Interpretation Note 4 - 2018 (Issue 5) – “Physical Presence Test” - Layman Version
Purpose
- The Note explains the Physical Presence Test.
- It applies only to natural persons who are not ordinarily resident in South Africa during a tax year.
- If you pass this test, you become a tax resident under section 1(1)(a)(ii) of the Income Tax Act.
Background (Why It Matters)
- Since March 1, 2001, South Africa uses a residence-based tax system.
- Residents are taxed on worldwide income.
- Non-residents are taxed only on SA-sourced income.
- You become a resident by either:
- Being ordinarily resident, or
- Passing the Physical Presence Test (and not being exclusively resident of another country under a tax treaty).
What Is the Physical Presence Test?
- You meet this test if, in the relevant tax year and the five preceding years:
- You spent more than 91 days in South Africa during the current tax year.
- You spent more than 91 days in South Africa during each of the five previous years.
- You spent a total of more than 915 days in South Africa across those five previous years.
- If you meet all three conditions, you are considered a tax resident for that year.
Counting Days: What Counts as a Day?
- Any part of a day in SA counts as a full day (e.g., arriving at 23:55 = 1 day).
- Days in transit without formally entering (e.g. at airport but not through immigration) are excluded.
- Arrival and departure days (as stamped in your passport) are included.
Examples
- Example 1: Missed the 915‑day total
- Over five years you spent 563 days total in SA — below 915 → Test fails → Not a resident under this test.
- Example 2: All three conditions met
- Over five years: 975 days total
- More than 91 days each year
- In current year: 108 days
→ Passes test → Resident from start of that tax year.
When Does Residency Start or End?
- Start: If you pass the test in Year 6, you’re a resident from the first day of that tax year (e.g. March 1).
- Cease: If you then stay outside South Africa for at least 330 consecutive full days, you stop being a resident from the day you left.
- Note: The physical presence test is repeated every year if you’re still not ordinarily resident.
Interaction with Tax Treaties
- If a double-tax agreement (DTA) says you’re only resident in another country, you are not a South African tax resident, even if you pass the physical presence test.
- Treaty definitions take priority over domestic law under section 1(1).
Summary Overview
- The Physical Presence Test offers a second route to tax residency for those not ordinarily resident.
- You must meet all three thresholds (current year, each prior year, and total days) to qualify.
- Once qualified, you’re taxed on worldwide income from the first day of that tax year, unless a DTA overrides.
- You cease residency after 330 full days abroad, counted consecutively.
Why It Matters
- Helps expatriates and long-term visitors determine whether South Africa treats them as tax residents.
- Crucial for understanding if you’re liable for worldwide income tax.
- Many mistakenly assume frequent visits or long stays abroad automatically end residency, but you must meet the 330‑day rule to cease automatically.