⚠️ *IMPORTANT* *UPDATE* ⚠️ You NO LONGER need to register for ROS in order to pay your Capital Gains Taxes (unless you're seen as a 'chargeable individual' by revenue - see below). Revenue has added a 'Make a payment' button to the 'My Account' page: 1️⃣Login & scroll down to 'Payments/Repayments' on your 'My Account' page 2️⃣Choose 'Make a payment' 3️⃣Select 'tax' and then 'capital gains tax'. You can make a payment here. ⚠️ If the above isn't visible for you, message revenue through MyEnquiries, tell them you wish to pay CGT, and they will activate button for you! 💡You only need to register for ROS if you are deemed to be a ' *chargeable individual* ' from a tax standpoint. A chargeable individual is someone who is 1) self-employed or 2) Has greater than €5,000 in NON-paye income (income from side hustles, renting a room, dividend/staking income, etc.)
Hi, thanks for your videos on these topics - they are very helpful. Regarding sending a payment via the 'Make a Payment' section of 'My, Account', I am seeing many options, but no option for Capital Gains Tax. Do you have to register for something to see this option? Do you still have to have an ROS account to be registered to pay CGT and fill in the CG1 form? Thanks!
@@jamesvancoppenhagen1988 I experienced the same. I rang Revenue to ask them about it, they told me to do an enquiry through myAccount with the following details: Enquiry relates to: "Tax Registration / Cancellation" More specifically: "Registration (non-company)" Enquiry details: Ask to be registered for Capital Gains Tax I only did this today but the lady on the phone said it would take around 3 days for them to process the registration. "Make a Payment" in myAccount should then have an option for Capital Gains Tax. If I'm not registered by the end of the week I'm going to ring the registration department to try get it pushed through.
@@aarondaly7428 This is so helpful, really appreciate the reply, Aaron! I actually did submit an enquiry, but I'll set up another with your suggested details. Thanks, and best of luck with your registration.
@@aarondaly7428 Having the same issue and this helped a lot, thanks!. If it's no trouble, post how the rest of the process goes for you or if ringing them again helps at all. Cheers
US- based financial advisor here - It's amazing how different the Irish system is to the US. Really interesting to learn about. Great stuff guys. simple and clear.
Hey guys, when registering for ROS, is the first step to apple for your ROS Access Number (RAN). Didn’t see it on the video but thats what shows up for me on the ROS/revenue website
Hey Jason - just to confirm you're aware that you now only need to create a ROS account if you're declaring non-PAYE income of €5,000 or more. This was an update since we posted the video. Revenue changed the system so that you can now make a payment for CGT without needing to register for ROS. If you're only trying to pay/file capital gains tax and nothing else, then you won't need to do the ROS steps, you can just go to 'Make a payment' on your my account page. If you do still need to do a Form 11, then correct, you just follow the steps to get your RAN and then the process should begin to match up with the video (again, revenue have made some small changes since we recorded at first!)
Hey thanks for watching! If you need any help with paying or filing CGT, feel free to ask in the comments. We'll try help as best we can or at least point you in the right direction!
I think you touched on it there with the bed and breakfast scheme but just so I understand what if I’m a long term investor and I just buy and hold is it only when I decide to sell shares at some point in the future that I have to pay ?
@@rayb558 Hey Ray - in short, yes, but a couple of quick caveats. - If your stocks pay dividends, you'll need to pay tax on the dividends (this is taxed at your income tax rate, not CGT) - If you hold ETFs (watch our video on this if you're unfamiliar) then you'll need to pay tax every 8 years, even if you don't actually 'make a sale' But yes, to your main question, if you don't sell your stocks - you shouldn't need to pay CGT until you actually sell them
Can you please make a video on how to file the CGT to the revenue late (for both gains and losses)? As well as video on how to read the 3 statements DEGIRO release each year, which includes the statements charges and if the charges and fees can be added as losses/deducted from the gains? Many thanks
Hi Richard, as far as we're aware (and note, we haven't had to file late ourselves yet) the submission of the form is the exact same, you just need to make the figure adjustments yourself based on the late-filing surcharges as outlined by revenue (link below). If you're filing a CG1 form, you'll see on row 25 (d) where there is space to add in the surcharge figures. For your statement video request, thanks for the idea, we'll add it to the list! Cheers, Ste
@@TheLearningsReport Please do a video with Degiro Tax report. Is it gross or net for CGT ? I have discovered simple portfolio app and there's a difference big time. For swing traders or position traders with dozen of pages of trades it is emotionally dragging. How much loss can we carry on from a year to an other please ?
Howiya Martin - cheers for watching, and also nice to see a bit of TikTok overflow! Shout if you have any topics you'd like us to cover. Great to have ya on board
Thank you! The tax issue around stocks was the biggest question mark for me. Great to have it all laid out here! I just recently registered with Ros as I’m a freelancer so at least I have that step done! Oh and I’d recommend that everyone give them self plenty of time to get set up on ROS before the deadline to declare the CGT. It took me a while to get everything sorted.
Hey! So for every day that the payment is late (without extenuating circumstances) there is an interest rate that is charged daily. I believe as of most recent estimations, the rate is 0.0219 percent per day. Revenue will likely request this is paid through your MyRevenue portal!
thanks,great information.i'm curious as to the personal side and the company side of taxes. say you have a business in both Ireland and Batumi, Georgia.would you be required to pay any Irish Taxes on any income you or your company makes in Georgia(country,not the USA) as in Georgia the taxes are territorial and anything made outside of that isn't taxed
Heya - so this is a bit of a niche one, but my understanding is that it 1) depends on your residency status for Ireland (in terms of taxes) and then additionally, 2) how much of the income earned in Georgia is repatriated to Ireland. You might the document below helpful to have a read through! www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/ie/Documents/Tax/ie-tax-ges-moving-to-ireland-tax-guide.pdf
Exactly! So for sales in 2021, you pay by Dec 15th (today!) if you’re above the 1270 exemption. If below, you don’t need to do anything this year, but will file next year 👍🏻 - Ste
Hi guys today I paid the first cgt in Ireland ... Hurray ... Thanks for your videos. Of course I had to contact Revenue because I couldn't find the right link ... they unblocked me and away ...
Hi Lucas, A bittersweet moment - finally getting your taxes sorted - hurray! Paying tax - boooo! Glad you got it sorted in the end and thanks for watching. - Cian
That's great somebody finally made a video for Irish residents but you forgot to talk about double taxation treaty and dividends and also self-reinvested dividends to avoid paying taxes.
Hi Laurent - If you watch our tax form videos, we run through that in more detail 👍 However, for your dividend point - I want to offer some clarification. If you have DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plan) offered by your broker, you still are taxed on the dividend even though it's reinvested automatically. So although it's automated, you're still liable for tax on it even though you technically didn't 'receive' it. If you're referring to accumulating ETFs in terms of dividends, then correct - those you can purchase and avoid paying the dividends directly. Our video on ETFs goes through that in detail. Thanks for watching and for the comment! - Ste
Hey Guys! Great video, I am so happy I stumbled upon this one! I just had a quick question. I have recently started investing in crypto, stocks and some ETFs. I am well aware of the exemption and I know that my gains are below that threshold. In that case do I still need to create the ROS account and fill in some details stating that my capital gains were for example €1000 which is lower than the exemption €1270 so I have nothing to pay or I can totally ignore this step and wait when once day my gains are higher than that?
Hey Esmond, Glad you liked the video and found it helpful. So, because you are below the threshold, you do not need to pay CGT as none is due. You will, however, have to file the gain the next year and you can do this through a CG1 form without registering for Ros. We have a video on this which you can check out here: ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html - Cian
Hey Paul, Thanks for watching! There is a section on the CG1 form where you can offset current (and previous) year allowable losses. We run through the CG1 form in detail in the video below - have a look and if still unclear, drop us a comment there: CG1 Form: ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html - Cian
Hey Andreas - sorry for the late reply on this one. Once you leave Ireland, you are still a 'ordinarily' resident for tax purposes for a period of time, is how we understand it. According to revenue, this period of time is 3 years. (link for reference below) www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/tax-residence/how-to-know-if-you-are-ordinarily-resident-for-tax-purposes.aspx After this time, to the best of our knowledge, you will be no longer eligible to pay Irish tax on your holdings, and instead will pay it in your new tax residence.
HI GUYS ITS CLEARLY ONE OF THE BEST VIDEOS OUT THERE......SHOULD I PAY TAX ONLY ON THE PROFIT THAT HAS REACHED MY BANK ACCOUNT OR ON THE PROFIT THAT I GOT FROM SELLING And still sitting in trading 212???? ...thanks
Thanks VJ! So yes, once a taxable event occurs (e.g. selling a share) you will be liable for tax on that sale regardless of whether you withdraw the funds or not. The tax won't be due until December however, so you can do whatever you like with the money until then! Of course, you'll need to make sure you have the funds ready once tax season comes around. - Ste
How do you calculate CGT when you investment is in USD? Do you need to add up all your deposits from your bank and minus what the platform says in dollars after converting it into euro to find your expense? I use etoro which deals in USD.
Hi Marcus - you calculate the conversion at the time of the sale. You can look at the date of your transaction, and what the USD-EUR rate was for the day in question. Link below is for a currency converter I use. You can plug in the applicable dates, and multiply the sold amount with the exchange rate on that day. That'll give you the Euro amount you need to calculate your liability 👍 www.xe.com/currencytables/?from=USD - Ste
Great video, thanks So if I am just buyin cryptocurrency this year for example, and I am not thinking to sell it before 3 or 4 years, - I don't have to fill any form for now or for any years I haven't made a sell in it. Only when I am thinking to sell? - And if I did then I should fill CG1 befor 15 Dec of the same year of selling? Nothing for the years between? Is that correct? Thanks again
Hey Alaa - thanks for watching! Q1 - Yes, you won't need to file or pay anything until you sell. The exception is if you stake this crypto that you're holding. In this case, you would likely receive payments/rewards for holding it, and this is taxable (but would likely be taxed as income, and thus, would be filed as income under your income tax return/form 12). Check out our video on crypto staking for more info! Q2 - If you're only declaring a capital gain/loss, then yes, it would be a CG1 form. But it wouldn't be in the year that you sell, you would file it the following year. So, lets say for example you: - Sell crypto in 2024... - You would, PAY the tax by Dec 15th of 2024 - FILE the CG1 form by Oct 31st of 2025 If you don't sell anything in the years you're holding, then you shouldn't be liable for tax/filing. 👍 - Ste
Do you have to pay the tax if I reinvest the money. I want to look in to making a investment portfolio as a road to early retirement. Thanks for the great video.
Hi Karol, Yes unfortunately the tax is still due as soon as you 'sell' (even if you only sell for 30 seconds, and reinvest the earnings!). However, you can make use of your €1270 annual exemption by selling some of your holdings towards the end of the tax year, harvesting the gain, and then reinvesting those funds. Any gain under that amount is tax free - so thats one way that you can avoid at least some of the taxes! This method is sometimes referred to as a 'Bed & Breakfast Sale' (video linked below) ua-cam.com/video/EKGYfRHTGKo/v-deo.html - Ste
Thanks Guys. I got some clarity. I didn’t found any dividends tax. I use DEGIRO. And some dividends come 15% tax some not taxt. Reits to are different. How to calculate them ? I will be nice to see some video. Thanks again
Hey Yurivy - tax on dividends in Ireland is charged at your marginal rate of income tax (so 20% or 40% depending on whether you're in the higher or lower tax band, + USC & PRSI). It will also somewhat depend on what shares you hold, and whether Ireland as a DTA (Double Taxation Agreement with that country). For example, there is a 30% withholding tax on US Share dividends for non-US residents. However , if you complete a W8-Ben form for your stockbroker, a lower 15% tax rate will apply. As this tax is 'withheld' you don't need to really worry about it, as it's already taken from your dividend. You will then need to pay the balance (i.e an additional 5% or 25% depending on your tax band) to revenue when filing your tax return. Please let us know if you have any follow-ups!
Excellent video guys, 1) can you explain the tax in the dividends, still the same method?Or how is the process when you are already paid tax in the dividend gains from companies overseas? 2) What about if that dividend is re-invest in the same company do I still have to declare those gains? 3) If for the current year, I only sell a bit of my my shares let’s say less than the exception, i have to declare that amount as well even though is less than the exception? Hope I explain myself. Thanks.
Cheers Claudio! Thanks for watching 1) So dividends on individual stocks are calculated at your marginal rate of income tax i.e. 20%/40% (Plus USC and PRSI) - not at the CGT rate of 33%. Dividends on ETFs are charged at 41%. 2) If you receive dividends from a company (or have it set so that dividends are reinvested automatically) you still are 'deemed' to have received the dividend, and still need to pay the tax due on it - even though you're paying tax on funds that you've already reinvested. The exception is if you are holding an Accumulating ETF, in that case, you don't need to pay tax on the dividends - you just pay the tax that's due every 8 years due to deemed disposal rule (see our video on ETFs for more detail on this) 3) Correct - if you sell a stock (for a gain or for a loss), you must declare it at the end of the year, regardless of whether the total comes under or above the exemption. In simple term, if you sell (anything at all), you must file!
