Evan Mitchell
Registered User
- Messages
- 4
I need some help and after reading through quite a bit of the forum over the last couple of days I thought I'd ask a couple of questions. I posted this on another forum and was hoping I could get some advice here also.
I have recently moved back from the US where I had used Vanguard directly and know I can't use them direct. My goal is to invest in a couple of low cost broadly diversified funds for 20-25 years but the more I learn about the tax structure in Ireland and the way funds are treated (8 year deemed disposal) 41% exit tax it seems like it may not be the best way to go.
There's no point in talking about how it is anywhere else but that just seems like there's little to no upside in investing in funds if the taxes are going to be that high and you're forced to sell every 8 years anyway. Is there any better route to take or something that I'm missing? I incorrectly assumed that it would be a straightforward process to just invest and continue to dollar cost average but the more I read about the events caused by each subsequent investment I'm less inclined to do so.
I am interested in investing about Euro100K in a couple of index/ETF funds with an execution only broker here over the course of the next couple of months.
I spoke with BOI for my day to day banking and they suggested speaking with one of the FA's who told me they take 1.5% of the value of the investment every year. So with the 20 year timeline I'm looking at they'd take 30K - so that's totally out of the questions.
Anyone have any advise for how to invest in a broadly diversified portfolio that isn't subjected to all of these ridiculous taxes that effectively negate the point of taking the risk in the first place - maybe I'm better off paying off my mortgage
I have recently moved back from the US where I had used Vanguard directly and know I can't use them direct. My goal is to invest in a couple of low cost broadly diversified funds for 20-25 years but the more I learn about the tax structure in Ireland and the way funds are treated (8 year deemed disposal) 41% exit tax it seems like it may not be the best way to go.
There's no point in talking about how it is anywhere else but that just seems like there's little to no upside in investing in funds if the taxes are going to be that high and you're forced to sell every 8 years anyway. Is there any better route to take or something that I'm missing? I incorrectly assumed that it would be a straightforward process to just invest and continue to dollar cost average but the more I read about the events caused by each subsequent investment I'm less inclined to do so.
I am interested in investing about Euro100K in a couple of index/ETF funds with an execution only broker here over the course of the next couple of months.
I spoke with BOI for my day to day banking and they suggested speaking with one of the FA's who told me they take 1.5% of the value of the investment every year. So with the 20 year timeline I'm looking at they'd take 30K - so that's totally out of the questions.
Anyone have any advise for how to invest in a broadly diversified portfolio that isn't subjected to all of these ridiculous taxes that effectively negate the point of taking the risk in the first place - maybe I'm better off paying off my mortgage