Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
Shakira will get a $64 million refund from the Spanish government after judge finds she’s not a tax fraud after all
business

Shakira will get a $64 million refund from the Spanish government after judge finds she’s not a tax fraud after all

Fortune · May 18, 2026, 12:58 PM · Also reported by 4 other sources

A Spanish court acquitted Shakira in a tax fraud case, ordering the government to return more than 55 million euros ($64 million) in wrongly imposed fines, a court document seen Monday by The Associated Press said. The decision follows years of tax troubles in Spain for the Colombian superstar. The ruling relates to a dispute over the 2011 tax year in which Spanish authorities failed to prove that the singer was a resident of Spain, the Madrid-based court said in its decision. For a person to be considered a tax resident in Spain, she must spend more than 183 days in the country. Spanish authorities were only able to prove that Shakira lived in Spain that year for a total of 163 days, the court said, ordering the Treasury to reimburse the singer the tax paid plus interest. Spain’s tax agency argued that at the time Shakira was tied to Spain through a relationship with now-retired soccer player Gerard Piqué, and that she based her main economic activities in the country. But the High Court ruled that the relationship could not be legally equated to a marital one, nor was it proven that “the main center or base” of Shakira’s activities or economic interests in 2011 were directly or indirectly located in Spain. “There was never any fraud, and the Tax Agency itself was never able to prove otherwise, simply because it wasn’t true,” Shakira, who had filed an appeal, said in a statement provided by her lawyers. Spain’s Treasury is to reimburse the singer 60 million euros (almost $70 million), including interest, Shakira’s lawyer said. “This resolution comes after an eight-year ordeal that has taken an unacceptable toll, reflecting a lack of rigor in administrative practices,” her attorney, José Luís Prada, said in a statement. In 2023, in a separate tax fraud case, Shakira reached a deal with Spanish prosecutors to avoid a trial over charges that she did not pay Spanish income tax worth 14.5 million euros (then $15.8 million) between 2012 and 2014.

Article preview — originally published by Fortune. Full story at the source.
Read full story on Fortune → More top stories

Also covered by

Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from Fortune alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop