EU Member State · RO
Romania's 0% Income Tax for Programmers: How the IT Exemption Works, What Qualifies, and What It Means for Employers Building Teams
Eastern Europe's Rising Economy With Untapped Potential
GDP per Capita
€17K
↓ €23K vs EU avg
GDP Growth Rate
+2.3%
↑ 1.2pp vs EU avg
Unemployment Rate
5.6%
↑ 0.2pp vs EU avg
Inflation (HICP)
6.8%
Government Debt
49.3%
↑ 15.5pp vs EU avg
Data year: 2022 · Source: Official statistical authorities · Last updated: 2024
Country Facts
- Capital
- Bucharest
- Official Language(s)
- Romanian
- Currency
- Romanian Leu (RON) Non-Eurozone
- EU Member Since
- 2007
- Population
- 19.0 million
- Area
- 238,397 km²
- ISO Code
- RO
- NUTS Code
- RO
Economic Overview
1 min readRomania remains Europe's poorest EU member by GDP per capita at €16,870, but its lower-middle-income economy has built a diversified industrial and services base. The country's 19.06 million people have drawn substantial foreign direct investment into automotive manufacturing, IT services, and energ
Romania remains Europe's poorest EU member by GDP per capita at €16,870, but its lower-middle-income economy has built a diversified industrial and services base. The country's 19.06 million people have drawn substantial foreign direct investment into automotive manufacturing, IT services, and energy sectors. Romania stands apart from regional competitors through fiscal discipline: government debt sits at 49.3% of GDP, below the EU average and giving policymakers room to maneuver when economic turbulence strikes.
Growth stalled at 2.3% in 2023 as post-pandemic normalization collided with external headwinds. The real concern is inflation, which remains stuck at 9.7% year-on-year despite cooling global conditions—a sign of stubborn demand pressures and supply-side constraints. Unemployment at 5.6% looks healthy on paper, but masks severe regional disparities and skills mismatches as emigration drains the workforce.
Romania confronts conflicting pressures. The National Bank has tightened aggressively, yet inflation remains sticky enough to erode real incomes and shake consumer confidence. The energy sector, which underpins both exports and growth, sits exposed to geopolitical shocks. Structural weaknesses—crumbling infrastructure, brain drain, and judicial instability—could easily derail convergence toward wealthier EU peers. EU funding and manufacturing migration from higher-cost economies do offer genuine opportunities, provided governance standards actually improve.
Key Economic Indicators
Data sourced from official EU and international statistical authorities. All figures are for the most recent available year.
GDP (Current Prices)
12/26 EUYear: 2025
GDP per Capita
Year: 2025
GDP Growth Rate
Year: 2025
Current Account Balance (% of GDP)
25/27 EUYear: 2023
The difference between a country's imports and exports of goods, services and transfers. A surplus means more is earned abroad than spent.
GDP per Capita (PPS)
Year: 2024
Price Level Index (EU=100)
Year: 2024
VC Investment (€m)
Year: 2023
House Price Index
37/78 EUYear: 2024
FDI Inflows (€bn)
16/19 EUYear: 2022
Romania: Convergence Under Strain
Romania's 19.04 million population makes it one of the EU's largest member states by headcount, yet economic sophistication and productivity lag significantly behind western European levels. Since joining the bloc in 2007, the country has achieved rapid nominal convergence alongside persistent internal fragmentation. Bucharest-Ilfov has become a genuine innovation and outsourcing hub, attracting major multinational technology and services operations that rival other Central European technology centres. This concentration masks a deeper problem: millions have emigrated since EU membership opened labour markets, departing for higher-wage economies across the bloc. The brain drain acts as both a short-term pressure valve and a long-term drag on human capital accumulation and productivity growth. Regional disparities between the dynamic capital and peripheral regions rank among the EU's widest, creating a bifurcated economy where development gains distribute unevenly.
At 19,900 EUR nominal GDP per capita, Romania sits roughly 40 per cent below the EU average and remains one of the bloc's poorest members by this metric. The purchasing-power-adjusted figure of 30,800 PPS relative to an EU average of approximately 32,500 tells a marginally brighter story, though it still reflects a significant development gap. The 0.7 per cent growth rate recorded in 2025 should alarm policymakers. It falls substantially below the EU average of around 1 per cent and represents a pronounced deceleration from the double-digit nominal growth rates that characterised the mid-2010s. Inflation at 6.8 per cent, more than double the EU average of 2.5 per cent, erodes household real incomes and suppresses domestic demand. A current account deficit of 8.2 per cent of GDP signals persistent external imbalance driven by import-intensive consumption and insufficient export competitiveness outside the technology services niche. The government deficit of 9.3 per cent, among the EU's worst, constrains counter-cyclical policy space. Revenue weakness and spending rigidities will complicate future consolidation efforts.
