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Departmental Data

Dáil Éireann Debate, Wednesday - 10 May 2023

Wednesday, 10 May 2023

Questions (55)

Holly Cairns

Question:

55. Deputy Holly Cairns asked the Minister for Finance the number of persons' that have availed of the Living City Initiative in each eligible area to date; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [21921/23]

View answer

Written answers

The Living City Initiative (LCI) is a scheme of property tax incentives provided for in sections 372AAA to 372AAD of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997. It offers income or corporation tax relief for qualifying expenditure incurred in the refurbishment and conversion of qualifying residential and commercial buildings located within ‘Special Regeneration Areas' in Cork, Dublin, Galway, Kilkenny, Limerick and Waterford.

There are three distinct types of relief available under the Initiative. These are:

• owner-occupier residential relief;

• rented residential relief; and

• commercial or retail relief.

The the LCI scheme was extended for a further five year period to 31 December 2027 in Finance Act 2022. The owner-occupier element of the relief was also enhanced in Finance Act 2022 for new entrants from 1 January 2023. Owner-occupiers may claim the relief over seven years rather than ten. Where they can’t absorb the deduction in-year, claimants will have the ability to carry forward relief up to a maximum of ten years after the expenditure is incurred.

Applications are required to be made to the relevant Local Authority. Revenue obtains information from the Local Authorities in respect to the number of applications received by them. Based on the most recent information received by Revenue, the number of total applications per eligible city since the introduction of the scheme are as follows:

Local Authority

Number of applications

Cork

113

Dublin

184

Galway

11

Kilkenny

17*

Limerick

54

Waterford

76

*Previously 18, the local authority have informed Revenue of the withdrawal of an application.

Revenue advise that it is not possible to break these applications down by year due to the low number of claimants and the need to protect taxpayer confidentiality. It is also not possible, with the data provided to Revenue, to break these applications down into successful and unsuccessful applications.

The Deputy will wish to note that information in relation to the overall cost of the scheme is available on the Revenue website for the years 2013 to 2020, the latest year for which fully analysed data are available, at www.revenue.ie/en/corporate/documents/statistics/tax-expenditures/property-reliefs.pdf.

The data for the scheme, to the extent that they are available, are set out below:

Tax Year

Amount claimed (€m)

Maximum tax cost* (€m)

Number of claimants

Average value of claim per claimant

2020

1.1

0.3

50

€22,000

2019

1.5

0.5

60

€25,000

2018

0.5

0.2

27

€18,519

2017

0.4

0.2

23

€17,391

2016

0.5

0.2

15

€33,333

2015

0.5

0.2

13

€38,462

2014

0.2

0.1

N/A

N/A

2013

0.1

0.0

N/A

N/A

*assumed at 40% for Income Tax and 12.5% for Corporation Tax.

The estimated tax cost is based on the assumption that the marginal income tax rate of 40 per cent generally applies to income tax claimants. The actual cost is not available in the tax return data as each taxpayer’s tax liability is computed by reference to all of their taxable income(s) and any applicable allowances, credits or other reliefs. Therefore, a median sum paid is not available.

Data in relation to 2021 will be available in the second half of this year.

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