Draft regulations for tax free savings published

Friday, November 14, 2014

Pretoria - National Treasury has published the draft Notice and Regulations required to allow the introduction of tax free savings accounts as of March next year.

The draft Notice and Regulations aims to encourage people to save.

The draft Regulations detail the products that will qualify as ‘tax free investments’ to be included in the tax free savings accounts, the disclosure requirements in respect of those products and the process for transferring amounts within a tax free savings account to a different service provider.

“The draft Notice lists the service providers that may offer tax free savings and investments to the public and administer those accounts on their behalf,” said National Treasury on Friday.

The objective of introducing the tax free saving accounts is to encourage individuals to save, which would reduce their financial vulnerability and reliance on debt when there are unexpected shocks to their normal income or sudden large expenditures.

A secondary objective is to increase the overall level of savings in the economy, which would bring wider macroeconomic benefits, noted National Treasury.

The Taxation Laws Amendment Bill 2014 (TLAB) includes a new section 12T that defines a ‘tax free investment’ to be a savings product, financial instrument or policy that must comply with these Regulations.

The new provision also states that all returns from such products will be tax free in the hands of the individual who owns them. An individual may contribute up to R30 000 per year in tax free savings and investments with a lifetime contribution limit of R500 000.

Licenced banks, long term insurance companies, managers of registered collective investment schemes, authorised users, linked investment service providers and the National Government will be able to offer tax free savings accounts.

National Treasury further added that the draft regulations follows the principle that products qualifying as tax free savings and investment should be simple to understand, transparent in their disclosure and suitable for the majority of individuals making use of such savings and investment products.

The draft Regulations allow for products that are issued by banks, long term insurance companies and managers of collective investment schemes.

“However those products may not have restrictions on when those returns are paid or on the level of returns paid to the individual. Products with performance fees will also not qualify as tax free investments.”

In a similar obligation to those imposed on collective investment schemes (Unit Trusts), products that expose an investor to an excessive level of market risk are excluded.

Products must also allow individuals to be able to access their savings and investment within seven business days after they request it. In the case of fixed deposits (or policies with a guaranteed return) early withdrawal penalties are allowed, but they may not exceed the amount specified in the draft Regulations.

Individuals with tax free savings accounts will be permitted to transfer any portion of the value in that account to another service provider and service providers must be able to facilitate such a transfer.

The draft Regulations state that the service provider must provide the individual with a certificate indicating the details of the transfer (such as the value to be transferred, the date of transfer and the new service provider to which the transfer is being made).

The individual then has two weeks to transfer the amount to the new service provider and the transferred amount will not count towards the annual contribution limit.

The public has until 3 December to comment on the draft regulations.

Written comments should be submitted to Janice Stoddart at janice.stoddart@treasury.gov.za. – SAnews.gov.za