A look at tax regulations for investors in South Africa

Taxes levied by the national government of South Africa under the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 (the Act) include the following:

  • Normal tax also known as income tax;
  • Provisional tax, which forms part of income tax;
  • Capital gains tax, which forms part of income tax;
  • Withholding tax on royalties; and
  •  Dividends tax.

1. Income Tax 

South Africa has a residence-based income tax system which has the effect that:

  •  A resident’s worldwide taxable income is subject to income tax in South Africa; and
  • A foreigner’s (a person that is not a resident) taxable income from sources within South Africa is subject to tax in South Africa. The South African government has entered into agreements for the avoidance of double taxation with various countries, to prevent the same income from being taxed twice. Should a single source of income be taxed in both countries, a credit will normally be allowed in the country of residence for the tax paid in the other country.

2. Resident Rules 

2.1 Companies & other entities: Based on the definition of the term “resident”, a person, other than a natural person, for example, a company or a trust, will be a resident if it is incorporated, established or formed in South Africa or has its place of effective management in South Africa.

2.2 Avoidance of double taxation: A double taxation agreement (DTA) is an international agreement aimed at eliminating or providing relief from international double taxation. However, such agreements also enable exchange of information between tax administrations, provide for a mutual agreement procedure to assist in resolving any conflict arising out of the interpretation or application of the DTA and may allow for tax collection on the other tax administration’s behalf. The increasing interdependence and cooperation between the modern world economies and cross-border trading makes it necessary for countries to enter into such agreements, thereby providing not only security for a country’s residents in cross-border interactions, but also in terms of encouraging outside investment.

It must be emphasised, however, that a DTA does not impose tax. Tax is imposed in terms of a country’s domestic law. A DTA’s purpose is to allocate taxing rights. Generally, it will provide for income to be taxed solely in one country or, if it remains taxable in both countries, for a taxpayer’s country of residence to be obliged to grant relief in terms of an article on elimination of double taxation. In South Africa, should an amount qualify for relief in terms of the said article, relief will be granted in the form of a credit. Reduced levels of withholding taxes, in situations where double taxation is permitted, are also provided for. A list of the DTAs in force in South Africa is available on the South African Revenue Service (SARS) website under Legal & Policy > International Treaties & Agreements > Double Taxation Agreements & Protocols.

As each DTA is unique, the relevant agreement must be consulted and the provisions therein adhered to. The SARS website also provides details of progress made with regard to DTAs currently being negotiated but not yet entered into force.

2.3 Unilateral relief for foreign taxes paid: The domestic tax legislation of each country will apply independently of each other where there is no DTA between the relevant countries.

A resident who is taxable in South Africa on income received from a foreign country and who is liable for tax in the foreign country on that income will be allowed a credit for the foreign tax paid against the South African tax liability. In order to qualify for this credit the taxes must have been payable to the government of any country other than South Africa, without any right of recovery of the tax payable.

It will be necessary for a resident to submit proof of foreign taxes paid or payable. An assessment or the equivalent thereof, tax receipts or an official document will generally be accepted as proof of foreign tax paid or payable. This rebate may be granted in substitution for and not in addition to the relief to which a resident would be entitled under a DTA.

2.4 Investment income & dividends: Dividends received by or accrued to person, whether a resident or a non-resident, from South African resident companies are generally exempt from income tax. Foreign dividends received by or accrued to residents are generally subject to income tax. Residents may claim a credit for foreign tax paid by them on the foreign dividends against their South African income tax liability. The following are some of the specific exemptions relating to foreign dividends:

• Foreign dividend received by or accrued to a person (together with companies forming part of the same group of companies which holds at least 10% of the total equity shares and voting rights in the company declaring the foreign dividend);

  • Foreign dividend received by or accrued to a foreign company and the foreign dividend is paid or declared by another foreign company declaring the foreign dividend;
  • Foreign dividend is received by or accrued to a person in respect of a listed share (as defined) and does not consist of a distribution of an asset in specie;
  • Foreign dividend is received by or accrued to a resident company in respect of a listed share (as defined) and does not consist of a distribution of an asset in specie; and
  • Foreign dividends received by or accrued to residents where a controlled foreign company (CFC) is involved.

