Written answers
Tuesday, 28 July 2020
Department of Finance
Tax Reliefs
Pearse Doherty (Donegal, Sinn Fein)
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259. To ask the Minister for Finance the estimated full-year cost in 2021 of introducing a tax relief of 8.33%, that is, equivalent to one month's rent paid by all renters not in receipt of other State assistance on a refundable basis. [18770/20]
Paschal Donohoe (Dublin Central, Fine Gael)
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The rent relief tax credit was abolished in Budget 2011 and is no longer available to those that commenced renting for the first time from 8 December 2010. This followed a recommendation in the 2009 report by the Commission on Taxation that rent relief should be discontinued. The view of this independent commission was that, in the same manner in which mortgage interest relief increases the cost of housing, rent relief increases the cost of private rented accommodation.
I am advised that there is no reliable basis available to Revenue on which to estimate the potential cost of the introduction of a tax relief as described by the Deputy.
The annual cost of such a tax credit, operating on a refundable basis, would depend on the number of those renting, other than those who are in receipt of rental support from the State, and the amount of rent paid by them each year.
According to Census 2016 data, the private rented sector amounts to approximately 310,000 units. This figure includes those in receipt of rental support from the State.
It is clear, therefore, that the costs involved would be likely to be very significant.
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