P60


In the United Kingdom, a P60 is a statement issued to taxpayers at the end of a tax year. It is important a taxpayer does not destroy the P60 forms issued to them, as they form a vital part of the proof that tax has been paid. They were also issued in Ireland until the 2018 tax year.

Ireland

In Ireland, P60s were abolished from 1 January 2019.
In 2018 and previous years, it detailed a taxpayer's taxable income and deductions made by PAYE, PRSI, health levy, and Universal Social Charge for that year. If the taxpayer's liability to tax for any year needed to be reviewed, they would need to send one part of the Form P60 to their Revenue Office. If they needed to claim a Social Welfare benefit, they would send the second part to the Department of Social Protection as evidence that they had paid PRSI contributions.
For employers, the P60 documents for their employees accompanied other documents sent in an end-of-year package which included the P35 document. The employers then passed on the P60 to their employees.
Proprietary company directors also filled in a "Form 11" or a "Form 12 Directors" at end of year.

United Kingdom

In the UK, the P60 form is issued by employers to each of their employees to detail the employees' taxable income and deductions made by PAYE for that year. Historically, it was the third part of a triplicate form, the front two parts being P14. P14 part 1 was sent to the Contributions Office, P14 part 2 was retained by the tax office with which the PAYE scheme is registered, however P60 continues to be issued to the taxpayer. The P60 has to be given to employees by 31 May. Parts 1 and 2 of the P14 were rendered redundant by at the beginning of the 2013/2014 tax year.