mandelbrot
Registered User
- Messages
- 2,330
Look - the whole point of this thread is to answer the question is NPPR a deductible expense.
I believe ,along with the Instititue of Taxation and many posters, that it should be.
Yes, Revenue may have a legal case for excluding NPPR as an expense based on a few words amongst a very long detailed law...
But until Revenue make matters clear to the public I am convinced that when i do include NPPR that the worst that wll happen (in the case of an audit)is that they will disallow it; nothing more.
My understanding of "levy" in this context is the imposition of a charge. AFAIK both the charge and the penalties are given rise to under the Act (linked already above).
Yep, you're dead right, even I talked myself around on that one!
But my point is that Revenue may be talked into accepting the proposition that the NPPR charge should be deductible, in line with other charges that are required as part of ownership of the property, but not on the basis that it is a rate levied by a local authority.
... you get a Revenue Audit - at least acccording to many tax practitioners.an expression of doubt on your Form11 would ensure that
Now I'm worried. Never thought that asking taxman a question would make him suspicious; the opposite in fact.
Never used an accountant for my form 11 and prefer to ask for the occasional bit of advice direct from the taxman.
Funnily enough, I have found in 30 yrs of audited accounts for my businesses -when I had to use accountants by law - that the taxman was sometimes more flexible than the auditors on some points.
However, I won't ask them about NPPR .
Gekko - am unsure whether you've properly read the preceding posts
Are these top accountancy companies KPMG, Ernstyoung, PriceWaterhouse that, according to the Sun Ind 24/4/10, charged 164 million euros as auditors and advisors to Anglo, BOI and AIB between 2000 and 2010 ?
Wow -then clearly they must be right and I'm wrong.
We differ in opinions, but please, Mandelbrot, try to avoid veering towards rudeness when somone has a different opinion.
On that note I shall cease my arrogant wittering on this subject.
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