I dont understand. If it's stamp-duty you are trying to avoid paying its five years but maybe this is social housing related or something.The other caveat is that I would be about 3 months shy of the 2 years that you have to own a property before you can rent it.
Eh ! So pointing out a blatant tax evasion ploy to someone in simple english is uncivil ? Maybe if the OP hugged the rule bug that would make him feel better ?What happens if you could be more civil with a first time poster?
I think it is patently obvious what your intentions were coming on here. Having carefully researched the topic and identified some of the pitfalls and taxation issues, you pose the following -... I have done some research and renting a property is a daunting task to say the least as theres an awful lot involved and a lot of bases to be covered. The other caveat is that I would be about 3 months shy of the 2 years that you have to own a property before you can rent it...
Someone who wants a legal and honest way out of a tax dilemma they have identified doesn't ask ' ...could I just get away with... ', which IMHO is an tax evasion question, but might ask something like 'Is there a legal way to avoid the taxes I will have to pay in the circumstances I describe?'... My question is could I just get away with renting it under the rent-a-room scheme? ...
Finally, the language traits which IMHO are the last refuge of the potential tax evader 'technically' and 'I could argue' and 'he just happens to have'.... technically it will still be my PPR, ... I could argue that he is only renting a room, he just happens to have the use of the whole apartment while I am on my extended holiday...
I dont understand. If it's stamp-duty you are trying to avoid paying its five years but maybe this is social housing related or something.
You have serious issues mathepac, disecting the semantics and context of each line of my post. I have repeatedly explained my position, that I have no intention of breaking any laws, Im simply looking for the most painless way of renting my apartment. I know nothing about this and Im starting from scratch so cut me a little slack and don't assume the worst of people straight off the bat.
The rest of the members have put forward useful constructive advise and even your first post had useful information although it was put across quite agressively. Theres no need to have a go at people, jump down their throat and accuse them of tax evasion. A simple 'no, you can't do that' would have done.
I'm not so sure it's as cut and dry as is being made out here.
Say I own my house 20 years and happily pay all my taxes etc. and I take in a lodger for 5 years under the rent a room scheme and he pays for a room in my house, then if I want to go on a round the world trip, do I have to eject the lodger? I doubt it. It's still my PPR. It's my home. When we go on holidays (ie, NOT to work abroad), even for a prolonged period it's still your PPR otherwise you'd be liable for CGT and everything which is obviously rubbish.
If the OP is content to take a lodger at the going rate for a ROOM and not the whole house (would exceed the 7k per annum limit on rent a room scheme anyway) then he should legally be able to go off on holiday and keep his lodger.
Independent advise or confirmation IN WRITING from revenue is the way to go. Under no circumstances get telephone confirmation and then proceed based solely on this.Thanks for your thoughts murphaph, funnily enough I was discussing this with a work colleague yesterday and he pondered the same point as you. I definitely think independent tax advise is a good idea, anyone know if you can hire a tax consultant on an hourly rate to have a chat about it? I think the easiest thing to do at the moment is to ring the revenue as suggested by my work mate and WaterSprite and see what they say
Why would you be paying half the bills if you are using none of the utilitities? Maybe half the standing charge for your ESB (and half the line rental for telephone if you have one) is fair but not one penny of the bill itself for the time you are away.My (2 bed)apartment is outside Dublin and would fetch 600-650 p/m, so I assume the rent-a-room scheme would cover half of that, so I would still need to pay at least 300 per month + half the bills
Edit: it's no what the rent a room scheme will cover-it's what the MARKET RATE for a SINGLE room will cover. You cannot legally charge your tenant over the rate for a room to push the rent up to the rent a room limit as this would indeed be tax evasion (pretending to rent a room when in fact the tenant is renting the house-otherwise the tenant wouldn't pay over the odds for the 'room').
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