C
How much of your mortgage is interest and how much is capital repayment for each of the last four years?
I always wonder why people post guesses. In any case, your guess is a bad guess. It makes no difference where the finance to buy the house was raised.I would guess that it also depends on which country the mortgage is in, the UK or IRL?
Probably a lot of give and take ? What do you mean by this ? Are you having a laugh ? Also our tax laws are not an evolution of Anglo tax laws. Irelands tax laws are completely independent to UK tax laws.IRL's tax law are an evolution of Anglo tax laws (just like our Justice laws), so there is probably a lot of give and take in this particular case.
I always wonder why people post guesses. In any case, your guess is a bad guess. It makes no difference where the finance to buy the house was raised.
Probably a lot of give and take ? What do you mean by this ? Are you having a laugh ? Also our tax laws are not an evolution of Anglo tax laws. Irelands tax laws are completely independent to UK tax laws. Irish tax laws are as similar to German tax laws as to UK tax laws.
Fight back Paddy, go on, fight your corner, defend your position.
As for your history lesson, true, 90 years ago we started off with a tax system inherited from the UK. For the past 90 years the two tax systems have gone their separate ways.
Bear in mind that 90 years ago, there was no such thing as PAYE, no such thing as VAT, no such thing as CGT. The tax system 90 years ago was nothing like the tax system of today.
What tax laws have we inherited from the UK 90 years ago which are still relevant today ? Feck all methinks !
If you think that Irish tax is so different from UK tax, then please tell my why such basic things are PAYE form names, such as P60s and P45s are the same in both countries? Have you ever been given your P45? If you have you will find that it is called the same and gives the same information in both countries!
In answer to no 1
Yes he must make a return even if he makes a loss. Remember losses can be carried forward so he could benifit later from them and use them if he actually makes a profit in future years
In answer to no 2
Yes he can claim interest relief on a mortgauge raised in Ireland.
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