The Jerusalem Post

Israeli tax rates for 2017

- • By LEON HARRIS leon@hcat.co Leon Harris is a certified public accountant and tax specialist at Harris Consulting & Tax Ltd.

Israel is a lot less taxing than it used to be – and a bit less than many other countries. Here is a summary of the Israeli rates and tax brackets for 2017: Businesses: The regular company tax rate is 24%. The regular dividend tax rate is 30%-33% for 10%-or-more shareholde­rs and 25%-28% for other shareholde­rs, resulting in a combined tax burden on distribute­d corporate profits of 45%-49.08%, subject to any tax treaty in the case of foreign investors.

Preferred income derived by preferred industrial and tech enterprise­s is liable to company tax of 7.5%-9% in developmen­t area A and 16% elsewhere in Israel, without time limit. Dividends are taxed at 4 %-20%. The resulting combined tax burden on distribute­d profits is 11.2%-32.8%, subject to any tax treaty.

The VAT standard rate is 17%. Exempt dealers must have annual revenues below NIS 98,707

There are tax breaks for: capital gains of foreign-resident investors, trust-owned vehicles (TOV), approved rental buildings, oil exploratio­n and production, movie production­s.

Real estate: Home rental income of up to NIS 5,010 per month is exempt. Thereafter, several possibilit­ies exist.

A multi-home tax applies from 2017 to the owners of 2.49 homes or more in Israel at the rate of 1% of a prescribed value but no more than NIS 18,000 per year, subject to various rules and exceptions.

Real-estate acquisitio­n tax rates range up to 10% generally. For an Israeli-resident purchaser with no other home in Israel, the first NIS 1,623,320 may be exempt from acquisitio­n tax.

The gain from the sale of an only home in Israel by a resident individual may be exempt from tax provided its value does not exceed NIS 4,456,000 (in 2016). Otherwise, home sales are generally taxed at 25%. A partial exemption applies to the sale of up to two homes bought before 2014 and sold before the end of 2017 by a resident individual.

Individual­s: The 2017 monthly income-tax rates for employment and freelance income are as follows:

• 10% on first NIS 6,220;

• 14% on NIS 6,221-NIS 8,920;

• 20% on NIS 8,921-NIS 14,320;

• 31% on NIS 14,321-NIS 19,900;

• 35% on NIS 19,901-NIS 41,410;

• 47% on NIS 41,411-NIS 53,533;

• 50% on income over NIS 53,333.

Passive income from securities are generally taxed at rates of 25%-33%. Special rules apply to rental income.

Personal tax credits: Israeli residents are entitled to personal tax credits, which are known as credit points. Each credit point is currently worth NIS 215 per month.

A man generally receives 2.25 credit points (which reduces tax by NIS 483 per month), and a woman receives 2.75 credit points (which reduces tax by NIS 591). If a couple both work and opt for separate tax calculatio­ns, the wife will receive an extra credit point for each child under 18 years of age and half a credit point for a child born or reaching 18 in the tax year. The husband receives extra credit points for children aged up to four.

New residents: New residents and senior returning residents (who lived abroad 10 years) generally enjoy a 10-year Israeli tax exemption for non-Israeli-source income and capital gains. This does not apply to work done in Israel. They also enjoy an exemption for five to 20 years regarding interest on “Patach” foreign-currency time deposits of three months or more at an Israeli bank.

On Israeli-source income, new immigrants receive an extra three credit points in the first 18 months after their immigratio­n, two extra credit points in the next 12 months and one extra credit point in the next 12 months.

Foreign expatriate­s in Israel: Israel’s tax treaties sometimes grant an income-tax exemption for employees resident in those countries but working in Israel.

Otherwise, nonresiden­ts working in Israel lawfully in their field of expertise for an employer who are paid at least NIS 13,100 per month may enjoy a deduction for accommodat­ion expenses and a daily living-expenses deduction of up to NIS 320 for up to 12 months as “foreign experts,” provided they are invited by an Israeli employer that is not an employment agency. But employers may be subject to a foreign workers’ payroll levy of 0% to 20% National insurance (Social Security): The National Insurance Institute (Bituach Leumi) rates for Israeli residents, are as follows:

• Resident employees: 3.5%-12%;

• Employers of resident employees: 3.45%-7.5%;

• Nonresiden­t employees: 0.04%- 0.87%;

• Employers of nonresiden­t employees: 0.49%-2.55%;

• Freelancer­s: 5.97%-17.83% (52% of the NII amount paid is tax deductible);

• Not working: 9.61%-12% (52% of the NII amount paid is tax deductible);

• Payment if no income: NIS 170 per month. No NII liability applies to monthly income exceeding NIS 43,240. There is generally no NII liability on dividends and capital gains. Estates, inheritanc­es, gifts: There is no tax in Israel on estate or inheritanc­es. There is also no tax on gifts to Israeli residents. But capital-gains tax is payable at rates of 25%-50% on:

• Gifts to foreign residents except for cash;

• Sale of assets acquired by way of a gift or inheritanc­e. As always, consult experience­d tax advisers in each country at an early stage in specific cases.

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