Cashing in your SA retirement annuity after tax emigration – how long must you wait now? - FinGlobal (2024)

It’s a question that’s top of mind for most South Africans who have relocated abroad permanently:Once I’ve ceased tax residency in SA, how long before Ican cash in my retirement annuity?Whether that relocation was recent or took place some time ago, it’s a question that many have been pondering since tax law changes in 2020 saw the phasing out of formal emigration, which had previously been used by expats to trigger the early withdrawal benefit on their retirement annuities back in South Africa.

Now that formal emigration through the South African Reserve Bank is no longer an option for expats, what’s the procedure for cashing in a South African retirement annuity early? Let’s take a look at what’s changed, and what you need to know.

Cashing in your SA retirement annuity

When can you cash in your South African retirement annuity?

Generally speaking, you’re not supposed to touch your retirement savings until the official retirement age of 55. This is to protect you from spending your savings before retirement, which helps to ensure that you have sufficient funds to finance your golden years.

Every rule comes with exceptions, and there are a handful of conditions under which you are allowed to cash in your retirement annuity early. As mentioned, it used to be possible to withdraw your retirement annuity funds once the South African Reserve Bank had approved and formalised your emigration. But formal emigration is no longer a thing, so now what?

Formal emigration has been replaced by tax emigration

Expats (both current and future) looking to wrap up their financial affairs in South Africa must now complete the process of tax emigration through the South African Revenue Service. Where previously formal emigration changed an individual’s status from resident to non-resident for exchange control purposes, tax emigration now involves a change from resident to non-resident for tax purposes.

Who is a South African tax resident?

According to the Income Tax Act, a tax resident is someone whomeets the requirementsof the ordinarily resident test or the physical presence test. This means that South Africa is either your real home, or you spend enough time in South Africa that the South African Revenue Service feels justified in taking their cut of your income.

What does being a South African tax resident have to do with cashing in your retirement annuity early?

Long story short – if you stop being a South African tax resident, you become eligible to trigger the early withdrawal benefit on your retirement annuity. Once you have withdrawn your retirement annuity funds and you have paid SARS their due in the form of lump-sum withdrawal tax, you are then free to transfer your funds abroad.

What’s the catch?

Everything in life has a catch. You can only encash your South African retirement annuity early once you have tax emigrated from South Africa and maintained this non-resident status for a minimum of three years now that tax laws have changed. According to our National Treasury, this three-year waiting period was designed to ensure that your emigration sticks and you’re not simply moving abroad, cashing in your retirement annuity, and moving back to South Africa a few years later with only the prospects of a penniless retirement to look forward to.

This means that if you’re still planning to relocate overseas and you’re still well under the age of 55, you’re going to have to wait three years before you can withdraw your retirement annuity savings. After the age of 55, you would not be able to encash your retirement annuity at all, but this is not a new rule. Practically speaking, you can only cash in your retirement annuity early if you’re not yet 55, after which it’s too late because you’re now eligible to retire and so it’s no longer anearlywithdrawal.

This also means that if you’ve already been living abroad for a number of years without already completing formal emigration, you are still eligible to cash in your retirement annuity early, after you complete tax emigration. According to the physical presence test that SARS uses, you cease to be a tax resident if you have relocated abroad and 330 days have passed and you have no intention of returning to South Africa.

Once this time has passed, you are then considered to have ceased your tax residency on the day that you left South Africa permanently. As a result, all you need to do is add three years onto the date of your permanent relocation, in order to calculate when you’ll be eligible to cash in your South African retirement annuity.

What happens when you cease tax residency in South Africa?

Other than becoming eligible to cash in your retirement annuity once there are three years between you and South Africa, changing from resident to non-resident for tax purposes has the following implications:

  1. You are no longer eligible topay tax on your foreign employment income in SA.
  2. You become eligible topay an exit tax on your tax emigration.

FinGlobal: tax emigration specialists of choice for South African expats

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Cashing in your SA retirement annuity after tax emigration – how long must you wait now? - FinGlobal (2024)

FAQs

Can I withdraw my retirement annuity if I emigrate? ›

The company that manages your retirement annuity needs a directive from SARS that confirms your status as a non-resident and outlines the amount of tax that needs to be deducted before it can pay the balance out to you. This step may take a while to be finalised.

