elacsaplau
Registered User
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Say someone (non-family member) needs expensive drugs - what is the tax positon if I pay for a few months' supply? (I don't need the money as much as he needs the drugs).
Drugs approx €5k per month.
Nobody in Ireland pays more than 134 pm for medicines, thanks to the DPS scheme.
My attitude would be to forget about the tax implications. Are you sure the drugs are worth it though?
A gift specifically for qualifying medical expenses for an incapacitated person is exempt from CAT.
You may also be able to claim relief in the medical expenses if you are the person paying them.
It will depend on the specific circumstances, but the below link might help answer your question.
I'm by no means an expert. My understanding is that it will qualify if they are permanently incapacitated. So if it's an illness from which the person is not expected to recover to the extent that they can work and financially support themselves. I would look at the illnesses that are covered under a serious illness policy as an example of what these might be.Paying for drug treatment to deal with something like cancer will not qualify for the exemption
I'm by no means an expert. My understanding is that it will qualify if they are permanently incapacitated. So if it's an illness from which the person is not expected to recover to the extent that they can work and financially support themselves. I would look at the illnesses that are covered under a serious illness policy as an example of what these might be.
My sense is that Revenue would have no interest whatsoever in someone paying €5k a month for serious medical treatment for someone else. Yes, by the letter of the law a liability could exist but they’re not monsters.
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