Tax Practitioners’ Connect Issue 25 (September)
Third Party Data Bi-Annual Submissions 2021: Now Open! The SARS Third Party Data Bi-Annual Submissions for the period 1 March 2021 – 31 August 2021 opened
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Third Party Data Bi-Annual Submissions 2021: Now Open! The SARS Third Party Data Bi-Annual Submissions for the period 1 March 2021 – 31 August 2021 opened
What’s New? 6 September 2023 – DA66 Automation: Frequently Asked Questions The Customs Modernisation Journey Pre SARS Customs commenced with a modernisation journey between 1980 –
Download PDF Guide Summary In order to comply with the Advance Import Payments (AIP) requirements as prescribed in SC-CF-42 the registered importer submits a completed
So much has changed during the past 2.5 months to bring to a culmination a year that was already characterized with so many challenges ahead of COVID-19 and the investment downgrade.
Welcome to the latest edition of Tax Practitioner Connect, the electronic newsletter for tax practitioners that keeps you up to date with the tax matters
Travelers are required by law to make certain declarations of goods and cash on entering or leaving South Africa. The declaration process is in line with practices around the world and in compliance with the provision of the Customs and Excise Act No. 91 of 1964 which makes it mandatory for any person entering and leaving the Republic to declare any goods in their possession. Full details of prohibited and restricted goods are available on the SARS website (www.sars.gov.za), and travelers are advised that it is their responsibility to comply.
THE USE OF THIS WEBSITE IS REGULATED BY THE RULES FOR ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION, PRESCRIBED UNDER SECTION 255(1) OF THE TAX ADMINISTRATION ACT, 2011 (ACT NO.
14 October 2022 – Today, SARS is hosting its 25th anniversary celebration, following its formal establishment on 1 October 1997. The auspicious event will be
The Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service (SARS), Mr Edward Kieswetter, has committed the SARS Customs division to scale up digital transformation and to increase the use of data to improve the facilitation of trade, revenue collection and improve compliance by traders who import and export goods across South Africa’s borders.
The Customs Division of the South African Revenue Service (SARS) and the Eswatini Revenue Service (ERS) today made public the findings of a Time Release Study (TRS) on the flow of trade between Eswatini and South Africa at the Oshoek / Ngwenya border post that the two countries share.
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