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Ireland triples tax take from super wealthy, raking in €500m

By International Adviser, 3 Mar 17

More than half a billion euros was collected by the Irish tax authorities last year from 571 of the country’s wealthiest individuals.

More than half a billion euros was collected by the Irish tax authorities last year from 571 of the country’s wealthiest individuals.

Irish Tax and Customs confirmed to International Adviser that high net-worth individuals, with net assets of over €50m, paid a total of €504m (£432m, $530m) to the tax office during 2016.

The haul is a substantial compared to 2015 when the Revenue took just €169m from the super wealthy and represents an increase of 200%.

Ireland’s finance minister Michael Noonan originally disclosed the figures in parliament earlier this week, noting that the 2016 amount includes “a number of particularly large tax payments by a small number of taxpayers”.

Noonan said these individuals are overseen by the Irish Revenue’s Large Cases Division (LCD), a 250-strong team tasked with investigating the tax affairs of the super wealthy.

He added that the rise in tax revenues collected in 2016 was also down to settlements made following a clampdown on tax avoidance schemes used by businesses and individuals.

Noonan revealed that 22,024 individual taxpayers declared themselves to be non-resident for tax purposes in 2015.

This allows individuals to avoid paying tax on worldwide income in Ireland and liable to pay tax only on their earnings inside the country.

Tags: High Net Worth | Ireland

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International Adviser covers the global intermediary market that uses cross-border insurance, investments, banking and pension products on behalf of their high-net-worth clients. No news, articles or content may be reproduced in part or in full without express permission of International Adviser.