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It's up to €14,000 p.a. or €1,167 p.m., not €1,300 p.m.I understand that we can rent out a room of our PPR for 1300 a month tax free which seems like a good deal.
I don’t understand your question. If you rent out the third room in your house, it’s tax-free if the income is €14,000 or less per year, and it has no impact on PPR Relief.Thanks Procotol for clarifying.
In that case I guess I would change my question to a 3 bedroom house, is it worth renting the third room and paying high tax on the rent when it might decrease the capital appreciation in the end? Although I admit this is less interesting to me
How does renting an additional room decrease the capital appreciation?Thanks Procotol for clarifying.
In that case I guess I would change my question to a 3 bedroom house, is it worth renting the third room and paying high tax on the rent when it might decrease the capital appreciation in the end? Although I admit this is less interesting to me
I meant to say, if you rent the third room then you don't avail of the rent a room scheme as you can only do this with one room or to a maximum of 1400 correct? And so when you sell it, you will owe money on the cgt of your ppr?I don’t understand your question. If you rent out the third room in your house, it’s tax-free if the income is €14,000 or less per year, and it has no impact on PPR Relief.
If you charge €14,001, it’s all taxable, and it impacts on PPR Relief, so there’s a clear incentive to charge no more than €14,000.
In that case I guess I would change my question to a 3 bedroom house, is it worth renting the third room and paying high tax on the rent when it might decrease the capital appreciation in the end? Although I admit this is less interesting to me
Sums arising to an individual in respect of the letting, for residential purposes, of a room or rooms in his or her home......may be exempt from income tax where they meet the conditions and are below the annual limit for the tax year in question (see Paragraph 5).
I don’t believe that the above is accurate.Once you live in the house, it's your PPR, and you don't pay CGT on any gain.
It doesn't matter how many rooms you rent out, or how much rental income you earn. If you live there, it's your PPR.
No. As mentioned above, you can rent out more than one room as long as the total income received from all people renting doesn't exceed €14k p.a. Also as mentioned above if you do receive more than €14k then you cannot avail of the rent a room scheme or PPR benefits.I meant to say, if you rent the third room then you don't avail of the rent a room scheme as you can only do this with one room or to a maximum of 1400 correct? And so when you sell it, you will owe money on the cgt of your ppr?
But if you do receive more than 14k, does the initial 14k count?No. As mentioned above, you can rent out more than one room as long as the total income received from all people renting doesn't exceed €14k p.a. Also as mentioned above if you do receive more than €14k then you cannot avail of the rent a room scheme or PPR benefits.
You can find a thorough explanation here.But if you do receive more than 14k, does the initial 14k count?
Did you actually read what people have posted?!But if you do receive more than 14k, does the initial 14k count?
However, is it possible that it can come against us financially in the long run?
Eg, purchase 2 bedroom house for 600k.
Home appreciates 4 % per year (just an average for sake of argument)
In 30 years, this home will therefore be worth 1.946 million.
We then sell it and make a profit of 1.346, which is not subject to capital gains as we did not rent a room.
scenario 2
rent a room
1300 x 12 months x 30 years, with inflation 4% = 925k profit
we then go to sell the house at 1.946 million, with a profit of 1.346 million
however, half of this profit is due to cgt (1 out of 2 bedrooms?) = 673k profit
this is added to the profit from renting of 925k = total of 1.598 million profit
Scenario 2 is more profitable but not by a huge amount.
Fair pointNobody has the first clue of how the tax system will be configured in 30 years' time. Trying to plan on foot of very long-term assumptions will tend more than often to be a mug's game.
It's a reasonable assumption that capital gains on your PPR will still be fully or almost fully CGT-exempt in future.Trying to plan on foot of very long-term assumptions will tend more than often to be a mug's game.
There's more than that being assumed here though.It's a reasonable assumption that capital gains on your PPR will still be fully or almost fully CGT-exempt in future.
It's hard to find a comparable country where typical gains on an average-sized PPR held for 15 years would attract material CGT. See here.
Levying CGT on PPRs is politically unpalatable not just in Ireland. That's unlikely to change here or elsewhere.
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