Your employer is obliged to give you a P60 if you’re still in their employment at the end of the tax year (5th April). If you’re working multiple jobs at the same time and still employed by all of them on 5th April, you should get multiple P60s for that tax year – one from each employer.
Do employees get P60?
2018 is the final year that you will issue a P60 to employees. From 1 January 2019, the P60 is abolished and replaced with an Employment Detail Summary, in line with PAYE Modernisation. From 2019 onwards, an Employment Detail Summary is available to employees through MyAccount.
Does a P60 show all jobs?
You get a separate P60 for each of your jobs. There’s a separate guide to getting P60s if you’re an employer. If you’re working for an employer on 5 April they must give you a P60. They must provide this by 31 May, on paper or electronically.
Is the P60 being replaced by an employment detail summary?
The P60 – a certificate detailing total pay and deductions including PAYE, PRSI and the Universal Social Charge – is being replaced by an Employment Detail Summary.
When do employers have to report p45s and P60s?
As part of PAYE modernisation, P45s and P60s have been abolished and replaced with an online system. Since 1 January 2019, employers have to report details of their employees’ pay, income tax, PRSI and USC to Revenue every time they pay their employees.
Do you have to request P60 from PAYE?
They do not have request a P60. You are obligated to automatically send the P60 either via paper or electronic form. If you are paid a salary via PAYE in your company you should also generate your own P60 at the end of the tax year.
When do you get your P60 tax return?
A P60 is an official form you obtain at the end of the tax year. It indicates how much you’ve earned over the tax year (this starts on 6th April, and ends on 5th April of the following year), as well as the amount you’ve paid in PAYE income tax and National Insurance contributions.