2.5 Business income: Business income received by or accrued to a non-resident from carrying on a trade or business within South Africa is taxable in South Africa. The taxability of the income may be affected by a DTA. Normally, profits will be taxed in the country of residence unless the business is carried on in the other country through a permanent establishment. The term “permanent establishment” is defined in the DTA and generally means a fixed place of business through which the business of the enterprise is wholly or partly carried on.

3. Companies & Businesses 

3.1 Tax consequences for companies: The shareholder of a company and the company are separate taxable entities. In addition, ownership of the company (ownership of the shares), and management of the day-to-day activities of the company are also usually separate. Companies – other than gold mining companies, small business corporations or micro businesses – are required to pay tax on their taxable income at a flat rate of 28%. A company which is not a “resident” as defined in the Act, carrying on a trade within South Africa, is likewise taxed at a rate of 28% on income derived from a source within South Africa.

3.2 Controlled foreign companies: A CFC is any foreign company of which more than 50% of the total participation rights in that foreign company are held, or more than 50% of the voting rights in that foreign company are directly or indirectly exercisable, by one or more persons that are residents of South Africa, other than headquarter companies.

4. Provisional Tax

Provisional tax is not a separate tax, but refers to advance payment made or to be made by a provisional taxpayer to the commissioner for SARS in a manner provided for by the Act. A provisional taxpayer includes a company.

Provisional tax payments are based on a taxpayer’s estimated taxable income for a specific tax year. The final income tax liability for that tax year will be determined upon assessment.

Payments are normally made by way of two payments, the first of which is usually within the period ending six months after the commencement of the year of assessment and the second payment on or before the last day of the year of assessment. These payments alleviate the burden of one large amount being payable on assessment as it spreads the income tax burden over the tax year.

Failure to make such payments may result in interest being levied and a penalty being imposed upon assessment. In the case of an overpayment of provisional tax, interest on overpaid amount is payable to the taxpayer upon assessment.

5. Capital Gains Tax (CGT)

5.1 Introduction: CGT was introduced with effect from October 1, 2001 (referred to as the “valuation date”) and applies to the disposal by the taxpayer of an asset on or after that date. All capital gains and capital losses made on the disposal of assets are subject to CGT unless excluded by specific provisions. The eighth schedule contains the CGT provisions which determine a taxable capital gain or assessed capital loss. Section 26A of the Act provides that a taxable capital gain must be included in taxable income. Since CGT forms part of the income tax system, the capital gains and capital losses must be declared in the annual income tax return.

5.2 Registration: A person who is registered as a taxpayer for income tax purposes need not register separately for CGT. A person who is not a resident, whose sole source of taxable income comprises a taxable capital gain needs to register as a taxpayer at a SARS branch office. For example, this may occur when a person who is not a resident of South Africa, and has no South African-source income disposes of immoveable property in South Africa.

5.3 Rates: For companies, 66.6% of the net capital gain is included in their taxable income and subjected to income tax at the company rate of 28%. The effective rate of CGT is 18.65% for companies.

6. Withholding Tax On Royalties

Finances received for the imparting of any scientific, technical, industrial or commercial knowledge or information, commonly known as know-how payments, are specifically included in the definition of the term “gross income”, and are taxable.

A final withholding tax of 15% (or a lower rate determined in a relevant agreement for the avoidance of double taxation) is payable on royalties or similar payments (South African source) made to a person who is not a resident for:

  • The use or right of use of, or permission to use any intellectual property as defined in section 23I; or
  • The imparting of or the undertaking to impart any scientific, technical, industrial or commercial knowledge or information. The withholding tax must be paid over to SARS by the last day of the month following the month during which the royalty is paid. The exemptions from withholding tax on royalties are:
  • Foreign natural person who is physically present in South Africa for more than 183 days during a period of 12 months preceding the date on which the royalty is paid;
  • Property subject to royalty withholding tax is connected to a permanent establishment of the foreign person who is a registered taxpayer; or
  • Royalty paid to a headquarter company relating to intellectual property to which section 31 of the Act does not apply.

