Calculate CGT on the sale of an asset at 33% for 2026.
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Sale Price | -- |
| Less: Purchase Price | -- |
| Less: Costs | -- |
| Gain | -- |
| Less: Annual Exemption (EUR 1,270) | -- |
| Taxable Gain | -- |
| CGT @ 33% | -- |
Reliefs checked (PPR, retirement, entrepreneur), indexation for pre-2003 assets, payment dates, and CG1 form guidance.
Get CGT Report - EUR 79This calculator uses 2026 tax year rates verified against Revenue.ie. It provides estimates for general planning purposes. Individual circumstances may vary. For a personalised analysis, consider our paid reports.
When you sell an asset (property, shares, crypto, or any valuable asset) for more than you paid, the profit is subject to CGT at 33%. You can deduct the purchase price, allowable costs (solicitor fees, stamp duty on purchase, auctioneer fees), and enhancement expenditure (extensions, renovations) to reduce the taxable gain.
Purchase price (2015): EUR 280,000. Sale price (2026): EUR 420,000. Solicitor/auctioneer fees: EUR 12,000. Extension in 2019: EUR 35,000.
Gain: EUR 420,000 - EUR 280,000 - EUR 12,000 - EUR 35,000 = EUR 93,000.
Less annual exemption: EUR 93,000 - EUR 1,270 = EUR 91,730.
CGT at 33%: EUR 30,270.90. Due by 15 December 2026 (if sold Jan-Nov).
CGT has its own payment schedule, separate from your income tax return. Gains arising January to November must be paid by 15 December. Gains in December are due by 31 January of the following year. Missing these dates attracts interest at 0.0219% per day.
All reliefs checked, enhancement expenditure included, indexation applied, payment dates confirmed, and CG1 form guidance. Delivered as a branded PDF.
Get CGT Report EUR 79Note: This calculator uses 2026 tax year rates verified against Revenue.ie. Tax rules change annually following the Budget.