Great video guys! This really helps a lot! I have one question however. I invest in cryptocurrency but mainly for mining crypto. I’m a little confused on how to go about paying taxes on that? Currently, all cryptos I mined are still sitting on my wallet (Revolut). If I withdraw them, will they be subject to CGT or income tax? Thanks!
Hey Ripblade, If your gain is below the threshold, you do not need to pay but should still file your gain so there is a record on Revenue for it. - Cian
Another brilliant video lads! Only thing is I didn't need to sign up to ROS, under the 'Make a Payment' link in MyAccount I have the option to pay CGT tax, unless I'm doing it wrong?
Great stuff, Jetfuel, thanks for watching. Great, since we recorded it has become easier to pay on MyAccount. You can pay on MyAccount and then file with the CG1 form (I believe you are a Form 12 user from your other comment). Let us know how you get on. 👍 - Cian
Thanks for this really useful information. One question, with RSU schemes and capital gains, why do do some companies hold nearly 50% of your stocks at vesting? Love the channel lads.
Hey Eoin, Thanks a million for watching! For RSUs, given that they are considered to be part of your income from an employment point of view, you will be charged income tax, USC and PRSI on RSUs and your employer will deduct this directly from your payslip at the vesting date. Generally speaking, some of the shares will be sold to cover this tax liability which is known as a “sell-to-cover” mechanism, meaning you don’t need to pay the tax liability directly out of pocket. You can talk to your company to see if you can pay this liability rather than sell the shares. CGT would be due if you later sold the remaining shares at a gain. We have a video which explains it here: ua-cam.com/video/HZ1StqSfEaE/v-deo.html - Cian
Hi guys!, quick question,lets say, i buy bitcoin in march 2022, but i decide just to keep the money there in order to make profit, and in february 2023 i decide to pass the money in euros and sell it, do i need to declare the gain in 2022 or 2023, cause i bought the coin in 22, but i just got the gain in 23, so i understand that i should declare the gain for 23. Do i need to declare or do something if i just invest in some coins and i just have the money there stoped without no seling it?
Hey Gabryel. So for clarity sake, lets separate 'declaring' and 'paying' into two different sections, as thats how you need to deal with it from a tax standpoint. Step 1 - PAY, Step 2 - File (or 'declare', to use your example). For the BTC you sell in February 2023, you would PAY your tax on the profit by Dec 15th of 2023, and then you would file (declare) your gain to revenue in your tax return that you would file by Oct 31st 2024. (Remember, you PAY in the year you sell, you FILE the following year). If all you do is buy Bitcoin (for example) and don't sell any of it, you wouldn't need to file any sort of tax return until you decided to sell it. - Ste
Hello I have a question ! I am a bit confused with my situation . I was born in Poland , I had been in Ireland for 20 years, I have Irish passport . Basically I have dual nationality. Now I have been living in Vietnam for 5 years now. I have shares and crypto on etoro and bit in binance . I have connected Irish bank to my accounts and the bank address is in Ireland which was my old house, I used to rent . My question is “should I pay taxes? If so, how do I do it and to which country ? Looking forward to your response. Thank you in advance.
Hey Jazda - In short, I'd likely look at speaking with a tax advisor on this one. You'd owe taxes in Ireland if you're ordinarily resident for tax purposes. Link below will give you some info on that and you can figure out where you stand! Your situation sounds quite unique, so I'd be cautious offering you too much direction on it as we're not tax profs etc etc. www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/tax-residence/index.aspx - Ste
Cheers for the video lads. Quick question (probably a stupid one but I'm new to this stuff!) - There doesn't seem to be any step where I show proof of a gain made or am I missing something? It seems you just work it all out yourself and then pay CGT as if you're buying tickets to a gig haha. Am I way off the mark here lads or what? Thanks again for the content, definitely picked up a few nuggets!
Hey Greg - No worries at all, thanks for the comment and glad you got some value from the vid! So yep you're correct, we don't really show that in the video. When paying your CGT (part 1 of the process) you simply are entering in a figure into a box, and clicking pay! When you go to FILE your return the following year using the CG1 form (part 2 of the process), that's when you give more details on your gains/losses. That being said, as it's self assessment, you don't actually need to submit as much detail as you might expect. If you get called for an audit, however, that's when they'll be looking for a full trade by trade breakdown!
Sorry for the late response - big summer off! 'Trading revenue' is usually revenue generated from operating a business. So in this case, I would say no, I don't believe you would include your capital gains as trading revenue. (if its from trading stocks or crypto, that is)
Hey Mahmoud, In short, according to Revenue you don't have to but be sure to check with your tax adviser on your individual situation. As it relates to income (i.e. dividends) and from Revenue's website (www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/tax-residence/index.aspx): "If you are neither tax resident nor domiciled in Ireland for tax purposes, you are chargeable to tax in Ireland on: Irish-source income, including income from an Irish public office foreign employment income where the duties of the employment are carried out in Ireland." And as it relates to CGT (www.revenue.ie/en/gains-gifts-and-inheritance/transfering-an-asset/index.aspx): "If you are non-resident in Ireland, you pay CGT on gains on the disposal of: land, buildings and minerals in Ireland exploration or exploitation rights in the Irish continental shelf unquoted shares deriving the greater part of their value from: -land, buildings or minerals in Ireland -exploitation rights in the Irish continental shelf -assets which are used for the purpose of a trade carried on in Ireland." You may owe CGT in your country of residence or domicile so make sure to check that out. - Cian
Amazing video lads, very well made. Just a few questions. 1) Do I have to pay CGT on withdrawal of the money into my account? 2) I am under 18 and i am greatly interested in starting to invest (of course under parents permission.) Can i withdraw the money into my revolut junior account and also pay the tax or would i have to withdraw it into a parents bank account and then pay the tax via their card?
Cheers Denis. 1) Once a sale is made, a taxable event has occurred. So it doesn't matter if the proceeds of the sale stay in your bank account, in your brokerage account, or anywhere else for that matter! From revenue's standpoint, its up to you to declare that sale to revenue when it comes to tax season, and pay the tax due. 2) Good for you wanting to get started early! The only issue might be finding a broker that will allow you to trade under 18? I guess there's nothing stopping you opening it under your parent's name, but that might lead to some logistical headaches down the road. Tha tax itself wouldn't be paid through Revolut either way. It would just be paid via Revenue's website - so you can use whatever card you like to pay the tax. In terms of withdrawing the funds, are you referring to the funds you will have invested? Im a little confused about that list bit. - Ste
Hi Lads forgot to ask you in my previous question, when calculating CGT can you also deduct the fees you pay for buying and selling cryto before you apply the 33%. Thanks David.
No worries! So our understanding is that you can add your purchase trading fee to your cost basis (thereby reducing your tax liability marginally) but I'm not 100% on whether you can also include the selling fee. I think its usually only costs directly associated with the *acquisition* of the shares/crypto, but not with the selling - however I'll need to do some digging myself! Let us know if you hear anything from revenue on it will you? Cheers and thanks for the question. - Ste
According to the revenue PDF you have attached to your video description people employed and working in Ireland should file Form 12, could you please confirm the differences between form 12 and form CG1? Thank you
Hi Richard, we have videos on all three tax forms relevant to most Irish investors/employees. Form 11, Form 12, and CG1 form. They're all linked below for: Form 12: ua-cam.com/video/x4QVvH8DjM4/v-deo.html Form 11: ua-cam.com/video/15fgO8-8o6g/v-deo.html CG1 Form: ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html - Ste
Cheers for the comment! Going to be totally honest and say we're not totally sure on what you're asking here 😂But that could easily be our lack of knowledge on the subject. Can you elaborate? - Ste
And cheers for the comment 👍 Per your question - that's a first for us, can't say we've any knowledge of it. Assumably unless you're a tax resident in Portugal, you'd need to pay CGT wherever you're domiciled, which would be Ireland assumably? You're resident in Ireland for tax purposes if you're in the country for either: - 183 days or more in a tax year - or 280 days or more in a tax year plus the previous tax year taken together, with a minimum of 30 days in each year. Not sure what the rules are for Portugal, but I would guess that if you spend enough time in the country you then qualify for tax there instead of Ireland. There would also be the nitty gritty stuff of where you bought the shares initially - so I don't think it'd be as simple as "move to Portugal 6 months before you sell your shares in order to avoid CGT" 😂I would guess the CGT exemption would only be for shares purchased while a tax resident within Portugal. However, this is speculation on my part - I don't know the actual answer. Curious to hear what info you have on it already though? Could be tempted by a move to Portugal 😏
@@TheLearningsReport As far as I've heard so far. It's as simple as moving to Portugal for 6 months and setting up a bank account and have a 12 month rental lease or purchase a property. I've gained some serious % in the crypto space and I rather not pay 33% (I took the risk, can't understand why Revenue want a share). I could be wrong on this with some minor details but that's what I've understood of it.
Nice, yeah, crypto markets have been a bit nuts recently! Always painful having to consider the tax liability - but a move to Portugal sounds pretty nice regardless, whether its for taxes or otherwise 😂Sadly, tax is a necessary evil. Indeed, you did take the risk with your crypto, but Irish taxes pay for many of the great things our country offers outside of the investing space (hospitals, roads, schools, parks, trains - etc.) so although we absolutely agree that 33% is a difficult pill to swallow, there are trade offs.
Unfortunately, at time of writing, that seems to be the case yes! It's a fast moving space, though, so will be interesting to see how things materialise. - Ste
Great video lads, can you clarify something. Some tokens like Safemoon give holders reflection tokens for holding their token in your wallet. These additional tokens built up in the same wallet.Are they considered income or CGT? Would they fall under similar rules of airdrops/skating when received are income and then when you sell CGT? Cheers 👍
Nice one, Anthony - thanks for the question. By the sounds of it, yeah I’d also look at those through the same lense as staking, airdrops etc. But again, thats assuming that our assumption re: staking taxes is correct (which it may not be!) So in summary, I would agree with your view on it. The value of token when you receive them is your “income taxable event” and then when you sell down the line, cgt (unfortunately) - Ste
Great content, well done! Are you planning to do one on filling CGTs? Thats the bit that is a bit unknown for me, I'm not sure what I should be tracking as I buy or sell
Hi Edward, thanks for watching! We can add it to the list! Is there something particular that you would like us to cover that wasn't covered in this video? - Cian
For those who were interested (or just seeing this comment now) we've released two videos on filing your CGT/Income taxes! Links below: CG1 Form (Capital Gains) - ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html Form 12 (Income tax Return) - ua-cam.com/video/x4QVvH8DjM4/v-deo.html
Born and lived in Ireland for 23 years , lining in the US for past 40 years . In 2002 I purchesed just under 3 acres with house and sveral out buildings for 100K. Spent about 50K fixing up the property but never finished . I am Selling the property now, do I pay the CGT in Ireland If I use all the proceeds of the sale to purchase and appartment in Ireland . In the US this is called a 1031 Exchange
Hey Christy - as far as I'm aware, we don't have an equivalent to what you describe here in Ireland. The only relief that I'm aware of when selling a property is the PPR (principal primary residence relief) which I imagine you're already familiar with, but I also imagine is not applicable to you given that you're in the US (or at least, I suspect the property you're referring to is Ireland based, while you're US based? I don't think you specify where the property in question is). My understanding would be that you pay the 33% CGT on whatever profit you make, and then the balance is what you can then use to purchase the apartment. www.revenue.ie/en/gains-gifts-and-inheritance/cgt-reliefs/principal-private-residence-ppr-relief.aspx
Nice one, Christy - thanks. To clarify, are you asking about using your crypto holdings as collateral to take out a loan as opposed to selling the assets themselves? Or to take out a loan to pay your CGT liability? - Ste
Very useful information !!! I lost some tokens from an impermanent loss pool, do you know if I could deduct them from my benefits this year? Thank you in advance.
Hi Xabier. That's a very good question - gonna need to do some digging on that one! My gut would tell me, unlikely, but could be wrong. Will circle back! Cheers for bringing to our attention. - Ste
@@TheLearningsReport Hello The learnings report team. Following up on my question related to the impermanent loss, do you think it could be deducted from the capital gains? Thank you so much.
