property and digitising it for your accountant
- Coordinating with your accountant on supporting documents needed for filings (utility bills, building dues, contractor receipts)
- Liaising with the building manager on κοινόχρηστα statements
- Being the in-person contact point for engineers, inspectors and tradespeople, freeing your accountant to focus on tax work
- Quarterly summary reports to you that complement the annual tax-side summary your accountant provides
For new diaspora owners without an existing relationship, we can also recommend tax representatives we've worked alongside and who have a track record with overseas-based clients. Just ask.
Companion reading: our E9 guide, our ENFIA explainer, and opening a Greek bank account from abroad.
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