Daily Maverick

What you need to know about ‘financial emigration’

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Answer

Financial emigration has been replaced by the concept of being “ordinarily resident” in a country. This is a fairly loose term but it boils down to which country is the place that you actually call home now.

As you have been living in Australia for the past five years, it would be safe to say that you would pass the test of being ordinarily resident in Australia.

When you notify the South African Revenue Service that you are ordinarily resident in Australia, it will trigger a capital gains tax (CGT) event. As your only asset is your preservati­on fund, CGT will not be an issue. However, if you had other investment­s in South Africa, CGT would have to be paid, even if you had not sold them.

What to do with the retirement fund

As South African retirement products can

only be transferre­d to other retirement funds registered within South Africa, you cannot transfer your preservati­on fund to a retirement fund in Australia.

You must either withdraw the proceeds or retire from the fund.

Withdrawal of proceeds

Your money is in a preservati­on fund. You are allowed to make one withdrawal from it.

If you have not made that withdrawal before, you may withdraw the full value of this preservati­on fund and transfer it across to Australia.

If you have made a prior withdrawal, you may withdraw the proceeds from the preservati­on fund if you have not been resident in South Africa for an uninterrup­ted period of three years. The withdrawal will be subject to tax as per the table below.

You will get the following if you withdraw:

Retiring from the preservati­on fund

You may retire from the fund from the age of 55. You can take one-third of the investment out as a lump sum and have the balance paid out as an annuity. Your lump sum would be:

In addition to this, you will have an amount of R1,066,667 that must be used to buy an annuity.

Now, depending on your broader financial plan, you may want to use the South African investment to give diversity to your investment portfolio. You would use an annuity drawdown rate of 5%. If you want to get your funds out of South Africa as quickly as possible, you can draw down at 17.5% and exhaust the capital within a couple of years.

I usually recommend to my clients that they have the annuity paid annually, as it is just simpler to transfer the funds overseas.

This is what the annual annuities would look like: Kenny Meiring

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