Brendan Burgess
Founder
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It's not preliminary tax, it's just the CGT due
FYI that date has not yet been determined.You do the return by 15 November 2025.
The timeline between the children going back to school (before which annually, only the most dutiful worry about their tax returns) and 31 October is far too narrow given the multiplicity of taxes now involved.TBH I'd be happy to just go back to 31-Oct for all returns, sure who files paper returns now anyway
Yet there is always not merely a last minute rush, but a stampede throughout the entirety of September and October and also halfway into November. It's increasingly unsustainable.You can file your 2024 tax returns, Income Tax and CGT, at any date between 1st January 2025 and 31st October 2025
Well maybe not 1st January but certainly from the middle of January
So there is no reason for a last minute rush
It seems like something that could be easily solved by something like variable pricing? €400 for tax returns January-April, €500 May-September, €750 October-NovemberYet there is always not merely a last minute rush, but a stampede throughout the entirety of September and October and also halfway into November. It's increasingly unsustainable.
The main issue for most firms is that they must first concentrate each year on company compilation assignments that typically have a CT1 filing deadline of 23 September, and a CRO Annual Return Date of 30 September.It seems like something that could be easily solved by something like variable pricing? €400 for tax returns January-April, €500 May-September, €750 October-November
I’m usually in a tax refund position, so it would suit both of us better to do the return earlier, but I don’t tend to hear from them until September or if I initiate over the summer it is given no urgency, always baffles me.
Thanks Corola - that's very helpfulYou file ETF gains and dividends in your Income Tax return (Form 11), not your Capital Gains Tax return. The tax rate is 41% for gains and dividends.
If you hold for 8 years you have to pay tax on the unrealised gain. If you sell before 8 years you still pay 41% on the gain.
The Revenue guidance is here, section 4.1:
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