T McGibney
Registered User
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97(2)(d) - the cost of maintenance, repairs, insurance and management of the premises... being an expense of the transaction(s) under which the rents were received (this catches most of the "normal" expenses - but since the NPPR / HC don't arise as expenses of renting, they don't fall in here, and a deduction under this subsection would require a concession similar to that for term life assurance).
I mentioned in a previous thread that buildings insurance costs 'don't arise as expenses of renting'. You can rent an uninsured property and a property can be insured regardless of whether it is occupied. Yet insurance is clearly an allowable expense for Case V. I don't remember a Revenue eBrief or Tax Briefing telling me so.
?(d) the cost of maintenance, repairs, insurance and management of the premises borne by the person chargeable and relating to and constituting an expense of the transaction or transactions under which the rents or receipts were received, not being an expense of a capital nature;
One could say that Revenue custom and practice in allowing insurance, confers an implicit concession.
Or it could be said perhaps that NPPR/HC falls within the ambit of the following:
?(d) the cost of maintenance, repairs, insurance and management of the premises borne by the person chargeable and relating to and constituting an expense of the transaction or transactions under which the rents or receipts were received, not being an expense of a capital nature;
That would be a very dangerous road for them to go down. Under self-assessment, people could be claiming under the radar for all sorts of garbage, and any 'custom and practice' precedent could end up being trotted out for 'Dvd rentals', 'wages to children' and the like.
Returning to the issue of the deduction for insurance:
If I have a property let and I have it insured, I could argue I only have it insured because it is let, as it is more likely to burn down or be damaged etc with tenants in it...
I have lost count of the number of threads on this subject both here and on other forums,the fact remains that Revenue have not stated whether this is allowable or not is frankly disgraceful and I don't care how busy they are,there should be no grey areas or second guessing in regards issues like this.
Without excusing the fact that no briefing has issued, I would imagine it's possible that Revenue don't see any grey area. They may be of the opinion that these charges clearly aren't rates, aren't levied by local authorities, and aren't expenses of a transaction giving rise to the receipt of rent, and that therefore there is no grey area. And iin the absence of any substantial level of lobbying / representations to them to suggest that taxpayers / agents are second guessing, then they may not see a pressing need to issue a clarification.
Why on earth don't they publish their view though? They see no problem with horsing out eBriefs on all sorts of obscure topics, almost on a daily basis. The fact that the ITI have engaged on correspondence with them on this topic should have signalled long before now to even the most elevated ivory-tower bureaucrat that this is a matter of public concern.
So much for Revenue not confirming the position to the masses...
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