Revenue Tax Briefing Issue 68, April 2008
Arising from a number of queries to Revenue offices concerning the ‘employee tax credit’ (also known as the ‘PAYE tax credit’), this article outlines the circumstances under which such credit may be granted.
Section 472 TCA provides for a tax credit known as the ‘employee tax credit’ (or ‘PAYE tax credit’) to an individual who has emoluments (except for ‘excluded’ emoluments, outlined below) to which the PAYE system of tax deduction at source applies or is applied.
Where, for any year of assessment, a claimant proves that his or her total income for the year consists in whole or in part of such emoluments, he/she shall be entitled to a tax credit of €1,830 (or a lesser amount where the full employee credit is not required to cover the income tax liability).
Irrespective of the number of sources of emoluments to which the PAYE system of tax deduction at source applies or is applied, an individual is entitled to only one employee tax credit. In the case of a husband and wife on joint assessment, each spouse is entitled to the employee credit against their respective emoluments (provided such emoluments are not ‘excluded’ emoluments).
Emoluments to which the employee tax credit does not apply are:
However, subject to certain conditions, the employee tax credit may be claimed in respect of emoluments paid -
where such emoluments are paid by a company (or a person connected with the company) of which either parent is a proprietary director, or by an individual (or by a partnership in which the individual is a partner) where such individual is the parent of the child.
The credit is available to the child (other than a child who is himself or herself a proprietary director) if, for the relevant tax year, either (a) or (b), as follows, are satisfied:
Under section 472(3) TCA, individuals resident in the State for tax purposes can also claim the employee tax credit in respect of the profits or gains from an office or employment held or exercised outside the State if the profits or gains from that office or employment:
Note: Section 15 of the Finance Act 2006 provides that so much of the income of a foreign office or employment of an individual as is attributable to the performance in the State of the duties of that office or employment is, with effect from 1 January 2006, chargeable to income tax under Schedule E (instead of Case III of Schedule D) and within the scope of the PAYE system. Where, within the scope of the PAYE system, the employee tax credit is due against such emoluments.
Social security pensions from other EU Member States
Where a foreign pension chargeable to tax in the State satisfies all the conditions (a) to (c) in respect of cross-frontier workers, the employee tax credit may be granted against such pension.
Where the emoluments of foreign embassy employees working in the State are within, and not relieved from, the charge to tax in the State, such employees may claim the employee tax credit notwithstanding that the PAYE system of tax deduction was not applied to their salary/wages.