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Tax Credits

Dáil Éireann Debate, Tuesday - 9 April 2024

Tuesday, 9 April 2024

Ceisteanna (306)

Claire Kerrane

Ceist:

306. Deputy Claire Kerrane asked the Minister for Finance how many applications have been made to the Succession Farm Partnership Tax Credit; how many have been approved; how many have been paid for the allowed years provided, in tabular form, by years one, two, three, four and five; how much has been paid out under the scheme overall from 2020 to date, broken down by year; if this information can be provided in tabular form; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [14801/24]

Amharc ar fhreagra

Freagraí scríofa

667D of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 provides for a tax credit for Succession Farm Partnerships. The measure came into effect in 2017.

To avail of the tax credit, the farm partnership must be entered onto the register of Succession Farm Partnerships, maintained by the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine. Each partner in a registered Succession Farm Partnership is entitled to an annual tax credit for up to five years of the lesser amount of:

€5,000 per year of assessment divided between the partners in accordance with their profit-sharing ratio; and

the assessable profits (after deducting any capital allowances) of that partner’s “several trade”, meaning the assessable profits arising to the partner from the succession farm partnership.

The table below provides a breakdown of the number of taxpayer units claiming this credit, showing the number of years for which taxpayer units had benefited from the credit (up to end 2021).

Number of Years

Number of Claimants (Taxpayer Units*)

1 Year

169

2 Years

136

3 Years

127

4 Years

115

5 Years

82

* A “taxpayer unit” is either an individual with any personal status who is singly assessed or a couple in a marriage or civil partnership who have elected for joint assessment.

The estimated annual cost and number of taxpayer units claiming the Succession Farm Partnership tax credit, broken down by year for 2017 to 2021, the latest year for which complete data are currently available for analysis, is included in the ‘Cost of Tax Expenditures’ publication. For the ease of the Deputy the following table sets out data from the Cost of Tax Expenditures publication.

Year

Numbers

€m

2021

260

1

2020

410

0.9

2019

350

0.8

2018

290

0.6

2017

175

0.4

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