Income tax in Singapore

Income tax in Singapore involves both individual income tax[1] and corporate income tax. Income earned both inside and outside the country for individuals and corporate entities is taxed

Individual income tax

Individual income tax in Singapore is payable on an annual basis, it is currently based on the progressive tax system (for local residents and tax residents), with taxes ranging from 0% to 22% since Year of Assessment 2017. The Year of Assessment (YA) is based on the calendar year commencing 1 January to 31 December, and is payable on a preceding year basis, whereby taxes payable per year of assessment is based on income earned in the preceding calendar year.

Taxation is based on the source principle, in which only income earned at source, in this case in Singapore, or those derived from overseas but received in Singapore, are taxable. Any income arising from sources outside Singapore and received in Singapore on or after 1 January 2004 by an individual (other than partners of a partnership) is exempt from tax. This system has the potential to allow for tax avoidance practiced by individuals who derive income from abroad, gain tax exemptions via their non-resident status there, and use this income outside Singapore. Expatriates and foreign workers in Singapore are also liable for paying income tax.[2]

Corporate income tax

Corporate income tax like individual income tax is payable on annual basis. However, foreign income earned by a Singapore company may require dual taxation once in the income origin country and in Singapore. In such a case, companies can claim Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) payable on the same income. As company is taxed only on preceding year, there is a need for business owners to truly understand the difference between "year of assessment" [3] and "basis period".

Foreign-sourced dividends, foreign branch profits and foreign-sourced service income remitted into Singapore on or after 1 June 2003 by a Singapore resident company will be tax exempt if [4]:

  • the headline tax rate of the foreign country from which income is received is at least 15 percent in the year the income is received, and
  • the foreign income had been subjected to tax in the foreign country from which it was received.
gollark: I mean making good use of the DNS packets, not CPU use on each end; I don't really care about that.
gollark: So you probably need checksums now and you use up even more of the packet size.
gollark: And you also need to be able to autodetect properties of the system of DNS servers between you and the authoritative one doing the actual bridging. But that might randomly change (e.g. if you switch network) and start messing up your data.
gollark: But you also want to be able to send data up efficiently, but you're probably using much of the limited space for user data which won't get munged by recursive DNS/proxies/whatever on the session token and whatever, so now you have to deal with *that*.
gollark: Possibly? You apply somewhere.

References

  1. "Complete information on individual income tax: Types, filing details and other". IRAS on individual income tax. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  2. "Income tax details for foreigners and expatriates". IRAS on individual income tax. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  3. "Year of Assessment and Basis Period". SingaporeAccounting.com. Retrieved 12 Nov 2016.
  4. "Overview of Singapore Taxation". 3ecpa.com.sg. Retrieved 27 Jun 2017.
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