The labour market disguises fragility behind apparent tightness. Unemployment sits at 6.1 per cent, marginally above the EU average, whilst the employment rate of 69.5 per cent trails the bloc modestly. Yet youth unemployment at 26.1 per cent reveals a stark skills mismatch and limited job quality for younger cohorts. Long-term unemployment at 2.1 per cent is mercifully low, indicating that joblessness tends to be episodic rather than entrenched. The inflationary environment obscures real wage deterioration. At 6.8 per cent headline inflation, purchasing power compression hits acutely, particularly for lower-income households already exposed to volatile food and energy prices. Government debt of 54.8 per cent of GDP, whilst well below the EU average of 83 per cent, has been rising and now approaches levels at which fiscal space becomes genuinely constrained. Structural unemployment pressures in peripheral regions and a public sector still undergoing transition risk turning the labour market into a source of political tension if real incomes continue to contract.
Romania confronts a medium-term growth challenge that convergence narratives have consistently underestimated. Structural absorption of EU funding has accelerated and financed genuine improvements in transport and energy infrastructure. Yet this fiscal support masks underlying productivity weakness: R&D expenditure at 0.5 per cent of GDP is less than one-third the EU average, concentrating innovation in a handful of sectors and firms rather than diffusing it economy-wide. Emigration and persistent regional inequality constrain potential growth through both supply-side factors—a shrinking and ageing workforce with limited human capital in peripheral regions—and demand-side weakness including depressed domestic consumption and subdued business investment outside concentrated sectors. The fiscal position demands urgent consolidation given the yawning deficit, yet austerity in this context risks deepening regional disparities and accelerating outmigration.
Unemployment Rate
Year: 2025
Employment Rate (20–64)
23/24 EUYear: 2024
Median Gross Annual Earnings
Year: 2022
Youth Unemployment Rate
Year: 2025
Long-Term Unemployment Rate
8/26 EUYear: 2025
Romania's unemployment rate of 6.1 per cent sits marginally above the EU average of 6 per cent, yet this headline figure masks a fundamentally fractured labour market. The post-communist transition created a dual economy that persists today: rapidly modernising urban centres, particularly Bucharest-Ilfov, contrast sharply with peripheral regions where subsistence agriculture and informal work dominate. Structural underemployment and inactive labour reserves hide underlying slack that cyclical measures fail to capture. Growth forecasts of 0.7 per cent for 2025 have not triggered unemployment spikes, a resilience that obscures the fragmentation beneath.
Romania's flexicurity model lags far behind Nordic standards. Labour regulations remain rigid on paper, but enforcement is sporadic, creating de facto flexibility through informal channels and precarious work rather than institutional design. Workers bear the vulnerability while employers in high-skill sectors face persistent quality shortages—a paradox only partially explained by brain drain since EU accession in 2007.
The employment rate of 69.5 per cent conceals severe sectoral imbalances and skill mismatches. Bucharest's multinational development centres have driven rapid expansion in technology and business services outsourcing, creating islands of modernity alongside low-productivity agriculture and retail sectors that employ substantial portions of the workforce. Youth unemployment at 26.1 per cent—more than four times the headline rate—reveals acute school-to-work transition failures, worsened by weak links between vocational education and employer demand. Long-term unemployment stands at just 2.1 per cent, likely reflecting transitions into inactivity or emigration among the persistently jobless rather than rapid reemployment.
Wage pressures have tightened in Bucharest's tech sector where skills are scarce, yet real wage growth has lagged inflation at 6.8 per cent—nearly three times the EU average. This erosion of purchasing power contributes directly to the -8.2 per cent current account deficit.
Emigration represents Romania's most insidious structural challenge. Millions have left since accession, hollowing out prime working-age cohorts and leaving peripheral labour markets chronically undersupplied. This coexists paradoxically with youth unemployment and skills gaps, suggesting those remaining face qualification or location barriers. Research and development spending at just 0.5 per cent of GDP—half the EU average—reflects weak innovation capacity, leaving the economy vulnerable to automation it is poorly equipped to manage. The government deficit of -9.3 per cent of GDP severely constrains fiscal space for active labour market policies, vocational retraining, and regional infrastructure investment. The Gini coefficient of 27.3, among Europe's most egalitarian, conceals that this apparent equality masks widespread underemployment rather than genuine income security.
Without institutional reforms to labour market intermediation, stronger vocational education, targeted regional investment, and meaningful active labour policies, Romania will bifurcate further: Bucharest will prosper while peripheral regions face secular decline.
Inflation (HICP)
7/27 EUYear: 2023
Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices — the EU's standard measure of price changes across all member states.
Inflation Rate (HICP)
Year: 2025
Government Debt (% of GDP)
16/27 EUYear: 2023
Total government debt as a percentage of GDP. The EU Stability Pact sets a reference target of below 60%.
Personal Income Tax Top Rate
52/54 EUYear: 2022
Fiscal Analysis: Romania
Romania's public debt stands at 54.8% of GDP in 2024, significantly below the EU average of approximately 83%, positioning it among Europe's lower-debt economies. The country's rapid nominal GDP convergence since EU accession in 2007 and modest debt burdens inherited from the early transition period explain this relatively comfortable position. Yet the underlying trend demands attention. Debt has climbed steadily from around 12% of GDP in 2008, driven by persistent structural deficits and the absorption of EU funds without matching fiscal consolidation. The country's low-debt advantage, though genuine, is eroding faster than broader economic growth would suggest.
The fiscal position has deteriorated sharply. Romania's government deficit reached 9.3% of GDP in 2024—nearly double the EU average and substantially wider than the 3% threshold under the Stability and Growth Pact. Weak revenue collection, rising current expenditure on public sector wages and pensions, and inadequate targeting of EU structural funds toward productive investment have all contributed. The government has pursued an expansionary fiscal stance precisely as economic momentum slows, with growth falling to just 0.7% in 2025.
Currency exposure presents a tangible risk. The leu's persistence outside the eurozone leaves Romania vulnerable to exchange-rate fluctuations that could inflate the debt-to-GDP ratio. The wide budget deficit constrains fiscal space for addressing acute structural challenges. Brain drain demands investment in human capital and regional development. Youth unemployment sits at 26.1%, signaling significant underutilized labour. Defence commitments are rising amid European security concerns. R&D spending at only 0.5% of GDP—half the EU average—reflects inadequate investment in productivity-enhancing innovation. Without credible consolidation, Romania risks breaching excessive deficit procedures under tightened EU surveillance.
At-Risk-of-Poverty Rate
4/14 EUYear: 2025
Gini Coefficient
9/14 EUYear: 2025
Tertiary Education Attainment
Year: 2024
ICT Specialists (% of Employment)
25/27 EUYear: 2023
R&D Expenditure (% of GDP)
Year: 2024
Corruption Perceptions Index
49/54 EUYear: 2023
Population
Year: 2025
Life Expectancy at Birth
Year: 2024
Government Debt (% GDP)
15/26 EUYear: 2024
Government Deficit (% GDP)
26/26 EUYear: 2024
Current Account Balance (% GDP)
Year: 2024
Where Romania Stands in the EU
2022 data · All 27 EU member states
GDP per Capita
Romania ranks 26th out of 27 EU member states — value: 16.9K €/capita (EU avg: 39.8K€/capita)
Romania's GDP per capita of 30,800 PPS sits just below the EU27 average of 32,500, qualifying it as a converging middle-income economy that trails Western counterparts by a considerable margin. The headline convergence story obscures deeper problems. Brain drain continues to siphon talent. Regional disparities remain entrenched. The technology sector's dependence on Bucharest creates bottlenecks that prevent development from spreading across the country.
Unemployment Rate
Romania ranks 14th out of 27 EU member states — value: 5.6 % (EU avg: 5.8%)
Government Debt (% of GDP)
Romania ranks 16th out of 27 EU member states — value: 49.3 % GDP (EU avg: 64.8% GDP)
Doing Business in Romania
Practical intelligence for founders, investors, and executives entering Romania.