@@xabierremiro8049 Hi Xabier thanks for the reminder. No response from revenue on it - so you may need to speak with a tax adviser to get better advice on it unfortunately. We're not in a position to give direction on it! That being said, I assume when you're referring to impermanent loss, you are talking about withdrawing funds from pools where you have experienced impermanent loss? (thus making the impermanent loss, permanent). If the funds are still active in the pool, then no, this wouldn't be eligible for offset as that would be akin to asking if it was possible to offset losses on stocks that you still own, but that have depreciated in value. Of course, these can only be offset if you actually sell them for a loss. Holding stocks that have depreciated withouts selling, is essentially another example of 'impermanent' loss that only becomes permanent (and deductible) after you realise the loss. - Ste
This was extremely informatative, good work. However, the "Register for ROS" option at 4:30 does not appear to still be there. I also seem to be unable to register for ROS when going directly to the ROS login page, so I'm stuck. If anyone knows how to do this, please let me know
Hey Jason, Some of our viewers were having an issue with that. If you send Revenue an enquiry through MyEnquiries, they should be able to sort you out. Let us know how you get on. 👍 - Cian
Gents, this is amazing. So helpful. When you are choosing the year to register the gain via the return, does the gain refer to the year you sold in? Or the actual years to that point the gains were made?
You're welcome! So a little unsure what you mean when you say 'choosing the year'. If you're filing a CGT return, you generally would be filing the return to declare any gains you made from the sale of stocks/crypto in the PREVIOUS calendar year. So for example, any profits you made last year from stocks/crypto (2021) would be FILED as part of your CGT return this year (2022). With CGT it needs to be filed annually, so if you have gains to declare from earlier year, you'll need to file a late payment with revenue, and its best you speak directly to revenue about that (if that's applicable to your situation!). So to your question, and building on the simple example above, the gain would refer to any profit you made in 2021 (Jan 1st up until Dec 31st of 2021). Hope this answers your Q? - Ste
Thank you for this brilliant explanation guys. Very helpful! I just have a small question, if I avail of my 1270€ bed&breakfast (or might even only sell those 1270€ and not re-purchasing it) do I still need to go online on revenue and pay “0€” of tax and then file this ?
Hey Diego, Thanks for watching and appreciate the kind words! You would still need to file the gain with a CG1 form by 31 October in the year after you sell but you don't need to pay. We have a video which runs through this form which you can check out here: ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html And more details on the Bed & Breakfast Sale: ua-cam.com/video/EKGYfRHTGKo/v-deo.html - Cian
Hi guys great video, what are the implications of paying tax if you are a day trader and also what is the situation with options trading? I read somewhere you have to pay RTSO on that which is 42%. Thanks
Hi Jack, thanks for watching! So, just to split out your questions, I'll start with the day trader. There are no real differences depending in what type of investing you're doing (long-term buy and hold vs. day trading), as it relates to stocks, you will still have to pay capital gains tax on your gains/profits. One implication is that you may have multiple gains and losses (hopefully not many!) throughout the year so it will be easier for you to maybe calculate the overall gain/loss for the period as a whole before the the tax is due for the two periods mentioned in the video. For options trading, unfortunately, we haven't gotten 100% clarity on how this is taxed as there is limited information at the moment. Sorry that this probably doesn't help but might be worth checking with a tax expert if you know one. If you do find an answer, please let us know! RTSO is for unapproved share options, which usually relates to employees buying shares from their companies at a discounted rate. I believe the 42% is an old figure for that, it is dependent on your income bracket. More info can be found here: www.taxassist.ie/resources/questions-and-answers/relevant-tax-on-a-share-option Hope this helps! - Cian
Cheers Lucas. Yeah, any profits or losses from investing need to be declared. If you fall under the €1270 exemption, the process will be very quick and easy though - and will only take a couple of mins. - Ste
Hey Andy - Yep, nearly all the stocks I own are priced in USD (as they're listed on US exchanges) and the CGT is the same regardless i.e 33%. When it comes to calculating the taxes, you would take the exchange rate of USD-EUR on the day you sold the shares, to establish what the EUR amount was, and then calculate the 33% tax on that. - Ste
Hi guys great video, you make it very easy to understand. The part I’m confused with is actually filling in the form. Payment is no problem thanks to your clear and concise instructions, but using my pen and filling in the CGt1 form is to much for me to understand. I’m dealing with crypto currency...
Hey Rob, glad you found it helpful - appreciate the feedback. So at a high level, you can treat your crypto like stocks. When it comes to the CG1 form, you basically need to do most of your calculations in your own time (on a notepad, excel sheet or however you prefer), and then the CG1 is essentially just filling in your calculations. The mistake people make is that they think they need to fill out the whole form - where in reality you'll probably only need to fill in a couple of lines at most. Just find the sections applicable to you, and start there. Gains / Losses / Net chargeable gains is likely the most relevant section of the form for you. We're going to be doing a video on how to fill out these forms at some stage soon, but let us know what specific setions are confusing you and we can do our best to answer here in the comments! It's also worth remembering that as long as you file on time, even if there is a mistake on your form (an accidental mistake), revenue are unlikely to punish you for that - they'll just ask you to fix the error. So if in doubt, it's always better just to file something, and then you can always re-file without penalty (generally speaking). - Ste
Hey Saleh, appreciate it and thanks for the comment. Wish I could be of more help, but in short, the answer is I don't know. My guess (and again, its very much a guess) is that it will come down to what documents you have, your ID, and what other documents are required when setting up your brokerage account. Alternatively, if possible, you could potentially try open the account under your 'current' nationality/residency? Again, this is definitely beyond my area of knowledge - sorry I can't be of more use! Curious to hear how you get on though. - Ste
Hey guys! Recently discovered you and your work is fantastic!! Thank you very much!! Quick question: Does it make any difference in CTG if you aren’t domiciled in Ireland? I mean, you are Ordinary resident but not domiciled in Ireland buying and selling shares/stocks in Revolut or Degiro. Thank you!!
Hey Filipe, Thanks for watching! Yes, it does change but it can be very specific to a person's situation. We'd recommend getting tax advice for your situation, especially if it is a potentially large CGT liability. Generally speaking, if you are not domiciled in Ireland and don't remit the gains back to Ireland, you are not liable to CGT in Ireland (but probably are elsewhere). Found the below on Revenue's website: "Non-domiciled individuals and the remittance basis of assessment The remittance basis of assessment applies to foreign sourced income and foreign capital gains of an individual who although tax resident in the State for a tax year is not Irish domiciled for that tax year. Under the remittance basis of assessment, the non-Irish income and gains are taxable only to the extent that they are remitted to the State. However, the remittance basis of assessment does not apply to the income of a non-Irish sourced employment attributable to the performance in the State of the duties of that employment." - Cian
Hey just a quick question for you guys. If I have money invested in stocks or crypto but I haven't sold any of my shares, I.e. I bought a stock and held onto it, would I still have to pay CGT or would this only apply after I have sold it?
Hey - yea only when you sell! So if you simply buy and hold, you won't have any tax issues to worry about (unless the stocks happen to pay a dividend, for example) But generally speaking, yes, no CGT is due until you actually sell your holdings. - Ste
Thanks for the great information, can u please Tel me how can we prouve crypto losts to the revenue, because when we loose assets on an exchange platform we don't get any receipt about that. Thanks
Hey Ibra - if you export your transaction history on whatever exchange you use, you should be able to see your gains and losses within that. Additionally, you could use a crypto tax software provider to do the legwork for you! Check out Koinly, Coinpanda, etc. if interested. - Ste
Great video guys 😁 What about scenario like this? I buy my crypto using Euro then have a gain so decide to sell some or everything but not to euro but to stable coin like USDC, USDT etc. Do I still need pay tax and file CGT? For example in Poland you don't pay any tax until you change your gains into Fiat money.
Hey Lucas - glad you enjoyed! So unfortunately, yes, the key word in this scenario is "sell some". The act of selling/swapping/converting from a crypto to a stable coin is still considered a sale for tax purposes (I'm surprised that's not the case in Poland, sounds like an extremely big loophole 😂). If everyone could just swap crypto to a stable coin and then cash out, no one would pay an ounce of tax ever! Hope this helps. - Ste
@@TheLearningsReport Thanks for swift reply. As someone mention in previous comments I think Irish gov is ripping us off. If you sell your crypto and buy more then you just build up your portfolio. If you cash out then you should pay tax. I am in retail business so I am selling my products during the year and buy more using my profits. At the end of the year we buy even more to avoid paying huge tax. So we don't have cash (crypto) we have products on our shelves (USDT). I hope it make sense 😁
No worries. I see what you're getting at, but it's a little different when you're talking from a business supplying products/inventory standpoint, and personal investment portfolio. I guess the argument from an economic/revenue standpoint is that you're supplying a tangible product/service to customers when it comes to your retail business (and benefit from tax breaks as a result), whereas with crypto its solely to build your personal wealth!
Great content guys. I do have few questions though. 1. I'm selfemployed, so do I still need to pay CGT before 31st of January if I sold in December in the previous year, or I can do it later on my Form 11 2. Do I need to "pay" CGT before 31st of January even if I didn't make any extra profit in December, but only used 1270 CG credit? Thanks
Cheers! 1. For CGT, yes, the deadlines for paying are the same regardless of your employment status. Everyone pays in the year they sell, and files by Oct 31st of the following year. So for your example: - Sold stock in December 2021 - Pay tax on profit by Jan 31st 2022 - File form 11 by Oct 31st 2022 2. Correct - if your TOTAL profit from 2021 (including what you sold in December) is under the €1270 exemption, then no, no tax is due to be paid and all you'll need to do is file your Form 11 by October! Hope that clears it up for you. - Ste
Great info What if I keep buying crypto with my profit in crypto exchange, but dont withdraw fiat to bank account for 3,4 years do i still have to declare every year?
Hi Hamid Muhammad - you have to declare as long as you make a sale. In your example above, I believe you would have to make a sale to create your "investment profit" and so would then have to pay and file. You would have to pay and file regardless of whether you withdraw this money. It can be frustrating especially if you are making many trades in a year but most brokers should have a summary of trades in the app.
One other thing to add - we haven't used any personally, but there are new 'crypto tax' services popping up due the the currency's explosion in popularity, so it might be worth doing your research into one of those. Usually, they link to your exchange and run a script that pulls all your trades and lets you know how much tax you owe!
Another great video lads, you’ve been able to answer my questions in other videos I’ve commented on and I appreciate it, so I was wondering if you could help me with a question I can’t find an answer to. I’ve been using drivewealth to invest for 2 years which requires me to covert euros to dollars. I do this weekly and was wondering if fx comes into the equation when calculating a gain. E.g if I buy shares in Apple for 1000 dollars and sell for 2000 but I bought them at say 10 different points which required 10 different conversions of currency and 10 different exchange rates. Hope this isn’t too confusing basically what I’m asking is if currency conversion comes into the equation of cgt gains.
Howiya Conor - great to see you're still following along, and no worries at all. In short, yeah it would - but marginally, unless you're dealing with substantial sums of cash (or if there were some significant swings in currency rates during the timeframe in question) If you wanted to be really granular about it, your gain would be net of the forex fees you incur for each time you convert your EUR to USD (and vice versa when you sell the holdings and assumably convert back to EUR to then spend it). From a tax standpoint, as I understand it, the only time it would really come into play is when you actually sell the holdings. So the forex rate when you're purchasing is relevant in the sense that its a 'fee' (albeit small) but when you sell, you would basically be taxed on the amount of whatever the USD to EUR conversion rate is on the day you sell. I use this XE currency tool (below) to look at historical exchange rates to calculate CGT due in EUR for holdings that are sold in USD. Per your example, if you sold $2000 of Apple in Jan 2021, and you're paying the tax in Dec 2021, you would just find out what the FX rate was on that date in Jan, convert to EUR, and thats your taxable number. If you sold in tranches, then you would just need to do it for each time you sold (but again, the difference in rate will likely be marginal) Tool: www.xe.com/currencytables/?from=USD - Ste
Really great video. What happens if you are holding stocks for the long run? Is it only when you sell, be it one year later or ten later you pay? Also what if your are earning dividends but you keep that money in your trading account?
Lads, great video, I've one question: If the stocks that I've purchased and subsequently sold through Degiro/Revolut are shares that came from stock exchanges outside of Ireland, do I need to pay capital gain taxes in the country of the exchange's origin as well?
Hey Kevin, Thanks for watching! So, it can get very nuanced here but if you are resident and domiciled in Ireland, you'll pay the 33% here. And for a lot of other countries (including US, UK and EU countries), Ireland has double taxation agreements, which basically prevents you from paying tax in both jurisdictions. In the majority of circumstances, no. But, as I said, there could be nuance with certain countries. More details on the DTAs here: www.revenue.ie/en/tax-professionals/tax-agreements/double-taxation-treaties/index.aspx - Cian
@@TheLearningsReport thanks Cian! With help from your video, I built a little Excel spreadsheet with quick functions to get these calculations and totals done quickly for me. Big help!
Cheers Richard. Good shout - we'll add it in! Are you struggling on a specific part, or do you just mean a general overview of where to enter the info on the form etc. ?
