See the Property Investment FAQ for a summary of the tax and other issues. You would be liable for income tax on any rental income less allowable expenses (including mortgage interest). You would also be liable for CGT on c. (5-1)/(3+5) = 4/8 = 50% of any capital gain arising from the eventual resale. Whether or not you should keep and rent isn't easy to answer. You would need to crunch the numbers to check if the potential rental income and capital appreciation make this a viable option and better than any alternatives open to you. You also need to consider whether or not you want to be a landlord and the fact that concentrating most or all of your means in one asset class, risk/reward profile and geographic region (Irish residential property in an arguably "hot" market) involves risks not associated with a more diversified portfolio. If in doubt get independent, professional advice on the investment and tax issues involved.What CGT and tax would i have to pay if i rented the apartment for the next 5 years and then sold or should i just sell up now.
No - you pay CGT on a portion of any eventual gain based on how long it was rented out versus your PPR. My outline calculations above give the general gist.I am not too sure about this. I think you pay 20% on the difference between the purchase & sale price.
The clawback will only apply if the property is rented out within 5 years of purchase. If the property is not rented or is sold on within 12 months of vacating it as a PPR then no SD clawback or CGT applies.You have made a really good profit now with only 5,000 claw back!
The longer you hold onto it the larger the proportion of any gain arising from the resale is assessable for CGT. My example above shows that 50% is assessable for CGT. Hold onto it for another year rented out and the proportion would be (6-1)/(3+6) = 5/9 or c. 56% of any gain, yet another year and it's (7-1)/(3+7) = 6/10 = 60% and so on. Of course the precise CGT bill will depend not only on the percentage of the gain that is assessable but the size of the gain which cannot be predicted.Are you saying the longer i hold on to the apartment (say for 10 years), that would decrease the amount of CGT i would have to pay?
No - if you sold after 10 years assuming 3 years PPR and 7 years rented then the proportion of any gain assessable for CGT would be (7-1)/(3+7) = 6/10 = 60%!If i sold after 10 years, would the formula be the following (5-1)/(3+10) = 4/8 = 30% (Or have i this formula all wrong)
Liteweight means that CGT (@ 20%) is paid on the non PPR portion of your period of ownership (what CM has been showing you how to calculate, including the final 12 month exemption [where the 1 is calculating in years, months may/should also be used if more appropriate]) and that CGT is not 50% (or whatever the result you calculate from the formula above) of the sale price.Sullyman, I assume you realise that capital gains tax is charged at 20% on profit made excluding the time the apartment was your PPR?
They should be the same date unless it is a self build I would have thought? Either way it's when you take ownership of the property as far as I know.Does PPR start when you sign contracts etc or does Revenue calculate same form when mortgate kicks in ?
Signing the contracts is not the same as closing the purchase. Closing the deal is the significant even as far as I know.As i'm currently living in my apartment for the last three years and signed the contracts a year earlier. Does that count as 4 years? Probably not, knowing my luck
Does PPR start when you sign contracts etc or does Revenue calculate same form when mortgate kicks in ?
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