Company Formation
- Time to incorporate: 1 day
- Minimum capital: RON 1 (~€0.20)
- Common structure: SRL
Language of Business
- Official language: Romanian
- In practice: English widely used in IT, outsourcing, and international business
- English proficiency: Medium-High
Talent & Workforce
- University graduates: ~120,000 per year
- Key industries: IT & Software, Automotive, Manufacturing, Agriculture
Digital & Infrastructure
- Internet speed rank: 2nd in EU (extremely fast broadband)
- e-Gov maturity: Medium
- Notable: Bucharest emerging as a tech and outsourcing hub
EU Funding Access
- Budget position: Net beneficiary (large)
- Key programmes: Cohesion Funds, ERDF, ESF+, PNRR
Work Permits for Non-EU
- EU Blue Card: Yes
- Key visa types: EU Blue Card, Long-term Work Visa
- Difficulty: Easy
Business & Tax Environment
Key rates for companies investing or operating in Romania.
Business Climate Overview
Romania's economy pivots toward services while retaining its manufacturing foundation. Bucharest has become a magnet for technology and business process outsourcing operations, with major multinationals building substantial development centres to exploit the country's position in European value chains—a lower-cost alternative to Western European hubs without sacrificing EU regulatory alignment. Automotive components, IT services and light manufacturing form the industrial core, yet the sector bleeds talent; millions have emigrated since 2007, constraining supply-side growth despite nominal GDP per capita reaching €19,900. The gap between Bucharest and peripheral regions remains cavernous, starving the domestic market and creating a fractured economy. Romania's GDP per capita of 30,800 PPS—roughly 95% of the EU average—places it in an awkward middle position: too developed to compete on labour costs alone, yet too innovation-starved to compete with mature Western economies. R&D spending at 0.5% of GDP, well below the EU norm, exposes this critical weakness as the economy matures.
The business climate offers flexibility offset by regulatory unpredictability. Employment sits at 69.5%, but youth unemployment at 26.1% reveals skill gaps and deep structural unemployment problems. Corporate tax rates remain attractive and EU structural funds are flowing faster than before, upgrading infrastructure and institutions. Yet macroeconomic dangers loom. Government debt stands at 54.8% of GDP, the budget deficit hits 9.3%, inflation runs at 6.8% and the current account deficit reaches 8.2% of GDP—all signals of mounting external strain. The leu's exclusion from the eurozone introduces currency swings that complicate operations for multinationals with regional footprints. Bureaucratic opacity plagues utilities and public procurement, and corruption persists despite EU oversight. Infrastructure has improved but remains substandard outside Bucharest and major transport corridors.
Foreign capital is flooding in, chasing technology, renewable energy and manufacturing automation opportunities. Romania retraces Poland's path from a decade ago: a convergence bet with technology upside. EU membership, a young workforce, low corporate taxes and its role as a Balkans gateway have drawn sustained investment into software development, semiconductor packaging, renewable energy and automotive supply chains. Investors face a choice between two Romanias: Bucharest-Ilfov delivers developed services infrastructure and consumer spending, while the provinces offer cheaper operations and manufacturing but suffer infrastructure shortfalls. The persistent fiscal deficit and inflation climate demand hedging. Labour cost advantages relative to Western Europe are shrinking as wages climb and emigration tightens supply. Romania works as a medium-term convergence play, not a quick cost-cutting solution.
Corporate Tax Rate
16.0%
Standard headline rate on company profits
Tax rates shown are standard rates only. Reduced rates, exemptions, holding regimes, and special economic zones may apply. Always consult a qualified local tax adviser before making business decisions.
Historical Trends (2018–2022)
Source: Official EU and international statistical authorities. p = provisional e = estimated b = break in series
Romania's Economic Journey: From Plan to Market
Romania's post-communist transformation defied the shock therapy Poland embraced and the gradualism China pursued. Instead, the country stumbled through a protracted, chaotic transition that only gained real traction after joining the European Union in 2007. The Ceaușescu regime bequeathed a debt-ridden, technologically backward industrial economy. Heavy engineering sectors and chemical plants became instant liabilities once markets opened. The 1990s delivered the expected catastrophes—hyperinflation, currency collapse, closure of uncompetitive state enterprises—but Romania lacked the institutional scaffolding of the Czech Republic or Bulgaria's Orthodox currency-board stability. Successive governments zigzagged through reform. Corruption festered. Property rights remained weak. Foreign investors stayed away. By 2000, Romania had fallen furthest behind its Visegrád peers in income levels and institutional quality.
