Here’s how South African tax residents and non-South African tax residents are taxed differently
The Covid-19 lockdown and the measures being taken to mitigate it, are severely impacting the South African fiscus.
It is inevitable that The South African Revenue Service (SARS) will be looking for additional revenue, and South Africans living offshore, who are still SA tax residents, may be in for a shock, when SARS claims taxes on eligible assets, says William Louw, director of SA Tax at Sable International.
William Louw explains the tax residency situation and cautions expats to ensure that they know their tax residency status and to get their financial affairs in order before the end of the tax year.
To understand your tax residency status, you first need to work out if you are a South African tax resident or non-South African tax resident. Each category comes with its own requirements, said Louw.
South African tax residents and non-South African tax residents are taxed differently. South African tax residents are required to pay tax on income earned in South Africa and overseas.
This applies whether you reside in South Africa or in a foreign country, said Louw.
Non-South African tax residents are only taxed on their South African-sourced income. For example, if a non-South African tax resident owns a property in South Africa that they rent out, they will need to pay tax in South Africa on the income they earn from that rental.
“You will always submit the tax returns in the country you are not tax resident in first. This way, if you pay tax in the country you are a non-resident in, you can disclose your tax paid in
the country that you are tax resident in and avoid a double taxation and instead pay the higher tax amount between the countries,” said Louw.
For example: If you earn rental income in South Africa but are a tax resident in the UK, you will submit your South African tax return first and pay this tax (should you owe any).
You will then disclose the paid South African tax on your UK tax return and HM Revenue & Customs will tax this amount and if the amount is higher than the tax paid in South Africa you will pay
the extra tax.
The reverse is also true when you are South African tax resident.
Who is a SA tax resident?
You may be living in another country, but if you spend time in South Africa each year or have assets and family based in the country, you could still be treated as a South African tax resident, said Louw.
To ensure you remain compliant and don’t get a surprise tax bill, you should understand the tax residency rules.
“To determine your tax residency status, there are two sets of criteria that you’ll need to check your circumstances against. The first is the ordinary residence test. If you don’t meet the criteria of this test, then you’ll move onto the physical presence test.”
- Step 1 – The Ordinary Residence Test: You can still be regarded as being resident in South Africa regardless of the number of years you’ve spent outside the country.
This is because the South African Revenue Service (SARS) determines your residency by where your assets and family are based as well as the location of your permanent home, among other factors.
In some circumstances, dual residency is also a factor. If, for example, you’ve been working in Dubai for the past 10 years, you could find that you are a dual resident because you are a tax resident in both the UAE and in South Africa, said Louw.
“In this situation, you would need to check if there’s a double taxation agreement (DTA) in place and where that agreement assigns your residency.”
- Step 2 – The Physical Presence Test: This is a calculation of the actual amount of time you physically spend in South Africa.
You are considered a South African tax resident if you meet all of the criteria below:
- 91 days in South Africa in the current year of assessment, and
- 91 days or more in each of the preceding five years of assessment, and
- 915 days in total during those five preceding years of assessment.
Double tax agreements
“If you determine that you are a tax resident in both South African and the country you reside in, you’ll need to check if there’s a DTA in place between the two countries,” said Louw.
A DTA is also sometimes referred to as a double tax treaty. It’s an agreement between two or more countries that prevents your income from getting taxed twice – by the country in which your income is earned and your country of residence, he said.
Tax treaties help determine which country should receive the tax on your income.
To correctly apply treaty relief on your foreign earned income, you will need to consider various factors such as if you have a tax residency certificate, where you have a permanent home and where your centre of vital interests are among other factors, said Sable International.
What about “expat tax”?
From 1 March 2020, only the first R1.25 million earned in foreign income by South African tax residents will be exempt from tax in South Africa.
You need to have spent more than 183 days outside South Africa in any 12-month period and, during the 183-day period, 60 days are continuously spent outside South Africa, noted Louw.
Such absence must be work-related.
For example, if you spend 120 days working abroad and 65 days abroad on holiday, this will not meet the exemption. “Any amount you earn above R1.25 million will be taxed in South Africa at the relevant tax resident’s marginal tax rate,” said Louw.
For example, if you earn R1.6 million, the first R1.25 million is excluded from tax leaving you with R350,000.
If you earn any income in South Africa (such as rental income), this will be added to the R350,000 and the total will be taxed accordingly.
What happens if you don’t comply with SARS?
“If you’re supposed submit a South African tax return and you don’t, or if SARS thinks you need to and you don’t, then you’ll be subject to an administrative (admin) penalty.
“Often, South African tax residents will leave out their foreign income earnings because it’s not taxable in South Africa. SARS requires that South African tax residents declare all their reportable income irrespective of where it’s earned,” said Louw.
South African taxpayers (this includes South African tax residents and South African non-tax residents) who do not submit a return will be charged an admin penalty based on their taxable income, Sable International warned.
Penalties can range from R250 up to R16,000 a month for each month of non-compliance and per return outstanding, it said.
Understanding the terms around South African residency
- South African citizen: A person who was born in South African or obtains citizenship by descent or naturalisation and may hold a South African passport. This is a Home Affairs definition.
- South African resident: Any person who has taken up permanent residence, is domiciled or registered in South Africa. This is a Home Affairs definition.
- Non-South African resident: A person whose normal place of residence, domicile or registration is outside the Common Monetary Area (CMA). This is a Home Affairs and South African Reserve Bank definition.
- South African resident temporarily abroad: A resident who has left South Africa for any country outside the CMA with no intention of taking up permanent residence in another country. This is a South African Reserve Bank definition.
- South African tax resident: Your tax residency status determines how you are treated with regard to taxation in a particular country. An individual is regarded as a tax resident of South African if he or she is ordinarily resident in South Africa or meets the requirements of the physical presence test. This is a tax definition.
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