The main advantages of offshore
companies are:
anonymity |
nominee services through lawyers |
highest level of privacy protection |
limited liability without any paid up capital requirement
|
legal tax exemption |
no
taxation on any kind of income
|
no
accounting requirements |
no
reporting requirements |
no
fees for accountants |
no
auditing |
no
requirements on profession or financial standing |
business can be conducted internationally |
and
much more |
Hong
Kong Scope of Profits Tax
Profits tax is levied
under the Inland Revenue Ordinance on the "assessable profits"
of corporate entities, partnerships, trusts and sole proprietorships.
It is levied according to the "territorial principle" meaning that it
is the source of the income rather than the residential or
non-residential status of the entity that determines whether or not
trading income is or is not subject to Hong Kong profits tax.
The territorial
principle means that only income which meets the following 3
preconditions is subject to Hong Kong profits tax:
- The entity must
trade in Hong Kong
- The income must
arise from such a trade
- The income must
arise in or be derived from Hong Kong
The residential or
non-residential status of the entity is irrelevant as is the fact that
the income is or is not exempt from tax in a foreign jurisdiction.
Advance tax rulings are available in the SAR and are particularly
favored and recommended on the question of whether or not for profits
tax purposes trading income is deemed onshore and taxable or offshore
and tax exempt.
"Source of income" for
profits tax purposes has been defined as the geographical location of
the operation which substantially gave rise to the income, but the
Inland Revenue's Practice Note No 21 adds more precise criteria:
The establishment of
an office in Hong Kong: does not of itself render a company liable
to profits tax where that office is not generating profits from within
the territory.
Place where the
contract was negotiated and executed: A key criterion is the place
where the contract was negotiated and signed. Income relating to a
sale contract negotiated by the seller from the territory by way of
facsimile or telephone where the negotiation did not require travel
outside the territory is deemed Hong Kong source income for profit tax
purposes. Likewise if the contract is negotiated and signed outside
the territory and the goods sold are not sourced from within the
territory then any income arising is not deemed Hong Kong source
income for profits tax purposes. This is often achieved by utilizing
an offshore company which re-registers in the territory as a foreign
company but whose directors both remain non resident and negotiate and
execute the contract from the offshore jurisdiction.
Booking Center:
Where the Hong Kong entity is merely a booking center in the sense
that it does not negotiate or draft the sale agreement (which is
carried out abroad) but merely issues an invoice on instructions,
operates a bank account and maintains accounting records covering the
transaction then the income from such a transaction is not deemed Hong
Kong source income for profits tax purposes.
Shares & Securities
: Gains from shares and securities purchased and sold on the
territory's stock exchange are deemed Hong Kong source income for
profit tax purposes (assuming the entity is subject to profit tax on
such an activity).
Cross Border Land Transportation:
Income from cross-border land transportation is deemed Hong Kong
source income if the passengers or goods are normally uplifted in Hong
Kong.
Loans : Loan
interest on a loan made available to the borrower within the
jurisdiction of Hong Kong is deemed to be Hong Kong source income for
profits tax purposes and taxable in the hands of the Hong Kong lender
whereas loan interest on a loan made available to the borrower in a
foreign jurisdiction is not deemed Hong Kong source income and is
therefore not taxable.
Hong Kong Profits Tax Rates
A number
of rates apply:
- Companies pay a
standard rate of 17.5% on assessable profits.
- Businesses other
than corporate entities pay a rate of 16% on assessable profits.
- Special
concessionary rates of profits tax which are substantially less than
the standard rates apply to the following businesses or sources of
income:
- Interest or
capital gains made on qualifying maturity debt instruments are
taxed at 8%.
- The re-insurance
of offshore risks is taxed at 8% of assessable profits.
- Life insurance
businesses are assessed at 5% of the value of the premiums
arising in Hong Kong.
- An entity whose
business is to grant rights to use a trademark, copyright,
patent or know how pays a flat profit tax of 1.75% (or 17.5% on
10%) of the payment received with all related expenses being non
tax deductible. If the recipient of the payment is a related
offshore licensing company the Hong Kong company must withhold
and hand over 1.75% of the fee paid over.
- Income from the
international operations of shipping companies is exempt from
tax unless the ships are operating in Hong Kong waters or
proximate to the same in which case only that proportion of
income earned in Hong Kong is subject to local tax of 17.5%.
Shipping profits meeting the conditions of the double taxation
agreement with the USA are exempt from profits tax in Hong Kong.
- Irrespective of
whether or not the company is managed and controlled from Hong
Kong assessable profits are the proportion of income arising
within Hong Kong (from the uplift of passengers and freight
locally) to the proportion of worldwide income. Under a number
of international aircraft double taxation agreements the
government has agreed to include income arising abroad for
taxation in Hong Kong where that income is exempted abroad under
the agreement. Likewise profits meeting the conditions of the
double taxation agreements are exempt from profits tax locally.
