PROVISIONAL TAX

Provisional taxpayers must comply with all requirements for filing returns and making payments in order to avoid risk of penalties and interest. Our article provides guidance on the risks attendant on being a provisional taxpayer, and how to mitigate them, as well as a short insert regarding COVID-19 tax relief.

Taxpayers who are required to pay provisional tax must comply with additional tax filing obligations together with their usual obligation to file an annual income tax return. As provisional taxpayers, these persons must quickly become familiar with their provisional tax obligations, failing which they are at risk of paying interest and/or penalties, in addition to the income tax payable.

Provisional tax obligations

In brief, provisional taxpayers must accurately estimate their taxable income for the year of assessment in question and pay income tax on this in advance. The estimate of taxable income is declared by completing and submitting a provisional tax return (IRP 6) twice per year, and simultaneously paying the corresponding amount of tax (if any). Provisional tax obligations are, therefore, separated into obligations in respect of each period, being the first and second periods.

The due dates for provisional tax payments, relative to the first and second periods, are typically as follows:

Where any provisional taxpayer fails to comply with their provisional tax obligations, the penalties and interest which may be imposed will depend on whether the non-compliance was in respect of the first or second period.

First Period

Penalty for late payment of provisional tax

Provisional taxpayers are obliged to make timeous payment of their provisional tax. In the case of an individual (or trust), the due date would typically fall on 31 August and, in the case of a company, payment is due within six months from date of commencement of its financial year.

The failure by a provisional taxpayer to make payment on time will result in the imposition of what is known as a “penalty for late payment of provisional tax”, which is imposed in terms of paragraph 27 of the Fourth Schedule to the Income Tax Act, read with Chapter 15 of the Tax Administration Act. This penalty is calculated at 10% of the provisional tax amount not paid.

By way of a simple example, if a provisional tax amount of R700 000 was not paid or is paid late, the penalty that is levied will be 10% of R700 000, being R70 000.

Interest on overdue provisional tax as a result of late or non-payment

Interest is levied, in terms of section 89bis(2) of the Income Tax Act, on provisional tax due by the taxpayer as a result of late or non-payment and will continue to accrue until the taxpayer has paid the tax in full. Interest on overdue provisional tax is calculated at the “prescribed rate”, which is the rate of interest fixed by the Minister of Finance by notice in the Government Gazette.

Whilst the prescribed rate of interest fluctuates over time, the Government Gazette, dated 27 March 2020, published an interest rate of 9,75% as of 01 March 2020. The varying interest rates levied since 1 July 1982 have been tabulated by SARS and are available on the SARS website.

Second Period

Penalty and interest for late payment of provisional tax

The penalty imposed and interest levied for late payment of provisional tax, as discussed relative to the first period, are equally applicable to the second period. A failure by a taxpayer to make payment on time, typically 28 or 29 February, will result in the imposition of a 10% penalty and interest thereon at the prescribed rate until payment of the tax in full.

Penalty for the underpayment of provisional tax as a result of underestimation

A provisional taxpayer is at risk of a second type of penalty, imposed in terms of paragraph 20 of the

Fourth Schedule to the Income Tax Act, read with Chapter 15 of the Tax Administration Act, where the taxpayer’s actual taxable income for the year of assessment in question is more than the estimate of taxable income declared by the taxpayer to SARS on their provisional tax return. The taxpayer’s actual taxable income is determined on assessment of their normal income tax return, which is submitted subsequent to the filing of their provisional tax return.

The calculation of this penalty (known as an “underestimation penalty”) depends on whether the taxpayer’s actual taxable income is more than R1 million or whether the actual taxable income is equal to or less than R1 million. This will determine both the room for error, i.e., how much the taxpayer must have underestimated for the penalty to arise, as well as the amount of the penalty payable.

  1. Actual taxable income equal to or less than R1 million

If the taxpayer’s actual taxable income for the year of assessment was equal to or less than R1 million, an underestimation penalty will be levied if the taxpayer’s second period estimate of taxable income was less than 90% of the taxpayer’s actual taxable income, and the estimate was less than the “basic amount” applicable to the second period.

The basic amount is the taxable income assessed for the preceding year of assessment, less certain prescribed amounts as detailed in SARS’ Interpretation Note 1, titled “Provisional Tax

Estimates” (issue 3). A penalty will, therefore, not be levied if the taxpayer’s second period estimate of taxable income was greater than the applicable basic amount.

The amount of the underestimation penalty is calculated as 20% of the difference between: