Brendan Burgess
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My interpretation would be if I had 2 antiques, sold one and owed CGT on it and donated the other one and got a credit, I could not use that credit to offset the CGT tax.A person shall not be entitled to any refund of tax in respect of any payment on account of tax made in accordance with this section
That's not the issue here as far as I understand it - i.e. the non-refundable nature of this and most or all other tax credits. It's the fact that this tax credit is prospective rather than retrospective so that it doesn't allow for a refund of tax already paid - e.g. via payroll on salary or pension payments. This is unlike other common tax credits. Some other tax credits are similarly mainly or fully prospective - e.g. R&D tax credits etc.The idea here is that you can use this credit to reduce your tax bill. But if you don't have a tax bill big enought to absorb the credit, e.g. because you have very little income, you can't use the rest of the credit to get a payment from Revenue.
I think the idea is that a successful creative person will donate while living and see their tax bill reduced for the rest of their life.But also unlike many other tax credits any unused portions of the Heritage Gift one can be carried forward to be used in future years if necessary.
I don't see how you could read it any other way then the way I described it.Hi Peanuts
I don't see how you could read it like that at all?
If you sell an antique and have a CGT liability of €160k and donate another one and get a Heritage Tax Credit of €120k, you would simply pay €40k CGT.
I think the idea is that a successful creative person will donate while living and see their tax bill reduced for the rest of their life.
In effect, to me if you sell an antique and have a CGT of €160k and have paid that already and if you then subsequently have a Heritage Tax Credit of €120k, you cannot use that credit to get €120k back from Revenue
I can set off a Heritage Tax Credit granted in 2025 against it because I will not have paid the CGT, CAT or other Income Tax. But if the PAYE has been deducted already, I can't get it back.
I don't think this is primarily aimed at successful creative; more at the relics of aul' dacency who inherit paintings, furniture etc of heritage value assembled by their forebears, but who don't have the income required to insure them, maintain them, etc and/or have no particular interest in owning them. The idea is to make donating the stuff to a cultural institution that wants to acquire them a viable alternative to auctioning them.I think the idea is that a successful creative person will donate while living and see their tax bill reduced for the rest of their life.
Yes, that's how it works but @Brendan Burgess is asking why this is the case and why, unlike many other credits, you can't get a refund of tax already paid with the Heritage Gift credit.In effect, to me if you sell an antique and have a CGT of €160k and have paid that already and if you then subsequently have a Heritage Tax Credit of €120k, you cannot use that credit to get €120k back from Revenue
That's not what the Tax and Duty Manual says. Look at section 5.
Again, this is missing @Brendan Burgess's key point. Which is that the donor may have, say, PAYE income tax deducted at source and also self assessed income tax, CGT etc. and they can use the credit to reduce the latter when filing their return/paying their taxes but not get a refund of the former which has already been deducted at source.If the tax liabilities were €20,000 and the value of the item were €22000, then only €20,000 is required to reduce the liability to nil.
Since the liabilities have already been discharged there is no tax available for refund.
tax liability, including arrears and penalties.
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