EU accession changed everything. Brussels imposed conditions that carried real weight. Multinational capital chasing Eastern European arbitrage followed. The technology sector exploded as Boehringer Ingelheim and IBM built major development hubs in Bucharest. The leu stabilised. EU structural funds began arriving after 2009. Two decades of gradual convergence compressed into one accelerated jump. But the speed came at a price. Brain drain intensified as newly skilled workers emigrated. Infrastructure investment clustered in the capital and surrounding regions. Provincial Romania fell visibly behind.
Romania today embodies a paradox: high growth potential shadowed by structural fragility. Retaining the leu rather than adopting the euro proved shrewd, offering monetary flexibility during crises while avoiding the deflationary rigidity that crippled the Balkans. Yet the currency's volatility and inflation persistently above EU average expose the weakness of central-bank independence and fiscal discipline carried over from the transition years. Government debt sits at 55% of GDP—manageable against the eurozone average—but a 9.3% deficit and 8.2% current-account deficit reveal that convergence runs on external borrowing, not productivity gains. R&D spending stands at just 0.5% of GDP, half the EU average. This exposes an economy dependent on foreign-owned enclaves rather than homegrown innovation. Youth unemployment reached 26%, not from labour scarcity but from skills mismatches rooted in post-secondary education that lagged Western standards, starved during the transition decades.
Bucharest's cosmopolitan outsourcing hubs and peripheral regions where underemployment and agricultural subsistence define life represent the same country in two different eras. This uneven geography, paired with political instability and corruption that persisted where others consolidated order, positions Romania at the EU's efficiency frontier permanently. The country grows fast but from a low base. It attracts talent and capital but cannot hold them. It modernises selectively while structural gaps widen.
| Indicator | Unit | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GDP (Current Prices) | €M | 204.8K | 223.3K | 219.8K | 241.0K | 280.8K |
| GDP per Capita | €/capita | 10.5K | 11.5K | 11.4K | 12.6K | 14.7K |
| GDP Growth Rate | % | 5.4 | 4.0 | -3.6 | 5.6 | 4.2 |
| Unemployment Rate | % | 5.3 | 4.9 | 6.1 | 5.6 | 5.6 |
| Population | persons | 19.5M | 19.4M | 19.3Me | 19.2M | 19.0Me |
| Government Debt (% of GDP) | % GDP | 34.6 | 35.2 | 46.9 | 48.6 | 48.1 |
| Current Account Balance (% of GDP) | % GDP | -4.6 | -4.9 | -5.1 | -7.2 | -9.6 |
| Employment Rate (20–64) | % | 63.9 | 65.1 | 65.2 | 67.1 | 68.5 |
| At-Risk-of-Poverty Rate | % | 23.5 | 23.8 | 23.4 | 22.5 | 21.2 |
| Median Gross Annual Earnings | €/yr | — | — | — | — | 12.5K |
| Price Level Index (EU=100) | PLI | 55.7 | 55.5 | 55.4 | 56.0 | 59.9 |
| Personal Income Tax Top Rate | % | — | — | — | — | 10.0 |
| House Price Index | HPI | 5.6 | 3.4 | 4.7 | 4.4 | 7.2 |
| FDI Inflows (€bn) | €bn | — | — | — | — | 4.5 |
| Tertiary Education Attainment | % | 17.8 | 18.4 | 18.7 | 18.8b | 19.7 |
Romania is the EU's most surprising technology talent story: a country that went from Communist-era isolation to hosting Adobe, Oracle, and Bitdefender's global engineering teams within a generation, at costs that are still 60-70% below Western EU.
Economic Character
Romania's economic trajectory since EU accession in 2007 has surprised analysts who underestimated how rapidly a country with deep institutional challenges, historic underdevelopment, and a Communist legacy could integrate into a modern European economy. GDP has more than doubled in real terms since accession. Romania is now the EU's seventh-largest economy by nominal GDP at approximately €310 billion, and by purchasing power standards its position is considerably stronger — cost levels remain among the EU's lowest, meaning the real economic activity inside Romania's borders is substantially greater than headline figures suggest.
The surprise in Romania's economic story is the technology sector. In most mental models, Romania is classified as a manufacturing and agriculture economy — and it is, with a significant automotive presence (Dacia/Renault is Romania's largest single exporter) and one of the EU's largest agricultural sectors. But Romania has simultaneously built a technology ecosystem that punches dramatically above its weight. Adobe, Oracle, Bitdefender, UiPath (founded in Bucharest, now a US-listed company valued at over $10 billion at peak), and dozens of other global technology companies have significant engineering presences in Bucharest and Cluj-Napoca. UiPath's story in particular — a Romanian-founded company that built robotic process automation technology and became one of the most valuable enterprise software companies in the world — is a proof point for the depth of Romanian technical talent.
