what to do!!!!!!
You will have to pay a stamp duty claw back alright to the revenue, we sold our house in november.
It was a new house and we lived in it for 14 months, however when selling we were advised by our accountant to pay back the stamp duty claw back...., I would hold onto it for an investment purposes... as sometimes things always dont go according to plan, and its always nice to have someone of your own....
Not just if you rent - if you hold the property for more than 12 months after vacating it as your PPR then some portion of any evential resale gain will be assessable for CGT regardless of whether or not it was rented out.Also if you rent the property for a couple of years there will be a capital gains tax liability when you sell. The first twelve months after the property ceases to be your PPR is exempt from CGT.
Not just if you rent - if you hold the property for more than 12 months after vacating it as your PPR then some portion of any evential resale gain will be assessable for CGT regardless of whether or not it was rented out.
Not just if you rent - if you hold the property for more than 12 months after vacating it as your PPR then some portion of any evential resale gain will be assessable for CGT regardless of whether or not it was rented out.
You will have to pay a stamp duty claw back alright to the revenue, we sold our house in november.
It was a new house and we lived in it for 14 months, however when selling we were advised by our accountant to pay back the stamp duty claw back...., I would hold onto it for an investment purposes... as sometimes things always dont go according to plan, and its always nice to have someone of your own....
I was referring to CGT and not SD. See CCOVICH's comments about when the SD clawback applies above.Phew !!! I was getting worried that I had paid the stamp duty when I shouldnt have,
Your rental income will also be assessable for income tax - even if it is less than your mortgage repayments - so the shortfall could be even more than €200. And you need to allow for vacant periods. And there is lots more to being a landlord that you need to be aware of. See the Property Investment FAQ for a basic summary.my mortgage is 1100 and current similar properties are renting for 900 euro. so i would need to make up the difference.
Yeah - I'm not sure where the consensus about keeping it came from!I wouldn't keep it.