Silverdale Shopping Centre,
Management Offices,
61 Silverdale Street, Silverdale
Auckland, New Zealand.
Email: Henrico.kotze@randgroup.biz
Mobile: +64 21 265 5066
Hamilton, New Zealand
Email: Bernie.vandermerwe@randgroup.biz
Twitter: @randrescue
Phone: +64 800 726 373
Mobile: +64 21 1950000
PO BOX 430, Silverdale,
0932, New Zealand
Phone: +61 2 90980380
Mobile: +61 468 609 061
Email: Reeva.Cutting@randgroup.biz
Mobile: +64 21 2655 066
Email: Henrico.kotze@randgroup.biz
City business Centre GF02,
27A Michalacopoulou Street,
Nicosia 1075, Cyprus
Phone: +357 25 722 666
Mobile: +357 99 174 073
Email: Elena.vanTrotsenburg@randgroup.biz
Phone: +44 2037738387
Mobile: +64 21 222 7897
Email: Rudi.Stander@randgroup.biz
No. If you were born in South Africa you have the right to return unless the law is changed. In Zimbabwe, Zimbabwean-born citizens lost their right to citizenship because one or both parents had the right to another nationality. This is not the case in South Africa. However, if you become a citizen of another country by application, you lose the right to a South African passport whether you emigrate formally or not. The South African department of Home Affairs may not know of this until you apply for a new passport and answer the passport application question: “Have you ever applied for or been granted citizenship of another country?”
South African exchange control requires a South African bank to be the intermediary between the reserve bank and you. Only a South African bank can certify your form 336 (b) for SARS and the life assurers can only pay the proceeds of your Retirement Annuity into a blocked account. This account can be opened, the proceeds received and remitted to you in your new country. The account can then be closed.
You have to re-open a new account with the bank which handled your emigration. This is where we occasionally have a problem as some banks have failed to keep your records especially if it is more than 5 years since you emigrated. However, the problems are usually solvable.
It is true that since June 2011 the bank can give approval “immediately” to qualifying emigrants who have already left and who have less than R4 million in assets. They also technically do not need a South African bank account. However, in practice, the assurers will not issue a cheque and they are precluded by law from paying into a general bank account. Rand Rescue recommends that an account be opened in your name to ensure you receive all the cash due to you.
Yes, it is true. Preservation funds do not come under pension, provident or retirement annuity fund rules. It is even worse if it is a preservation pension fund. If you have had one withdrawal then at retirement age – minimum age 55 – you can only retire with one third plus a pension. There is talk of this being changed but it has not happened yet.
A good question! If you are in South Africa and approach your own tax office and bankers it can take as little as six weeks to be classed as an emigrant with a blocked account. However, we have postal delays, two to three weeks to receive your original documentation, SARS take two weeks to send the IT21 (a) clearance form from the Durban office to your original office. One Johannesburg tax office application took three months and then the directive was posted to our client instead of to our office. The bank can only work on the original tax clearance letters. They are not allowed to accept certified copies, e-mailed or faxed copies. The bank also takes much longer to re-open an account if you are not in South Africa. After the blocked account is open and clearance given the application to mature your retirement annuity is made and SARS takes around four weeks to calculate your tax and give you a directive. This should improve when it is no longer a manual application. Rand Rescue does, however, keep you informed of progress regularly.
This is the form South Africans have to submit to SARS to formalise their emigration. It must be accompanied by identity documents, passports, permanent residence visas and form 336 (b) among other things. It contains information on the tax payer and all his or her family who are emigrating with him or her. Each spouse must submit their own IT21 (a) form.
This is the form South Africans have to submit to their bankers so his or her bank can make application to the South African Reserve Bank. The bank requires the same forms as SARS except they must be certified copies. The form contains a list of all your assets and liabilities – both spouses must submit their own 336 (b) forms.
