In short, No. Just because you are the sole owner does not mean you can treat the company's funds as your own personal banker.
the repayment of over €160 million by directors and connected persons to their companies and the referral of 86 large cases involving some €48 million to the Revenue Commissioners because of possible tax liability concerns;
Section 31 Companies Act 1990 brought in the rules on transactions with directors and for some 16 years we blissfully ignored them.
This is a bit of an exaggeration. There was widespread ignorance of this law at one stage but not in recent years. This issue was addressed specifically in the 2001 Company Law Enforcement Act and has been a very real issue for company directors, auditors and other concerned parties ever since then.
It has also failed utterly to police the quality of financial statements filed in the CRO even where defective balance sheets have been filed in situations where companies have screwed creditors.
You can take what you like out of the company during its financial year once you have your tax position right at 31 oct and the companys tax position right at its year end
Once you leave directors loans in place at company year end you have to report it on your CRO return and also if its left in place there are income tax implications if its an interest free loan.
if its repaid in a few months after the year end the revenue are usually ok about it
As previously stated any payment you make to yourself from the company is taxed at 25%.
I
As previously stated any payment you make to yourself from the company is taxed at 25%
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