DUBLIN, May 6 (Reuters) - Ireland collected 4.2% more tax at the end of April than in the same period last year when the one-off proceeds of a ruling on Apple back taxes are excluded, the finance ministry said on Wednesday.
A surge in corporate tax receipts has driven Ireland's overall tax take to record levels in each of the past five years, contributing to significant budget surpluses during most of that time, even as spending has risen sharply.
The finance ministry upgraded its forecasts last month and now expects to take in 4.8% more tax this year than in 2025, excluding the Apple back taxes. The increase in the first four months was driven by a 5.7% jump in income tax receipts and a 4.5% rise in VAT payments.
Less than 10% of corporate tax is paid in the four months and receipts were up 8.6% year-on-year during that period. The finance ministry expects corporate tax receipts to rise by 7% to 35 billion euros this year and account for almost a third of all tax collected.
Government expenditure increased at a faster rate in April and was 8.9% higher year-on-year due to a 9.3% rise in spending on public services and a 5.3% boost in investment in capital projects.
Ireland had a headline exchequer deficit of 4.7 billion euros ($5.53 billion) at the end of April, though that was largely due to the timing of transfers to new sovereign wealth and savings funds, the finance ministry said.
While the ministry expects to run an exchequer deficit of 1.2 billion euros this year, it also hiked its forecasts last month for a 2026 general government surplus of 9.2 billion euros from the 5.1 billion euros expected six months ago.
The general government balance, which includes all public sector revenues and expenditure, would equate to a surplus of 2.5% of modified gross national income. ($1 = 0.8505 euros) (Reporting by Padraic Halpin Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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