If you are liable for Swedish income tax, you are expected to pay the tax which is stated in your income declaration.
Everyone who has to pay any form of tax to the Swedish Tax Agency is assigned a personal tax account. The tax account summarizes your tax payments, your preliminary tax as shown by income statements and your final tax as shown by your final tax statement.
You can make payment to your tax account at any time, for example when you want to make a payment to cover future taxes, or to avoid interest expenses. A payment cannot be reserved for a specific tax or charge as it is set off against the total deficit on the tax account.
We cannot accept cheque payments or cash, all payments must be made via deposit into the account of the Swedish Tax Agency.
You can make payment to your tax account by paying through your bank over the Internet.
Swedish Tax Agencys bank giro account: 5050 - 1055
In order for Swedish Tax Agency to credit your payment, you must cite your personal identification number or organisation registration number or special registration number or your OCR-number.
If you cite your personal identification number or organisation number or special registration number it should be in the following format: xxxxxx-xxxx.
The OCR-number is 13 digits long and should be in following format xxxxxxxxxxxxx. If you do not know your OCR-number, you can try our OCR-calculation.
You need Swedish eID and the Swish app. Log in to “My pages” (“Mina sidor”) and follow the instructions (which are in Swedish).
You can pay in a maximum of SEK 40,000 per day. The amount paid in is credited to your tax account on the same day, but it can take up to three days to be displayed in your banking records.
If you cannot make an online payment, you can use a Swedish Tax Agency payment slip. To request a payment slip, please enter “Inbetalningskort” in the search field in this e-service.
Alternatively, you are welcome to call our tax information service.
When you make a payment from abroad, it’s important to enter the correct details in order for the payment to be credited to your tax account.
Select just one of the following options when making your payment, and do not provide any additional information.
If you don’t know your OCR number, you can find it by using our OCR calculation e-service, which is in Swedish.
If you make a payment to your tax account from a foreign bank account, you must use the following International Bank Account Number (IBAN), codes and address details. You must state both the IBAN and BIC/Swift details when making a payment.
You must make your payment in Swedish kronor (SEK), even if you make it from a foreign bank. We cannot accept payments by cheque. All payments must be transferred electronically to the Swedish Tax Agency’s account in accordance with the instructions above.
Processing will be faster if you leave the message field empty. If you wish to contact us to provide any further details relating to your payment, you can email or call us.
A payment has to be made and recorded in the Swedish Tax Agency's account no later than on the due date. Therefore, it is not enough to make the payment as late as on the due date.
There are fixed due dates for payments of tax. Generally, the due date for the payment of any preliminary tax is either on the 12th of each month. In January and August the due date is on the 17th.
You always have at least 90 days to pay from the date of decision shown on the final tax statement. The due date is shown in the calculation you receive together with the final tax statement. If you wish to avoid interest expenses you can pay earlier.
Interest is calculated on the deficit or surplus in your tax account. Interest is calculated on a daily basis on your current balance, from the date on which there is a surplus or deficit in the account. The interest on your tax account is linked to a base rate that follows broader market interest rate developments. This means that the base rate might change during the year. Interest on a surplus amount is tax exempt, and interest on a deficit is not deductible.