The rate is 16% of assessable profits.
- The sale of
goods on consignment from Hong Kong on behalf of a non resident
is subject to a tax of 1% of the turnover without any deductions
unless the non resident can produce accounts to show that he
would have paid less profit tax than consignment tax in which
case a normal rate of tax will apply .The selling of goods on
consignment is deemed to be the equivalent of creating a
permanent establishment.
- An entity whose
business is to rent out a film, tape or sound recording for use
in any cinema or television program pays a profit tax of 1.75% (or
17.5% on 10%) of the payment received with all related expenses
being non tax deductible.
Hong Kong Calculation of Taxable Base
A number
of factors including the territorial principle have created an
extremely attractive fiscal regime exempting categories of income
which in most other jurisdictions would normally be subject to a
profits tax:
- Dividend income
received by a Hong Kong parent company from either a resident or
foreign subsidiary is not deemed income in the holding company's
hands and is thus not subject to an assessment to profits tax.
- There is no separate
schedule of capital gains tax in Hong Kong. Nor does the territory
follow the practice of other jurisdictions and tax capital gains as
trading income which is subject to profits tax. However by way of
exception a business whose activities is to trade in capital assets
is assessed to profits tax on any profits made on the sales of those
capital assets as if these gains were trading income. Likewise if
the asset is deemed a revenue asset as opposed to a capital asset
then any profits made on its disposal are deemed trading income and
assessed to profits tax. The absence of capital gains tax (often
together with other factors) has had a number of fiscal consequences:
- Profits remitted
to a Hong Kong parent which represent the profitable disposal of
its shareholding in a resident or non resident subsidiary are
not assessed to tax in the territory both because the gains
are capital gains and because (in the case of a non resident
company) income arising outside jurisdiction is exempt from tax
under the principle of territoriality.
- The profitable
disposal by a Hong Kong entity of foreign real estate is not
assessed to tax in the territory both because the gains are
capital gains and because of the principle of territoriality. This
includes a disposal effected by means of the Hong Kong entity
selling 100% of the shares in a company whose sole asset is the
foreign real estate.
- Since currency
gains and losses are considered to have a capital nature they are
neither taxable profits nor deductible losses.
- The transfer by a
Hong Kong entity of capital assets to a foreign or resident
subsidiary or branch at market value and at a profit is considered
a capital gain and thus does not attract tax in Hong Kong (unless
the assets are classified as revenue assets).
- Rental income from
foreign real estate is not assessable income in Hong Kong for profit
tax purposes. (However depreciation & interest payments on loans
made to finance the real estate tax are non deductible in the
territory).
- The profits and
losses of the foreign branch or subsidiary of a Hong Kong company
are neither taxable profits nor deductible losses in Hong Kong owing
to the territoriality principle.
- Interest income
received by a resident or non resident business entity on deposits
lodged with a financial institution are exempt from profits tax (By
way of exception if the deposit was made by a "financial institution"
then any interest received by the financial institution is deemed
trading income for profits tax purposes and taxed accordingly).
- The tax treatment of
loan interest payments and receipts requires a special mention. 3
situations apply:
- Loan interest
repayments made by a Hong Kong borrower to a foreign lender
are only tax deductible in Hong Kong if the foreign lender is a "financial
institution". If the foreign lender is not a financial institution
but is the parent or subsidiary of the Hong Kong borrower the
interest payments are not tax deductible in the territory unless
the parent or subsidiary is a connected company and is subject to
Hong Kong profits tax on the loan interest receipts.
- Loan interest
repayments received by a Hong Kong company on a loan made
to a 3rd party are not taxable income in the hands of the Hong
Kong lender if the loan was advanced to the borrower from a
foreign jurisdiction such as Gibraltar. If the loan was advanced
to the borrower from Hong Kong then the loan interest repayments
are taxable in the territory.
- A Hong Kong parent
company which borrows money to set up a subsidiary or a branch in
a foreign country cannot deduct the cost of the loan for profit
tax purposes since the income earned by the borrower has a foreign
source. Therefore the loan should always be sourced by the foreign
subsidiary or the foreign branch in the foreign jurisdiction in
which it will be tax deductible.
- Owing to the
principle of territoriality there is no controlled foreign
company legislation under which the profits and capital gains of non
resident subsidiaries can be taxed as if they were the profits of a
resident parent company.(The converse applies in both the United
States and the United Kingdom).
- Consolidated group
accounting under which the profits of one company in the group can
be set off against the losses of another company in the group so as
to reduce the over all profit subject to profits tax does not
exist in Hong Kong.
- Losses can be
carried forward indefinitely. This compares favorably with other
jurisdictions which only allow losses to be carried forward for a
fixed period of time (usually 5 years).