7. Withholding Tax On Interest 

With effect from March 1, 2015, the interest paid to a foreign person from a source within South Africa is subject to withholding tax on interest at the rate of 15%.

The withholding tax on interest is a final tax. This means the foreign person is liable for the withholding tax on interest.

The withholding tax must be paid over to SARS by the last day of the month following the month during which the interest is paid. Exemptions from withholding tax on interest include:

  • Interest paid to a foreign person by the government, a bank, South African Reserve Bank, the Development Bank of Southern Africa or the Industrial Development Corporation;
  • Interest paid to a foreigner in respect of any listed debt;
  • Interest paid to a foreign natural person who is physically present in South Africa for a period of more than 183 days during the 12 months before the date on which the interest is paid; or
  • The debt claim in respect of which the interest is paid is effectively connected with a permanent establishment of a foreign person in South Africa who is a registered taxpayer.

8. Dividends Tax 

8.1 Introduction: Dividends tax applies to any dividend declared and paid by any company other than a headquarter company. Although dividends tax is part of the Act, it is a separate tax from income tax.

In 2007 the Minister of Finance announced that the secondary tax on companies would be replaced with the dividends tax. In the years since that change was announced, legislation has been enacted to provide a legislative foundation for the implementation of the tax. The dividends tax legislation subsequently went into effect on April 1, 2012.

8.2 Tax liability: The liability for dividends tax is triggered by payment of the dividend, falls on the recipient (i.e., beneficial owner) of the dividend, and is to be withheld from the dividend payment by either the company distributing the dividend or, where relevant, certain other withholding agents.

Dividends in specie is an exception to this general principle as the liability for the dividends tax remains with the company paying the dividend, and is not transferred to the recipient. Further, there are certain transactions that are deemed to be dividends for purposes of the dividends tax, such as where low/ no interest is charged in respect of a debt that arose by virtue of a share held in the company.

8.3 Withholding tax: The regulated intermediary or the company declaring the dividend withholds 15% of the value of the dividend. The dividends tax is a withholding tax and should be withheld from dividend distributions and paid to SARS by the company paying the dividend or, where the company makes use of a regulated intermediary, by the latter. The person liable for the dividends tax retains the ultimate responsibility to pay the tax should any of the withholding agents fail to withhold.

8.4 Exemptions to dividends tax: The dividend payments could be exempt from dividends tax depending on the nature or status of the recipient. The exemptions are “elective” in the sense that it will only apply where the company distributing the dividend or regulated intermediary receives the required notifications (“declarations” and “undertakings” in the form prescribed by SARS) from the recipient prior to payment of the dividend. The recipient needs to submit both of the following:

  • Declaration by beneficiary owner; and
  • Undertaking by beneficiary owner to inform SARS of future changes. Where the notifications as indicated are not submitted in time the withholding agent is required to withhold tax at the full rate. However, under these circumstances the beneficial owner has three years to submit the required notifications and claim a refund from the person who withheld the dividends tax from the dividend payment.

8.5 Foreign dividends: Payments to foreign residents may be subject to a reduced rate where the relevant DTA between South Africa and their country of residence provides for such. This normally requires the foreign beneficial owner to be a company and to hold between 10% and 25% of the share capital of the South African company paying the dividend. To qualify, the foreign resident needs to declare their status (by way of a similar “declaration” and “undertaking” referred to above) to the company declaring the dividend or the regulated intermediary involved. If they do not, the withholding agent is required to withhold tax at the full rate (with similar refund rules as explained in paragraph 8.4 above being applicable).

9. External Companies  

9.1 Requirements to register as an external company: Under South Africa’s corporate legislation, the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the Companies Act), companies that are incorporated in a jurisdiction outside of South Africa must register as an external company with South Africa’s Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (the Commission) within 20 business days after it first begins to conduct business within South Africa. The Commission is the regulatory body which is largely responsible for regulating the Companies Act. The Companies Act prescribes that a foreign company must be regarded as conducting business within South Africa if that foreign company is, inter alia, “a party to one or more employment contracts within South Africa”.