When can I cash out my retirement annuity? ›

Generally speaking, an investor can only access the funds in their RA from age 55 onwards, with no upper age limit for retirement. When you retire from your retirement annuity, you have the option to withdraw one-third of the investment in cash, with the first R500 000 being tax-free.

How much money can you take out of South Africa when emigrating? ›

As long as you can verify the legitimacy of the source of your funds, there is no limit to the amount of money you can move out of South Africa as a non-resident. However, where the amount exceeds the Foreign Capital Allowance of R10 million, you will require prior approval from the South African Reserve Bank.

Do I need to financially emigrate from South Africa? ›

Whether financial emigration is right for you will depend on what kind of retirement funds and assets you hold; it is not necessary for all expats. All South Africans have the annual R1 million single discretionary allowance and R10 million foreign investment allowance (which requires a SARS tax clearance certificate).

What happens to my retirement accounts if I move abroad? ›

Usually, Americans living abroad will still pay U.S. taxes and can still hold U.S. accounts, including their IRA. This usually means you will not need to move your IRA with you.

Can I withdraw all my money from an annuity? ›

Yes. Rather than take an early withdrawal, an annuitant can sell all or part of an annuity to a company in exchange for a lump sum amount. There are no surrender fees associated with selling an annuity because the annuitant is effectively selling his/her right to receive future payments for a certain period of time.

What happens if I cash in my annuity? ›

Withdrawals from annuities can trigger one of two types of penalties. The insurer issuing the annuity charges surrenders fees if funds are withdrawn during the annuity's accumulation phase. The IRS charges a 10% early withdrawal penalty if the annuity-holder is under the age of 59½.

What is the maximum lump sum? ›

HMRC put some limits on the amount of tax free lump sum a member can take. The limit is the lower of, either: 25% of the capital value of your benefits after commutation. 25% of the remaining standard lifetime allowance.

Why can't I withdraw my retirement annuity? ›

Cash withdrawals are subject to tax. You retain this right if not used at the time you leave your retirement fund. You cannot make any withdrawals until such time as you leave your new employer. You cannot make any withdrawals until you retire (minimum retirement age is usually 55.)

What are the tax implications of emigrating from South Africa? ›

Exit tax when you leave South Africa

When you declare yourself non-tax resident, you're deemed to have sold your assets (excluding immovable property situated in South Africa and your RA) to your foreign self. A CGT amount, known colloquially as “exit tax”, then becomes immediately due.

What is the difference between emigrating and immigrating? ›

Immigrate begins with the letter I. If you associate I with “in,” you can easily remember that immigrate means to move into a different country. Emigrate begins with an E, so if you associate it with exit, you'll remember that it means to leave your home country.

How much money can a South African take out of the country per year? ›

What rules apply to South African residents travelling abroad? Adult residents (above 18 years old) may use a travel allowance within the single discretionary allowance limit of R1 million per calendar year. Residents under 18 years old are permitted a travel allowance of up to R200 000 per calendar year.

How can I leave South Africa permanently? ›

To be designated an emigrant for exchange control purposes (in other words, if you want to leave South Africa to settle in another country permanently), you must follow the excon process as defined by SARB. This is also known as 'financial emigration'.

How much money can a person keep at home legally in South Africa? ›

How much cash can you legally keep at home South Africa? As much as you want, if it is in the local currency Rands. You just need to be able to prove it is proceeds from legal activities, because they can confiscate it if it is proceeds of crime.

What happens to your retirement annuity when you emigrate? ›

Retirement (from age 55):

Pension preservation fund / retirement annuity members can access up to one-third of the capital, which can be taken abroad. Members wanting to access the full benefit will need to financially emigrate. On emigration, the benefit will be subject to a higher tax rate.

Can I withdraw from my 401k when living abroad? ›

You can generally assume that taxes on your U.S. retirement accounts will be the same as if you lived Stateside: Traditional 401(k)s and IRAs are tax-deferred accounts, meaning you'll pay taxes on withdrawals even if you're overseas. Withdrawals are taxed as income.

How do I avoid taxes on an annuity withdrawal? ›

To avoid paying taxes on your annuity, you may want to consider a Roth 401(k) or a Roth IRA as a funding source. Then, you do not pay taxes upon withdrawal since Roth accounts are funded with after-tax dollars.

What happens to 401k if you emigrate? ›

If you're a nonresident with a 401(k) and are planning to return to your home country, you can cash out the account, roll it over into an IRA, or leave the funds where they are until you turn 59½ and can start taking penalty-free withdrawals.

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