South Africa: Tax law changes and tax compliance requirements

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

South Africa: Tax law changes and tax compliance requirements

dachs.jpg

Peter Dachs

Limitation on interest deductions

With effect from January 1 2015 certain limitations will be imposed on the deduction of interest incurred, inter alia, by debtors in the following instances:

  • where the creditor is in a controlling relationship with such debtor; or

  • where there is no controlling relationship but where the creditor has obtained funding from a person in a controlling relationship with the debtor; and

  • where the interest incurred is not, inter alia, subject to South African tax in the hands of the person to which the interest accrues.

These limitations may impact on transactions where foreign funding is obtained by South African borrowers from non-resident lenders. A non-resident lender would not be subject to tax if it qualifies for the domestic interest exemption or treaty relief.

Tax compliance requirements

Government Notice No 506 published in Government Gazette No 37767 on June 25 2014 (GN 506) stipulates who is required to furnish returns for the 2014 year of assessment, inter alia:

  • Every person who is personally or in a representative capacity liable to taxation under the Income Tax Act; and

  • Every company, trust or other juristic person, which is a resident, or every company, trust or other juristic person, which is not a resident which either:

  • carried on a trade through a permanent establishment in South Africa, or

  • derived any capital gain from a South African source or which derived service income from a South African source;

  • Every non-resident whose gross income consisted of interest from a source in the Republic to which the provisions of section 10(1)(h) of the Income Tax Act, do not apply.

The issue arises whether the phrase "liable to taxation under the Act" includes a non-resident that earns South African sourced income but is entitled to full treaty relief from South African tax.

In terms of a SARS private binding ruling, the exemption in respect of treaties comes in after gross income. This supports the view that a non-resident which qualifies for treaty relief would not have "income" as defined and should therefore not be "liable to tax" and accordingly not be required to submit a tax return for the 2014 tax year. It should be noted that a private binding ruling only has a binding effect on SARS in respect of the applicant or co-applicant for the ruling and no third party may rely on any such ruling.

Peter Dachs (pdachs@ensafrica.com)

ENSafrica – Taxand Africa

Tel: +27 21 410 2500

Website: www.ensafrica.com

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

However, women in tax face greater career obstacles than their male counterparts, an exclusive ITR survey of more than 100 women tax leaders revealed
Under Jeff Soar’s leadership, WTS UK aims to scale to 100 partners within five years and challenge the big four
As the firm embarks on a major shakeup of its EMEA partnerships, some staff will be watching nervously
The buyout of Hucke and Associates continues Ryan’s streak of firm acquisitions; in other news, a UK appeal against VAT on private school fees was dismissed
Tax teams are responding to usual client demand in the region, albeit with increased working from home flexibility, local sources indicate
A 120-plus-day delay to refunds would cost taxpayers almost $3bn in additional interest, the Cato Institute warned; plus indirect tax updates from February
The Office for Budget Responsibility’s pessimistic pillar two forecast accompanied the UK chancellor’s muted Spring Statement, dubbed ‘as dull as possible’ by one adviser
Digital tax reform is dissolving the old ‘temporal buffer’, forcing systems, institutions, and professionals to adapt as real-time reporting reshapes governance, capability, and compliance
Our first instalment features analysis of Deloitte’s landmark EMEA merger, Donald Trump’s Supreme Court tariff showdown and Venezuela’s tax evolution
While some believe it could have a positive effect on the wider advisory landscape, others argue that HMRC’s ‘red tape’ exercise won’t deter bad actors
Gift this article