An another Frequently asked question, which still got wrong by many.
“Is my Solar Export Generation is taxable event in Ireland”
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You are an individual (not a company).
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You generate renewable electricity mainly for your own household’s consumption (typically under 50 kW AC export capacity — i.e., standard micro-generation under ESB Networks NC6/NC7).
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You export surplus energy to the grid and receive payment from your electricity supplier (the Clean Export Guarantee – CEG).
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The payments are made to you personally (i.e., the electricity meter is in your name).
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The tax exemption applies to the income you earn from your supplier for exported electricity — e.g. Energia, Electric Ireland, Bord Gáis, SSE Airtricity, etc.
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This is usually shown on your bill or in your supplier account as “Export Payments” or “CEG Credit.”
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You can earn up to €400 per year tax-free.
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If you earn more than €400, only the excess is taxable at your normal marginal income tax rate.
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You don’t need to file a tax return if your export income is below €400 and you have no other untaxed income.
🔹 Joint Electricity Bills (Important & Often Missed) – added on the 12th of Jan 2026
*thanks for Richard C. for highlighting this section below:
Where more than one individual is named on the electricity bill, each individual can separately avail of the €400 micro-generation income tax exemption.
This means:
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A jointly named electricity bill (for example, a couple or co-owners) can qualify for up to €800 tax-free export income per year (€400 per named individual).
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The exemption is not split between the named individuals — it applies in full to each person.
This position is confirmed in Revenue’s official guidance, which states:
“Where more than one individual is named on the electricity bill each individual can avail of the exemption i.e. the exemption is not split between them.”
— Revenue,
Tax and Duty Manual – Exemption of Certain Profits of Microgeneration of Electricity (Section 2: Qualifying Criteria)
🔹 Practical example
| Scenario | Export Income | Tax Due |
|---|---|---|
| Joint bill (2 names), earns €620 total | €620 | No tax payable |
| Joint bill (2 names), earns €900 total | €900 | Tax applies only on €100 (€900 − €800 exemption) |
| Single-name bill, earns €620 | €620 | Tax applies on €220 (€620 − €400 exemption) |
📌 Important:
The electricity account must genuinely be in both names. If only one person is named on the bill, only one €400 exemption applies, even if two people live in the property.
|
Scenario
|
Export Income
|
Tax Due
|
|---|---|---|
|
Home with 6 kW solar PV, earns €320 in CEG credits
|
€320
|
No tax payable
|
|
Home earns €550 in export payments
|
€550
|
Tax applies only on €150 (the amount above €400)
|
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Originally applied for 2022–2025.
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Now extended until 31 December 2028 (confirmed in Budget 2025).
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It applies only to individuals — not limited companies or partnerships.
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It covers electricity exported to the national grid — not private energy sharing.
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It’s an income tax exemption only — VAT and other business taxes don’t apply unless you’re operating as a commercial generator.
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Finance Act 2022, Section 216D of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997.
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Extended by Budget 2025 (Revenue guidance update pending but confirmed in Budget documents).
“What do I do if I get more than €400 credit? Is tax deducted by the electricity supplier?”
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Electricity suppliers (e.g. Electric Ireland, SSE Airtricity, Energia, Bord Gáis, etc.) do not operate PAYE or withhold any tax on your export payments.
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They pay you the full amount (either as a credit on your bill or a bank transfer), regardless of whether it’s under or over €400.
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If your total export income exceeds €400 in a calendar year, you are legally required to declare the excess on your annual income tax return.
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Only the amount above €400 is taxable.
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If you’re not normally filing a tax return (PAYE only):
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You can use Revenue’s “MyAccount” portal → ‘Declare other income’ → ‘Other income not subject to PAYE’.
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Enter the export income and specify that it is “microgeneration export income.”
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If you are a self-assessed taxpayer, include it on your Form 11 under “Other income.”
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The excess over €400 is taxed at your marginal income tax rate (20% or 40%), plus USC and PRSI if applicable.
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Example:
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You receive €600 from your supplier in 2025.
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€400 is exempt.
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You pay tax only on €200, at your own rate.
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|
Export Income
|
Supplier Withholding
|
You Need to File?
|
Taxable Portion
|
|---|---|---|---|
|
€350
|
No
|
No
|
None
|
|
€420
|
No
|
Yes
|
€20
|
|
€700
|
No
|
Yes
|
€300
|
“How to declare it If you’re not normally filing a tax return (PAYE only)”
“Do I include the full amount here or the excess amount only?”
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If your total export income is €600,
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You enter €200 (the amount above the €400 exemption limit)
under “Other income not subject to PAYE”, with a note saying “Microgeneration export income – €400 exempt under Section 216D TCA 1997.”
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That portion is completely disregarded for tax purposes (it’s not even included as “exempt income” in the return).
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You are only required to report the taxable balance once the total exceeds €400.
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Log into MyAccount → Declare other income → Other income not subject to PAYE
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Enter only the portion above €400
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Add a note:“Micro-generation export income – first €400 exempt under Section 216D TCA 1997.”
☀️ How to Declare Micro-Generation Export Income (Over €400)
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Your Revenue MyAccount login: https://myaccount.revenue.ie
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The total amount you were paid by your electricity supplier for exported electricity (e.g. Energia, SSE Airtricity, Electric Ireland).
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Confirm that your total export income is above €400 in that tax year.
🪜 Step-by-Step Instructions
“Manage My Record → Declare Other Income”
“Other income not subject to PAYE”
“Micro-generation export income – €400 exempt under Section 216D TCA 1997.”
Example:
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Total export income = €650
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Enter → €250
Revenue will automatically include this small taxable amount in your end-of-year balancing statement.
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The first €400 per year is completely tax-free — no need to declare it.
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Only amounts above €400 are taxable at your normal income tax, USC and PRSI rates.
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Suppliers do not deduct tax — you are responsible for declaring any excess.
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Keep a copy of your export payment statements from your electricity supplier as backup.
|
Year
|
Supplier
|
Export Income
|
Tax-Free
|
Taxable
|
Where to Declare
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
2025
|
SSE Airtricity
|
€360
|
€360
|
–
|
Not required
|
|
2025
|
Energia
|
€620
|
€400
|
€220
|
MyAccount → Declare Other Income
|
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Visit www.revenue.ie (official page)
- Read the Official “Exemption of Certain Profits of Microgeneration of Electricity” https://www.revenue.ie/en/tax-professionals/tdm/income-tax-capital-gains-tax-corporation-tax/part-07/07-01-44.pdf
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Or call the Revenue PAYE helpline: 01 738 3636
