Just looking for a sanity check here. I understand that income from work done abroad is subject to the other country's tax system in the same way as if I lived there full time, and that it only needs to be declared on an Irish tax return if transferred back to Ireland - correct me if I'm wrong please.
Does that mean that while working a normal Monday to Friday job in the Republic and paying normal Irish taxes on my earnings, I could do extra work on weekends in the North, and effectively pay no tax on those earnings because the UK has a large zero-rate band (£12570 per year), and I wouldn't reach that working one or two days a week? I would be happy to leave the money in the UK and pay course fees with it.
Seems both logical but too good to be true, so here I am. If this can be done, would it matter if the UK work was on a PAYE or a self employed basis?
I guess I'd need to keep train tickets or fuel receipts, to prove I really went north to do the work. And if self employed I'd need an accountant.
Does that mean that while working a normal Monday to Friday job in the Republic and paying normal Irish taxes on my earnings, I could do extra work on weekends in the North, and effectively pay no tax on those earnings because the UK has a large zero-rate band (£12570 per year), and I wouldn't reach that working one or two days a week? I would be happy to leave the money in the UK and pay course fees with it.
Seems both logical but too good to be true, so here I am. If this can be done, would it matter if the UK work was on a PAYE or a self employed basis?
I guess I'd need to keep train tickets or fuel receipts, to prove I really went north to do the work. And if self employed I'd need an accountant.