Flybytheseat
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All taxed as income under PAYE4. How is the rest of my Irish state and AVC pension taxed ?
Is this from public service employment in Germany?I will be entitled to approx €5K per annum German state pension from 67.
No - private sector employment. Paid gesaetliche Rentenversicherung (statutory pension contribution).Is this from public service employment in Germany?
In general, pensions due to employment in public services in EU countries are taxable in that country and in Ireland; whereas pensions due to employment in the private sector in EU countries are taxable only in Ireland
You may have to file a form to ensure that no tax is deducted in Germany but this will be included with your pension claim
Looing at that, you won't have to include the German pension on an Irish tax return (it's only taxable in Germany) and you'll only pay tax in Ireland on your other income as normal.Revenue website seems to state tax is payable in Germany and seems pretty clear on that fact:
https://www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/pension/private/german.aspx
Minimum 5 years of contributions are required.I always thought that if you worked in Germany for a time and then returned to Ireland that any mandatory pension contributions (Rentenversicherung I think) that you made were counted as PRSI contribution credits when calculating your entitlement to an Irish contributory state pension.
From the above, it sounds like you can actually get a German state pension instead. Is there a minimum amount of contributions that you need to have made to get the German state pension?
Thanks - most helpful. Yes Im no longer a German resident living back in Ireland for over 20 years.Assuming the 5k p.a. state pension from the GRV is your only source of German income (and I am assuming you are not resident in Germany) then it is all tax free in Germany as it's well below the current tax free allowance (Grundfreibetrag) of €10,908 for a single person. You do not need to submit a tax return and there would be no point in doing so as there is no tax being paid so no tax to refund. There is also a Rentenfreibetrag, which is a percentage of your pension that is tax free. This percentage depends on when you begin drawing a pension. For people drawing a pension in 2023 for the first time, it's 19% (next year it will be 20% and so on, this is due to a phased in change of the taxation of German state pensions). So, only 81% of your pension is even eligible to be taxed, but this is ca. 4k so even further below the ca. 11k tax free allowance. In short, you won't ever need to worry about tax returns for this small pension.
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