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Understanding how to register an estate for income tax in Ireland is one of the first, and most consequential, obligations facing any executor or personal representative after a death. Revenue requires the estate to be registered as a separate tax entity, with its own tax reference number, before income tax returns can be filed or tax clearance obtained for the distribution of assets. This guide walks through every stage of the process for 2026, incorporating the Capital Acquisitions Tax (CAT) thresholds as announced in Budget 2025/2026, updated eRegistration procedures on the Revenue Online Service (ROS), and the practical timelines that connect the PR1 probate application to Revenue’s due-diligence and clearance workflow.
If you are acting as an executor, administrator, or personal representative of a deceased person’s estate in Ireland, these are the core compliance actions you must complete:
Each step carries specific form requirements, deadlines, and potential pitfalls. The sections below provide the detail you need to comply fully and avoid personal liability.
Irish law uses the umbrella term personal representative to cover two distinct roles. An executor is named in the deceased’s will and derives authority from the will itself, confirmed by a Grant of Probate. An administrator is appointed by the court when there is no will (intestacy) or when the named executor is unable or unwilling to act; the court issues a Grant of Administration. Both carry identical executor duties in Ireland when it comes to Revenue compliance, registering the estate, filing returns, settling liabilities, and distributing the residue.
Do I need a solicitor to administer an estate? There is no legal requirement to engage a solicitor, and executors are entitled to apply for probate personally through the Probate Office. However, professional advice is strongly recommended where the estate involves real property, business assets, cross-border elements, disputes among beneficiaries, or any indication that the deceased’s tax affairs may not be fully up to date. The complexity of Revenue’s due-diligence process alone often justifies professional representation.
Solicitors and accountants acting on behalf of an estate access Revenue systems using their Tax Adviser Identification Number (TAIN). The Law Society of Ireland’s guidance on TAIN and administration of estates confirms that agents can submit returns, correspond with Revenue via MyEnquiries, and request clearance on the personal representative’s behalf. If you instruct an agent, ensure they are formally authorised on the estate’s tax record to avoid processing delays.
Once a person dies, the estate becomes a separate legal entity for tax purposes. Revenue must be notified of the death and the estate must be registered before any returns can be filed. The personal representative is responsible for obtaining a tax registration number, sometimes referred to informally as an estate PPSN in Ireland, through one of two channels.
Revenue’s eRegistration service allows personal representatives (or their authorised agents) to register an estate as a trust-type entity online. The steps are:
Where online registration is not possible, the personal representative should complete Form TR4 (Tax Registration for Trusts and Estates) and post it to the appropriate Revenue district. Form TR4 requires details of the deceased, the personal representative, the nature and estimated value of estate assets, and the types of tax for which registration is sought (income tax, CGT, or both).
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Certified copy of death certificate | Confirms date of death and identity of deceased |
| Copy of will (if one exists) | Establishes executor’s authority and estate terms |
| Grant of Probate or Grant of Administration (if already issued) | Formal legal authority, may be submitted later if not yet available |
| Personal representative’s PPS number and contact details | Links the estate to the individual acting on its behalf |
| Details of estate income sources (rental, investment, business) | Determines the taxes for which the estate must register |
If a solicitor or accountant is handling the administration, the agent’s TAIN should be linked to the estate’s new tax reference at the point of registration. This allows the agent to file returns, correspond through MyEnquiries, and ultimately request clearance without requiring the personal representative to interact with ROS directly. As noted in the Law Society’s TAIN guidance, failure to link the agent at registration stage is a common cause of delays in processing clearance requests.
The question of how to register an estate for income tax in Ireland is inseparable from understanding which returns must actually be filed. An estate typically generates obligations across multiple tax heads. The table below summarises the key reporting obligations.
| Tax Type | Registration / Form | Who Files / When |
|---|---|---|
| Income (deceased to date of death) | Form 11 (self-assessed) or Form 12 (PAYE taxpayer) | Executor/PR files for the year of death, covering income from 1 January to date of death |
| Estate income during administration | Form 1 (Trusts & Estates); estate registered via TR4 or eRegistration | Executor/PR as trustee files annually until assets are fully distributed |
| Capital Gains Tax (disposals during administration) | CGT registration via myAccount/ROS; CGT return filed per Revenue deadlines | Executor/PR files and pays CGT on disposals of estate assets during administration |
| Capital Acquisitions Tax (inheritance/gifts) | Form IT38; filed by the beneficiary (PR assists with valuations and information) | Beneficiary files where the taxable value exceeds the relevant group threshold; return due by 31 October of the year following the valuation date |
The personal representative must file a final income tax return for the deceased covering the period from 1 January of the year of death to the actual date of death. For self-assessed taxpayers, this is Form 11; for PAYE-only taxpayers, Form 12 may be appropriate. The return is filed under the deceased’s own PPS number, not the estate’s new tax reference. Any refund due is payable to the estate; any liability must be settled from estate funds before distribution.
Once the estate is registered as a separate entity, any income it receives during the period of administration, rental income from estate properties, bank interest, dividends, must be reported on the estate’s Form 1 (Trusts & Estates). This return is filed annually under the estate’s tax reference number. Estate income is typically taxed at the standard rate of income tax applicable to trusts, which is the standard rate (currently 20%) plus any applicable surcharge, though credits may reduce this depending on the nature of the income.
