Capital Gains Tax Calculator — Ireland 2026
Calculate CGT on any Irish asset disposal: property, shares, crypto, or business assets. Includes the €1,270 annual exemption, losses carried forward, and guidance on PPR and Entrepreneur Relief.
For planning purposes only — always confirm your CGT liability with a qualified tax adviser or Revenue guidance at revenue.ie.
Asset Disposal Details
CGT Calculation
What this Capital Gains Tax calculator does
This tool calculates the Irish Capital Gains Tax (CGT) due on the disposal of an asset. It is designed for Irish tax-resident individuals who have sold — or are planning to sell — an asset that has increased in value, including investment properties, shares, cryptocurrency, land, or business assets.
Enter your sale proceeds, the original purchase price, all allowable acquisition and disposal costs, any capital improvements, losses carried forward, and the annual exemption. The calculator computes your gross gain, applies reliefs and exemptions, and shows the CGT due at the standard 33% rate (or 10% if Entrepreneur Relief applies).
It does not model: The full PPR relief calculation beyond a simple percentage input (a detailed partial relief calculation requires a precise ownership timeline), Retirement Relief for older business owners, indexation on pre-2003 assets, development land surcharge rules, or non-resident CGT obligations. These reliefs can be substantial — if any apply, treat this calculator's output as an upper bound on your CGT liability and confirm the figure with a qualified tax adviser.
How the Irish CGT calculation works
Irish CGT is charged on the chargeable gain — the profit on the disposal — not on the full sale proceeds. The calculation follows a standard sequence set out in the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997:
Step 1 — Calculate the gross gain
Step 2 — Apply PPR Relief (property only)
If you lived in the property as your principal private residence for part of the ownership period, the gain is reduced proportionally. The exempt portion is calculated as: (years as PPR ÷ total years owned) × gross gain. The last 12 months of ownership always count as PPR occupation. Full PPR relief results in zero CGT.
Step 3 — Offset capital losses
Losses from the current tax year are applied first, then losses carried forward from previous years. Losses can reduce the gain to zero but cannot create a negative taxable amount. Unused losses are carried forward indefinitely.
Step 4 — Apply the annual exemption
Each Irish-resident individual has a CGT annual exemption of €1,270. It is applied after losses. It cannot be carried forward — it is use-it-or-lose-it each tax year. For jointly owned assets, each owner uses their own exemption against their share.
Step 5 — Apply the CGT rate
Worked examples — Ireland 2026
Example 1 — Dublin apartment, investment property sold for €420,000
A landlord bought a one-bed Dublin apartment in 2015 for €280,000. He paid €4,200 stamp duty and €2,800 legal fees on purchase. He spent €12,000 on a new kitchen and bathroom (capital improvement). He sells in 2026 for €420,000; his agent charges 1.5% (€6,300) and his solicitor charges €3,000. He has no losses carried forward and applies his annual exemption.
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Sale proceeds | €420,000 |
| Less: purchase price | −€280,000 |
| Less: acquisition costs (stamp duty + legal) | −€7,000 |
| Less: capital improvements | −€12,000 |
| Less: disposal costs (agent + legal) | −€9,300 |
| Gross gain | €111,700 |
| Less: losses brought forward | €0 |
| Less: annual exemption | −€1,270 |
| Chargeable gain | €110,430 |
| CGT at 33% | €36,442 |
Payment due by 15 December 2026 (disposal in Jan–Nov window). He nets €383,558 before CGT and €383,558 − €36,442 = €347,116 after CGT.
Example 2 — Shares portfolio, €65,000 gain with losses carried forward
An individual sold a mixed equity portfolio in March 2026 for €95,000. She had bought the shares over several years at a total cost of €28,000. Broker commissions: €250 on purchase, €320 on sale. She has €8,500 in capital losses brought forward from a 2023 disposal.
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Sale proceeds | €95,000 |
| Less: purchase cost + commissions | −€28,570 |
| Gross gain | €66,430 |
| Less: losses carried forward | −€8,500 |
| After losses | €57,930 |
| Less: annual exemption | −€1,270 |
| Chargeable gain | €56,660 |
| CGT at 33% | €18,698 |
The losses brought forward saved €2,805 in CGT (€8,500 × 33%). Payment is due 15 December 2026.
Example 3 — Business sale with Entrepreneur Relief, €800,000 gain
A founder sells her trading company in 2026. After deducting allowable costs, her chargeable gain before exemption is €800,000. She has owned at least 5% of the shares for 4 continuous years. Entrepreneur Relief applies — CGT rate is 10% instead of 33%.
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross gain | €800,000 |
| Less: annual exemption | −€1,270 |
| Chargeable gain | €798,730 |
| CGT at 10% (Entrepreneur Relief) | €79,873 |
| CGT at 33% (without relief) | €263,581 |
| Tax saving from Entrepreneur Relief | €183,708 |
Entrepreneur Relief requires strict eligibility conditions. Confirm qualification with your tax adviser well before the sale is structured.
How to interpret your CGT result
Payment deadlines matter
CGT has two separate payment deadlines in Ireland. Gains made between 1 January and 30 November must be paid by 15 December of that year. Gains made in December must be paid by 31 January of the following year. The CGT return itself is filed by 31 October in the following year as part of your Form 11 or Form CG1. Paying late incurs daily interest at Revenue's current rate — currently around 8% per annum — which can add up quickly on large CGT bills.
Effective CGT rate vs headline rate
Because costs, losses, and the annual exemption reduce your taxable gain, your effective CGT rate (CGT paid as a percentage of gross gain) is always lower than 33%. On a gain of €100,000 with €10,000 of allowable costs and the annual exemption, the effective rate is closer to 28–29%. This matters when comparing net proceeds across different disposal scenarios.
Timing your disposal for tax efficiency
If you have capital losses from another asset in the same year, offsetting them against a gain can significantly reduce the CGT bill. Similarly, if you are planning to sell and your gain is only slightly above €1,270, consider whether deferring to the next tax year allows you to use next year's exemption as well (some years have overlapping disposals). Timing also affects the payment deadline — a December disposal gives you until the following January to pay.
Joint ownership and two exemptions
If an asset is jointly owned by a couple, each owner has their own annual €1,270 exemption. On a joint disposal of an investment property, that doubles to €2,540 of exempt gain. Each joint owner must report their share of the gain on their own tax return.
Common mistakes when calculating Irish CGT
1. Missing allowable acquisition costs
Many people subtract only the purchase price from the proceeds, forgetting that stamp duty paid on purchase, legal fees, broker commissions, and a structural survey fee are all allowable deductions. On a €300,000 property, these can amount to €5,000–€8,000, saving €1,650–€2,640 in CGT.
2. Claiming repairs as capital improvements
Only capital expenditure that enhances the value of the asset is an allowable deduction — repainting walls, fixing a leaking tap, or replacing carpets are maintenance expenses, not capital improvements. A new extension, a complete kitchen replacement, or adding a garage are capital works that you can legitimately deduct.
3. Forgetting indexation on pre-2003 assets
If you acquired an asset before 31 December 2002, you can apply Revenue's indexation multipliers to inflate the acquisition cost, reducing the gain. This is particularly valuable for assets bought in the 1990s when inflation was higher. This calculator does not apply indexation — if your asset is pre-2003, your actual CGT liability may be materially lower.
4. Assuming PPR relief is all-or-nothing
Partial PPR relief is frequently miscalculated. The exempt portion is based on the period of actual residence as a proportion of total ownership, but the last 12 months of ownership always count as PPR regardless. If you have a long ownership period with a short period of non-residence, the taxable portion is smaller than many people assume.
5. Not filing a return when CGT is nil
If you make a gain that is fully covered by the annual exemption and losses, no CGT is payable — but you may still be required to file a CGT return to report the disposal. Check with Revenue or your adviser whether you have a filing obligation even in a nil-tax situation.
Frequently asked questions — Irish CGT
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