Thursday 21 April 2016

Tax Planning Exempt Income




Exempt income








Life is full of decisions one of the ones you can decide to make is whether you try to minimize the amount of tax you pay. This leads to a further decision of whether you do this legally or illegally.



Legally this is called tax avoidance or tax planning depending on the scale of how you organize your affairs. Both are perfectly valid means of minimizing your tax



Illegally this is called tax evasion, the shadow economy or sponging of the rest of society. It has high penalties for detection including hefty fines and prison sentences. Each time you evade tax then you end up driving the amount taken by other people to higher levels as they have to compensate for the amount you are not paying.



One of the ways to avoid income tax is through exemptions.



Within the Irish tax code there are various exemptions to income tax.



(1)   Exemption Limits:

Once you reach the grand age of 65 then any income you earn below €18000 is exempt from income tax. Once you reach 66 then you also avoid PRSI. If you are over 70 then you are charged a reduced rate of Universal Service Charge

 (2) Personal injury settlements (s 189), payments from the Haemophilia HIV Trust (s 190), Hepatitis C compensation (s 191), and payments in respect of thalidomide victims (s 192).

(3) Income of artists, writers and composers, subject to an overall annual limit of €50,000 (s 195).

(4) Interest on savings certificates (s 42) and instalment savings schemes (s 197).

(5) Income of recognised charities (s 207, 208).

(6) Income of amateur sports bodies (s 235).

(7) Rent from letting farm land (s 664). A claimant must be aged 55 or over, or unable through physical or mental incapacity to carry on farming. Exemption is given for the lower of:

(i) the farm rental income surplus, or

(ii) €40,000 where the lease is for more than 14 years, €30,000 where the lease is for 10 to 14 years, €22,500 where the lease is for seven to 10 years, or €18,000 in any other case.

(9) Rent-a-room relief (s 216A). Income from lodgers is exempt provided your gross income from such letting does not exceed €12,000 in the tax year.

(10) Home childcare earnings of up to €15,000 in the tax year (s 216C).

(11) Earnings of special assignees (s 825C). 30% of income above €75,000 in the case of employees assigned from a tax treaty country to work in their employer’s Irish operation.

(12) Start Your Own Business relief (s 472AA). Where a person previously long-term unemployed sets up a business, the first €40,000 of profits in a tax year are exempt. Expires 31.12.2016.
Frank McGivney www.meathaccountants.com 0469293891


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