- Since there are no
debt/equity thin capitalization rules in Hong Kong a foreign parent
can set up a resident subsidiary with a minimum of share capital and
a maximum of loan capital and thereby reduce taxable profits arising
in Hong Kong through excessive interest payments.
- The repayment by a
foreign subsidiary to its Hong Kong parent of the principal of loan
capital or share capital is free of tax in the territory including
where the repayment is by way of a capital reduction or a final
dividend distribution in a liquidation.
- The following
sources of trading income are exempted from profits tax:
- Interest received
or capital gains made on the purchase, retention or sale of a
Government bond issued under the Loans (Government Bonds)
Ordinance;
- Exchange fund debt
instruments;
- Hong Kong dollar
denominated multi – agency debt instruments;
- Specified
investment schemes which comply with the requirements of a
government supervisory authority are exempt from tax. Specified
investment schemes include investments in unit trusts and mutual
funds.
Profits Tax
Deductible Allowances
The following
allowances are deductible from assessable profits for profits tax
purposes.
- A deduction is
allowed for a contribution (or provision for a contribution) by an
employer amounting to not more than 15% of the employee's annual
salary into a recognized retirement scheme registered under the
Occupational Retirement Schemes Ordinance. (It is in any event
an offence for an employer to operate a pension scheme that is not
registered under this Ordinance). Since the Mandatory Provident
Fund Scheme came into effect on 1st December 2000 allowable
deductions are either 5% of an employee's gross salary or a maximum
of US$2,560 per month.
- Full deduction is
allowed for charitable donations not exceeding 10% of annual
assessable profits after deduction of depreciation allowances but
prior to losses carried forward being added in.
- Hong Kong tax paid
on foreign income which by law is chargeable to profits tax in Hong
Kong is an allowable deduction for profits tax purposes. (N.B.
foreign source income is not normally subject to tax in the
territory).
- Any property tax
already paid is deductible from income for profits tax purposes;
- Depreciation
allowances for capital equipment are as follows:
- 100% first year
allowances for manufacturing plant and machinery;
- 100% first year
allowances for computer equipment;
- 60% of the cost of
all other plant and machinery can be written off in the first year
with a rate of 10-30% written off thereafter.
- 20% of the cost of
construction of an industrial building can be written off in the
1st year with 4% per annum thereafter.
- Expenditure
incurred refurbishing or renovating business premises can be
written off in 5 equal instalments.
- In May, 2004,
LEGCO
expanded the scope of deduction for research and development
expenses under profits tax to cover design-related expenses.
Hong Kong Property Tax
Property
tax is levied annually on the owner or occupier of real estate located
in Hong Kong. Since ownership may be split (eg an entity with a 100
year lease may grant a 50 year sublease to a 3rd party) separate
assessments may be made on the same parcel of land. Property tax which
is governed by the provisions of the Inland Revenue Ordinance
has the following characteristics:
- The annual
assessment to property tax is based on 100% of the annual rental
income of the property less any rates paid, any bad debts, a repairs
and outgoings allowance constituting a maximum of 20% of the annual
rental income (irrespective of whether or not more was actually
spent) and other allowable deductions. In determining "rental income"
the Inland Revenue will include any premiums, service charges,
management fees, rates, repairs and outgoings paid by the tenant
either to the owner or on behalf of the owner under the terms of the
lease. In order to assist the inland revenue to assess the rental
income the owner is obliged to keep records for up to 7 years and
inform the tax authorities of the actual sums received.
- Property tax is
based on the territorial principle and is levied on buildings, parts
of buildings, wharves, piers and other structures located in Hong
Kong. The fact that the owner is non resident, non domiciled or a
national of a foreign country is completely irrelevant and does not
exempt him from having to pay this tax.
- The tax rate is 15%
of the assessed annual rental income .
- Property tax is
levied on a provisional assessment basis which takes into account
the previous year's rental income with a tax credit being granted
where the previous year's rental income exceeds the current year's
rental income. Relief is also given where part of the assessed
rental income is a bad debt.
- The following types
of property are exempted from this tax:
- The properties of
foreign governments;
- Charitable bodies
exempted from taxation;
- Business entities
who derive profits from and pay profits tax on rental income
derived from ownership of real estate are entitled to a set-off of
property tax against profits tax with a tax credit being granted
where the property tax exceeds the profits tax;
- A corporation
which purchases a property for its own occupation does not pay
property tax on the deemed rental income which it could have
earned if it had rented out the building.
- It is advisable for
properties to be owned by Hong Kong corporate entities since
property tax does not make allowances for either depreciation or
interest costs on a loan to finance the purchase, while such costs
are deductible for corporate profits tax purposes. A foreign company
cannot own real estate in Hong Kong unless it is registered as a
foreign company under the provisions of the Companies Ordinance.
