Irish Daily Mail

Renters’ tax credit ‘is not enough’

- By Cate McCurry

TENANTS will not see a major benefit in receiving the Government’s tax credit, as rents are too high and people are struggling to find properties, a renter has said.

It was announced in yesterday’s Budget that people who rent are to receive a tax credit worth €500 for 2023. However, Niamh Crowley, a tenant in Co. Carlow, said it is a fraction of what people pay every month in rent.

The childcare worker, from Dublin, had to move out of the city and away from family and friends as she couldn’t afford to pay rent on a property there.

The 29-year-old had been living with her mother but wanted independen­ce and to find a property of her own.

Reacting to the Government’s decision to give renters a tax credit, Ms Crowley said: ‘The tax credit is not enough. It might help some people, but it also does nothing for people who cannot find somewhere to rent. A couple of hundred euro is a fraction of what we are paying.

‘Moving to Carlow was my only option if I wanted to move out of my mum’s. I also found it difficult to get a property in Carlow and I only got somewhere through knowing people locally.

‘My rent now is much cheaper than Dublin, but I’m very lucky in the house I got. The last place I got in Carlow was quite high and I had to leave as it was not affordable. It’s not great to live away from everybody. I find that I am travelling home every weekend to Dublin to see family and friends, as I don’t know that many people here. I am paying so much money on petrol it’s ridiculous.’

She said that ‘it’s hard as I’m 29 and I want to move on to the next stage of my life and settle down, but I don’t want to settle down in Carlow’. She added: ‘I feel like I am building up this base here. Then, when I find something, I will have to leave all this and start again.

‘I am starting to build friendship­s here and meet people in the community, but it’s not my plan to be here forever... but I feel like it’s going to continue like this forever. I know I’m not going to live right by all my friends in Dublin, that’s understand­able. But it is hard to be so far away from my whole family. I can’t stop in with my man and have a cup of tea.

She said she is ‘on an OK wage now, but not anywhere close to anyone I know’. She added: ‘I’ve ten years’ experience and a degree in childcare and I still get paid less than many other jobs. I always wanted to do childcare and I worked hard in college to get me through it.’

Ms Crowley welcomed the decision to give €600 towards householde­rs’ energy bills. ‘The energy credit will help a bit. I am used to living on a significan­tly lower wage than I am on, so I am used to spending less,’ she said. ‘I find that buying for one person costs the same as buying for two.’

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 ?? ?? Decision: Niamh Crowley moved to Carlow from Dublin
Decision: Niamh Crowley moved to Carlow from Dublin

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