Could anyone clarify for me the treatment of UK Dividends - I know they are a special case. For other foreign dividends (in double taxation jurisdicions) I put the Gross Dividend as income, and offset the total of foreign and Irish withholding taxes against my total tax.
The UK Dividends are paid net of a 10% Tax credit. Do I declare the Gross Dividend as income, and offset the Tax Credit against tax, or do I declare the Net Dividend, and make no offset against tax (less favourable).
I think that you do it the first way - declare the gross dividend and then deduct the UK witholding tax from your Irish liability. The [broken link removed] certainly suggests that that's the case.
Sorry - you're right. Perhaps you enter the net dividend and somewhere else mention the witholding tax for which you are claiming a credit? Your liability is then the difference between the witholding tax and Irish income tax on the dividend income (20% or 42% depending on your gross income, including dividend income).
Thanks for that clarification Capall and apologies for any confusion caused. Seems odd that the Ireland-UK double taxation agreement doesn't cover this though. Is there a particular reason that such credits were ceased?