The SFT doesn't prevent such a contribution. It simply dictates the level at which chargeable excess tax will apply. And the SFT is increasing by €200K p.a. between 2026 and 2028 at which point it will be €2.8M.Okay, my mistake, 10m then.
But I thought the maximum SFT is about 2m, so how can an employer make a 10m contribution to one employee's pension fund?
They could do €1bn if they liked. But what’s the point? Unless someone was terminally ill.Okay, my mistake, 10m then.
But I thought the maximum SFT is about 2m, so how can an employer make a 10m contribution to one employee's pension fund?
I just came across this story on RTÉ. I’m curious what action Revenue might take in these cases. Could they prevent companies from deducting excessive PRSA contributions from their corporate tax bills, as outlined in the income tax manual regarding bona fide payments and excessive remuneration? Or might they target individuals under Section 811 for avoided BIK?I hope the problem was eejits creating fake employments for their spouses or children and their companies then they making huge PRSA contributions.
Versus, say, people just organising big contributions generally and Revenue not liking that.
You mean this?When does this take effect?
Guessing it's 1st Jan? So for 2025 salary and pension must be equal or the latter lower?
From 1 January 2025, the cap on employer paid PRSA contributions is capped at 100% salary. Any payments over this amount is treated as BIK.
Yes - I'm surprised the payroll software doesn't take it into account when calculating taxYou mean this?
Changes to PRSA funding limits
From 1 January 2025, the cap on employer paid PRSA contributions is capped at 100% salary. Any payments over this amount is treated as BIK. The unlimited contribution rule lasted just 2 years but greed took over for a small number of people (both advisors and their clients) who pushed things...www.askaboutmoney.com
They can't, pension limits are not hard rules. Revenue can issue dispensations to the limits.Yes - I'm surprised the payroll software doesn't take it into account when calculating tax
Probably because of this:TheStory.ie got details of a paper on this through an FOI request - sorry I can't link
but it's a few stories down on their front page.
The largest contribution was €1.3 million.
In 13 cases, the recipient only started work in 2023
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