That last paragraph on page one is very waffely. Think revenue are unsure themselves. Remember they did back track on term life insurance a few years ago. Keep your receipts. And ask them in writing if it's deductable yourself.
Thanks for the letter T McG, first concrete letter from revenue on this, I'm going to study it very carefully for loopholes.
I personally don't see it as waffly, nor do I see a loophole!
I only made a cursory reading of the letter yesterday but have had a closer examination last night. The letter is designed as are most civil servant letters to not actually state what the real situation is as the civil servant in question, SW, does not actually know, even though he is probably quite senior. The giveaway is in the last paragraph of page one. 'without forming an opinion'. What he means is that only a court can decide the law on whether the NPPR is a rate or not. He's playing around with words in relation to how or what is 'levying' the charge. When is a charge, cost, bill, a rate?
Tax briefings are only an interpretation of revenue's stance, as is that letter. Those interpretations can and do change over time. They can be wrong.
The Irish Taxation Institute has written to clarify the matter. They seem to have had 2 arguments
1. That is should be allowed under section 97 (1) of the 1997 Act and
2. Somehow it should be allowed outside of the legislation
Tax Institute should write back and ask what is a 'rate' exactly. And what is the difference between the 'charge being 'administered ' and being 'levied' by the local authority. If they do it will drive revenue nuts. They don't like to be specific, especially when on shaky ground.
The above is only my conjecture and opinion. No doubt the tax institute have the very best revenue lawyers working on it, whereas this poster is a mere blogger.
Plus it's fundamentally unfair that a charge is not deducatable. It's a cost to doing business. And that's all it is and so should be deductable. Would be interesting to know does the money collected go into the same account in the local authorities as rates, and presumable spent in the same way.
I only made a cursory reading of the letter yesterday but have had a closer examination last night. The letter is designed as are most civil servant letters to not actually state what the real situation is as the civil servant in question, SW, does not actually know, even though he is probably quite senior.
He believes that because the 1997 Act mentions " any rate levied by a local authority" then this must mean a rate levied by the national authority ( NPPR ) is NOT allowable.
I'd argue this is patent nonsense. There was no national rate(nppr) in 1997 - not for ten years, so obviously it could not be mentioned in the Act.
However, I (as well as the experts in the Irish tax ation Institution) may be wrong .
Where I am not wrong is that Revenue specifically state in their detailed guide that allowable expenses include " RATES AND LEVIES" -no mention of local or national.
Furthermore, when it comes to the section "what expenses can NOT be claimed for" there is no mention of NPPR.
Surely, any reasonable person with a NPPR could deduce that Revenue IS allowing the charge to be tax-deductible.
One example that I can think of where revenue changed the way they 'interpret' what is or is not deductable is mortgage term life insurance. For many years it was not allowed and hey presto one day it was. Nearly sure this probably applies to what is or is not capital expenditure as well. Revenue can be 'persuaded' to change the way they interpret things.
My accountant tells me it's not deductable, but that would be based on revenue rules and briefings so I go along with that for now. But I'm thinking of challenging it before 2012 (4 years after it began, due their their 4 year rule), hoping meantime that the tax institute/accountants will manage to persuade revenue to change the interpretation.
it is pretty clearly (not) levied by the local authority.
This logic doesn't hold water. Buildings insurance is an allowable deduction but is pretty much essential for the owner to have regardless of whether the property is let, otherwise occupied or vacant.Even at that, it would seem to me that it requires more of a concession from Revenue to allow it, than the example you gave. This is because the NPPR is levied equally on people who aren't letting their NPPRs; it isn't wholly or exclusively incurred, you'd still owe it even if you never let the property (although this is also true of the mortgage protection so I think I'm waffling now!).
This might be true in theory but certainly not in practice. Some local authorities are very busy at the moment sending demands to property owners for NPPR fee arrears and penalty fines. If this doesn't fall within the scope of 'levying', I don't know what does.
This logic doesn't hold water. Buildings insurance is an allowable deduction but is pretty much essential for the owner to have regardless of whether the property is let, otherwise occupied or vacant.
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