9.2 Registration process: An external company must register by filling with the Commission the CoR20.1 form (notice of registration of an external company), which must be accompanied by, among other things, the following:

  • A certified copy of the company’s constitutional documents filed in the jurisdiction in which the external company is incorporated;
  • A certified copy of the company’s certificate of incorporation or comparable document issued by the jurisdiction in which the external company is incorporated;
  • If the constitutional documents or certificate of incorporation of the external company (or comparable documents filed in the jurisdiction in which the external company is incorporated) are not in an official language of South Africa, translation of these documents, including the translation certificate, must also be filed; and
  • Certified copies of passports or identity documents of all directors of the external company. The COR20.1 form must set out the address of its principal office outside of South Africa, the names of its directors at the time that it files that notice, the address of its registered office in South Africa and the name and address of the person within South Africa who has consented to accept service of documents on behalf of the external company.

A filing fee of R400 ($35) is required to be paid for the filing with the Commission of all the documentation necessary for registration. It is likely that it will take between four and six weeks to receive the certificate from the Commission confirming registration as an external company together with a registration number. A failure to register as an external company in terms of the Companies Act within three months of commencing business in South Africa could result in the Commission issuing a compliance notice to the foreign company requiring it to register within 20 business days of receipt of the notice, or if it fails to register within this time, requiring the foreign company to cease carrying on its business or activities in South Africa. Registration as an external company merely confirms that the foreign company in question is presented and conducts business in South Africa as well as in its country of origin.

9.3 Legal nature of an external company: An external company is not a different legal entity to the foreign-based corporation. Accordingly, unlike in the case of a wholly owned South Africa incorporated subsidiary, the liability incurred or assets acquired by the external company will be the liability and assets of the foreign company. This means that the liabilities of the external company are not ring-fenced for the purpose of the foreign-based corporation. Similarly the directors of the foreign-based corporation will be the directors of the external company.

9.4 Companies Act & external companies: An external company is required to continuously maintain at least one office in South Africa and must register the address (and any changes thereto) of its office or principal office, if it has more than one office, initially by providing the required information upon registration and subsequently by filing a notice of change of registered office with the Commission.

An external company must also ensure that it files annual return in the prescribed form (COR30.3) with the required fee (dependent upon the annual turnover of the external company) with the Commission within 30 business days after the anniversary date of its registration as an external company. Failure to file annual returns for two successive years may result in the external company being deregistered.

The company must file a notice with a COR39 form within 10 business days after a person ceases to be a director of the external company, or after the external company becomes aware that any information in regards to its directors has changed. Should the details of the person within South Africa who has consented to accept service of documents on behalf of the external company change, a C0R21.2 form will have to be filed advising the Commission of this change. An external company is not required to prepare or maintain financial statements.

An external company is not required to appoint an auditor or lodge audited annual accounts with the Commissioner. However, from a practical perspective, accounts will nevertheless need to be drawn up by the external company for the purpose of submitting its South African tax return. SARS has in the past insisted that the accounts of South African branches be audited. The Companies Act requires that an external company must provide its full registered name or registration number to any person on demand and cannot misstate its name or registration number in a manner that is likely to mislead or deceive. A contravention of this section is an offence.

The Companies Act requires that an external company approve, by special resolution of the shareholders of the external company, a fundamental transaction (i.e., a disposal of the majority of a company’s assets, a merger or a scheme of arrangement) in certain circumstances if the external company is a holding company of a South African subsidiary.

An external company falls within the ambit of the provision dealing with the protection of whistleblowers who disclose contraventions of the Companies Act by an external company.

9.5 Public officer requirement for external companies: An external company is required to appoint a public officer who must reside in South Africa. Although this may be open to dispute, SARS are currently interpreting this to mean that the public officer must be a tax resident in South Africa.

Essentially, the public officer is the tax representative and will also be responsible for accepting services of all processes on the behalf of the external company in respect of tax matters.

A public officer is generally responsible for the company’s compliance with all of its tax obligations. These obligations include ensuring that the company’s tax returns are submitted to SARS in a timely manner and in the prescribed form, responding to any queries that SARS may have and ensuring that the taxes payable by the company are actually paid over by the company to SARS.

