Tax Residency & Source
There are two separate tests of tax residency under New Zealand law:
- Physical presence or days count test. A person will become a tax resident if he or she spends more than 183 days in a 12-month period in New Zealand. It is important to note that this does not necessarily mean a calendar year or a fiscal year, but in fact can be any 12 months; and
- Having a permanent place of abode in New Zealand, irrespective of whether the person has a permanent place of abode in another country.
The physical presence test is applied over any 365 day period and not necessarily a calendar year or a fiscal year (1 April to the following 31 March). Once the figure of 184 days is reached an individual is a tax resident from the first day.
A New Zealand tax resident must be physically absent from New Zealand for more than 325 days in a 365 day period and not have a permanent place of abode to break his or her tax residency.
The permanent place of abode test is the dominant test of tax residency and is often overlooked.
A permanent place of abode means having both i) a place of abode – i.e. a place to live – in New Zealand and ii) having a reasonable level of attachment to that place. In practice, the courts will look at a range of factors including:
- Where the taxpayer’s family live;
- Where the taxpayer takes his or her holidays;
- Whether personal effects are stored in New Zealand;
- Membership of clubs and professional associations; and
- Whether a job is kept open for someone working overseas.
Tax residency under domestic law can be modified by a Double Tax Agreement (DTA). New Zealand had 39 DTAs as at March 2016.
Generally, a New Zealand tax resident is taxed in New Zealand on his or her worldwide income. If income is taxed overseas credit will be given for the foreign tax, but only up to the level of tax payable in New Zealand on that income. New migrants and returning New Zealanders who have been non-resident for 10 years or more are generally eligible for a 48 month exemption from foreign passive income – e.g. interest, dividends, rents and royalties.
A company is a tax resident of New Zealand under domestic law if:
- The company is incorporated in New Zealand; or
- Its head office is in New Zealand; or
- Its centre of management is in New Zealand; or
- Its directors, in their capacity as directors, exercise control of the company in New Zealand, even if the directors’ decision-making also occurs outside New Zealand.
In addition, a foreign business trading in New Zealand will be subject to New Zealand tax on the profits relating to a permanent establishment (in general terms a place of business such as a shop, factory, quarry or similar, but also includes a dependent agent who has authority to contract on behalf of the foreign business) in New Zealand. Please note that the OECD is currently considering whether to widen the definition of permanent establishment.
Source
If income has a New Zealand source it is, almost always, taxed in New Zealand. An example of this is net rental income derived by a non-resident in New Zealand.
A situation that often comes as a surprise, is that interest paid to a foreign lender has a New Zealand source if the loan is secured over New Zealand land. Interest on such loans is subject to non-resident withholding tax at 10 or 15% or approved issuer levy (AIL) at 2%. Not all loans are eligible for AIL.