Dermot,
I imagine that the HC and LPC don't qualify as deductions as the expense is not incurred in the business of letting the property. If you lived in the house yourself the expense would still be incurred.
Thanks mandelbrot. You are as helpful as ever. I was just thinking that as the LPT is a replacement and nothing more than a name change as far as its objectives are and that there was an arguable case for a claim in view of the LPT being allowed. I accept your advice.
The Household charge has been described in Dept of Finance literature as follows: "A household charge of €100, to fund vital local services, in line
with the requirement in the EU/IMF Programme of Financial
Support for Ireland, is being introduced in 2012. The charge
which will raise some €160m per annum is an interim measure
pending design and implementation of a full property tax,
which will apply in 2014."
AFAIK Revenue took the position in relation to the NPPR and the HC that these were taxes rather than rates - the legislative provision dictating the deductions that can be allowed refers to rates.
If that were the yardstick, then road taxes (and irrecoverable VAT) would be disallowable as deductions for a business.
I don't see how - the rules for deductions against Case V are specific, and laid out in S.97. The general rules for Case I or II trade deductions don't apply.
(d) the cost of maintenance, repairs, insurance and management of the premises borne by the person chargeable and relating to and constituting an expense of the transaction or transactions under which the rents or receipts were received, not being an expense of a capital nature;
I'm addressing the notion that "taxes" can't be allowable deductions.
That said the scope of deductions allowable against rental income under s.97(d) TCA 1997 is quite wide:
(d) the cost of maintenance, repairs, insurance and management of the premises borne by the person chargeable and relating to and constituting an expense of the transaction or transactions under which the rents or receipts were received, not being an expense of a capital nature;
I agree but the reason I refer to it is because this was the line the ITI took when arguing for a deduction - that the NPPR and HC were effectively rates, and a deduction should be allowed under S.97(2)(b).The separate provision for deductibility of Rates "any rate levied by a local authority" is a red herring - Ireland hasn't had domestic property rates since 1977.
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