@@TheLearningsReport I am completely lost on how to do it on the myAccount section (I believe that is the section to do it), so I tutorial explaining it all and showing how to do it using mock data would be great and it would most likely benefit other members :)
Hey lads, Thanks for the great video. I'm a bit confused about the terminology and my situation. Could you please help me with these questions? 1) In many articles, I see the term "investment" vs "Trading", does it matter for how long I own the assets? 2) I do swing trading, so I buy and sell shares quite a lot through out the year. Should I calculate CGT on them separately and pay them separately or just on the net profit of the year ? 3) My profit is more than 5k what difference does that make to my tax situation? 4) I'm using my partners tax credit, She is a trader too. Should file her CGT as well or does she need to do it from her side? 5) is it possible to pay a random CGT tax ( more that what I should pay just because the deadline is here ) and claim the extra difference after I filed it? Thanks for your time and amazing content
Hey - Thanks! Appreciate it. 1) The terms are used interchangeably. Trading usually means more regular buying/selling, while investing is generally longer term. In terms of taxes in Ireland, no, CGT is charged the same regardless of how long you hold. 2) You'd need to calculate it for each trade yes, but your broker will likely be able to export a report for this. 3) None - you pay CGT on that amount. 4) Hmm in most cases you shouldn't be able to use her credit as far as we're aware. But thats up to you to figure out! 5) My guess, unlikely - but I don't know tbh! Message revenue and see perhaps, but I assume they'll just tell you to figure it out and pay whatever is due? Cheers for watching and the comment. - Ste
Firstly thank you for your advice. I wanted to ask a quick question. I own a house since 4 years. It was my primary residence for 2 years and now I have been renting it for 2 years, if I sell the property now do I have to pay the entire 33 percent cgt or I get a concession as it was my principal residence for 2 years. Thank you again :)
Hey Santosh, Good question - essentially, you can only claim PPR relief on a property for the time you lived in the property. So, in your case, I believe you could claim for 2/4 years or 50%. Send Revenue an enquiry to confirm your situation but for now sharing more details here: www.revenue.ie/en/gains-gifts-and-inheritance/cgt-reliefs/principal-private-residence-ppr-relief.aspx - Cian
A question regarding CGT Given that CGT is paid on profits following disposal of a security, assuming i am a swing trader and profited 70k in the year 2020 however before the end of the year all of the realised profits was subsequently lost alongside the invested capital concluding the year in a net loss. Is CGT now owed to revenue on the profits that were subsequently lost? To further add as a day trader or a swing trader the number of stocks bought and sold at the year end could be in the hundreds does revenue really want to know the details of each profitable trade i make per stock or you file just for the total profits/losses per year
Hey Rang - sorry the delay in getting back to you on this. In short, it will come down to whether your losses were allowable or not. For example, there's the 4 week rule in Ireland whereby if you sell your shares at a loss, you can't offset those losses against your gains if you repurchase within 4 weeks. With your swing trading, some of your trades may fall under this rule - so you'd need to figure out where you stand in that regard (that might be a headache, depending how much trading you do). I would speculate that you should be able to offset a large chunk of your losses, and not be liable for CGT based on the fact that your gains subsequently became losses (as long as they fall within the correct dates from a tax and revenue standpoint). You'll only need to give details of your individual trading history to revenue if you're audited. When filing your return, it's based on the totals - so you shouldn't have any issues there. (Again, the usual disclaimers of not financial advice etc etc. - but there ya have it, hope that helps you somewhat!) We're not traders ourselves, so the tax side of things is a tad easier for our investing strategy. Cheers for watching - Ste
3 роки тому+1
hi, thanks for this video, very helpful! question.. I sold some stocks in 2020 and i know i'm already late.. I did the math and I think I know how much should I pay, including the penalty for being late, but the question is.. how do I know after paying if I paid the right amount? what if I pay less, will revenue get in touch with me? is there some kind of portal where I can access and see that I paid the right amount? thanks in advance.
Hey Matías, So, I don't think it's very clear on the Revenue website. There is a section in the CG1 form for late filling but I didn't see anything for late payment. I think your best bet is to pay the amount including late fees and then submit an enquiry on MyEnquiries on Revenue.ie explaining your calculations and asking them to confirm they are correct. At least this way you'll have confirmation in writing from them if they ever come back or else they'll tell you what the correct amount is! - Cian
Great videos, thank you. Can you recommend any Irish forums discussing tax strategies? For example, what are the merits and drawbacks of creating a limited company?
Hey Ste - thanks for the feedback. Askaboutmoney.com is the Irish consumer forum and a large number of the searches we do around random topics seem to lead there. The conversations on the forum are (or seem at least) far more informed than what you might see on Reddit, for example. That being said the Irish Personal Finance reddit thread can have some great convos also - so I'd suggest having a look there also. Then of course boards.ie has a tax thread every now and again too! - Ste
Hey guys, great video! Very helpful. So, from what I understood, the €1,270 is calculated on top of all your gains, correct? However, if I swing trade and do, let's say, over 500 trades in a year, do I need to file each individual trade, or can I just add all the profit in one file? Also, if my profit was less than €1,270 in 2020, I would just need to file the CGT this October? Thank you, guys!
Hey Gabriel, thanks for watching! Correct - the exemption is for all allowable CGT gains - so that would span across stocks, crypto and anything else taxed under the CGT rate. If your trading is subject to CGT (which it likely is, but in certain cases it can be argued to be income if it's your main source of earnings), then you would need to figure out your own CGT liability. If you're trading often, you may want to use some sort of tax software to figure out your tax liability, given the number of trades you made in the year. Certain allowable losses could be offset against your gains, but that depends on when you sold the shares, how many you sold, first in first out rules, etc. But to your question, once you have established what that taxable figure is (that'll be the tricky part) then you simply file one return based on your calculations. For filing, correct, you would need to file by the end of October 2021 for your sales in 2020!
Thanks guys. I received a small dividend from shares I hold. Seems like this isn't a CGT payment for me, what tax do I pay on this? Where do I find the form on revenue?
Hey Alan - Form 12 (Income Tax Return) is what you'd need to fill out. We have a video on it which I've linked below! ua-cam.com/video/x4QVvH8DjM4/v-deo.html
Very informative video! I have a question. I'm a non-domiciled but a tax resident in ireland under PAYE. I have investments in etoro. How true is it that I'm not liable for taxes as long as I don't remit the gains to ireland? I would appreciate if you could enlighten. More power to your channel 😀
Cheers Arn. In short, there are so many ifs and buts to these sort of questions that we're always hesitant to try give a response. My understanding is that if you're an Irish tax resident, you're going to be liable for disposals from your sale of shares while a tax resident here - unless your country of domicile has a double taxation treaty with Ireland, whereby you may only be eligible to pay there. The 3 year rule you're referring to, I believe, is when you've LEFT Ireland, but are have been a tax resident in Ireland and continue being one for the 3 years following your departure. Again, when it gets to people's specific situations - just pay the €50-€100 quid for a tax advisor to get an informed response! Couple of resources below for you to mull over: www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/tax-residence/how-to-know-if-you-are-ordinarily-resident-for-tax-purposes.aspx mrsmoneyhacker.com/tax-loopholes-for-irish-investors/ taxsummaries.pwc.com/ireland/individual/income-determination
Hi guys, great video especially for people like me that recently moved in Ireland. For B&B sale do you need to do that at the end (30th Nov sale - 1st December re-buy) or you can do the buy-sell order at any point?
Hey Nikos, Glad you found it helpful! It can happen any time in the year but it will have different paying date implications. There are other factors to be aware of which we have highlighted in our video specifically for this which you can check out here: - Bed and Breakfaat Sale: ua-cam.com/video/EKGYfRHTGKo/v-deo.html - Cian
Excellent video! Fair play ! I have 2 questions, I would really appreciate if you could help me. The first : I had a loss this year beside i am not selling any of my stocks in the next few months or even years.. can I apply that loss in few years time when I sell my stocks? The second question: I bought apple and I'm not planning to sell in at least 5 years.. should I do the bed and breakfast tactic or just leave it the way it is and when one day I sell it I apply the tax gains? Thank u so much, cheers. Love your channel ! 👏
Cheers Jaime, appreciate it - couple of great questions here: Q1. So to clarify, you did sell something this year at a loss, but you didn't sell any stocks that made a gain? If so, then yes, you can carry your losses forward to a future tax year and then offset them against your CGT bill whenever you do sell something for a profit. Q2. If you're coming towards the end of the year and it doesn't look like you'll be using your exemption (because you're simply holding your stocks) then yes, you can sell the equivalent of the €1270, or that approx value (obviously it'll be tricky to match it exactly), and then simply repurchase the shares. We'll be doing a video very soon on Bed & Breakfast sales (and the math behind it), but essentially, by 'harvesting' your gains to avail of your exemption, you'll end up with more profit down the line when you 'actually' want to sell your shares. Hope this makes sense! - Ste
Fair play Ste ! Fair play .. very well explained, thank you so much for your time answering my questions. Your channel is fabulous and I already recommended to some friends. All the best !
⚠️ *IMPORTANT* *UPDATE* ⚠️
You NO LONGER need to register for ROS in order to pay your Capital Gains Taxes (unless you're seen as a 'chargeable individual' by revenue - see below). Revenue has added a 'Make a payment' button to the 'My Account' page:
1️⃣Login & scroll down to 'Payments/Repayments' on your 'My Account' page
2️⃣Choose 'Make a payment'
3️⃣Select 'tax' and then 'capital gains tax'. You can make a payment here.
⚠️ If the above isn't visible for you, message revenue through MyEnquiries, tell them you wish to pay CGT, and they will activate button for you!
💡You only need to register for ROS if you are deemed to be a ' *chargeable individual* ' from a tax standpoint. A chargeable individual is someone who is 1) self-employed or 2) Has greater than €5,000 in NON-paye income (income from side hustles, renting a room, dividend/staking income, etc.)
Hi, thanks for your videos on these topics - they are very helpful. Regarding sending a payment via the 'Make a Payment' section of 'My, Account', I am seeing many options, but no option for Capital Gains Tax. Do you have to register for something to see this option? Do you still have to have an ROS account to be registered to pay CGT and fill in the CG1 form? Thanks!
@@jamesvancoppenhagen1988 yeah I am looking for same but didnt found option to pay CGT
@@jamesvancoppenhagen1988 I experienced the same. I rang Revenue to ask them about it, they told me to do an enquiry through myAccount with the following details:
Enquiry relates to: "Tax Registration / Cancellation"
More specifically: "Registration (non-company)"
Enquiry details: Ask to be registered for Capital Gains Tax
I only did this today but the lady on the phone said it would take around 3 days for them to process the registration. "Make a Payment" in myAccount should then have an option for Capital Gains Tax. If I'm not registered by the end of the week I'm going to ring the registration department to try get it pushed through.
@@aarondaly7428 This is so helpful, really appreciate the reply, Aaron! I actually did submit an enquiry, but I'll set up another with your suggested details. Thanks, and best of luck with your registration.
@@aarondaly7428 Having the same issue and this helped a lot, thanks!. If it's no trouble, post how the rest of the process goes for you or if ringing them again helps at all. Cheers
US- based financial advisor here - It's amazing how different the Irish system is to the US. Really interesting to learn about. Great stuff guys. simple and clear.
Just found your channel today and this video is amazing. So simple and clear. Looking forward to watching more. Thanks lads!
Really appreciate that and cheers for taking the time to write the feedback. 🙏
- Ste
Hey guys, when registering for ROS, is the first step to apple for your ROS Access Number (RAN). Didn’t see it on the video but thats what shows up for me on the ROS/revenue website
Hey Jason - just to confirm you're aware that you now only need to create a ROS account if you're declaring non-PAYE income of €5,000 or more. This was an update since we posted the video. Revenue changed the system so that you can now make a payment for CGT without needing to register for ROS. If you're only trying to pay/file capital gains tax and nothing else, then you won't need to do the ROS steps, you can just go to 'Make a payment' on your my account page.
If you do still need to do a Form 11, then correct, you just follow the steps to get your RAN and then the process should begin to match up with the video (again, revenue have made some small changes since we recorded at first!)
For the RAN, I think we forgot to mention it as it wasn't visible for us when we went back to record this clip! Thanks for flagging.
@@TheLearningsReportgood stuff, thanks guys!
Great work lads, first video I've seen break it down this simply for Irish tax
Cheers boss - really appreciate that
Hey thanks for watching! If you need any help with paying or filing CGT, feel free to ask in the comments. We'll try help as best we can or at least point you in the right direction!
I think you touched on it there with the bed and breakfast scheme but just so I understand what if I’m a long term investor and I just buy and hold is it only when I decide to sell shares at some point in the future that I have to pay ?
@@rayb558 Hey Ray - in short, yes, but a couple of quick caveats.
