The Star Early Edition

SA tax residents abroad soon to pay Sars 45%

- RUAAN VAN EEDEN

SOUTH Africans living and working abroad should be doing more to prepare themselves for the implementa­tion of the country’s new expatriate tax on March 1, 2020.

Under the new legislatio­n, South African tax residents abroad will be required to pay tax to Sars of up to 45% of their foreign employment income, where it exceeds the R1 million exemption threshold.

The only practical way to avoid doing so is to financiall­y emigrate through a formal process which, as a consequenc­e, ceases tax residency, or to cease tax residency, without the need to formally emigrate.

But many South Africans living abroad aren’t aware of the new requiremen­ts or the consequenc­es or choosing to follow the financial emigration or cessation of tax residency route.

My concern as a tax practition­er is that not many expatriate­s in this position understand what the impact is going to be.

Unfortunat­ely, many expats believe that they are non-residents from a tax perspectiv­e, because of the fact that they’ve spent a number of years outside South Africa, and their stated intention is to never come back to the country.

This is simply not the case. Unless you have financiall­y emigrated, or ceased tax residency (without necessaril­y emigrating), you are still a South African taxpayer as far as Sars is concerned. And this means that you should have been submitting informatio­n about your income to the revenue authoritie­s during the years you worked outside the country.

Choosing which option to take isn’t always easy either.

What a lot of expats have discovered as part of this process is that if they cease South African tax residency, there’s a deemed exit charge from a capital gains tax perspectiv­e at a maximum effective rate of 18%, which most of them haven’t budgeted for.

This is particular­ly true of South Africans living in low tax jurisdicti­ons like Dubai – where no income tax is levied – who may have built up substantia­l offshore assets with tax-free income.

Expatriate­s in this position need to take a very hard look at their finances and see whether or not it makes financial sense to formally exit the South African tax net and suffer a once-off capital gains tax charge at a maximum effective rate of 18% on their worldwide assets.

Figuring out what action to take can be challengin­g. It’s an emotionall­y and technicall­y delicate position with a number of variables to consider.

What is clear, however, is that doing nothing is not an option. Managing Director, Tax Advisory at the Geneva Management Group

 ?? African News Agency (ANA) ?? Even if you work overseas, Sars demands you pay them tax. | OUPA MOKOENA
African News Agency (ANA) Even if you work overseas, Sars demands you pay them tax. | OUPA MOKOENA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa