Your Practical Tax Guide
for Irish Landlords

Your all-in-one resource as an Irish taxpayer with rental income

100,000

Landlords in Ireland

241,000

Registered private tenancies

€50,100

Median annual landlord rental income

Key Dates for 2026

Key tax and compliance dates for Irish landlords in 2026

January 1st

2025 Form 11 opens, allowing you to file your 2025 tax return.

March 1st

Introduction of a new Tenancies of Minimum Duration (TMDs) regime, along with updated rent control rules.

Mid-November

Deadline to file your 2025 Form 11, pay any tax due on your 2025 rental income, and pay your 2026 preliminary tax liability on rental income.

Taxes on Rental Income

40%

PAYE

11%

USC

4.2%

PRSI

55.2% Total

At the marginal rate of tax

PRSI increase

The PRSI rate will rise to 4.35% from 1 October 2026.

Your Obligations

Register the tenancy with the RTB

If it’s not registered, you’re technically breaking the law and you can’t properly use the RTB dispute system or claim relief on mortgage interest.

Follow the rules on rent & deposits

You must set and increase rent in line with the law, take only a lawful deposit, keep clear records, and return the deposit promptly at the end of the tenancy minus only valid deductions.

Respect tenant rights: privacy, notice & proper termination

You must respect your tenant’s rights by protecting their privacy, giving proper notice before entering or ending the tenancy, and never carrying out an unlawful eviction.

Provide a safe, habitable home that meets minimum standards

Repairs to structure, systems and appliances that came with the tenancy are your responsibility.

Key Resources

Everything you need to know as a landlord in Ireland

Sample Tax Calculation on Rental Income

Example: €70,000 annual rental income and no other income

Letting expenses€10,000/year
Mortgage interest€15,000/year
Capital allowances€6,000/year
Taxable rental income€39,000
PAYE (after standard credits)€3,800/year
USC€716/year
PRSI€1,609/year
Total tax€6,125/year
Net rental income€32,875/year

That works out at an effective tax rate of only 8.25%.

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For just €299, we’ll calculate the tax due on your rental income and file your Form 11 with Revenue on your behalf.

Common Unclaimed Reliefs

Residential Premises Rental Income Relief (€800 for 2025)

Capital allowances (12.5% deduction)

Mortgage interest relief (100% deduction)

Deductible rental expenses

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Rental income in Ireland is taxed under self-assessment: you pay income tax, USC and PRSI on your net rental profit after allowable expenses are deducted.

Irish landlords can usually deduct mortgage interest (if RTB-registered), repairs and maintenance, insurance, letting and management fees, accountancy and legal costs, RTB fees, and a share of costs like service charges that they don’t pass on to the tenant.

Yes. Rental profit is added to your other income and charged to USC at the standard USC income bands, with an additional 3% USC surcharge on non-PAYE income over €100,000.

In most cases, rental income is liable to PRSI at the Class S rate if your non-PAYE income (including rents) is above the Revenue thresholds, even if you also have PAYE employment.

The main reliefs are deductible expenses, 100% mortgage interest relief on qualifying loans, capital allowances on furniture and fittings, pre-letting expenses for vacant properties, and the Residential Premises Rental Income Relief for compliant landlords.

Yes. To claim mortgage interest relief and certain other landlord tax reliefs, the property must be properly registered with the Residential Tenancies Board (RTB).

Irish landlords report rental income on a Form 11 under Case V income, calculate net rental profit after expenses, and pay income tax, USC and PRSI through the self-assessment system.

Yes. If your allowable expenses exceed your rental income in a year, the resulting rental loss can usually be carried forward and offset against future Irish rental profits from other years.

This relief gives eligible individual landlords a limited income tax reduction on qualifying rental profits between 2024 and 2027, as long as they keep the property in the rental market and meet all conditions.

Yes, any gain on the sale of a rental property may be liable to Capital Gains Tax, although certain reliefs and deductible costs (like enhancement expenditure and buying/selling costs) can reduce the taxable gain.