I'm currently a student renting in Dublin. I've never owned property. My question is, if I were to either jointly invest in (e.g. with a relative) or invest on my own in oversees property would this eliminate my status as a first time buyer when I eventually seek to purchase an Irish home.
A first time buyer is a person who has not previously purchased or built a house or apartment anywhere in the world and who is purchasing a house or apartment for use as their principal place of residence.
If I was in your position, I'd be more conservative. Keep your FTB status (very valuable after post-election change in Stamp Duty) - you'll be glad you did.
Yes. You would no longer be a FTB in Ireland. I'm sure you will get the usual 'sure if you never tell the Revenue how will they know', but the rules are clear (from the[broken link removed]):
.... There may very well be ways around losing FTB status by investing abroad, but if they were that easy or obvious, everybody would be doing it.
Getting money out of a company can be difficult to accomplish in a tax efficient manner.
And also ... any transaction artificially structured mainly or purely to avoid tax may fall foul of Revenue's anti-avoidance legislation - i.e. otherwise legitimate tax avoidance measures may be deemed illegal in certain circumstances. The old cliché of avoidance being legal and evasion being illegal is not totally accurate.
I don't agree - first time buyer incentives are exactly that - incentives for first time buyers. Somebody who invests in property before buying a PPR is patently not a first time buyer. Of course, some would question the logic of having first time buyer incentives in the first place or extending them to all regardless of means etc. but that is a different discussion/debate.I personally think it is silly for revenues' rules to exclude someone from making an investment.
I don't agree - first time buyer incentives are exactly that - incentives for first time buyers. Somebody who invests in property before buying a PPR is patently not a first time buyer. Of course, some would question the logic of having first time buyer incentives in the first place or extending them to all regardless of means etc. but that is a different discussion/debate.
Obviously that (i.e. the use to which the property is put) does not matter as far as the current rules stand. The rules apply to first time buyers not first time PPR buyers.However it is my opinion that if someone is buying property in a country where they are not resident then they are not first time buyers of a home
I dont disagree with the legal definition of First Time Buyers ClubMan. ......
FTB is just a casual abbreviation - you need to look at the formal definition/tax rules.I didn't realise the word home was contained within the acronym FTB.
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