×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Friday
16
Jan 2026
weather symbol
Athens 12°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> Economy

Ex-spouses and partners open thousands of files of rich people to the tax authorities

Safari of controls by the Hellenic Revenue Service on villas, accounts and businesses of great wealth - Since October 2023 when the Hellenic Revenue Service platform was activated, it has received more than 60,000 complaints

Newsroom September 1 07:52

The Internal Revenue Service is putting rich taxpayers under the microscope and setting up a safari of audits with complaints that start not with anonymous information from random citizens, but mostly from people in the suspects’ inner circle. Former spouses seeking revenge, former business partners who left a business in a bad way, competitors, and “bitter” customers become the main feeders of the online platform “Citizen Complaints” of ADEA, resulting in thousands of files of great wealth being opened and villas, luxury cars, bank accounts, and offshore companies being put on scrutiny.

Since the platform went live in October 2023 to date, the AADE has received more than 60,000 complaints about tax and customs violations. These cases are not handled casually. Each one is filtered, evaluated, and scored by special three-member committees set up at major audit centres, spearheaded by the Large Taxpayer Control Centre.

Depending on the score a tip gets, it either ends up immediately in the file or turns into an audit order that goes as far as surprise investigations. The “score” starts at 0 for indifferent information and goes up to 4 for cases requiring immediate intervention.

The numbers reveal the size of the “hunt”. In the first five months of 2024 alone, audits were underway on more than 6,000 rich people’s cases, with fines topping €26.4 million. At the same time, 21 individuals faced criminal charges for major tax evasion.

Officials point out that behind the most effective complaints are almost always people who know people and things. It is no coincidence, they say, that former spouses or partners provide evidence that would be difficult for the audit to find otherwise. From an expensive property that was not declared, to offshore money trails and “black” business income, the smallest detail can become the thread that unravels the case.

>Related articles

At €3.9 billion the public debts to citizens and businesses – hospitals and tax authorities inflate the debts

AADE “safari” in e-shops, marketplaces, and food-ordering platforms

Second opportunity to settle debts to the tax authorities, the State and insurance funds

The process is fully automated. The complaints are sorted according to their content and forwarded to the relevant departments. They are then passed through three additional filters – simple, urgent or extremely urgent – to decide the priority in the audit.

When a case reaches the “immediate interest” category, the real safari begins with auditors going through cross-checks, bank data, and asset declaration checks, even requesting assistance from international authorities to trace money abroad.

The message sent by the tax authority is clear: citizens are becoming the “eyes and ears” of the tax authorities, and their complaints are being fully exploited. Although many speak of a “war of former partners and associates”, the result is that any information that passes the filter can lead to revelations of tax evasion of millions. And as long as the country’s wealthy see their names put on lists of suspects, the auditors’ safari will continue, armed with complaints from those who knew them best.

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#audits#Tax Authorities
> More Economy

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

One dead after train–bus collision at the Port of Hamburg – see photos

January 16, 2026

President of Air Traffic Controllers: Another communications blackout possible in the near future

January 16, 2026

Trump threatens tariffs against those who oppose U.S. plans for Greenland

January 16, 2026

X is down, thousands report problems

January 16, 2026

“Her father cut her hair because she asked to go to a hair salon, they never gave her money”: New testimonies about Laura

January 16, 2026

Rama persists after rant at Greek journalist and questions the link between “Greek speakers” and Plato and Aristotle

January 16, 2026

CIA chief in Venezuela meets with Rodriguez

January 16, 2026

Less alcohol and lower speeds with the new Highway Code and strict fines

January 16, 2026
All News

> Economy

Greek firms secure key roles in Libya’s reconstruction

21 Memoranda of Understanding in Benghazi with the Reconstruction Fund - Metlen, TERNA, ADMIE, Archirodon, THEON, TTSA, SALFO, HILLCON and the Greek business footprint in energy, networks, infrastructure, health, pharmaceuticals, food, education and digital projects

January 16, 2026

Latsis Group: This is the new project of Aura Residential’s 219 apartments in Elliniko

January 16, 2026

Industry: Energy deadlock after Commission’s “no” to Italian pricing model

January 16, 2026

ENFIA discounts explained: How home insurance unlocks up to 20% off – 21 answers from AADE

January 16, 2026

Tourism: Greece, Athens, and Attica lead with over 4.75 billion euros in revenue by 2019—Doubling previous figures

January 15, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα