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Probably, yes.I recently bought a rundown cottage to renovate. If I decide to sell it on and buy another to do up and sell on next year or the year after will the Revenue Comms. treat me as a developer
Income tax at your marginal rate.what kind of tax rate would I be looking at?
I have done a number of multi unit developments in this country and have never paid more than 20% tax.
I have 2 accountants dealing with this (one for personal and one for business) and they are both clear on what is going on and on what tax is being paid and I can not think that they are both wrong.Have you done so on the basis of professional advice? You would need to be very sure of your ground on this if the Revenue ever audit your tax returns.
I agree but I do not make the rules.Fair enough. It just sounds pretty conclusive to me that anyone who has done "a number of multi unit developments" is a property developer and should expect to be taxed accordingly. On the other hand, an amateur who renovates a cottage & sells it for a once-off profit might well benefit from the more relaxed CGT rules, but once a pattern of transactions emerges, it is increasingly difficult to claim that each is a capital gain.
if it takes you 3 years to bring a project to fruitition then you should be able to spread it out over 3 years and use 3 years tax credits but otherwise it should be income tax.
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