General view of the city centre skyline showing residential and commercial buildings in Dublin, Ireland, January 25, 2022. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne

DUBLIN (Reuters) -Ireland expects to collect 34 billion euros in corporate tax next year, up substantially from the 28 billion euros forecast earlier this year, Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe said on Friday.

Ireland has collected record levels of tax each year since 2021, primarily due to huge increases in corporate receipts paid mainly by a small number of foreign multinationals and which now make up almost a third of all receipts.

Dublin had anticipated that its corporate tax revenues would take a hit from 2026 as a result of global tax reforms agreed in 2021, but Donohoe said that would now not happen next year due to one pillar of the deal not being implemented.

He also cited continued strong economic performance for the increase from a forecast 32 billion euros this year, which was also revised up on Friday from a prior 31 billion euros.

Donohoe gave the updated forecast after figures from his department showed tax revenues were 1.1% higher than expected during the first nine months of 2025, after posting year-on-year growth of 4.6%, excluding one-off proceeds from a ruling related to Apple's back taxes.

Corporate tax receipts so far this year were 4.5% more than the finance ministry had expected, while growth rates so far this year of 4% in income tax and 4.8% in VAT were slightly lower than forecast, the finance ministry said.

Donohoe also said there would not be a repeat of recent cuts to income tax rates in Tuesday's expansionary budget for 2026, with the tax package instead focused on jobs and investment.

"If I was to aim to make progress on all of these matters together, I would end up proposing a tax package that I believe would be too big for Ireland and would pose risks to us in the future," Donohoe told a press conference.

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Alex Richardson)