This technology emergence was not government-planned; it was market-driven. Romanian universities — particularly the Polytechnic University of Bucharest, the Technical University of Cluj-Napoca, and Babeș-Bolyai University — produce strong mathematics, computer science, and engineering graduates at volume. Romania has historically had one of the highest rates of mathematics and science olympiad winners relative to population in Europe, a cultural emphasis on technical education that predates EU accession and has translated directly into workforce capability. Combined with wage levels that remain well below Western EU — despite sustained rapid growth — the result is a labour market that global technology companies have found genuinely exceptional.
Romania's economy remains structurally unequal. Bucharest and Cluj-Napoca are substantially wealthier and more developed than rural Romania, where poverty rates, infrastructure gaps, and public service access resemble a different country. This internal divergence is one of the EU's most acute regional inequality problems and represents both a governance challenge and a long-term economic constraint: the gap between urban and rural Romania limits the effective labour market for businesses outside major cities.
Labour Market & Talent
Romania's labour market for technology businesses offers arguably the best cost-quality ratio in the EU in 2026. The national median gross earnings are approximately €14,000–16,000 annually — the second-lowest in the EU after Bulgaria — but this national figure substantially misrepresents the urban technology market. Software engineers in Bucharest and Cluj-Napoca earn €25,000–55,000 depending on seniority and specialism, which is 40–60% below equivalent Warsaw roles and 60–75% below Amsterdam or Dublin. At senior and architect levels, the gap narrows as globally competitive talent commands globally competitive prices, but at mid-level, Romania offers a cost position that larger Eastern European markets are beginning to lose.
The talent pipeline is substantial. Romania produces approximately 8,000–10,000 computer science and engineering graduates annually from its major technical universities. The quality distribution is wide — the top third of Romanian graduates are genuinely competitive with engineering graduates from anywhere in Europe — and the bottom of the distribution reflects the variable quality of lower-tier institutions. Companies that invest in selective hiring from the top universities and in structured development programmes reliably build world-class engineering teams. Companies that hire without differentiation face quality variance.
ICT specialists make up approximately 4.8–5.2% of Romania's workforce — at and slightly above the EU average, but growing rapidly as the technology sector has expanded faster than the overall economy. The concentration in Bucharest and Cluj-Napoca means that the effective tech talent density in those cities is considerably higher than the national figure suggests.
Wage growth in Romania has been among the highest in the EU — 12–18% annually in recent years — driven by minimum wage increases (the government has been aggressive in raising minimum wages), skills shortages in the technology sector, and the knock-on effects of EU wage convergence. The labour cost advantage is real but compressing, and businesses that built Eastern European technology teams in 2015 at 20% of Western EU cost are now operating at 35–45% of Western EU cost and moving higher. The strategic window for cost-driven nearshoring in Romania is still open but narrowing.
One distinctive feature of Romania's labour market: English language fluency is exceptional for an Eastern EU country, particularly among university-educated professionals under 40. The penetration of English-language media, international education programmes, and — notably — online gaming culture has produced a generation of Romanian professionals who communicate in English naturally and without significant accent barriers, which matters for client-facing roles.
Tax & Business Structure
Romania's tax structure is among the EU's most genuinely competitive for small and growing businesses. The standard corporate tax rate is 16% — below Poland, Czechia, and most Western EU peers. But more significantly, Romania operates a turnover-based microenterprise tax regime for companies with annual revenues below €500,000: these companies pay 1–3% of turnover (depending on employee count) rather than 16% of profit. For early-stage, pre-profitability businesses or businesses with significant revenue but thin margins during growth phases, the microenterprise regime can produce dramatically lower effective tax rates than any profit-based alternative.
The IT sector receives additional specific benefits: IT employees' salaries — up to a defined monthly threshold — are exempt from personal income tax under a specific incentive designed to retain technology talent domestically and attract international technology companies. This IT tax exemption means that technology companies in Romania face lower true total compensation costs than either the gross salary or the statutory tax rates suggest, because employees receive a higher net take-home on the same gross package than they would under standard rules. The exemption has been a significant factor in Romania's technology sector growth.
