SUBSCRIBE
Tech Journal Now
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Reading: EU tax officials confront the most pressing legal question of our time: If you sell RuneScape gold to someone and they use it to buy a magic sword, do you still have to pay taxes?
Share
Tech Journal NowTech Journal Now
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • AI
  • Best Buy
  • Games
  • Software
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Journal Now > Games > EU tax officials confront the most pressing legal question of our time: If you sell RuneScape gold to someone and they use it to buy a magic sword, do you still have to pay taxes?
Games

EU tax officials confront the most pressing legal question of our time: If you sell RuneScape gold to someone and they use it to buy a magic sword, do you still have to pay taxes?

News Room
Last updated: September 23, 2025 10:43 pm
News Room
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE

On September 11, advocate general at the Court of Justice of the European Union Juliane Kokott issued an opinion requesting a preliminary ruling from the Tax Disputes Commission under the Government of the Republic of Lithuania on a case concerning that most fundamental financial quandary with which all states, federations, and empires in their might and majesty must—in time—contend: Should you have to pay taxes if you sell RuneScape gold to somebody for real money?

The opinion’s introduction, which begins with a quote from Goethe’s Faust—”Gold all doth lure, Gold doth secure all things. Alas, we poor!”—explains that “a taxable person” avoided paying VAT [value added tax] on “not insignificant” transactions in which RuneScape gold was purchased from players and sold to others at a profit (via GamesRadar).

(Image credit: Jagex / ScreteMonge on YouTube)

“In the present case, the Court has an opportunity to deal with the way in which an entirely new form of gold trading is considered for VAT purposes,” Kokott says.


Related articles

This taxable individual, Kokott explains, was found to have bought and resold through “various forums, groups, and platforms such as Facebook, Discord, and Skype” enough RuneScape gold to earn €415,484—approximately $488,000 USD—between 2021 and 2023.

In Lithuania, small businesses that earn under €45,000 per year are exempt from VAT obligations. Having handily cleared that threshold, our industrious gold sellers were expected to pay the appropriate taxes. They did not—hence the January 2024 legal proceedings in which the applicant was ordered to pay €46,688 in retroactive VAT.

A forester from Old School Runescape, contemplating life next to his pheasant friend on a green field.

(Image credit: Jagex Game Studios)

In her opinion, Kokott writes that, as people tend to do when they’re suddenly on the hook for the equivalent of $55,000, “the applicant disagreed with the decision of the tax authority and lodged a complaint.”

To laymen like you and I, this situation probably seems pretty open and shut. If you make money on something, you pay taxes on it. That’s the way the world works, unless you’re wealthy enough that you’d topple entire nations’ GDP if you were ever held accountable for your sins. I’d hate to be in that world!

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

However, the taxable person in question, Kokott writes, insists that “the income from the sale of in-game gold is income from trading in virtual currencies and is therefore exempt from VAT,” much like how exchanging Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies is exempt from VAT in some EU countries.

An Old School RuneScape screenshot.

(Image credit: Jagex)

“According to the applicant, if it is not a virtual currency, then in-game gold should be regarded as a multi-purpose voucher, which is not subject to VAT,” Kokott says.

It’s an interesting gambit—but does it have any merit? After reading Kokott’s thoughts, I’m going to go with “yeah, no.”


Related articles

In her request for a preliminary ruling from Lithuania’s Tax Disputes Commission that would nip this thing in the bud, Kokott points to two portions of relevant EU law that handle VAT exemptions.

Old School RuneScape running in HD mode.

(Image credit: Jagex)

“Article 135(1)(e) of the VAT Directive exempts transactions, including negotiation, concerning currency, bank notes and coins used as legal tender,” Kokott writes. “If the applicant’s transactions involving in-game gold are to be covered by the exemption, in-game gold would have to be legal tender.”

Considering I can’t deposit my RuneScape gold into my bank account, Kokott says in-game currency “can be clearly ruled out” as legal tender.