Consider an estate that includes a rental property generating €1,200 per month and a deposit account accruing €800 in annual interest. After the deceased’s death on 15 March 2026, the executor registers the estate with Revenue. The final Form 11 covers the deceased’s personal income from 1 January to 15 March 2026. From 16 March onwards, the rental income and interest belong to the estate and are reported on its Form 1. If the executor sells the rental property during administration for a gain, a CGT return and payment are also required under the estate’s tax reference.
Capital Acquisitions Tax (CAT) applies to gifts and inheritances above certain tax-free thresholds. The CAT thresholds for Ireland in 2026, as announced in Budget 2025/2026, are:
These thresholds are lifetime-aggregated, meaning any prior gifts or inheritances from the same group relationship reduce the available tax-free amount. CAT is currently charged at 33% on the taxable value above the threshold.
A beneficiary must file a Form IT38 where the total taxable value of benefits received in the relevant group exceeds 80% of the applicable threshold, even if no tax is actually payable. The valuation date, the date on which the benefit is deemed to be taken, determines the filing deadline: the IT38 form for Ireland must be filed and any CAT paid by 31 October of the year following the valuation date. The personal representative’s role is to provide accurate valuations and to ensure beneficiaries are aware of their filing obligations.
The inheritance tax Ireland 7-year rule is often confused with the dwelling house exemption, which has its own conditions. A beneficiary may be exempt from CAT on an inherited dwelling if they occupied the property as their principal private residence for three years prior to the inheritance, do not own any other residential property, and continue to occupy it for six years after the inheritance (subject to certain exceptions). Careful planning and documentation are essential, as Revenue actively scrutinises claims for this exemption.
Before distributing estate assets to beneficiaries, the personal representative should obtain a letter of clearance from Revenue confirming that all taxes due from the deceased and the estate have been paid or accounted for. Distributing without clearance exposes the executor to personal liability for any outstanding tax debts.
Revenue’s Tax and Duty Manual, Part 46-01-02, sets out the clearance procedure. The personal representative (or their agent via TAIN) submits a request through MyEnquiries, accompanied by a completed due-diligence questionnaire and supporting documentation.
Revenue’s due-diligence process involves a review of the deceased’s tax affairs for a look-back period. The personal representative should assemble:
Industry observers expect that Revenue’s processing target remains approximately 35 working days from receipt of a complete clearance request where no queries arise. However, incomplete submissions or unresolved queries from the due-diligence review can extend this timeline significantly.
The most frequent causes of delay include unfiled returns for prior years, undeclared rental or investment income, property disposals where CGT was not properly computed, and discrepancies between probate valuations and market evidence. Where Revenue issues a query, the personal representative must respond within the timeframe specified. Failure to do so can result in the clearance request being closed without resolution, requiring a fresh submission.
The interaction between the PR1 probate application and the tax clearance process is a critical planning point. The PR1 application to the Probate Office does not itself require tax clearance, but the personal representative cannot safely distribute the estate without it. The practical effect is that executors should begin the tax registration and return-filing process as early as possible, ideally in parallel with the probate application, to avoid bottlenecks at the distribution stage.
Executor duties in Ireland extend beyond tax compliance to encompass the proper management and distribution of the estate. Several recurring questions arise in practice.
Can an executor sell property without beneficiaries’ consent in Ireland? Generally, yes, an executor has the power to sell estate assets where the will grants such authority, or where a sale is necessary to pay debts, taxes, or administration expenses. However, the executor must act in the best interests of the beneficiaries and obtain proper market valuations. Where the will is silent on sale powers and the beneficiaries object, a court application may be required. Prudent executors obtain written consent from all residuary beneficiaries before disposing of significant assets.
The personal representative must pay the deceased’s debts in the order prescribed by law before distributing the residue. Funeral and testamentary expenses rank first, followed by secured debts, preferential debts (such as certain employee claims), and finally unsecured debts. Tax liabilities, income tax, CGT, and CAT, must be fully accounted for before distribution. Executors who distribute assets without settling known liabilities risk personal exposure to creditors’ claims.
Beneficiaries are entitled to receive estate accounts showing all receipts, payments, and distributions. While there is no statutory deadline for completing administration, unreasonable delay can give rise to a beneficiary’s right to compel the executor to account. As a matter of best practice, the personal representative should provide interim updates and aim to complete administration within 12 months of the Grant of Probate, though complex estates frequently require longer. Information on the order of inheritance under Irish law is available from Citizens Information.
The following consolidated checklist tracks the process from notification through to final distribution. Executors can use this as a planning framework alongside professional advice.
0–4 weeks after death:
1–3 months:
3–9 months:
9–12+ months:
Knowing how to register an estate for income tax in Ireland is the essential foundation for every subsequent compliance step, from filing the deceased’s final return to securing the clearance needed for safe distribution. The process involves precise form selection (TR4, Form 11, Form 1, IT38), strict adherence to Revenue deadlines, and careful coordination between probate and tax timelines. Executors and personal representatives who approach these obligations methodically, with professional support where appropriate, will protect both the estate and themselves from unnecessary liability. Always verify current deadlines and thresholds directly with Revenue, as rules and processing times are subject to change.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Readers should seek professional guidance tailored to their specific circumstances.
Last reviewed: 31 May 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Helen McGrath at O’Connor LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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