Do I need a tv licence for my two week touring caravan holiday?

Binomial

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Do I need a tv licence for my two week touring caravan holiday?

The caravan site we were staying in on Saturday was visited by a TV licence inspector who insisted with the people staying in the caravan next door that a licence is required. He took their home address details and told them to expect correspondance.


Thanks,
Binomial
 
Thanks SB but are you sure?

is what Oasis has to say.

Every household, business or institution in Ireland with a television or equipment capable of receiving a television signal (i.e., an aerial, satellite dish, etc.,) must have a television licence.

Since a (holdiday) caravan is neither a household, a business or an institution I dont see how they are covered.

BiN
 
My understanding from their adverts etc is that 'each tv needs a licence'.
Therfore, if he calls to your holiday home, have your domestic licence with you, and say its also your domestic Tv you brought with you, then I would think you are covered.
 
Binomial said:
Thanks SB but are you sure?

is what Oasis has to say.

Since a (holdiday) caravan is neither a household, a business or an institution I dont see how they are covered.

BiN

Yes, I suppose the question is what is the definition of a household maybe?

quote Oasis: "If your holiday home/second home contains a television, or equipment capable of receiving a television signal (i.e., satellite dish, aerial), then this household must also have a television licence"

Would the caravan be a holiday home?!

From that phrasing it doesnt look like you need a licence so.
 
[FONT=Verdana, Arial]http://www.evening-herald.ie/enniscorthy_guardian/index.php3?ca=38&issue_id=14288

About seven articles down on the page linked, in the left hand column is a story relating to this.

Can't find any government links which state they are needed, but from the newspaper article....
"[FONT=Verdana, Arial]Hundreds of holiday home and mobile home owners in North Wexford could find their holidays will bite their pocket a bit harder this year, after An Post TV Licence inspectors reminded them this week that they must have a television licence if they have a television."[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Arial]
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runner said:
My understanding from their adverts etc is that 'each tv needs a licence'.
Therfore, if he calls to your holiday home, have your domestic licence with you, and say its also your domestic Tv you brought with you, then I would think you are covered.
I'd have presumed the "hundreds" mentioned above would have had home TV licences. I suppose it depends on how detailed the journalist went with the investigations.
[FONT=Verdana, Arial]

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A tv licence applies to a household\business\institution not the TV itself.

e.g. you can have 6 TVs in the house and 1 licence will suffice. Or you can transfer the tv licence to a new address when you move etc.
 
for a holiday home you need a licence
for a touring caravan you do not
for a fixed caravan mobile home you do need it

its because you get two weeks grace to show the licence and you will be at home then where you can show it present and correct .
 
Hi all,

I rang a lady in the TV licence office in Dublin. She stated that I required a licence for my touring caravan. She said she had a query from a man who had taken a portable tv with him when he went fishing and he needed a licence.

I asked her did a British or German tourist require a tv licence for their RV and the answer was yes!

I asked her about the people who parked their caravans in the same spot for the two weeks previous to me and after me, they also needed licences.

She said that if the park operator provided the TV's then he would be responsible but that if it was our Telly then we are responsible even if it was for just two weeks of the year.

I also asked her that if I watched Kerry - Cork munster final over the internet would I require a TV licence and the answer was no!

I reckon that we give the TV licence a few years and it will go the way of the radio licence in the 1960s because it will be unenforceable/

BiN
 
Binomial said:
Thanks SB but are you sure?

is what Oasis has to say.

Since a (holdiday) caravan is neither a household, a business or an institution I dont see how they are covered.

BiN
I wouldn't rely on Oasis for a definitive legal interpretation. It is intended as an information source, and it may not cover every possibility. Though I'd guess that iif you ask them the question, they may well update the site to include this answer.

Do all Vodafone phones now need a TV licence given that they are now advertising live TV?
 
RainyDay said:
Do all Vodafone phones now need a TV licence given that they are now advertising live TV?

No, you don't need a TV license for your mobile phone ;)
 
Binomial said:
a man who had took a portable tv with him when he went fishing and he needed a licence.
Wow! He must've found fishing to be a really boring pasttime or something. Perhaps he should have taken up a more interesting hobby or something?
 
No, you don't need a TV license for your mobile phone
That's an interesting development - streaming TV on your mobile. It doesn't seem too much of a leap for the likes of NTL to offer streaming TV over their cable network (they already offer broadband) to a suitably adapted screen - one with no tuner.

I think TV licence days are numbered.

With regards the fisherman - maybe he was trying to electrocute the fish with the TV, and needed a fishing licence.
 
ClubMan said:
Wow! He must've found fishing to be a really boring pasttime or something. Perhaps he should have taken up a more interesting hobby or something?

He must also have a fairly long extension lead...or else know a river area that providers handy electric plugs for TV watching fishermen!
 
ClubMan said:
Wow! He must've found fishing to be a really boring pasttime or something. Perhaps he should have taken up a more interesting hobby or something?

Maybe he wanted it for the weather forecast !
 
I can see where a bricks and mortar holiday home might require a TV licence but it does seem daft that a touring caravan from say Belfast would need a full TV licence to cover them for their two weeks on holiday in Bundoran!
 
remember a story of a guy refusing to pay his licence when the inspector called to the door he said he was refusing to to pay because of section 31 of the broadcasting act where rte refused access to sinn fein on the airwaves, the inspector just shrugged his shoulders and left without arguement
 
we've got a twin TV set for the car that plays DVD's. Does this mean we need one for that aswell?
 
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