10. Employers Tax

10.1 Introduction: Employees’ tax, which is also referred to as “Pay As You Earn”, is the tax that employers are required to withhold from the remuneration of employees and pay to SARS on a monthly basis on behalf of their staff. Employees’ tax is a withholding tax on employment income and will thus be offset against each employee’s final income tax liability for the applicable year of assessment.

10.2 Registration: An individual who becomes liable for any income tax or who must submit an income tax return is required to apply to SARS within 21 business days of becoming liable. A taxpayer must complete an IT 77 registration form. An individual who receives taxable income in excess of a specific amount (known as the “tax threshold” amount) in the year of assessment is liable for income tax.

10.3 Year of assessment: A year of assessment for an individual taxpayer consists of 12 months beginning on the first day of March of a specific year and ending on the last day of February of the following year. Income tax returns must be submitted to SARS on an annual basis during the period announced by the Commissioner in the government gazette.

Failure to submit income tax returns on time may attract certain administrative penalties which will be levied in the terms outlined in Chapter 15 of the Tax Administration Act (the TA Act). Taxpayers may file their income tax returns with the authorities either electronically or manually.

10.4 Provisional tax: Employees’ tax and provisional tax are not separate taxes, but they help in relieving the tax burden that would exist on assessment, by spreading the payments over multiple periods instead of one lump sum payable at year end.

An individual who derives income that does not constitute remuneration (for example, taxable interest, rental or business income) must pay provisional tax. A provisional taxpayer is:

  • Any individual who earns business income or farming income;
  • Any company or close corporation; or
  • Any person who is notified by the Commissioner that he or she is a provisional taxpayer. A provisional tax return (IRP6) must be completed by estimating the individual’s total taxable income for the year of assessment and determining the income tax payable on the estimated taxable income. The estimate may not be lower than the individual’s taxable income (as assessed by SARS) for the previous year of assessment, known as the basic amount, unless permission is obtained from SARS. An individual who has no assessed taxable income for a previous year of assessment must estimate his or her taxable income for the current year of assessment as accurately as possible.

Provisional tax is paid twice a year (or on a six-monthly basis). The first payment is due at the last business day in August and the deadline for the second payment is the last business day of February the following year. A third or “top-up” payment can be made to avoid interest; this payment is due seven months after the end of the year of assessment.

10.5 Penalties: Individuals who do not comply with their tax obligations may be liable to certain penalties. The two broad categories of penalties introduced by the TA Act on October 1, 2012 are:

  • Administrative non-compliance penalties in terms of Chapter 15 of the TA Act, intended mainly to promote compliance with the administrative provisions of the TA Act, and
  • Understatement penalties in terms of Chapter 16 of the TA Act, intended to punish and deter conduct that contravenes the law.

10.6 Administrative non-compliance penalties: This fixed-amount penalty may be levied when a taxpayer fails to comply with an obligation imposed by or under any tax legislation.

Currently the only non-compliance that could be subject to this penalty is failure by a natural person to submit an income tax return by the due date. This category of penalty is applicable for years of assessment commencing on or after March 1, 2006 where a person has two or more outstanding income tax returns for such years of assessment. Fixed-amount penalties are payable at a fixed rate per month. The amount of the penalty is dependent on the amount of taxable income received by a taxpayer in the preceding year of assessment; or on whether that individual is in an assessed loss position.

10.7 Understatement penalties: Understatement penalties are levied in cases where more serious contraventions of a tax act take place. The penalty is levied in terms of a prescribed table if one of the understatements listed below takes place that either prejudices SARS or the fiscus:

