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Subscribe17 FEB 2025 / ACCOUNTING & TAXES
Amazon is once again under fire in Europe, and this time, the stakes couldn’t be higher. Italian authorities have accused the e-commerce giant of dodging €1.2 billion in VAT payments between 2019 and 2021, citing tax loopholes that allowed sellers primarily from China and other non-EU countries to skirt compliance. With the EU’s recent VAT reforms tightening the screws on digital platforms, and the e-commerce giant pushing a record $100 billion AI investment in 2025, this case underscores the fine line between regulatory crackdowns and corporate growth strategies. So, is Amazon just a casualty of Europe’s tough new tax rules, or did it drop the ball on compliance? Let’s dive in.
Italy’s Guardia di Finanza isn’t playing around. After analyzing 7 billion financial transactions, investigators claim that Amazon failed to ensure VAT was paid on goods sold through its platform by third-party sellers. With the e-commerce giant facing a total claim of €3 billion (including penalties and interest), the heat is on. The problem? Before 2021, EU VAT laws left a major loophole, sellers had to register for VAT in each country they sold in, and enforcement was weak. That changed with the EU’s VAT One-Stop Shop (OSS) and new digital reporting requirements, which shifted responsibility to online platforms like Amazon to collect and pay VAT on behalf of sellers.
But Italy, ahead of the EU curve, passed its law in 2019 holding tech platforms directly liable for VAT fraud and that’s the provision that’s now coming back to bite Amazon. The e-commerce giant, of course, isn’t taking this lying down. The company insists it “fully complies with VAT regulations in all markets”, pointing to its €1.4 billion tax contributions to Italy in 2023. However, skeptics argue that Amazon’s marketplace model makes it nearly impossible to track every seller, allowing fraud to slip through the cracks.
This case isn’t just about Amazon, it’s a warning shot to all digital marketplaces. The EU’s new VAT system, which took full effect in 2021, was designed to close loopholes and boost tax revenues by up to €18 billion annually.
Key changes include:
This means Amazon can no longer pass the buck to third-party sellers. If VAT isn’t paid, the company itself is on the hook.
Timing is everything, and this tax probe comes as Amazon is making its biggest-ever investment in AI and cloud infrastructure. In 2025, Amazon will outspend even Microsoft and Alphabet, pumping over $100 billion into AI and data centers to cement its dominance.
However, Amazon isn’t the only player going big on AI. OpenAI, SoftBank, and Oracle have announced a $100 billion AI infrastructure Stargate Project that could expand to $500 billion over time. Meanwhile, China’s DeepSeek shook up the industry with a cheaper AI model, triggering a $600 billion market cap drop for NVIDIA in a single day. Amazon can’t afford to slow down its AI spending—even with rising regulatory headaches.
The e-commerce giant is no stranger to legal battles, and this VAT probe could drag on for years. But with Italy’s tax police already seizing over €121 million from an Amazon unit last year, the company may decide that settling is the smarter play.
Meanwhile, the broader impact is clear:
With Amazon walking a tightrope between regulatory compliance and aggressive expansion, the real question is: Can it keep scaling without tripping over Europe’s ever-evolving tax laws? For now, the battle lines are drawn, and the outcome could reshape the future of e-commerce in Europe.
With €1.2 billion in VAT under dispute, the e-commerce giant's tax troubles aren’t just a legal headache—they’re a test of how global tech giants navigate new digital tax rules. As Europe tightens enforcement, Big Tech’s freewheeling tax days are numbered. One thing’s for sure: Amazon will fight tooth and nail to protect its turf. But with AI ambitions soaring and regulators circling, can it stay ahead of both innovation and compliance? Only time and possibly a courtroom will tell. Subscribe to MYCPE ONE Insights for the latest in finance, accounting, and corporate news delivered straight to your inbox.
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