South Africa’s fiscus needs every rand in tax revenue it can get, but potentially lucrative revenue streams are out of reach because tax registration snarl-ups prevent would-be taxpayers from contributing.

Registration delays are being experienced across various tax types, from VAT and carbon tax to the health promotion levy (the so-called ‘sugar tax’), which is problematic for businesses and the fiscus. 

The registration requirements are onerous and the norm for a VAT registration is well beyond the turnaround time of 21 business days that the South African Revenue Service (SARS) has committed to. Recently, even with large corporates and multinationals, significant delays have been experienced, with few clients being successful with a VAT registration within SARS’ turnaround time. In one instance, a multinational has been struggling for a year to get on the VAT register. 

The apparent reason for SARS’ complex, time-intensive registration processes is to prevent the registration of rogue individuals or entities set on receiving fraudulent refunds. SARS’ concerns are understandable, given how widespread fraud is across the economy, but creating bottlenecks in the registration of legitimate businesses is, in my view, not the answer. 

Further, it seems that if one does not mind circumventing the system, and has some money to throw at the problem, one can buy a non-trading shelf company with an existing VAT number, so the registration processes do not seem to be infallible.

Impact on taxpayers and the economy 

To ensure as many taxpayers are registered as possible, it would make more sense for the fiscus to facilitate registrations speedily and then, at least in the first year, conduct thorough audits on those businesses to prevent money from leaving through fraudulent refunds. 

Drawn-out registrations delay legitimate transactions. For example, during 2024, the closing of a transaction to transfer an existing business was held up for several months because a VAT number was not available for the buyer. 

Another unintended consequence of VAT registration delays is that businesses that rely on imports or exports cannot operate because without a VAT number, such a business cannot obtain a customs number. 

Registration delays go beyond VAT 

The problem is not limited to VAT registrations. Registrations for other tax types, where there is no or little possibility of refunds being paid, are also proving cumbersome. The health promotion levy and carbon tax are examples of taxes where money can only flow in one direction: from the taxpayer to SARS. 

Not only is registration for these non-refund-carrying taxes burdensome, it also entails submitting separate applications to SARS. These applications often require the same supporting documents to be submitted each time. 

Once registered as a taxpayer on eFiling, it should be easy to activate new tax types that a taxpayer may be liable for, but this is currently not the case. 

To improve tax registration processes without compromising the integrity of the tax system, it would be beneficial to consider:

  • Completing registrations within the required turnaround time of 21 business days and increasing the number and scope of post-registration audits to ensure SARS is receiving its due.

  • Allowing once-off registration for taxpayers instead of requiring separate registrations for different tax types such as carbon tax and the health promotion levy.

  • Introducing a self-service system for processes such as obtaining additional tax registrations or activating additional tax types, specifically for taxpayers already registered on eFiling.

By making it easier for taxpayers to register, SARS can ensure that much-needed tax revenue flows into the fiscus without undue delays and reduce the red tape associated with getting a business up and running.

  • Yasmeen Suliman, Partner, Bowmans

While several South African businesses have already adopted e-invoicing as standard practice, others are still pondering the implications of what impending changes to SARS’ VAT reporting requirements will be. With these changes to the tax authority’s VAT reporting framework likely to be implemented in 2028, it’s becoming more urgent for businesses to consider how they’re going to be ready to comply with e-invoicing, as the ‘when’ is clear and coming closer every day.

E-invoicing allows for greater automation and less manual administration regarding billing, reconciliations, reporting and document capture, while offering increased visibility into transactions via real-time reporting through meaningful dashboards. It allows for faster collections, quicker supplier payments authorisations, and reduced cash leakages arising from processing errors and disputes. Importantly, e-invoicing also allows for increased security, in turn reducing the potential for fraud-related crime.

With businesses’ planning cycles rolling out over years rather than months, the larger organisations – likely to be the first that need to be compliant – should already have plans in place for their ERP environments to adapt to enable e-invoicing. What’s more, they should also be having similar discussions with their suppliers, vendors and key customers.

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