A Chartered Tax Accountant is someone who is trained in Tax Affairs
The revenue site is the only canonical (trusted) source.
3) so 490 + 750 + 100 ( -400) =€940
The tuition relief shouldn't be a minus. Did you enter minus figures or is my formula incorrect? Either way, I'll have to fix. Thanks.
Please everyone, be totally honest...
It seems to me that you do not have the knowledge of tax practice which would be fundamental.
You need to acquire this knowledge and through sitting down with a tax consultant.
You will need to stay up to date.
You need a partner with a background in tax.
Brendan
As I said in an earlier thread
Pulling your self up by your own shoe laces.Whst does bootstrapping mean?
You are confused.
A Chartered Accountant is an accountant. They may or may not have a good knowledge of tax.
A Chartered Tax Advisor is a member of the Tax Institute who has completed some specialist exams
Chartered Tax Adviser (CTA)
The Chartered Tax Adviser (CTA) programme meets the needs of those who work in full-time tax roles or aspire to develop their career in tax.taxinstitute.ie
Whst does bootstrapping mean?
I would expect that very few if any practising accountants would be interested in taking on work of this nature, less still paying referral fees for the privilege.
Put simply there isn't any money in it. And it's fiddly, time-consuming and uncertain work.
Take as an example the new Rent Tax Credit for which a claim requires input of a long jumble of dates, PPSNs and eircodes. A absolute nightmare even for accountants.
The uncertainty comes from promising someone they can expect to get say €500 back in a tax refund, and then finding they haven't disclosed to you some or other source of income that they had during year that had no tax deducted at source, meaning that they now owe a net balance to Revenue.
The uncertainty comes from promising someone they can expect to get say €500 back in a tax refund, and then finding they haven't disclosed to you some or other source of income that they had during year that had no tax deducted at source, meaning that they now owe a net balance to Revenue.
I've locked-down all the number inputs on the form.I doubt I entered a - figure. I certainly didn't do it intentionally. I was not being paid to go to College.
But you should probably make it impossible to enter a - figure.
Brendan
Long done away with: https://www.revenue.ie/en/employing...ms/list-of-forms-used-by-employers/index.aspxThat's great thanks. No P45?
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