- If your stocks pay dividends, you'll need to pay tax on the dividends (this is taxed at your income tax rate, not CGT)
- If you hold ETFs (watch our video on this if you're unfamiliar) then you'll need to pay tax every 8 years, even if you don't actually 'make a sale'
But yes, to your main question, if you don't sell your stocks - you shouldn't need to pay CGT until you actually sell them
Please do a refreshed video, it would be very helpful.
Can you please make a video on how to file the CGT to the revenue late (for both gains and losses)? As well as video on how to read the 3 statements DEGIRO release each year, which includes the statements charges and if the charges and fees can be added as losses/deducted from the gains?
Many thanks
Hi Richard, as far as we're aware (and note, we haven't had to file late ourselves yet) the submission of the form is the exact same, you just need to make the figure adjustments yourself based on the late-filing surcharges as outlined by revenue (link below). If you're filing a CG1 form, you'll see on row 25 (d) where there is space to add in the surcharge figures.
For your statement video request, thanks for the idea, we'll add it to the list!
Cheers,
Ste
@@TheLearningsReport Please do a video with Degiro Tax report. Is it gross or net for CGT ? I have discovered simple portfolio app and there's a difference big time. For swing traders or position traders with dozen of pages of trades it is emotionally dragging. How much loss can we carry on from a year to an other please ?
This is absolutely class. I never really knew much about how to reduce CGT and this is awesome!
Nice one, James - a bit of extra cash for you to reinvest! Thanks for the great feedback.
Thanks a mill lads ! Came here from TikTok
Howiya Martin - cheers for watching, and also nice to see a bit of TikTok overflow! Shout if you have any topics you'd like us to cover. Great to have ya on board
Great stuff again, guys. I'm remarkably uninformed on all things finances, so you're helping out a lot.
Nice one, Baz. Some nice crypto tax breaks in Berlin as far as I'm aware! Make the most of it 😏
- Ste
Thank you! The tax issue around stocks was the biggest question mark for me. Great to have it all laid out here! I just recently registered with Ros as I’m a freelancer so at least I have that step done! Oh and I’d recommend that everyone give them self plenty of time to get set up on ROS before the deadline to declare the CGT. It took me a while to get everything sorted.
Great note re: deadline, Hannah - thanks for flagging! Best of luck with the freelancing and glad you found the video helpful 🙌
Ye should do a video where you explain what to do when you have filed late or sent payment late for CGT
Hey! So for every day that the payment is late (without extenuating circumstances) there is an interest rate that is charged daily. I believe as of most recent estimations, the rate is 0.0219 percent per day. Revenue will likely request this is paid through your MyRevenue portal!
Absolutely great videos! we need this so much in Ireland!
Thank you Gio! Glad you found the channel and love to hear you're enjoying the content.
- Ste
Thanks for the video guys! What's the late fee for paying late?
Say by 1 month, or 2 months, or more?
Came here from Tik tok lads - thought you might like to know
Love it, Colm! 😎 Great to know - see you in the next one. 👉
- Cian
Very simple & clear explanation !!! Thank you 🙏
Thanks for watching, George! See you in the next one. 👉
- Cian
You're very good guys. I am always coming back to see your videos once and again. Hope you keep on uploading more videos! Thanks thanks thanks
Sorry for the late response - big summer off!
And thank you, yes we need to get back into creator mode soon :)
thanks,great information.i'm curious as to the personal side and the company side of taxes.
say you have a business in both Ireland and Batumi, Georgia.would you be required to pay any Irish Taxes on any income you or your company makes in Georgia(country,not the USA) as in Georgia the taxes are territorial and anything made outside of that isn't taxed
Heya - so this is a bit of a niche one, but my understanding is that it 1) depends on your residency status for Ireland (in terms of taxes) and then additionally, 2) how much of the income earned in Georgia is repatriated to Ireland. You might the document below helpful to have a read through!
www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/ie/Documents/Tax/ie-tax-ges-moving-to-ireland-tax-guide.pdf
Is registering for ROS only possible at certain times of the year? I don't see this option on my MyAccount.
Thanks guys, if gains
Exactly! So for sales in 2021, you pay by Dec 15th (today!) if you’re above the 1270 exemption. If below, you don’t need to do anything this year, but will file next year 👍🏻
- Ste
Amazing video! Can you give us an example of the bed and breakfast strategy?
Hi guys today I paid the first cgt in Ireland ... Hurray ... Thanks for your videos. Of course I had to contact Revenue because I couldn't find the right link ... they unblocked me and away ...
Hi Lucas,
A bittersweet moment - finally getting your taxes sorted - hurray! Paying tax - boooo!
Glad you got it sorted in the end and thanks for watching.
- Cian
That's great somebody finally made a video for Irish residents but you forgot to talk about double taxation treaty and dividends and also self-reinvested dividends to avoid paying taxes.
Hi Laurent - If you watch our tax form videos, we run through that in more detail 👍
However, for your dividend point - I want to offer some clarification. If you have DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plan) offered by your broker, you still are taxed on the dividend even though it's reinvested automatically. So although it's automated, you're still liable for tax on it even though you technically didn't 'receive' it.
If you're referring to accumulating ETFs in terms of dividends, then correct - those you can purchase and avoid paying the dividends directly. Our video on ETFs goes through that in detail.
Thanks for watching and for the comment!
- Ste
Hey Guys! Great video, I am so happy I stumbled upon this one! I just had a quick question. I have recently started investing in crypto, stocks and some ETFs. I am well aware of the exemption and I know that my gains are below that threshold. In that case do I still need to create the ROS account and fill in some details stating that my capital gains were for example €1000 which is lower than the exemption €1270 so I have nothing to pay or I can totally ignore this step and wait when once day my gains are higher than that?
Hey Esmond,
Glad you liked the video and found it helpful.
So, because you are below the threshold, you do not need to pay CGT as none is due. You will, however, have to file the gain the next year and you can do this through a CG1 form without registering for Ros.
We have a video on this which you can check out here: ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html
- Cian
Hello great videos I was just wonder how do u offset your losses from this year
Hey Paul,
Thanks for watching!
There is a section on the CG1 form where you can offset current (and previous) year allowable losses. We run through the CG1 form in detail in the video below - have a look and if still unclear, drop us a comment there:
CG1 Form: ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html
- Cian
brilliant! you guys nailed it with such a clear explanation, even for a tax-dummy foreigner like myself. many thanks
Thank you so much for watching! The taxes are tough to get your head around for sure. 🙄
- Cian
What if you buy and hold shares never selling and then move out of Ireland? Will they tax you on exit like Denmark and california? Great video lads
Hey Andreas - sorry for the late reply on this one.
Once you leave Ireland, you are still a 'ordinarily' resident for tax purposes for a period of time, is how we understand it. According to revenue, this period of time is 3 years. (link for reference below)
www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/tax-residence/how-to-know-if-you-are-ordinarily-resident-for-tax-purposes.aspx
After this time, to the best of our knowledge, you will be no longer eligible to pay Irish tax on your holdings, and instead will pay it in your new tax residence.
HI GUYS ITS CLEARLY ONE OF THE BEST VIDEOS OUT THERE......SHOULD I PAY TAX ONLY ON THE PROFIT THAT HAS REACHED MY BANK ACCOUNT OR ON THE PROFIT THAT I GOT FROM SELLING And still sitting in trading 212????
...thanks
Thanks VJ! So yes, once a taxable event occurs (e.g. selling a share) you will be liable for tax on that sale regardless of whether you withdraw the funds or not. The tax won't be due until December however, so you can do whatever you like with the money until then! Of course, you'll need to make sure you have the funds ready once tax season comes around.
- Ste
How do you calculate CGT when you investment is in USD? Do you need to add up all your deposits from your bank and minus what the platform says in dollars after converting it into euro to find your expense? I use etoro which deals in USD.
Hi Marcus - you calculate the conversion at the time of the sale. You can look at the date of your transaction, and what the USD-EUR rate was for the day in question. Link below is for a currency converter I use. You can plug in the applicable dates, and multiply the sold amount with the exchange rate on that day. That'll give you the Euro amount you need to calculate your liability 👍
www.xe.com/currencytables/?from=USD
- Ste
Great video guys! Thank you so much.
Glad you liked it, Veronique, and thanks for watching! 👍
- Cian
Great video, thanks
So if I am just buyin cryptocurrency this year for example, and I am not thinking to sell it before 3 or 4 years,
- I don't have to fill any form for now or for any years I haven't made a sell in it. Only when I am thinking to sell?
- And if I did then I should fill CG1 befor 15 Dec of the same year of selling? Nothing for the years between?
Is that correct?
Thanks again
Hey Alaa - thanks for watching!
Q1 - Yes, you won't need to file or pay anything until you sell. The exception is if you stake this crypto that you're holding. In this case, you would likely receive payments/rewards for holding it, and this is taxable (but would likely be taxed as income, and thus, would be filed as income under your income tax return/form 12). Check out our video on crypto staking for more info!
Q2 - If you're only declaring a capital gain/loss, then yes, it would be a CG1 form. But it wouldn't be in the year that you sell, you would file it the following year. So, lets say for example you:
- Sell crypto in 2024...
- You would, PAY the tax by Dec 15th of 2024
- FILE the CG1 form by Oct 31st of 2025
If you don't sell anything in the years you're holding, then you shouldn't be liable for tax/filing. 👍
- Ste
I never copped that B&B move! Will be using that in future.
Hey guys, brilliant vid, do you have to submit a return for a small gain that is below the 1270 exemption?
Do you have to pay the tax if I reinvest the money. I want to look in to making a investment portfolio as a road to early retirement. Thanks for the great video.
Hi Karol,
Yes unfortunately the tax is still due as soon as you 'sell' (even if you only sell for 30 seconds, and reinvest the earnings!).
However, you can make use of your €1270 annual exemption by selling some of your holdings towards the end of the tax year, harvesting the gain, and then reinvesting those funds. Any gain under that amount is tax free - so thats one way that you can avoid at least some of the taxes! This method is sometimes referred to as a 'Bed & Breakfast Sale' (video linked below)
ua-cam.com/video/EKGYfRHTGKo/v-deo.html
- Ste
Thanks Guys. I got some clarity. I didn’t found any dividends tax. I use DEGIRO. And some dividends come 15% tax some not taxt. Reits to are different. How to calculate them ? I will be nice to see some video. Thanks again
Hey Yurivy - tax on dividends in Ireland is charged at your marginal rate of income tax (so 20% or 40% depending on whether you're in the higher or lower tax band, + USC & PRSI). It will also somewhat depend on what shares you hold, and whether Ireland as a DTA (Double Taxation Agreement with that country). For example, there is a 30% withholding tax on US Share dividends for non-US residents. However , if you complete a W8-Ben form for your stockbroker, a lower 15% tax rate will apply. As this tax is 'withheld' you don't need to really worry about it, as it's already taken from your dividend. You will then need to pay the balance (i.e an additional 5% or 25% depending on your tax band) to revenue when filing your tax return.
Please let us know if you have any follow-ups!
Thanks
Excellent video guys, 1) can you explain the tax in the dividends, still the same method?Or how is the process when you are already paid tax in the dividend gains from companies overseas?
2) What about if that dividend is re-invest in the same company do I still have to declare those gains?
3) If for the current year, I only sell a bit of my my shares let’s say less than the exception, i have to declare that amount as well even though is less than the exception?
Hope I explain myself. Thanks.
Cheers Claudio! Thanks for watching
1) So dividends on individual stocks are calculated at your marginal rate of income tax i.e. 20%/40% (Plus USC and PRSI) - not at the CGT rate of 33%. Dividends on ETFs are charged at 41%.
2) If you receive dividends from a company (or have it set so that dividends are reinvested automatically) you still are 'deemed' to have received the dividend, and still need to pay the tax due on it - even though you're paying tax on funds that you've already reinvested. The exception is if you are holding an Accumulating ETF, in that case, you don't need to pay tax on the dividends - you just pay the tax that's due every 8 years due to deemed disposal rule (see our video on ETFs for more detail on this)
3) Correct - if you sell a stock (for a gain or for a loss), you must declare it at the end of the year, regardless of whether the total comes under or above the exemption. In simple term, if you sell (anything at all), you must file!
Great video guys! This really helps a lot! I have one question however. I invest in cryptocurrency but mainly for mining crypto. I’m a little confused on how to go about paying taxes on that? Currently, all cryptos I mined are still sitting on my wallet (Revolut). If I withdraw them, will they be subject to CGT or income tax? Thanks!
What if you have not made a gain more than the exemption of €1,270
Hey Ripblade,
If your gain is below the threshold, you do not need to pay but should still file your gain so there is a record on Revenue for it.
- Cian
Another brilliant video lads! Only thing is I didn't need to sign up to ROS, under the 'Make a Payment' link in MyAccount I have the option to pay CGT tax, unless I'm doing it wrong?
Great stuff, Jetfuel, thanks for watching.
