Id assume no double up just the dsys at least one person wfh.What if there are two (or more?) of you working at home? Can you claim 30% each, or do you just work out the total number of days that at least one of you is working at home?
Id assume no double up just the dsys at least one person wfh.What if there are two (or more?) of you working at home? Can you claim 30% each, or do you just work out the total number of days that at least one of you is working at home?
Sounds right. So next question will be if one of us claims eWorkers allowance of €3.20 pd, can the other claim the 30%. (You can't claim both I believe).You claim 30% of what you pay. So if one person pays, they are the one that claims, otherwise you split the cost and claim between you.
Sounds right. So next question will be if one of us claims eWorkers allowance of €3.20 pd, can the other claim the 30%. (You can't claim both I believe).
Agreed.This was discussed to death in last years home working thread, if I remember correctly. You don't claim eWorkers. Your employer will either pay you eWorkers (in which case you cant claim the 30%) or they don't pay you (and you could claim the 30%).
Agreed.
But if I claim eWorkers and my wife doesn't, can my wife claim the 30%?
Fair points. I'll ask my accountant (and report back).The payments are supposed to cover the same thing "This payment is to cover expenses incurred such as heating and electricity costs." It would be doubling up. Overall, its unclear. https://www.revenue.ie/en/tax-profe...ains-tax-corporation-tax/part-05/05-02-13.pdf
May the odds be ever in your favour...
I heard the max would be around €200 or so. Obviously depends on the cost of your bills etc.What's the estimated average daily benefit, does anyone knew?
I'm wondering if it's actually worth the trouble that it'll take to calculate the claim etc.
These things are often designed to be a pain, and of little real value, purely to let politicans pretend that they've helped the tax payer.
Government estimates that it could benefit 400k workers at a fiscal cost of €11m.What's the estimated average daily benefit, does anyone knew?
What's the estimated average daily benefit, does anyone knew?
I'm wondering if it's actually worth the trouble that it'll take to calculate the claim etc.
These things are often designed to be a pain, and of little real value, purely to let politicans pretend that they've helped the tax payer.
The obvious reason being that they are underresourced but not too bothered about improving things as long as their staff are picking up the slack?My exact thoughts herself was doing double that for weeks and has over 52 days holidays accrued, that the company has made an exception on her taking them due to obvious reasons.
Alas, these credits are usually setup with some internal threshold above which you'll get asked for documentation to support your claim.I've been approaching this wrong, I need to invest in a power guzzling cryptocurrency mining rig and then claim 30% of the electricity costs back.
I was of the same option. But yesterday it appears to revenue online have a updated receipt tracker and now easier to claim.The more I think about this, the more annoyed I'm getting - my limited free time is valuable, and yet our government think its okay to waste it with this nonsense.
... I could end up spending longer collecting and filing the bills, doing the maths and then the tax return, than I'd get back for my troubles, in financial terms.
Maybe I'm better off not wasting time trying to claim this petty relief, but ensuring that I vote against the current governing parties, at the next election?