  • A default in rendering a return;
  • An omission from a return;
  • An incorrect statement in a return; and
  • If no return is required, the failure to pay the correct amount of tax. 10.8 Interest: Interest at the prescribed rate may be charged under the following circumstances:
  • If a taxpayer is late in paying his or her income tax that is due on assessment; or
  • If the provisional tax is not paid in full within the applicable prescribed period. 10.9 Criminal offences: Criminal offences relating to non-compliance could be committed if an individual does not comply with an obligation imposed under a tax act. These offences are committed if the person performs or fails to perform an act wilfully and without just cause. If convicted, the person is subject to a fine or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years. Offenses could be:
  • The failure to register or notify SARS of a change of particulars when required;
  • Failure to retain records;
  • Failure or neglect to submit a return or document to SARS or issue a document to a person as required;
  • Failure to provide information, documents or material facts to SARS as and when required under a tax act; and
  • Obstructing or hindering a SARS official in carrying out his or her duties. Criminal offences relating to tax evasion could be committed if a person intentionally evades tax or obtains an undue refund, or assists another person in such an endeavour.

If convicted, that person may be subject to a fine or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding five years. This category additionally includes the making of false entries in books of account or returns without reasonable grounds for believing that entry to be true, providing false answers to information requests and fraud.

Criminal offences relating to filing a return without authority occur where a person:

  • Submits a return or other document to SARS under a forged signature;
  • Uses another person’s electronic or digital signature without that other person’s consent; or
  • Submits to SARS a communication on behalf of another person without that person’s consent. A person convicted could be subject to a fine or imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years.

11. Value-Added Tax

11.1 Introduction: Value-added tax (VAT) is a transactional tax which is levied on taxable supplies of goods and services. This is the tax that is borne by the end users (non-registered VAT vendors) of those goods and services. This is simple because the registered VAT vendors are able to pay and/or claim back the tax portion that has been charged on a price of those goods and services supplied. The current tax rate charged is 14%.

11.2 Registration for VAT: Any person (including a public authority, municipality, company, any body corporate or incorporate, the estate of any deceased or insolvent person, any trust fund and any foreign donors) which carries on an enterprise as defined is mandatory to register for VAT when the taxable supplies received for a period of 12 months exceeds the threshold of R1m ($86,400).

Furthermore, any person who has an enterprise and taxable supplies exceed R50,000 ($4320) for a period of 12 months may voluntary register for VAT. Only persons who make wholly or partially taxable supplies are required to register for VAT. All persons that are in the course or furtherance of the exempt supplies are not supposed to be registered for VAT. This is because exempt supplies are specifically excluded in the definition of an enterprise.

11.3 Registering for VAT after threshold: Effective from April 1, 2015 any person who is liable to register for VAT (VAT vendors) but is not registered and who is carrying on an enterprise as defined may not be able to recover the VAT portion that is payable to SARS on the supply made by him subsequently to the registration. Here we are referring to a person who have concluded a contract agreement for more than R1m ($86,400) but have failed to register for VAT before the contract agreement was concluded.

11.4 VAT returns & submission: Registered VAT vendors are required to submit their VAT 201 returns and account for VAT to SARS at regular intervals (tax period). Depending on the total value of the taxable supplies made in the period of 12 months and the type of the industry the vendor is in, the tax period varies from one month to 12 months. The VAT 201 returns should be submitted to SARS before the 25th of the following month of the tax period.

11.5 Claiming input VAT: Input VAT is deductible against output VAT only when the goods and/or services are acquired by the vendor wholly or partly for the purpose of consumption, use or supply in the course of making taxable supplies.

The vendor must be in possession of a valid tax invoice from the supplier to be able to claim input VAT. Vendors are not permitted to claim input VAT against any personal expenditures.

11.6 Apportionment of input VAT: When the goods and/or services are acquired wholly for making taxable supplies, input VAT is deducted in full. When the goods and/or services are acquired wholly for making exempt supplies, input VAT is denied. When the goods and/or services are acquired to make both taxable and exempt supplies, section 17(1) provides that the input VAT must be apportioned. Before the input VAT is apportioned, the VAT vendor needs to determine the costs incurred that are directly attributable in making taxable supplies. Once those costs are determined, apportionment needs to be made on the costs that are of mixed supplies. Direct attribution means that the expenditure was incurred either wholly for making taxable supplies, in which the case input VAT can be deducted in full, or wholly for making exempt or other non-taxable supplies, in which the case no input VAT is deductible.

