If you’re thinking of making a big move overseas, you risk losing all the perks, both sentimental and administrative, that comes with being a citizen.
This according to Tax Consulting South Africa and Xpatweb, explaining that anyone who acquires citizenship in another country will automatically lose their South African citizenship.
This includes all rights and privileges associated with being a South African citizen, including losing their right to a South African passport and one’s right to vote.
This condition is stipulated in Chapter 3: Loss of South African Citizenship, Section 6(1) of the South African Citizenship Act of 1995.
It does not include someone who gains foreign citizenship through marriage, and the section also does not apply to minors.
Relinquishing one’s status as a citizen does not have any tax benefits for those seeking to cease their tax residency.
“Also, you will be alienated from certain rights you may consider your heritage and not worth sacrificing,” Marisa Jacobs, managing director of Xpatweb advised.
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“So, when developing your roadmap towards full financial emigration, whether this is just financially moving your money or also the physical move of a family, it is critical that you consider deeply what South African citizenship means to you.
“You must also be well informed of the options available to you, as these decisions impact the rest of your life as well as generations to come.”
The experts also warned that foreign citizenship must not be confused with permanent residence abroad.
Many South Africans emigrate under a host country’s permanent residence programme, requiring them to hold an appropriate visa throughout.
They cannot apply for that jurisdiction’s passport, and may typically be excluded from rights reserved for full citizens, like voting.
Just moving to another country does not result in the loss of one’s South African citizenship.
A good example is Mauritius, where a retirement visa can be relatively easily obtained and with no property investment. However, this does not qualify the visa holder to eventually take up Mauritius citizenship.
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“Where you formally accept citizenship in another country, you can be issued with its passport and enjoy all the benefits of being a citizen. But you will relinquish your South African citizenship by that act alone.
“Although the Act provides for the resumption of your citizenship, this is not possible as long as you remain a foreign national,” Jacobs explained.
She further advised that there was a way to avoid this situation, but that one must act quickly.
Section 6(2) of the Citizenship Act allows a South African to apply to the Minister of Home Affairs to retain their South African citizenship.
This is provided they do so prior to losing it for accepting foreign citizenship.
“Once it is lost, it is lost for good or a process which no one will voluntarily undertake,” Jacobs warned.
If the Minister deems it fit, they will order the retention of one’s citizenship. Making this application a priority will allow one to enjoy the best of both nationalities.
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It may be tempting to assume that relinquishing one’s citizenship is sufficient grounds to cease tax residency in South Africa, or that becoming a foreign national absolves one of any outstanding tax or legal obligations.
This is not true, and not worth sacrificing one’s citizenship for.
Section 12 of the Act provides that a person is not freed “from any obligation, duty or liability in respect of any act done or committed before he or she ceased to be a South African citizen”.
This includes your tax obligations to Sars, which remain even after you become a foreign citizen, until they are settled.
There are significant benefits to having a second passport, often referred to as a “Plan B”, for those not physically leaving South Africa, but merely keeping their wealth outside South Africa, or being on a roadmap to migrate their family internationally.
The costs involved depends very much on their goals with another passport, and which country’s status they want to access.
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