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The impact of SARS shortening the filing season

Tax season in a traditional season runs from July to November.

Taxpayers will have until  October 31 to submit their tax returns, which is three weeks shorter than usual.

The acting SARS Commissioner, Mark Kingon, announced the alteration in the tax season, starting on July 1, on Monday, June 4.

“A shorter filing season allows additional time for SARS, taxpayers and the tax fraternity to deal with return verifications before most taxpayers go on the December holiday break,” said Kingon.

“Often there are delays with taxpayers having to respond to our queries and requests over the holiday break. The quiet period after the first three months of tax season has now been removed resulting in efficient use of our resources.”

  • Analysis and findings

SARS analysed the data derived from the high volumes of taxpayer visits to their various branches, the reason for the visits, who was filing returns and which filing medium they were using. It was found that, inter alia:

• There is an inundation of people going to file at a branch while they are not required to do so.
• Many returns are being filed for prior years.
• Registered eFilers are unnecessarily filing at branches.
• Tax practitioners who primarily file via eFiling are using branches to file taxpayers’ returns, to name but a few.

According to Vincent Radebe, tax consultant at Tax Consulting SARS, the three-week cut is one of the Revenue Service’s initiatives to provide effective, transparent, professional and fair service to all taxpayers.

“The alteration in the tax season will further streamline audit processes to reduce volumes, allow the Receiver of Revenue, taxpayer and tax practitioners to deal with return verifications before the December holiday break, and result in a more timeous pay-out of refunds to taxpayers,” said Radebe.

  • Who will be impacted?

Radebe said SARS does not require natural persons to file an income tax return if, at the very least, their annual gross income consists solely of remuneration from a single source (such as an employer) which does not exceed R 350 000 and PAYE has been withheld accordingly.

“However, through our experience, we have noticed that SARS may raise an assessment based on an estimate or refrain from paying out a refund due to non-submission of a return which was below the above-mentioned R 350 000 limit.

“As such, we advise taxpayers to continue filing to achieve complete compliance with SARS.

“The change will impact all individual taxpayers who are non-provisional taxpayers using the eFiling platform, and provisional taxpayers who file their returns at a branch.

“Failure to submit a tax return within the deadline may just lead to the possible imposition by SARS of administrative non-compliance penalties.

“Therefore, to avoid possible administrative penalties, it remains imperative for taxpayers to file their returns within the tax filing deadline.”

ALSO READ: More knowledge, less excuses this tax season 

 

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Riaan Engelbrecht

Chief Sub Editor at Caxton Media

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