If you have not previously submitted the form IT21 (a) and form 336 (b) you have not formally emigrated. This is why SARS ask for copies of these two forms before giving a tax directive to release your Retirement Annuities. Many South Africans have left the country without formally emigrating and they have become residents and citizens of their new country. However, from a South African view point they have not emigrated formally.
South African exchange control requires a South African bank to be the intermediary between the reserve bank and you. Only a South African bank can certify your form 336 (b) for SARS and the life assurers can only pay the proceeds of your Retirement Annuity into a blocked account. This account can be opened, the proceeds received and remitted to you in your new country. The account can then be closed.
A good question! If you are in South Africa and approach your own tax office and bankers it can take as little as six weeks to be classed as an emigrant with a blocked account. However, we have postal delays, two to three weeks to receive your original documentation, SARS take two weeks to send the IT21 (a) clearance form from the Durban office to your original office. One Johannesburg tax office application took three months and then the directive was posted to our client instead of to our office. The bank can only work on the original tax clearance letters. They are not allowed to accept certified copies, e-mailed or faxed copies. The bank also takes much longer to re-open an account if you are not in South Africa. After the blocked account is open and clearance given the application to mature your retirement annuity is made and SARS takes around four weeks to calculate your tax and give you a directive. This should improve when it is no longer a manual application. Rand Rescue does, however, keep you informed of progress regularly.
If you have not previously submitted the form IT21 (a) and form 336 (b) you have not formally emigrated. This is why SARS ask for copies of these two forms before giving a tax directive to release your Retirement Annuities. Many South Africans have left the country without formally emigrating and they have become residents and citizens of their new country. However, from a South African view point they have not emigrated formally.
No. If you were born in South Africa you have the right to return unless the law is changed. In Zimbabwe, Zimbabwean-born citizens lost their right to citizenship because one or both parents had the right to another nationality. This is not the case in South Africa. However, if you become a citizen of another country by application, you lose the right to a South African passport whether you emigrate formally or not. The South African department of Home Affairs may not know of this until you apply for a new passport and answer the passport application question: “Have you ever applied for or been granted citizenship of another country?”
South African exchange control requires a South African bank to be the intermediary between the reserve bank and you. Only a South African bank can certify your form 336 (b) for SARS and the life assurers can only pay the proceeds of your Retirement Annuity into a blocked account. This account can be opened, the proceeds received and remitted to you in your new country. The account can then be closed.
You have to re-open a new account with the bank which handled your emigration. This is where we occasionally have a problem as some banks have failed to keep your records especially if it is more than 5 years since you emigrated. However, the problems are usually solvable.
It is easy to open a new tax account for tax clearance purposes.
A good question! If you are in South Africa and approach your own tax office and bankers it can take as little as six weeks to be classed as an emigrant with a blocked account. However, we have postal delays, two to three weeks to receive your original documentation, SARS take two weeks to send the IT21 (a) clearance form from the Durban office to your original office. One Johannesburg tax office application took three months and then the directive was posted to our client instead of to our office. The bank can only work on the original tax clearance letters. They are not allowed to accept certified copies, e-mailed or faxed copies. The bank also takes much longer to re-open an account if you are not in South Africa. After the blocked account is open and clearance given the application to mature your retirement annuity is made and SARS takes around four weeks to calculate your tax and give you a directive. This should improve when it is no longer a manual application. Rand Rescue does, however, keep you informed of progress regularly.
Yes, it is true. Preservation funds do not come under pension, provident or retirement annuity fund rules. It is even worse if it is a preservation pension fund. If you have had one withdrawal then at retirement age – minimum age 55 – you can only retire with one third plus a pension. There is talk of this being changed but it has not happened yet.
It is true that since June 2011 the bank can give approval “immediately” to qualifying emigrants who have already left and who have less than R4 million in assets. They also technically do not need a South African bank account. However, in practice, the assurers will not issue a cheque and they are precluded by law from paying into a general bank account. Rand Rescue recommends that an account be opened in your name to ensure you receive all the cash due to you.
It is easy to open a new tax account for tax clearance purposes.