Shakira wins £50m tax refund from Spanish government
A Spanish court has ordered the tax authority to refund €55 million to singer Shakira, ruling that the money was improperly collected. The national high court acquitted the Colombian singer of tax fraud, stating that tax authorities failed to prove she spent the minimum 183 days in Spain in 2011 required for personal income tax.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA Spanish court has ordered the tax authority to refund €55 million to singer Shakira, ruling that the money was improperly collected. The national high court acquitted the Colombian singer of tax fraud, stating that tax authorities failed to prove she spent the minimum 183 days in Spain in 2011 required for personal income tax. Shakira stated the court ruling "finally set the record straight" after years of public scrutiny, asserting there was never any fraud. She dedicated her victory to ordinary citizens facing similar struggles to prove their innocence.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedShakira dedicated her victory to ordinary citizens facing similar tax disputes.
Shakira stated there was never any fraud and the administration could not prove otherwise.
Tax authorities failed to prove Shakira spent 183 days in Spain in 2011.
The court acquitted Shakira of tax fraud.
A Spanish court ordered the tax authority to refund €55m to Shakira.