Revenue Note for Guidance
This section provides that a company is to be assessed and charged to corporation tax for every accounting period on all its profits arising in that period. The section also contains rules for determining when an accounting period begins and ends for the purposes of corporation tax.
(1) Except as otherwise provided by the Corporation Tax Acts, a company is assessed and charged to corporation tax for every accounting period on all profits arising in that period whether or not they are received in, or remitted to, the State. The exceptions include the exclusion from corporation tax of profits not attributable to an Irish branch or agency of a non-resident company (section 25(2)), the corporation tax exemptions contained in Chapters 2 and 3 of Part 7, the exemptions imported into corporation tax from income tax by virtue of section 76(6) (most of these are set out in Chapter 3 of Part 7 and are now expressed as applying for the purposes of the Tax Acts) and the exemption for profits arising to a life assurance company from investments and deposits of so much of its life assurance fund and separate annuity fund as is attributable to its pension business (section 717(1)).
(2) An accounting period begins —
(3) An accounting period ends on the earliest of the following —
(4) A resident company if not otherwise within the charge to corporation tax is treated as coming within that charge at the time it commences to carry on business.
(5) The Revenue Commissioners are authorised to determine which accounting date is to apply where a company carrying on more than one trade makes up accounts for those trades to different dates and does not make up accounts for the whole of its activities.
(6) Where a dormant company makes a chargeable gain or incurs an allowable loss, an accounting period is treated as beginning at the time of the gain or loss and the gain or loss is treated as accruing in that accounting period. This accounting period will end according to the rules set out earlier. Allowable capital losses incurred in the years 1974–75 or 1975–76 (that is, allowable losses for the purposes of capital gains tax) may be carried forward under paragraph 19 of Schedule 32 and treated as allowable losses incurred by the company while within the charge to corporation tax.
(7)(a) An accounting period ends and a new one begins when a company commences to be wound up. Thereafter an accounting period ends on the expiration of 12 months from the beginning of the winding up or at the completion of the winding up. These rules apply to the exclusion of the rules set out above concerning the start/end of accounting periods.
(7)(b) The date a winding up commences is—
(8) Where, because a company has failed to make returns or supply accounts or other information, it is not possible to determine an accounting period in accordance with the above rules, the inspector is authorised to make an assessment for such period not exceeding 12 months as appears to him/her appropriate. The period so chosen by the inspector is treated as an accounting period of the company unless —
Where on appeal the company shows the true accounting periods, the assessment for the accounting period chosen by the inspector still has effect for the period to which it relates as if it were an assessment or assessments for the true accounting periods. Further assessments can then be made for such other period or periods constituting the true accounting periods which would have been allowed to have been made at the time the original assessment was made.
Relevant Date: Finance Act 2019