Earned Income Tax Credit 2026 — €2,000 income tax reduction for self-employed

Earned Income Tax Credit Ireland 2026

If you are self-employed in Ireland, you are entitled to the Earned Income Tax Credit — a €2,000 reduction in your income tax bill. It was introduced to match the PAYE Tax Credit that employees receive. Every self-employed person who files a tax return should be claiming this credit.

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Earned Income Tax Credit 2026 — At a glance

Credit amount
€2,000 per year
What it reduces
Income tax only — not PRSI or USC
Who it applies to
Self-employed and proprietary directors
Combined with PAYE credit
No — only one credit applies
How to claim
Form 11 (self-assessment) or Revenue myAccount

How the credit works — examples

The Earned Income Tax Credit directly reduces the income tax you owe. It does not reduce PRSI (Class S, 4%) or USC. Here are examples for different levels of self-employment income:

How the €2,000 EITC reduces your income tax bill (2026)

Net self-employment incomeIncome tax before EITCEITC appliedIncome tax after EITC
€15,000/year€1,550−€1,550 (credit limited to tax owed)€0
€20,000/year€2,860−€2,000€860
€30,000/year€5,060−€2,000€3,060
€50,000/year€14,260−€2,000€12,260
€80,000/year€26,260−€2,000€24,260

Figures are approximate, based on 2026 income tax rates: 20% on income up to €42,000 (single person), 40% above. Standard credits (personal credit, EITC) applied. PRSI and USC are additional and not shown.

EITC vs. PAYE Tax Credit

CreditAmount (2026)Who gets it
PAYE Tax Credit€2,000Employees with PAYE income
Earned Income Tax Credit€2,000Self-employed and proprietary directors

The two credits are equivalent in value — self-employed people receive the same base income tax reduction as employees. Before 2016, self-employed people received a lower credit, creating an imbalance. This was phased out by 2020.

Who qualifies

  • Sole traders and freelancers in any sector
  • Self-employed tradespeople (plumbers, electricians, builders)
  • Self-employed delivery drivers, cleaners, childminders
  • Farmers with self-employment income
  • Artists and performers with self-employment income
  • Proprietary directors — company directors owning more than 15% of shares

Full self-employed tax picture

The Earned Income Tax Credit is one of several tax reliefs and credits for self-employed people. On top of the EITC, self-employed people may also qualify for:

  • Personal Tax Credit (€1,875 in 2026 — everyone gets this)
  • Home Carer Tax Credit if a spouse cares for children or dependents
  • Pension contributions deduction — reduce taxable income by contributing to a pension
  • Business expenses — all legitimate costs are deducted before calculating taxable profit
d'Emilia Accounting

This credit is claimed through Form 11 — need help filing?

Marina Luna is a specialist in self-employment tax returns in Ireland. She ensures your Earned Income Tax Credit and all other eligible credits are correctly applied in your annual Revenue submission.

Frequently asked questions

What is the deadline for claiming the EITC?

The EITC is claimed on your annual tax return (Form 11), which is due by 31 October each year for the previous tax year (or mid-November if you file and pay via ROS online). Missing the deadline incurs surcharges — 5% of tax owed for up to 2 months late, 10% after that.

Can a company director get the EITC?

Yes — but only a proprietary director (one who owns more than 15% of shares) qualifies. A company director who owns no shares is treated as a PAYE employee and gets the PAYE Tax Credit instead.

Is the EITC refundable?

No. The credit reduces your income tax to zero at most — if your income tax bill is lower than €2,000, the credit reduces it to zero but you do not receive the difference as a cash refund.

Do I need an accountant to claim EITC?

Not necessarily. If your tax affairs are straightforward, you can file through Revenue myAccount. However, for most self-employed people with business income and expenses, an accountant ensures you claim all allowable deductions and credits correctly, including the EITC.

What if I have both PAYE income and self-employment income?

If you have mixed income, Revenue allocates the €2,000 tax credit. You cannot receive both a full PAYE Tax Credit and a full Earned Income Tax Credit — one credit of €2,000 applies based on your primary income. Revenue's tax credit allocation system manages this on your return.

Common misunderstandings about the Earned Income Tax Credit
  • The credit reduces income tax only — PRSI (4% Class S) and USC are charged separately and are unaffected by the credit.
  • The credit is not refundable — if your income tax bill is less than €2,000, you get a €0 bill but no cash back.
  • Self-employed people cannot claim both the EITC and the PAYE Tax Credit — only one applies.
  • The credit must be claimed on a tax return — it is not applied automatically without filing.
  • A company director who owns less than 15% of the company's shares is treated as a PAYE employee, not self-employed, for tax credit purposes.

This page was reviewed against official Revenue.ie guidance and updated to reflect the 2026 Earned Income Tax Credit rate.

Reviewed by

Vitor Alves

Founder of D’Emilia Accounting

Tax adviser and accountant helping immigrants and businesses in Ireland.

Last reviewed: June 24, 2026 · About this site