Tax efficient giving

Have you donated to the Irish Cancer Society in the last four years? If so, just a moment of your time could make all the difference to someone living with cancer. And it won’t cost you a penny. Read on to learn more

Kids dressed in yellow holding daffodils

This will help our specialist cancer nurses to support even more patients nationwide, in hospitals, online and by phone through our Support Line. It will support more families with direct financial help and specialist services when their child receives a cancer diagnosis. Our Night Nurses can provide end-of-life care for more cancer patients in their own homes.

But we cannot do anything unless you sign and return your tax-back form today.

Did you know you can allow the Irish Cancer Society to claim 44.9% in tax back on your donations over €250, at no cost to you, our donor. That’s an additional €112.25 on top of a €250 donation. All you need to do is sign and return a CHY3 tax-back form so we can claim the tax back from the Revenue Commissioners.

By completing a CHY3 form, you can unlock much needed income which could fund life-saving, cancer research or the delivery of a range of services that will improve the lives of people living with cancer.

Ways to complete a CHY3 Enduring Certificate

Frequently Asked Questions

After the end of any year in which your donations total €250 or more, we will send you a CHY3 form to complete (unless you have already completed one for that period).

  • If you are a taxpayer, complete the form and return it to the Irish Cancer Society. We will then send a claim to Revenue. When they are satisfied that you paid at least that amount in tax, they will send us the money.
  • Note: Please send your completed CHY3 form directly to the Irish Cancer Society, not Revenue.

Your donation will be worth an additional 44.93%. So, if you donate €250, we can claim €112.33 tax back from revenue, meaning your original donation is worth €362.33 to the Irish Cancer Society. 

That depends. We can only claim tax back on donations made to the Irish Cancer Society, which come from you personally, not from a group fundraising activity. (e.g. if you bought raffle tickets, raised sponsorship yourself or sponsored someone to go on an overseas trek, they would not qualify).

  • You will have received no tangible benefit from this personal donation.

If in doubt, do get in touch, and we can let you know if your donation qualifies.

Absolutely. Your details will remain completely confidential to the Irish Cancer Society and the Revenue Commissioners. The information will not be used for anything other than the tax claim. And you don’t need to tell us how much tax you pay or whether you are PAYE or self-assessed. All we need is your signature and PPS number. We will retain this number securely and only for the purposes of obtaining the tax back on your donation.

Not at all. It won’t cost you a penny in tax or affect your tax status in any way.

Yes. If you are jointly assessed as a couple either party can sign the form using either person’s PPS number. 

If you have a pension, investments or any other means on which you pay either income or capital gains tax, we can claim on this amount.

  • I’m self-employed/self-assessed – don’t I get the tax relief myself?

    Since 1 Jan 2013, self-assessed and PAYE taxpayers are treated the same – all tax relief goes to the charity, not the taxpayer. So, while you don’t get the relief yourself, your donations to the Irish Cancer Society can be worth 44.9% more, at no extra cost to you.

It doesn’t matter if you have given to other charities as well. You can send in the tax form to each charity. We only reclaim tax on the donations you made to the Irish Cancer Society (assuming you donated €250 or more to us within a year). All charities can claim separately for donations you’ve made. 

Notable

  • Only personal donations to value €250 and above made to the Irish Cancer Society in one or more of the last four calendar years qualify for the Tax-Efficient Giving programme.
  • A personal donation is considered a donation made by you from your own personal funds directly to the Irish Cancer Society.
  • Donations made to other individuals/entities that are collecting/fundraising on behalf of the Irish Cancer Society or where your donation is consolidated with donations from other donors are not considered a personal donation for the purpose of tax reclaims to Revenue.

Fundraise

Fundraise

Whether you're running a marathon or shaving your head to raise money to fund our work, we'll appreciate your amazing support!

Volunteer

Volunteer with the Irish Cancer Society

One of the many ways that you can get involved with us is by volunteering with our organisation. Learn more by clicking the link below.