When the expenditure incurred cannot be directly attributed because it relates to both taxable and exempt and/or other non-taxable supplies, that expenditure must be apportioned. That means expenditures that need to be apportioned are general business overhead costs. The process of applying direct attribution can be facilitated by the way in which an enterprise organises its different activities, e.g., its business units, into those making taxable goods and those producing tax-exempt supplies.

The apportionment ratio must be determined by using a method approved by SARS. Since the November 2000 tax period, the only approved method which may be used to apportion input tax without specific written approval from the Commissioner is the turnover based method (TBM). This method is used as a default because there is usually a fairly good correlation between the turnover of a business and its resources which are employed to produce the turnover. However, there are circumstances where the TBM is not appropriate, proves impossible to use or does not yield a fair approximation.

If this is the case, the vendor must approach SARS to obtain consensus on an alternative method that yields a more accurate result. In choosing the method, it must achieve a “fair and reasonable” result that is a proper reflection of the manner in which the vendor’s resources are applied.

The TBM of apportionment constitutes a binding general ruling No. 16 issued on March 25, 2013 in accordance with section 89 of the Income Tax Act, 1962 (Act No. 58 of 1962). This binding general ruling went into effect an April 1, 2013 and will remain in force until withdrawn or replaced.

TBM is expressed as follows: Y= A/(A+B+C ) X 100 where Y= apportionment ratio; A= value of all taxable supplies (including deemed taxable supplies); B= value of all exempt supplies; C= sum of any other amounts not included in A or B, which was received or accrued during the period in question.

11.7 Importation of goods & services: The VAT Act defines what goods are and what services are. There is a difference in treating these components when imported for VAT purposes.

Because goods are tangible, the Customs Act requires that they should be imported in 1 of 43 designated commercial ports in South Africa. Imported goods should be for consumption, use or supply in the course of making taxable supplies for input VAT to be claimable. The vendor would need to hold valid documentations as prescribed by both the VAT Act and Customs Act. Furthermore, the vendor or his agent would have had to make payment for VAT and Custom to the Customs Office in order to clear the goods through these designated commercial ports. Therefore regular importers or their clearing agents can apply to obtain access to a deferment facility.

A deferment facility allows importers a credit facility with SARS for a specified amount for Customs duty and VAT payable. They will then need a valid contract agreement between SARS and the vendor and/ or his clearing agent. SARS may require a bank guarantee in certain instances before issuing the deferment facility. Currently, vendors who are on invoice basis and payment basis are required to furnish SARS with certain documentation. These documents support the claim of input VAT. Effective from April 1, 2015, the Customs Office has modernised South Africa’s Customs system to be an automated work-flow-driven system. This will allow Customs officers and taxpayers to complete all clearance processes end-to-end without having to perform manual functions. Accordingly, paper-based documents are no longer generated and issued to vendors.

Imported services are defined as services made by a supplier who is not a resident of South Africa or who conducts business outside of the country. These services are supplied to a recipient who is a resident in the country to the extent that those services are not used in the course of making taxable supplies. The recipient is therefore required to declare and make payment to SARS at the standard rate of 14%.

There are also instances where VAT is not payable for services imported. These include the services of a non-resident employee under employment contract or supply of educational services by an institution established in an export country which is regulated by the relevant educational authority in that country.

You have reached the limit of premium articles you can view for free. 

Choose from the options below to purchase print or digital editions of our Reports. You can also purchase a website subscription giving you unlimited access to all of our Reports online for 12 months.

If you have already purchased this Report or have a website subscription, please login to continue.

The Report: South Africa 2016

Tax chapter from The Report: South Africa 2016

Articles from this chapter

This chapter includes the following articles.
The Report: South Africa 2016

The Report

This article is from the Tax chapter of The Report: South Africa 2016. Explore other chapters from this report.

Covid-19 Economic Impact Assessments

Stay updated on how some of the world’s most promising markets are being affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, and what actions governments and private businesses are taking to mitigate challenges and ensure their long-term growth story continues.

Register now and also receive a complimentary 2-month licence to the OBG Research Terminal.

Register Here×

Product successfully added to shopping cart