Great, since we recorded it has become easier to pay on MyAccount. You can pay on MyAccount and then file with the CG1 form (I believe you are a Form 12 user from your other comment).
Let us know how you get on. 👍
- Cian
Great content, explained very well in a way that’s easy to understand. Well done 👍🏻👍🏻
Cheers Dave!
Hi, thanks for the great content! Do I need to submit a CG1 form on the premium received in selling put options?
Great video lads! Just happened across the channel today! 👏🇮🇪
Thank you sir, early days for us but appreciate the note! And likewise - great to see some other Irish focused channels already out there.
@@TheLearningsReport Yeah the lack of information in Ireland around investing is crazy! Amazing to see more people spreading knowledge 👏
Subscribed - looking forward to following along with your content 🙌
Thanks for this really useful information. One question, with RSU schemes and capital gains, why do do some companies hold nearly 50% of your stocks at vesting? Love the channel lads.
Hey Eoin,
Thanks a million for watching!
For RSUs, given that they are considered to be part of your income from an employment point of view, you will be charged income tax, USC and PRSI on RSUs and your employer will deduct this directly from your payslip at the vesting date. Generally speaking, some of the shares will be sold to cover this tax liability which is known as a “sell-to-cover” mechanism, meaning you don’t need to pay the tax liability directly out of pocket.
You can talk to your company to see if you can pay this liability rather than sell the shares.
CGT would be due if you later sold the remaining shares at a gain. We have a video which explains it here:
ua-cam.com/video/HZ1StqSfEaE/v-deo.html
- Cian
Hey gents. Great video many thanks. Quick question. Is CGT still 33% on US shares?
Hey Rozza,
Thanks for watching!
Yes, still 33% on US shares. 👍
Cian
Hi guys!, quick question,lets say, i buy bitcoin in march 2022, but i decide just to keep the money there in order to make profit, and in february 2023 i decide to pass the money in euros and sell it, do i need to declare the gain in 2022 or 2023, cause i bought the coin in 22, but i just got the gain in 23, so i understand that i should declare the gain for 23. Do i need to declare or do something if i just invest in some coins and i just have the money there stoped without no seling it?
Hey Gabryel. So for clarity sake, lets separate 'declaring' and 'paying' into two different sections, as thats how you need to deal with it from a tax standpoint.
Step 1 - PAY, Step 2 - File (or 'declare', to use your example).
For the BTC you sell in February 2023, you would PAY your tax on the profit by Dec 15th of 2023, and then you would file (declare) your gain to revenue in your tax return that you would file by Oct 31st 2024. (Remember, you PAY in the year you sell, you FILE the following year).
If all you do is buy Bitcoin (for example) and don't sell any of it, you wouldn't need to file any sort of tax return until you decided to sell it.
- Ste
thats great , thanks very much i got how it works. Thank you very much for your help. You did explain it very clear.
@@ladesancho88 Excellent, no problem.
Hello I have a question ! I am a bit confused with my situation .
I was born in Poland , I had been in Ireland for 20 years, I have Irish passport . Basically I have dual nationality.
Now I have been living in Vietnam for 5 years now.
I have shares and crypto on etoro and bit in binance .
I have connected Irish bank to my accounts and the bank address is in Ireland which was my old house, I used to rent .
My question is “should I pay taxes? If so, how do I do it and to which country ?
Looking forward to your response.
Thank you in advance.
Hey Jazda - In short, I'd likely look at speaking with a tax advisor on this one. You'd owe taxes in Ireland if you're ordinarily resident for tax purposes. Link below will give you some info on that and you can figure out where you stand! Your situation sounds quite unique, so I'd be cautious offering you too much direction on it as we're not tax profs etc etc.
www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/tax-residence/index.aspx
- Ste
Cheers for the video lads. Quick question (probably a stupid one but I'm new to this stuff!) - There doesn't seem to be any step where I show proof of a gain made or am I missing something? It seems you just work it all out yourself and then pay CGT as if you're buying tickets to a gig haha. Am I way off the mark here lads or what? Thanks again for the content, definitely picked up a few nuggets!
Hey Greg - No worries at all, thanks for the comment and glad you got some value from the vid! So yep you're correct, we don't really show that in the video. When paying your CGT (part 1 of the process) you simply are entering in a figure into a box, and clicking pay!
When you go to FILE your return the following year using the CG1 form (part 2 of the process), that's when you give more details on your gains/losses.
That being said, as it's self assessment, you don't actually need to submit as much detail as you might expect. If you get called for an audit, however, that's when they'll be looking for a full trade by trade breakdown!
@@TheLearningsReport nice one lads, that makes sense now. Looking forward to more content!
@@NeglectedGoattt Good stuff - drop us a note if you have anything in particular you'd like to see us cover! We're always looking for ideas 👌
Hi Guys, thanks for the video! Very helpful.
I have a question: Capital gain is part of trading income (for the revenue?).
Thanks for your reply :)
Sorry for the late response - big summer off!
'Trading revenue' is usually revenue generated from operating a business. So in this case, I would say no, I don't believe you would include your capital gains as trading revenue. (if its from trading stocks or crypto, that is)
If I'm a forginer & non Resident in Ireland Do I pay CGT on ETFs that It"s domicile is in Ireland ?
And I hope you make a video on that matter
Hey Mahmoud,
In short, according to Revenue you don't have to but be sure to check with your tax adviser on your individual situation.
As it relates to income (i.e. dividends) and from Revenue's website (www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/tax-residence/index.aspx):
"If you are neither tax resident nor domiciled in Ireland for tax purposes, you are chargeable to tax in Ireland on:
Irish-source income, including income from an Irish public office
foreign employment income where the duties of the employment are carried out in Ireland."
And as it relates to CGT (www.revenue.ie/en/gains-gifts-and-inheritance/transfering-an-asset/index.aspx):
"If you are non-resident in Ireland, you pay CGT on gains on the disposal of:
land, buildings and minerals in Ireland
exploration or exploitation rights in the Irish continental shelf
unquoted shares deriving the greater part of their value from:
-land, buildings or minerals in Ireland
-exploitation rights in the Irish continental shelf
-assets which are used for the purpose of a trade carried on in Ireland."
You may owe CGT in your country of residence or domicile so make sure to check that out.
- Cian
So helpful! You are brilliant. Thanks for making this so simple.
Thank you for watching, Charul - really appreciate the kind words. 🙏
- Cian
Amazing video lads, very well made. Just a few questions.
1) Do I have to pay CGT on withdrawal of the money into my account?
2) I am under 18 and i am greatly interested in starting to invest (of course under parents permission.) Can i withdraw the money into my revolut junior account and also pay the tax or would i have to withdraw it into a parents bank account and then pay the tax via their card?
Cheers Denis.
1) Once a sale is made, a taxable event has occurred. So it doesn't matter if the proceeds of the sale stay in your bank account, in your brokerage account, or anywhere else for that matter! From revenue's standpoint, its up to you to declare that sale to revenue when it comes to tax season, and pay the tax due.
2) Good for you wanting to get started early! The only issue might be finding a broker that will allow you to trade under 18? I guess there's nothing stopping you opening it under your parent's name, but that might lead to some logistical headaches down the road.
Tha tax itself wouldn't be paid through Revolut either way. It would just be paid via Revenue's website - so you can use whatever card you like to pay the tax. In terms of withdrawing the funds, are you referring to the funds you will have invested? Im a little confused about that list bit.
- Ste
Hi Lads forgot to ask you in my previous question, when calculating CGT can you also deduct the fees you pay for buying and selling cryto before you apply the 33%. Thanks David.
No worries! So our understanding is that you can add your purchase trading fee to your cost basis (thereby reducing your tax liability marginally) but I'm not 100% on whether you can also include the selling fee. I think its usually only costs directly associated with the *acquisition* of the shares/crypto, but not with the selling - however I'll need to do some digging myself!
Let us know if you hear anything from revenue on it will you? Cheers and thanks for the question.
- Ste
@@TheLearningsReport Will do thanks Ste for the info
According to the revenue PDF you have attached to your video description people employed and working in Ireland should file Form 12, could you please confirm the differences between form 12 and form CG1?
Thank you
Hi Richard, we have videos on all three tax forms relevant to most Irish investors/employees. Form 11, Form 12, and CG1 form. They're all linked below for:
Form 12: ua-cam.com/video/x4QVvH8DjM4/v-deo.html
Form 11: ua-cam.com/video/15fgO8-8o6g/v-deo.html
CG1 Form: ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html
- Ste
Awesome content guys! would like to see what are the tax implications of FX trades derived from buying and selling US stocks and how to deal with them
Cheers for the comment! Going to be totally honest and say we're not totally sure on what you're asking here 😂But that could easily be our lack of knowledge on the subject. Can you elaborate?
- Ste
Cheers for the video.
What do ye know about avoiding CGT by moving to Portugal?
And cheers for the comment 👍 Per your question - that's a first for us, can't say we've any knowledge of it. Assumably unless you're a tax resident in Portugal, you'd need to pay CGT wherever you're domiciled, which would be Ireland assumably?
You're resident in Ireland for tax purposes if you're in the country for either:
- 183 days or more in a tax year
- or 280 days or more in a tax year plus the previous tax year taken together, with a minimum of 30 days in each year.
Not sure what the rules are for Portugal, but I would guess that if you spend enough time in the country you then qualify for tax there instead of Ireland.
There would also be the nitty gritty stuff of where you bought the shares initially - so I don't think it'd be as simple as "move to Portugal 6 months before you sell your shares in order to avoid CGT" 😂I would guess the CGT exemption would only be for shares purchased while a tax resident within Portugal. However, this is speculation on my part - I don't know the actual answer.
Curious to hear what info you have on it already though? Could be tempted by a move to Portugal 😏
@@TheLearningsReport As far as I've heard so far. It's as simple as moving to Portugal for 6 months and setting up a bank account and have a 12 month rental lease or purchase a property.
I've gained some serious % in the crypto space and I rather not pay 33% (I took the risk, can't understand why Revenue want a share).
I could be wrong on this with some minor details but that's what I've understood of it.
Nice, yeah, crypto markets have been a bit nuts recently! Always painful having to consider the tax liability - but a move to Portugal sounds pretty nice regardless, whether its for taxes or otherwise 😂Sadly, tax is a necessary evil. Indeed, you did take the risk with your crypto, but Irish taxes pay for many of the great things our country offers outside of the investing space (hospitals, roads, schools, parks, trains - etc.) so although we absolutely agree that 33% is a difficult pill to swallow, there are trade offs.
Question, is trading crypto for another crypto a taxable event on Ireland?
Unfortunately, at time of writing, that seems to be the case yes! It's a fast moving space, though, so will be interesting to see how things materialise.
- Ste
Great video and very nice explanation!
Appreciate it! Thanks for watching
Great video lads, can you clarify something. Some tokens like Safemoon give holders reflection tokens for holding their token in your wallet. These additional tokens built up in the same wallet.Are they considered income or CGT? Would they fall under similar rules of airdrops/skating when received are income and then when you sell CGT? Cheers 👍
Nice one, Anthony - thanks for the question. By the sounds of it, yeah I’d also look at those through the same lense as staking, airdrops etc. But again, thats assuming that our assumption re: staking taxes is correct (which it may not be!)
So in summary, I would agree with your view on it. The value of token when you receive them is your “income taxable event” and then when you sell down the line, cgt (unfortunately)
- Ste
Brilliant video. If I’m on illness benefits do i also pay this way? Thanks so much
Great content, well done!
Are you planning to do one on filling CGTs? Thats the bit that is a bit unknown for me, I'm not sure what I should be tracking as I buy or sell
Hi Edward, thanks for watching!
We can add it to the list! Is there something particular that you would like us to cover that wasn't covered in this video?
- Cian
For those who were interested (or just seeing this comment now) we've released two videos on filing your CGT/Income taxes! Links below:
CG1 Form (Capital Gains) - ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html
Form 12 (Income tax Return) - ua-cam.com/video/x4QVvH8DjM4/v-deo.html
@@TheLearningsReport Amazing! you guys are doing great work
@@mamba101 Cheers Ed
Born and lived in Ireland for 23 years , lining in the US for past 40 years . In 2002 I purchesed just under 3 acres with house and sveral out buildings for 100K. Spent about 50K fixing up the property but never finished . I am Selling the property now, do I pay the CGT in Ireland If I use all the proceeds of the sale to purchase and appartment in Ireland . In the US this is called a 1031 Exchange
Hey Christy - as far as I'm aware, we don't have an equivalent to what you describe here in Ireland. The only relief that I'm aware of when selling a property is the PPR (principal primary residence relief) which I imagine you're already familiar with, but I also imagine is not applicable to you given that you're in the US (or at least, I suspect the property you're referring to is Ireland based, while you're US based? I don't think you specify where the property in question is).