Hong Kong Stamp Duty
The laws
on stamp duty are set out in the Stamp Duty Ordinance. Stamp
duty is either a fixed fee or is calculated ad valorem depending on
the nature of the transaction. It is payable on:
- Leases, assignments
and conveyances of immovable property.
- The transfer of
shares or marketable securities
- The transfer of
bearer instruments (being instruments under which ownership is
transferred through physical delivery).
Immovable Property
Stamp Duty Rates
2 separate rates of
stamp duty are payable on immovable property:
- The Conveyance of
a Freehold or the Assignment of a Leasehold: The rate of stamp
duty is progressive and varies from US$13 if value of the
transferred interest is less than US$128,000 to a maximum rate of
2.75% where the property is valued at more than US$565,875 .
- The Granting of a
Short-Term Lease: The stamp duty rate is progressive and varies
between .25% and 1% of the annual rental value depending on whether
the lease is for less than one year or more than 3 years. Any
agreement which increases the rent reserved by a chargeable stamped
lease is itself chargeable to stamp duty in respect of the
additional rent which it makes payable.
Immovable Property
Transactions Exempted from Stamp Duty:
The following immovable
property transactions are exempt from stamp duty:
- Non-Residential
Property: Instruments transferring "non residential property"
are exempt from stamp duty. Non-residential property is defined as
property which may not by law be used at any time for residential
purposes.
- Gifts to
Charitable Institutions or Public Trusts: Instruments
transferring immovable property by way of gift to a charitable
institution or public trust are exempt from stamp duty.
- Approved
conveyances on sale to diplomatic or consular bodies.
- A transaction
conveying an interest in immovable property between "associated
corporate bodies". Entities are defined as associated corporate
bodies when one entity holds over 90% of the share capital of the
other or when a 3rd entity holds over 90% of the share capital of
both entities. The association must remain for 2 years after the
transfer in default of which the full level of stamp duty must be
paid over retrospectively. The financing of the transaction cannot
come from an unassociated body.
- Mortgages:
Mortgages are free of stamp duty.
Immoveable Property
Stamp Duty Anti-Avoidance Provisions
There are elaborate
anti avoidance provisions in place aimed at deterring speculation.
Thus where the beneficial owner of real estate executes an instrument
in favor of a third party under which he undertakes to hold the real
estate on trust for the third party duty is payable on this instrument
as if a conveyance had taken place. Likewise stamp duty is payable
where under an uncompleted contract of sale the vendor is deemed by
law to hold on trust for the purchaser.
Stamp Duty Payable
on Shares & Marketable Securities
Stamp duty of .225% is
payable on the transfer of shares or marketable securities whereas .1%
stamp duty is payable on the issued share capital of a company up to a
maximum stamp duty fee of HK$30,000. In the long-term stamp duty on
shares and securities is to be phased out completely.
Securities
Transactions Exempted from Stamp Duty
The following
transactions are exempt from stamp duty:
- Loan capital
transactions, bills of exchange, promissory notes, certificates of
deposit, exchange fund debt instruments and Hong Kong multilateral
agency debt instruments.
- Transactions
involving debentures, loan stocks, funds bonds or notes that are not
denominated in Hong Kong currency except to the extent that they are
redeemable in that currency.
- Stock donated to
charitable bodies or public trusts which are exempt from taxation in
Hong Kong.
- A transaction
conveying stock between "associated corporate bodies". Entities are
defined as associated corporate bodies when one entity holds over
90% of the share capital of the other entity or when a 3rd entity
holds over 90% of the share capital of both entities. The
association must remain for 2 years after the transfer, in default
of which the full level of stamp duty must be paid over
retrospectively. The financing of the transaction cannot come from
an unassociated body.
Stamp Duty Payable
on Bearer Instruments
The amount of stamp
duty payable is 3% of the value of the instrument transferred.
Hong Kong Filing Requirements and Payment of Tax
The tax
year starts on 1st April. The assessment to profits tax is provisional
and is based on the previous year's assessable profits with 75% of the
assessment being due by the 3rd quarter and the final 25% being due at
the year-end. Tax payments delayed less than 6 months are subject to a
5% non-deductible surcharge whereas payments overdue by more than 6
months are subject to a 10% non-deductible surcharge. A tax credit is
granted where the previous year's assessment exceeds the currents
year's assessable profits.
Hong Kong Withholding Tax
There are
no withholding taxes in Hong Kong as such, but there are certain
circumstances in which a company making a payment to a foreign
associate (subsidiary or holding company) which is deemed to be Hong
Kong source income needs to needs to withhold the tax.
For instance, when a
Hong Kong entity pays royalties for the use of intellectual property
to its own offshore licensing affiliate, then tax is due of 10% of 16%
= 1.6% and this must be withheld by the Hong Kong paying company.