Should You Exit the Irish Rental Market in 2026?
42,300 landlords have left the Irish rental market since 2020. With the new March 2026 rules adding 6-year minimum tenancies and tighter restrictions, the question many landlords are asking is: should I be next? Here’s a structured framework to help you decide.
Why Landlords Are Leaving
The exodus isn’t driven by one thing — it’s a combination of factors that have made renting out property increasingly difficult for small, individual landlords:
- Taxation: Rental income taxed at up to 52% (income tax + USC + PRSI). Ireland has some of the highest landlord tax rates in Europe
- Regulation: New 6-year minimum tenancies, nationwide rent caps, tighter eviction rules, increased RTB obligations
- Property prices: High sale prices make exiting attractive. Many landlords who bought during the downturn can lock in significant capital gains
- Management burden: Compliance, maintenance, tenant disputes, tax filing — it can feel like an unpaid second job
- Better alternatives: Diversified investment portfolios offer comparable or better returns with zero management burden
The Five Questions That Decide It
1. What’s your net return on equity?
Not gross yield — your actual cash return on the equity you have tied up in the property. If your property is worth €380,000 and you owe €200,000, your equity is €180,000. If you net €2,000/year after all costs and tax, that’s a 1.1% return on your equity. You could earn 4–5% in a diversified fund with zero effort.
2. How much CGT would you owe?
Capital Gains Tax at 33% on the gain is the biggest factor. But reliefs exist: retirement relief (age 55+), entrepreneur relief, PPR relief. A good tax advisor could save you tens of thousands. Use our Rental Yield Calculator and Landlord Tax Calculator to model your specific scenario.
3. Can you handle the new 2026 rules?
6-year minimum tenancies. CPI/2% rent cap. New RTB data requirements. BER obligations. If compliance feels like a burden now, it’s not getting easier.
4. What’s your 5-year plan?
If you were planning to sell within 5 years anyway, the new TMD rules make that harder. Selling now — before a new tenancy starts under the 2026 rules — gives you maximum flexibility.
5. What would you do with the money?
If the answer is “I don’t know”, that’s a reason to pause. But if you have a clear plan (pay off your own mortgage, invest in a pension, diversify into funds), the numbers often favour selling.
The Numbers Test
Here’s a quick comparison framework:
| Scenario | Annual Return |
|---|---|
| Keep: Net rental income after all costs, tax, and the €1,000 relief | €_________ |
| Sell: Net proceeds invested at 5% annual return | €_________ |
| Difference | €_________ |
If selling and investing beats keeping by more than €2,000–3,000/year, the financial case for exit is strong. Factor in the time, stress, and risk reduction of not being a landlord, and the decision becomes clearer.
Track every deductible expense. Form 11 summary generator. Know your real net profit before you decide.