My understanding would be that you pay the 33% CGT on whatever profit you make, and then the balance is what you can then use to purchase the apartment.
www.revenue.ie/en/gains-gifts-and-inheritance/cgt-reliefs/principal-private-residence-ppr-relief.aspx
Hi Guys, only just found your channel, great stuff, very informative. Quick question, can you take out a Crypto loan to offset the CGT liability?
Nice one, Christy - thanks. To clarify, are you asking about using your crypto holdings as collateral to take out a loan as opposed to selling the assets themselves? Or to take out a loan to pay your CGT liability?
- Ste
Very useful information !!! I lost some tokens from an impermanent loss pool, do you know if I could deduct them from my benefits this year? Thank you in advance.
Hi Xabier. That's a very good question - gonna need to do some digging on that one! My gut would tell me, unlikely, but could be wrong. Will circle back! Cheers for bringing to our attention.
- Ste
@@TheLearningsReport thank you so much!!! Looking forward to hear from you.
@@TheLearningsReport Hello The learnings report team. Following up on my question related to the impermanent loss, do you think it could be deducted from the capital gains? Thank you so much.
@@xabierremiro8049 Hi Xabier thanks for the reminder. No response from revenue on it - so you may need to speak with a tax adviser to get better advice on it unfortunately. We're not in a position to give direction on it!
That being said, I assume when you're referring to impermanent loss, you are talking about withdrawing funds from pools where you have experienced impermanent loss? (thus making the impermanent loss, permanent).
If the funds are still active in the pool, then no, this wouldn't be eligible for offset as that would be akin to asking if it was possible to offset losses on stocks that you still own, but that have depreciated in value. Of course, these can only be offset if you actually sell them for a loss. Holding stocks that have depreciated withouts selling, is essentially another example of 'impermanent' loss that only becomes permanent (and deductible) after you realise the loss.
- Ste
@@TheLearningsReport Thank you so much for your concern about my question. I will double-check with a tax advisor to be sure.
This was extremely informatative, good work. However, the "Register for ROS" option at 4:30 does not appear to still be there. I also seem to be unable to register for ROS when going directly to the ROS login page, so I'm stuck. If anyone knows how to do this, please let me know
Hey Jason,
Some of our viewers were having an issue with that. If you send Revenue an enquiry through MyEnquiries, they should be able to sort you out.
Let us know how you get on. 👍
- Cian
@@TheLearningsReport Awesome, thanks for quick reply.
I'll do that, keep up the good work guys, love the content!
Great stuff, Jason. Glad to have you along the journey with us. 👍
- Cian
Gents, this is amazing. So helpful. When you are choosing the year to register the gain via the return, does the gain refer to the year you sold in? Or the actual years to that point the gains were made?
You're welcome!
So a little unsure what you mean when you say 'choosing the year'. If you're filing a CGT return, you generally would be filing the return to declare any gains you made from the sale of stocks/crypto in the PREVIOUS calendar year. So for example, any profits you made last year from stocks/crypto (2021) would be FILED as part of your CGT return this year (2022). With CGT it needs to be filed annually, so if you have gains to declare from earlier year, you'll need to file a late payment with revenue, and its best you speak directly to revenue about that (if that's applicable to your situation!).
So to your question, and building on the simple example above, the gain would refer to any profit you made in 2021 (Jan 1st up until Dec 31st of 2021).
Hope this answers your Q?
- Ste
Thank you for this brilliant explanation guys. Very helpful!
I just have a small question, if I avail of my 1270€ bed&breakfast (or might even only sell those 1270€ and not re-purchasing it) do I still need to go online on revenue and pay “0€” of tax and then file this ?
Hey Diego,
Thanks for watching and appreciate the kind words!
You would still need to file the gain with a CG1 form by 31 October in the year after you sell but you don't need to pay.
We have a video which runs through this form which you can check out here:
ua-cam.com/video/YorwaTXEPYI/v-deo.html
And more details on the Bed & Breakfast Sale:
ua-cam.com/video/EKGYfRHTGKo/v-deo.html
- Cian
@marinagonc02 Hey Marina - When you say 'income tax return', are you filing a form 12 or form 11?
Question- is there a way to efile your CGT gains? Or do I need to manually fill the form, take a scan and send it to revenue?
Great video, just wondering then if your Capital Gains are lower than your exception, do you still have to submit it to revenue?
Hi guys great video, what are the implications of paying tax if you are a day trader and also what is the situation with options trading? I read somewhere you have to pay RTSO on that which is 42%.
Thanks
Hi Jack, thanks for watching!
So, just to split out your questions, I'll start with the day trader. There are no real differences depending in what type of investing you're doing (long-term buy and hold vs. day trading), as it relates to stocks, you will still have to pay capital gains tax on your gains/profits. One implication is that you may have multiple gains and losses (hopefully not many!) throughout the year so it will be easier for you to maybe calculate the overall gain/loss for the period as a whole before the the tax is due for the two periods mentioned in the video.
For options trading, unfortunately, we haven't gotten 100% clarity on how this is taxed as there is limited information at the moment. Sorry that this probably doesn't help but might be worth checking with a tax expert if you know one. If you do find an answer, please let us know!
RTSO is for unapproved share options, which usually relates to employees buying shares from their companies at a discounted rate. I believe the 42% is an old figure for that, it is dependent on your income bracket. More info can be found here: www.taxassist.ie/resources/questions-and-answers/relevant-tax-on-a-share-option
Hope this helps!
- Cian
Incredibly useful, thank you
You're very welcome!
Great stuff lads, A quick question if I have made only 1K I still need to declare it, or what should I do?
Cheers Lucas. Yeah, any profits or losses from investing need to be declared. If you fall under the €1270 exemption, the process will be very quick and easy though - and will only take a couple of mins.
- Ste
Hey guys are stocks like tesla that are bought in us dollar taxed thr same?
Hey Andy - Yep, nearly all the stocks I own are priced in USD (as they're listed on US exchanges) and the CGT is the same regardless i.e 33%. When it comes to calculating the taxes, you would take the exchange rate of USD-EUR on the day you sold the shares, to establish what the EUR amount was, and then calculate the 33% tax on that.
- Ste
Hi guys great video, you make it very easy to understand. The part I’m confused with is actually filling in the form. Payment is no problem thanks to your clear and concise instructions, but using my pen and filling in the CGt1 form is to much for me to understand. I’m dealing with crypto currency...
Hey Rob, glad you found it helpful - appreciate the feedback.
So at a high level, you can treat your crypto like stocks. When it comes to the CG1 form, you basically need to do most of your calculations in your own time (on a notepad, excel sheet or however you prefer), and then the CG1 is essentially just filling in your calculations. The mistake people make is that they think they need to fill out the whole form - where in reality you'll probably only need to fill in a couple of lines at most. Just find the sections applicable to you, and start there.
Gains / Losses / Net chargeable gains is likely the most relevant section of the form for you. We're going to be doing a video on how to fill out these forms at some stage soon, but let us know what specific setions are confusing you and we can do our best to answer here in the comments!
It's also worth remembering that as long as you file on time, even if there is a mistake on your form (an accidental mistake), revenue are unlikely to punish you for that - they'll just ask you to fix the error. So if in doubt, it's always better just to file something, and then you can always re-file without penalty (generally speaking).
- Ste
Great video lads... i have a question Can i trade stocks while being on stamp 3.
Hey Saleh, appreciate it and thanks for the comment. Wish I could be of more help, but in short, the answer is I don't know. My guess (and again, its very much a guess) is that it will come down to what documents you have, your ID, and what other documents are required when setting up your brokerage account.
Alternatively, if possible, you could potentially try open the account under your 'current' nationality/residency?
Again, this is definitely beyond my area of knowledge - sorry I can't be of more use! Curious to hear how you get on though. - Ste
@@TheLearningsReport thank you so much for ur honest response.. iam working on it lets see how it goes..
@@salehnawaz7233 No worries & best of luck!
Hey guys! Recently discovered you and your work is fantastic!! Thank you very much!! Quick question: Does it make any difference in CTG if you aren’t domiciled in Ireland? I mean, you are Ordinary resident but not domiciled in Ireland buying and selling shares/stocks in Revolut or Degiro. Thank you!!
Hey Filipe,
Thanks for watching!
Yes, it does change but it can be very specific to a person's situation. We'd recommend getting tax advice for your situation, especially if it is a potentially large CGT liability.
Generally speaking, if you are not domiciled in Ireland and don't remit the gains back to Ireland, you are not liable to CGT in Ireland (but probably are elsewhere). Found the below on Revenue's website:
"Non-domiciled individuals and the remittance basis of assessment
The remittance basis of assessment applies to foreign sourced income and foreign capital gains of an individual who although tax resident in the State for a tax year is not Irish domiciled for that tax year. Under the remittance basis of assessment, the non-Irish income and gains are taxable only to the extent that they are remitted to the State.
However, the remittance basis of assessment does not apply to the income of a non-Irish sourced employment attributable to the performance in the State of the duties of that employment."
- Cian
Hey just a quick question for you guys. If I have money invested in stocks or crypto but I haven't sold any of my shares, I.e. I bought a stock and held onto it, would I still have to pay CGT or would this only apply after I have sold it?
Hey - yea only when you sell! So if you simply buy and hold, you won't have any tax issues to worry about (unless the stocks happen to pay a dividend, for example) But generally speaking, yes, no CGT is due until you actually sell your holdings.
- Ste
if i made less than €1270 off stocks in the year do i still have to do anything towards the end of the year?
Hiya Jack. No, but you’ll still need to file your return next year (for this year 2021) even if you’re under the €1270 exemption.
- Ste
Thanks for the great information, can u please Tel me how can we prouve crypto losts to the revenue, because when we loose assets on an exchange platform we don't get any receipt about that. Thanks
Hey Ibra - if you export your transaction history on whatever exchange you use, you should be able to see your gains and losses within that. Additionally, you could use a crypto tax software provider to do the legwork for you! Check out Koinly, Coinpanda, etc. if interested.
- Ste
Great video guys 😁
What about scenario like this? I buy my crypto using Euro then have a gain so decide to sell some or everything but not to euro but to stable coin like USDC, USDT etc. Do I still need pay tax and file CGT?
For example in Poland you don't pay any tax until you change your gains into Fiat money.
Hey Lucas - glad you enjoyed! So unfortunately, yes, the key word in this scenario is "sell some". The act of selling/swapping/converting from a crypto to a stable coin is still considered a sale for tax purposes (I'm surprised that's not the case in Poland, sounds like an extremely big loophole 😂). If everyone could just swap crypto to a stable coin and then cash out, no one would pay an ounce of tax ever!
Hope this helps.
- Ste
@@TheLearningsReport Thanks for swift reply. As someone mention in previous comments I think Irish gov is ripping us off. If you sell your crypto and buy more then you just build up your portfolio. If you cash out then you should pay tax.
I am in retail business so I am selling my products during the year and buy more using my profits. At the end of the year we buy even more to avoid paying huge tax. So we don't have cash (crypto) we have products on our shelves (USDT).
I hope it make sense 😁
No worries. I see what you're getting at, but it's a little different when you're talking from a business supplying products/inventory standpoint, and personal investment portfolio. I guess the argument from an economic/revenue standpoint is that you're supplying a tangible product/service to customers when it comes to your retail business (and benefit from tax breaks as a result), whereas with crypto its solely to build your personal wealth!
Great content guys. I do have few questions though.
1. I'm selfemployed, so do I still need to pay CGT before 31st of January if I sold in December in the previous year, or I can do it later on my Form 11
2. Do I need to "pay" CGT before 31st of January even if I didn't make any extra profit in December, but only used 1270 CG credit?
Thanks
Cheers!
1. For CGT, yes, the deadlines for paying are the same regardless of your employment status. Everyone pays in the year they sell, and files by Oct 31st of the following year. So for your example:
- Sold stock in December 2021
- Pay tax on profit by Jan 31st 2022
- File form 11 by Oct 31st 2022
2. Correct - if your TOTAL profit from 2021 (including what you sold in December) is under the €1270 exemption, then no, no tax is due to be paid and all you'll need to do is file your Form 11 by October!
Hope that clears it up for you.
- Ste
@@TheLearningsReport Thank you so much for your answer, everything is clear now.
Best of luck guys
@@zonzip8229 You're welcome!
Great info
What if I keep buying crypto with my profit in crypto exchange, but dont withdraw fiat to bank account for 3,4 years
do i still have to declare every year?
Hi Hamid Muhammad - you have to declare as long as you make a sale. In your example above, I believe you would have to make a sale to create your "investment profit" and so would then have to pay and file. You would have to pay and file regardless of whether you withdraw this money.
It can be frustrating especially if you are making many trades in a year but most brokers should have a summary of trades in the app.
One other thing to add - we haven't used any personally, but there are new 'crypto tax' services popping up due the the currency's explosion in popularity, so it might be worth doing your research into one of those. Usually, they link to your exchange and run a script that pulls all your trades and lets you know how much tax you owe!