Which brings us to the voucher question. Kokott writes that, for in-game gold to be considered a voucher—which is exempt from VAT under Article 30b(2) of the EU’s VAT Directive—it must meet “two cumulative conditions.”

A hydra in Old School Runescape.

(Image credit: Jagex)

“First, the goods to be supplied or the potential supplier must be apparent from the voucher or its terms and conditions,” Kokott says. “Second, in-game gold would have to give rise to the obligation to accept it as consideration for a service,” because “the purpose of a voucher is to ‘document’ a taxable person’s obligation to supply (in the present case) a service.”

To make this simpler, imagine you receive a voucher you can redeem for a product or service. That voucher would specify the conditions under which it can be redeemed, and what it can be redeemed for—which in-game gold doesn’t do, because it can be used for whatever the player wants to spend it on. And that voucher would represent an obligation for the voucher’s supplier to provide a later service—which isn’t the case with in-game gold, either.

“In-game gold itself is therefore already the consumable benefit and does not merely serve to procure a later consumable benefit in the form of an as yet unspecified service,” Kokott says, before penning what is perhaps history’s single greatest line written about financial law:

“The mere fact that a service (in-game gold) can be exchanged for another (such as an item like a ‘magic sword’)—in the present case, within the game—does not make the service that has already been supplied a voucher.”

Java graphics at their best.

(Image credit: Jagex)

There’s more to the opinion before Kokott effectively tells Lithuania’s Tax Disputes Commission that it should dumpster this whole situation, but I think the austere quotation marks around “magic sword” makes an appropriate mic drop for this overview.

Interestingly, as my colleague Austin Wood noted over at GamesRadar, Kokott issued her opinion just 5 days before RuneScape developer Jagex declared a strengthened zero-tolerance policy on real-world gold trading, which RuneScape’s terms of service “expressly forbid.”

“Buying gold off a real world trader is already very clearly against the rules, but historically we’ve treated the buyers more leniently than the sellers when issuing penalties for real world trading,” Jagex said. “As part of our clamp-down on those gold-farming bots and the harm they do to Old School RuneScape, we’re now taking a harsher line against players caught buying gold from them. If you’re buying your gold that way, please don’t expect to get away with just a warning.”

It’s unclear whether the Jagex’s signalling a new War on Gold-selling was in any way a response to Kokott’s opinion, but if you’re going to be writing your own opinions for the highest court in EU law, you can apparently do worse than pairing Faust quotes with magic swords.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

I was ready to be a crab about Silksong in the face of its memetic hype, but the game is simply too good

How to get an Imaginary Friend in The Sims 4 Adventure Awaits

Stalker remasters hit 1.3 as GSC back-ports quick-inventory slots from Call of Prypiat to all 3 games

After 170 hours of Elden Ring Nightreign its new, increasingly evil Deep of Night mode has managed to hook me in again

Escape from Tarkov finally puts on the big boy pants and announces a Steam release as it gears up for version 1.0

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Trending Stories

Games

Clair Obscur Expedition 33 devs are ‘working on a big thank you update’ which’ll include a new location, boss battles, and ‘highly requested’ quality-of-life improvements

October 9, 2025
Games

Kentucky sues Roblox, calling it ‘a playground for predators who seek to harm our children’

October 9, 2025
Games

Ubisoft reportedly cancelled an Assassin’s Creed game set around the American Civil War because of Yasuke backlash and political turmoil in the US

October 8, 2025
Games

Can you ID these videogames just from their food? Take our latest, tastiest quiz!

October 8, 2025
Games

Blizzard insists that now is the right time to axe World of Warcraft’s popular combat mods: ‘We’re going to be paying very close attention in the weeks and months to come’

October 8, 2025
News

Stoke Space raises a whopping $510M to accelerate work on its fully reusable Nova launch system

October 8, 2025

Always Stay Up to Date

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tech Journal Now

Quick Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?