Personal income tax is a flat 10% rate — the lowest flat income tax rate in the EU — with social contributions adding approximately 37.25% in combined employer and employee contributions (though the social contribution base has specific caps). The total employer cost structure is complex but workable, and the flat 10% income tax rate is a genuine draw for internationally mobile talent evaluating personal tax efficiency alongside business location decisions.
Company formation in Romania is more administratively involved than Estonia or Ireland but has improved significantly. A SRL (Societate cu Răspundere Limitată — private limited company) can be formed in approximately 1–3 weeks through the National Trade Register, with minimum share capital of 1 RON (effectively zero). The digitisation of company registration has improved but is not complete; notarisation requirements add friction relative to more advanced digital jurisdictions. Banking is functional and well-developed, with major international banks (ING, Raiffeisen, UniCredit) alongside domestic banks providing comprehensive corporate banking services.
Romania uses the Romanian Leu (RON) rather than the euro. This is a genuine consideration: EU membership does not include eurozone membership, and businesses operating in Romania face currency risk on euro-denominated revenues or costs. Romania has been working toward eurozone accession for years but consistently deferred due to fiscal and inflation criteria misses; euro adoption is not imminent. For businesses operating entirely within Romania's domestic market, this is manageable; for businesses with significant euro or dollar revenue streams, currency hedging or structural management is necessary.
Governance & Risk
Romania scores 46/100 on the Corruption Perceptions Index — below the EU average and reflecting genuine systemic challenges. Corruption in Romania is not merely a historical legacy; it remains an active constraint on business efficiency, particularly in government procurement, regulatory licensing, and judicial outcomes at lower court levels. Romania's National Anticorruption Directorate (DNA) has prosecuted hundreds of high-profile cases including former prime ministers and ministers, demonstrating institutional capacity to tackle corruption at the highest levels, but implementation and enforcement at the operational level remains uneven.
For private sector commercial transactions between established businesses, the practical corruption risk is lower than the aggregate CPI score suggests. Established international companies operating within clear legal frameworks typically report manageable compliance risk; the higher-risk interactions are with government counterparties, regulated industries, and procurement processes. Companies that rely on government contracts or regulated licences as core revenue streams should invest heavily in compliance infrastructure and local legal counsel.
FDI inflows to Romania have been significant and growing, driven by the technology sector, automotive manufacturing (Dacia/Renault, Ford), and shared services. The EU's Cohesion Fund and Regional Development Fund have financed significant infrastructure improvement — motorway construction, airport upgrades, broadband extension — though Romania's infrastructure gap relative to Western EU and even Poland remains substantial. Transport infrastructure outside the Bucharest-Cluj-Napoca-Timișoara triangle is often poor, constraining labour market access in regional cities.
Romania's banking system emerged from the 2008–2009 crisis in reasonable shape after a period of painful deleveraging, and is now adequately capitalised by EU standards. The central bank (BNR) has maintained monetary credibility under sustained political pressure.
Who Should Seriously Consider Romania
Technology companies building engineering teams at Western quality and Eastern cost. Romania's combination of strong technical university output, English fluency, EU legal framework, and salary levels still materially below Western EU makes it the most compelling case in the EU for technology nearshoring in 2026. Adobe's design engineering teams, Oracle's ERP development units, and Bitdefender's cybersecurity research — all based in Romania — validate this thesis at the highest level.
Businesses seeking the microenterprise tax regime. For companies under €500,000 in annual revenue, Romania's 1–3% turnover tax is the EU's most favourable early-stage tax position, effectively providing a multi-year tax holiday during the revenue-building phase.
IT-sector businesses benefiting from personal income tax exemption. The IT employee income tax exemption reduces true total compensation costs for technology businesses and allows companies to offer higher net pay on the same gross budget — a meaningful tool in competitive talent recruitment.
Manufacturing operations seeking the EU's lowest-cost combination of skills and infrastructure. For automotive components, electronics, and consumer goods manufacturing, Romania's wage levels are the EU's second-lowest while infrastructure — particularly in developed regions like Transylvania and the Bucharest metropolitan area — is adequate for modern industrial operations.
Who Should Look Elsewhere
Businesses where institutional predictability is a primary risk factor. Romania's governance quality requires active management: compliance programmes, strong local legal counsel, and careful counterparty selection are not optional extras but core operational requirements. Companies that have minimal tolerance for governance uncertainty should choose the Netherlands, Germany, or Ireland.
Logistics and distribution operations requiring pan-European reach. Romania's geographic position — southeastern corner of the EU — and infrastructure gaps (particularly road connectivity to Western Europe) make it suboptimal for pan-European logistics operations. Poland or the Netherlands serve distribution needs far more effectively.
Businesses requiring immediate eurozone currency simplicity. Non-euro currency management adds operational overhead. For businesses with significant euro revenue and cost streams, eurozone members are simpler to operate.
Companies where domestic market scale is important in the near term. At median incomes of approximately €16,000 and significant rural poverty, Romania's consumer market has less spending power than its population of 19 million suggests. Urban Romania (Bucharest, Cluj, Timișoara, Iași) is a workable consumer market; rural Romania is not.
Romania's IT Income Tax Exemption: Which Roles Qualify, How to Calculate Net vs Gross, and Employer Obligations
Romania's most powerful and least-understood business incentive is the income tax exemption for qualifying IT employees. Employees working in specific IT roles — software developers, systems analysts, database administrators, network engineers, and related technical functions — whose employers operate in qualifying NACE codes (primarily 5821, 5829, 6201–6209) are exempt from Romania's 10% personal income tax on their salaries.
The practical effect is significant: a software engineer earning €30,000 gross in Romania retains approximately €22,000 net after social contributions (which still apply), versus approximately €19,000 net under standard Romanian tax rules. For employees comparing offers, Romania's IT exemption makes net-of-tax packages competitive with roles in countries with nominally higher gross salaries but heavier personal tax burdens.
For employers, the exemption means total compensation cost per IT employee is lower than gross salary comparisons suggest. A Romanian IT employer paying €35,000 gross for a developer is competing effectively against a Polish employer paying €45,000 gross for the same role, because the Romanian employee takes home more net and the employer faces lower social contribution bases in some bands. The exemption applies up to a monthly gross salary cap — verify the current threshold with a Romanian tax adviser.
Romania vs Poland for EU Tech Development: Cost, Talent Quality, and Ecosystem Depth
Romania and Poland are the two most common Central and Eastern European choices for technology team buildout, and the comparison is nuanced enough that the right answer genuinely depends on your specific requirements.
Poland offers larger absolute talent volume (300,000+ developers vs Romania's approximately 100,000–150,000 in tech roles) and more established shared services infrastructure. Warsaw, Kraków, and Wrocław have decades of multinational technology presence creating mature hiring pipelines, established supplier ecosystems, and professional services infrastructure. For teams needing to scale to 100+ people quickly, Poland offers more depth.
Romania offers a lower cost base (30–40% cheaper than Poland at comparable seniority levels), the IT income tax exemption which improves net pay competitiveness, and extraordinary mathematical talent at the top of the distribution — Romanian competitive programmers consistently rank among Europe's best. Cluj-Napoca and Bucharest are genuine technology cities with growing ecosystems. For businesses prioritising cost per engineer and willing to invest in building their own hiring pipeline, Romania offers better unit economics.
Bottom Line
Romania is the most underestimated EU economy for technology businesses, and one of the most accurately-rated for everything else. The technology talent story is real, validated by the track records of global companies that have built significant engineering operations in Bucharest and Cluj-Napoca. The governance challenges are also real and require active management. The correct framing is not "is Romania a good place to do business?" — the answer to that is "it depends enormously on what business." For technology engineering teams, shared services, and manufacturing at the lowest EU cost tier, Romania is genuinely compelling. For governance-sensitive industries, pan-European logistics, or consumer market scale, the challenges outweigh the cost advantages.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about Romania's economy, EU membership, and tax environment.
Romania's unemployment rate stood at 5.6% in 2022, which is 0.2 percentage points below the EU27 average. This is broadly in line with the EU average.
Romania's GDP per capita was €16,870 in 2022, €22,916 below the EU27 average of €39,786. The country ranks 26th out of 27 EU member states on this measure.
No, Romania is not currently a member of the Eurozone. The country uses the Romanian Leu (RON) and maintains its own monetary policy through its national central bank.
The standard corporate income tax rate in Romania is 16.0%. This is the headline rate applied to company profits. Reduced rates, special regimes, and exemptions may apply to certain types of income or sectors — always consult a qualified local tax adviser for specific situations.
Romania has a population of approximately 19.0 million. Population trends vary across EU member states, influenced by birth rates, migration, and demographic change.
Romania became a member of the European Union in 2007. It joined in the 2007 enlargement alongside Bulgaria. EU membership has shaped the country's trade, legal framework, and economic policy ever since.