Professional Insurance are among the most overlooked deductions for freelancers — typically deductible at 100%, yet half of self-employed people either skip the claim or document it so weakly that it's reclassified during an audit. Here's how to do it right in 2026.
Why professional insurance qualify
Tax authorities accept this deduction when the expense is necessary for your professional activity, properly documented, and proportional to actual business use. The rule applies in nearly every European country, with national variations on the percentage and threshold.
The document you need
Keep annual policy plus payment proof. A bank-statement line alone is not enough — auditors want the source document showing the merchant, the amount, the date and ideally a business justification. Digitize it the day you get it; paper receipts fade in months.
The most common mistake
The single biggest reclassification trigger is mixing personal life insurance with professional liability on the same statement. It's an honest error in most cases, but the tax authority does not distinguish — the deduction is removed and back-taxes plus penalties apply.
The pro tip
Professional liability insurance is 100% deductible and often legally required. Keep it on a separate policy from personal coverage — bundling makes the deductible portion harder to defend during an audit.
How SnapCost makes this automatic
Snap the receipt with your phone, the AI extracts merchant, amount and VAT, and you assign the right category in one tap. SnapCost stores the original image alongside the data, so you always have the evidence the tax authority wants — without rummaging through a shoebox.