Another great video lads, you’ve been able to answer my questions in other videos I’ve commented on and I appreciate it, so I was wondering if you could help me with a question I can’t find an answer to.
I’ve been using drivewealth to invest for 2 years which requires me to covert euros to dollars. I do this weekly and was wondering if fx comes into the equation when calculating a gain. E.g if I buy shares in Apple for 1000 dollars and sell for 2000 but I bought them at say 10 different points which required 10 different conversions of currency and 10 different exchange rates. Hope this isn’t too confusing basically what I’m asking is if currency conversion comes into the equation of cgt gains.
Howiya Conor - great to see you're still following along, and no worries at all.
In short, yeah it would - but marginally, unless you're dealing with substantial sums of cash (or if there were some significant swings in currency rates during the timeframe in question)
If you wanted to be really granular about it, your gain would be net of the forex fees you incur for each time you convert your EUR to USD (and vice versa when you sell the holdings and assumably convert back to EUR to then spend it).
From a tax standpoint, as I understand it, the only time it would really come into play is when you actually sell the holdings. So the forex rate when you're purchasing is relevant in the sense that its a 'fee' (albeit small) but when you sell, you would basically be taxed on the amount of whatever the USD to EUR conversion rate is on the day you sell. I use this XE currency tool (below) to look at historical exchange rates to calculate CGT due in EUR for holdings that are sold in USD.
Per your example, if you sold $2000 of Apple in Jan 2021, and you're paying the tax in Dec 2021, you would just find out what the FX rate was on that date in Jan, convert to EUR, and thats your taxable number. If you sold in tranches, then you would just need to do it for each time you sold (but again, the difference in rate will likely be marginal)
Tool: www.xe.com/currencytables/?from=USD
- Ste
@@TheLearningsReport perfect thanks for clearing that up, appreciate you taking the time to reply.
@@conorduffy3625 No problem
In Poland it's 19% flat fee 😮😮
It's quite a lot 33%🤦 it a broad light robbery 😬😞
Really great video. What happens if you are holding stocks for the long run? Is it only when you sell, be it one year later or ten later you pay? Also what if your are earning dividends but you keep that money in your trading account?
I include myself in this question, please answer?
Great video lads 👍🏻
Thanks, Darren! And cheers for watching!
- Cian
Lads, great video, I've one question: If the stocks that I've purchased and subsequently sold through Degiro/Revolut are shares that came from stock exchanges outside of Ireland, do I need to pay capital gain taxes in the country of the exchange's origin as well?
Hey Kevin,
Thanks for watching!
So, it can get very nuanced here but if you are resident and domiciled in Ireland, you'll pay the 33% here. And for a lot of other countries (including US, UK and EU countries), Ireland has double taxation agreements, which basically prevents you from paying tax in both jurisdictions.
In the majority of circumstances, no. But, as I said, there could be nuance with certain countries. More details on the DTAs here: www.revenue.ie/en/tax-professionals/tax-agreements/double-taxation-treaties/index.aspx
- Cian
@@TheLearningsReport thanks Cian! With help from your video, I built a little Excel spreadsheet with quick functions to get these calculations and totals done quickly for me. Big help!
@@Kevinf63 love it, glad we could help. Best of luck with it and any questions, just shout. 👍
- Cian
Great video. Could you please make a video on how to declare dividends to the Irish revenue as well? :)
Cheers Richard. Good shout - we'll add it in! Are you struggling on a specific part, or do you just mean a general overview of where to enter the info on the form etc. ?
@@TheLearningsReport I am completely lost on how to do it on the myAccount section (I believe that is the section to do it), so I tutorial explaining it all and showing how to do it using mock data would be great and it would most likely benefit other members :)
Sounds good, will do one on this a little closer to tax season 👍
Hey lads, Thanks for the great video.
I'm a bit confused about the terminology and my situation. Could you please help me with these questions?
1) In many articles, I see the term "investment" vs "Trading", does it matter for how long I own the assets?
2) I do swing trading, so I buy and sell shares quite a lot through out the year. Should I calculate CGT on them separately and pay them separately or just on the net profit of the year ?
3) My profit is more than 5k what difference does that make to my tax situation?
4) I'm using my partners tax credit, She is a trader too. Should file her CGT as well or does she need to do it from her side?
5) is it possible to pay a random CGT tax ( more that what I should pay just because the deadline is here ) and claim the extra difference after I filed it?
Thanks for your time and amazing content
Hey - Thanks! Appreciate it.
1) The terms are used interchangeably. Trading usually means more regular buying/selling, while investing is generally longer term. In terms of taxes in Ireland, no, CGT is charged the same regardless of how long you hold.
2) You'd need to calculate it for each trade yes, but your broker will likely be able to export a report for this.
3) None - you pay CGT on that amount.
4) Hmm in most cases you shouldn't be able to use her credit as far as we're aware. But thats up to you to figure out!
5) My guess, unlikely - but I don't know tbh! Message revenue and see perhaps, but I assume they'll just tell you to figure it out and pay whatever is due?
Cheers for watching and the comment.
- Ste
Firstly thank you for your advice. I wanted to ask a quick question. I own a house since 4 years. It was my primary residence for 2 years and now I have been renting it for 2 years, if I sell the property now do I have to pay the entire 33 percent cgt or I get a concession as it was my principal residence for 2 years. Thank you again :)
Hey Santosh,
Good question - essentially, you can only claim PPR relief on a property for the time you lived in the property. So, in your case, I believe you could claim for 2/4 years or 50%. Send Revenue an enquiry to confirm your situation but for now sharing more details here:
www.revenue.ie/en/gains-gifts-and-inheritance/cgt-reliefs/principal-private-residence-ppr-relief.aspx
- Cian
A question regarding CGT
Given that CGT is paid on profits following disposal of a security, assuming i am a swing trader and profited 70k in the year 2020 however before the end of the year all of the realised profits was subsequently lost alongside the invested capital concluding the year in a net loss.
Is CGT now owed to revenue on the profits that were subsequently lost?
To further add as a day trader or a swing trader the number of stocks bought and sold at the year end could be in the hundreds does revenue really want to know the details of each profitable trade i make per stock or you file just for the total profits/losses per year
Hey Rang - sorry the delay in getting back to you on this.
In short, it will come down to whether your losses were allowable or not. For example, there's the 4 week rule in Ireland whereby if you sell your shares at a loss, you can't offset those losses against your gains if you repurchase within 4 weeks. With your swing trading, some of your trades may fall under this rule - so you'd need to figure out where you stand in that regard (that might be a headache, depending how much trading you do).
I would speculate that you should be able to offset a large chunk of your losses, and not be liable for CGT based on the fact that your gains subsequently became losses (as long as they fall within the correct dates from a tax and revenue standpoint).
You'll only need to give details of your individual trading history to revenue if you're audited. When filing your return, it's based on the totals - so you shouldn't have any issues there.
(Again, the usual disclaimers of not financial advice etc etc. - but there ya have it, hope that helps you somewhat!) We're not traders ourselves, so the tax side of things is a tad easier for our investing strategy.
Cheers for watching
- Ste
hi, thanks for this video, very helpful! question.. I sold some stocks in 2020 and i know i'm already late.. I did the math and I think I know how much should I pay, including the penalty for being late, but the question is.. how do I know after paying if I paid the right amount? what if I pay less, will revenue get in touch with me? is there some kind of portal where I can access and see that I paid the right amount? thanks in advance.
Hey Matías,
So, I don't think it's very clear on the Revenue website. There is a section in the CG1 form for late filling but I didn't see anything for late payment.
I think your best bet is to pay the amount including late fees and then submit an enquiry on MyEnquiries on Revenue.ie explaining your calculations and asking them to confirm they are correct. At least this way you'll have confirmation in writing from them if they ever come back or else they'll tell you what the correct amount is!
- Cian
Great videos, thank you. Can you recommend any Irish forums discussing tax strategies? For example, what are the merits and drawbacks of creating a limited company?
Hey Ste - thanks for the feedback. Askaboutmoney.com is the Irish consumer forum and a large number of the searches we do around random topics seem to lead there. The conversations on the forum are (or seem at least) far more informed than what you might see on Reddit, for example.
That being said the Irish Personal Finance reddit thread can have some great convos also - so I'd suggest having a look there also.
Then of course boards.ie has a tax thread every now and again too!
- Ste
Hey guys, great video! Very helpful. So, from what I understood, the €1,270 is calculated on top of all your gains, correct? However, if I swing trade and do, let's say, over 500 trades in a year, do I need to file each individual trade, or can I just add all the profit in one file?
Also, if my profit was less than €1,270 in 2020, I would just need to file the CGT this October?
Thank you, guys!
Hey Gabriel, thanks for watching! Correct - the exemption is for all allowable CGT gains - so that would span across stocks, crypto and anything else taxed under the CGT rate.
If your trading is subject to CGT (which it likely is, but in certain cases it can be argued to be income if it's your main source of earnings), then you would need to figure out your own CGT liability. If you're trading often, you may want to use some sort of tax software to figure out your tax liability, given the number of trades you made in the year. Certain allowable losses could be offset against your gains, but that depends on when you sold the shares, how many you sold, first in first out rules, etc.
But to your question, once you have established what that taxable figure is (that'll be the tricky part) then you simply file one return based on your calculations.
For filing, correct, you would need to file by the end of October 2021 for your sales in 2020!
Thanks guys. I received a small dividend from shares I hold. Seems like this isn't a CGT payment for me, what tax do I pay on this? Where do I find the form on revenue?
Hey Alan - Form 12 (Income Tax Return) is what you'd need to fill out. We have a video on it which I've linked below!
ua-cam.com/video/x4QVvH8DjM4/v-deo.html
@@TheLearningsReport Amazing, thank you
@@alanrmurphy No worries!
Very informative video! I have a question. I'm a non-domiciled but a tax resident in ireland under PAYE. I have investments in etoro. How true is it that I'm not liable for taxes as long as I don't remit the gains to ireland? I would appreciate if you could enlighten. More power to your channel 😀
Cheers Arn. In short, there are so many ifs and buts to these sort of questions that we're always hesitant to try give a response.
My understanding is that if you're an Irish tax resident, you're going to be liable for disposals from your sale of shares while a tax resident here - unless your country of domicile has a double taxation treaty with Ireland, whereby you may only be eligible to pay there.
The 3 year rule you're referring to, I believe, is when you've LEFT Ireland, but are have been a tax resident in Ireland and continue being one for the 3 years following your departure.
Again, when it gets to people's specific situations - just pay the €50-€100 quid for a tax advisor to get an informed response!
Couple of resources below for you to mull over:
www.revenue.ie/en/jobs-and-pensions/tax-residence/how-to-know-if-you-are-ordinarily-resident-for-tax-purposes.aspx
mrsmoneyhacker.com/tax-loopholes-for-irish-investors/
taxsummaries.pwc.com/ireland/individual/income-determination
How do you file ur crypto losses to revenue i have a tax report from the exchange to submit how is this done with the ros system
Hi guys, great video especially for people like me that recently moved in Ireland. For B&B sale do you need to do that at the end (30th Nov sale - 1st December re-buy) or you can do the buy-sell order at any point?
Hey Nikos,
Glad you found it helpful!
It can happen any time in the year but it will have different paying date implications. There are other factors to be aware of which we have highlighted in our video specifically for this which you can check out here:
- Bed and Breakfaat Sale: ua-cam.com/video/EKGYfRHTGKo/v-deo.html
- Cian
Excellent video! Fair play ! I have 2 questions, I would really appreciate if you could help me. The first : I had a loss this year beside i am not selling any of my stocks in the next few months or even years.. can I apply that loss in few years time when I sell my stocks? The second question: I bought apple and I'm not planning to sell in at least 5 years.. should I do the bed and breakfast tactic or just leave it the way it is and when one day I sell it I apply the tax gains? Thank u so much, cheers. Love your channel ! 👏
Cheers Jaime, appreciate it - couple of great questions here:
Q1. So to clarify, you did sell something this year at a loss, but you didn't sell any stocks that made a gain? If so, then yes, you can carry your losses forward to a future tax year and then offset them against your CGT bill whenever you do sell something for a profit.
Q2. If you're coming towards the end of the year and it doesn't look like you'll be using your exemption (because you're simply holding your stocks) then yes, you can sell the equivalent of the €1270, or that approx value (obviously it'll be tricky to match it exactly), and then simply repurchase the shares. We'll be doing a video very soon on Bed & Breakfast sales (and the math behind it), but essentially, by 'harvesting' your gains to avail of your exemption, you'll end up with more profit down the line when you 'actually' want to sell your shares.
Hope this makes sense!
- Ste
Fair play Ste ! Fair play .. very well explained, thank you so much for your time answering my questions. Your channel is fabulous and I already recommended to some friends. All the best !
I have CTG losses from 2021 & 2022, how do I go back to declare these losses ?