Ireland · 2026
Ireland Capital Gains Tax Calculator
Work out Irish CGT at 33% — with the €1,270 annual exemption, Principal Private Residence relief (including the final 12 months), capital losses, joint ownership and the reduced 10% Entrepreneur Relief.
📘Estimate for 2026. Standard 33% rate on gains above the €1,270 exemption. It doesn't model pre-2003 indexation, retirement or angel-investor relief, or the 40% rate on certain funds and life policies. CGT is self-assessed — confirm with Revenue.ie or an adviser before filing.
How Irish CGT works
Capital Gains Tax is charged at 33% on your chargeable gain — proceeds minus selling costs, the original cost, buying costs and any enhancement spending. From the gain you deduct reliefs, losses and the €1,270 annual exemption (each person has one; it can't be transferred or carried forward). The 10% Entrepreneur Relief rate can apply to qualifying business disposals, up to a €1.5 million lifetime limit.
Principal Private Residence relief
If a property was your only or main home, PPR relief exempts the gain for the time you lived there — plus the final 12 months of ownership in all cases. The relief is time-apportioned: relief = gain × (qualifying months ÷ total months owned). Living there the whole time means the gain is fully exempt.
Losses and joint ownership
Allowable losses (this year or carried forward from earlier years) reduce the gain before the exemption. Because each spouse has their own €1,270 exemption, a jointly owned asset benefits from two — and transfers between spouses are themselves CGT-neutral.
Frequently asked questions
What is the CGT rate in Ireland?
33% on gains above the €1,270 annual exemption, or 10% on qualifying business disposals under Entrepreneur Relief (€1.5m lifetime limit).
Do I pay CGT on my home?
Usually not — Principal Private Residence relief covers the period it was your main home plus the final 12 months. Let or absent periods may leave part of the gain taxable.
Can my spouse's exemption help?
Each spouse has a separate €1,270 exemption, and asset transfers between spouses are CGT-free — so jointly held assets get two exemptions.
Related
Educational estimate — not tax advice. Ireland 2026: CGT 33% (10% Entrepreneur Relief on qualifying business disposals, €1.5m lifetime limit), €1,270 annual exemption per person, PPR relief with the final 12 months, losses carried forward. It doesn't model pre-2003 indexation relief, retirement or angel-investor relief, development land, or the 40% rate on certain funds and offshore policies. Confirm with
Revenue.ie and a qualified Irish adviser.