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Cross-border productions — Ireland + Northern Ireland + UK

Last verified 28 May 2026


A cross-border production is one where production activity, financing, talent or distribution spans the Ireland / United Kingdom jurisdictions. Most commonly Ireland and Northern Ireland, sometimes extending into Great Britain (Scotland / Wales / England) for additional funding.

Cross-border is one structuring pattern, not the default. Many Northern Ireland productions are NI-only (NI-shot, NI-financed via NI Screen Fund + sister funds + AVEC — UK Audio-Visual Expenditure Credit + BBC NI), and many Ireland productions are Ireland-only (Section 481 — the Irish scripted tax credit + Screen Ireland + a domestic broadcaster). Togra serves all-island producers — see Niall's project memory on Togra's all-island scope.

When producers structure cross-border

Reasons to structure cross-border include:

Stacking the tax credits

Each tax credit is calculated against expenditure in its own jurisdiction — no double-counting:

Both credits can run on the same production provided the spend is cleanly attributed. The producer maintains separate Irish + UK cost accounting against the relevant credit's qualifying-expenditure rules.

State aid — the post-Brexit position

The EU state-aid framework that caps Section 481 — the Irish scripted tax credit and Section 487A — the Irish unscripted tax credit at 50% applies to EU Member State public funding. Post-Brexit, the UK is not a Member State.

UK public funding does not count toward the Irish state-aid cumulation cap. Concretely:

The 60% cross-border allowance under the Cinema Communication applies only where more than one EU Member State funds the production. Ireland + UK does not get the 60% allowance.

See State Aid — the EU cumulation cap and its mitigations for the full rule and AVEC — UK Audio-Visual Expenditure Credit for the explicit position (UK funding is not EU state aid post-Brexit).

The state-aid arithmetic on the Irish side of a cross-border production therefore remains the standard 50% cap. Over 50% disqualifies S487A entirely (under Section 487A — the Irish unscripted tax credit). On S481, low-budget / "difficult" film certifications may permit higher intensity — see Low-budget and "difficult" film certifications — exceeding the 50% state-aid cap.

Corporate structure

A cross-border production typically uses:

  • An Irish DAC — when required DAC (qualifying company) for the S481 side
  • A UK SPV (qualifying company under AVEC rules) for the AVEC side
  • A co-production agreement governing IP, recoupment, and the flow of funds between the two entities

Specialist legal advice is essential — this is not a structure to attempt without it.

Some producer companies have bases in both jurisdictions (Irish entity + NI entity under common ownership). Such a group can host the Irish DAC + the UK SPV under one slate, simplifying group-level reporting.

Common patterns

  • Belfast-set drama: BBC NI commission + NI Screen Fund + sister funds + UK AVEC, with Irish co-production element + S481
  • Animation co-production: UK + Irish animation studios working in parallel under a co-production treaty
  • Cross-border documentary: split filming + post + financing across the two jurisdictions
  • Cross-border drama with NI shoot + ROI post: NI Screen + AVEC on the shoot, S481 on the post

How Togra supports cross-border productions

A cross-border production can carry both an S481 readiness tracker and an AVEC tracker in parallel. State-aid cumulation is calculated across all funders and credits regardless of jurisdiction. Funder progress reports surface NI Screen + Screen Ireland + BFI deliverables side by side. Where the producer company group has bases in both jurisdictions, group-level reporting consolidates across the slate.

Sources

  • · European Audiovisual Observatory IRIS-1 (May 2026)
  • · Common Irish + UK indie production practice