Boost purchasing power & curb inflation

Concrete help that makes a difference in everyday life. That is our policy.

Energy price support until 31 December 2026

for heating oil: -15 ct/l

for gas: -15 ct/m³

for petrol & diesel: -5 ct/l

for electricity : -4 ct/kWh

New “crédit d’impôt conjoncture” tax credit

Tax relief for everyone from 1 June 2026

Up to €24 per month

Equivalent to cancelling one index tranche = 2.5%li>

Integration into the tax scale from 1 January 2027

People on the minimum wage will receive €200 more net

Structural increase of € 105 and an additional increase of €98 through a tax credit on 01.01.2027

This tax credit will increase by a further €21 on 1 July 2027

The tax exemption for the unqualified minimum wage will remain in place

Promoting the transition to renewable energies

Time-limited increase of the Klimabonus Wunnen until 30 June 2027

Up to €12,000 for heat pumps

Up to 20% for energy-efficient renovation

€300 for energy advice for a single-family house

€500 for energy advice for residential buildings

Social leasing for electric cars from 1 January 2027

In an uncertain international situation, the government, together with the social partners, has reached an agreement that strengthens purchasing power, eases the burden on businesses, and makes the country more resilient. 

Prime Minister Luc Frieden presented the resilience package in the Chamber, which is built around three main objectives: curbing inflation, protecting jobs, and driving forward the energy transition. 

Specifically, energy prices will be temporarily capped.

This helps families in their day-to-day lives, but also businesses, because lower energy prices help curb inflation and improve predictability. 

With a new “Crédit d’impôt conjoncture", people will also receive direct additional relief, without introducing new taxes. 

The social minimum wage is also being strengthened. At the same time, care is being taken to ensure that small and medium-sized businesses in particular are not burdened excessively.

In addition, the agreement provides targeted support for sectors that have been particularly hard hit by the crisis, including agriculture. 

An important component is also the energy transition. With further support through the Klimabonus Wunnen, for heat pumps, energy-efficient renovations, and social leasing for electric cars, dependence on fossil energy is to be reduced. This is good for the climate, for people, and also for Luxembourg’s crafts and trades. 

On behalf of the CSV parliamentary group, Laurent Zeimet congratulated the Prime Minister and the government team on the outcome of the Tripartite and thanked them. 

The President of the CSV parliamentary group spoked that this Tripartite shows that the government can conduct social dialogue and, in a difficult situation, assumes responsibility with a steady hand. For the CSV, this agreement is important because it provides concrete relief for people, strengthens businesses and safeguards social cohesion. The resilience package is thus an agreement in the interest of the whole country: for families, for businesses, for jobs and for Luxembourg’s future.