South Africans continue to make what can be described as a “silent exit”: relocating offshore and structuring income and assets abroad, yet never formally ceasing South African tax residency. This leaves them exposed to SARS taxing them on their worldwide income.
South Africa operates on a tax residency-based system. This means if SARS regards you as a South African tax resident, your worldwide income and gains remain taxable locally — irrespective of where you live, invest, or operate. Physical absence alone does not sever tax residency. Without a formal application to SARS confirming that you are ceasing South African tax residency and supporting evidence, many expatriates unknowingly remain fully liable.
Do not assume you are off the radar simply because you have left the country.
SARS Turns Up the Heat on Offshore Wealth
SARS has shifted decisively from passive enforcement to data-driven risk profiling, focusing on taxpayers whose declared residency status appears inconsistent with their financial footprint and cross-border activity.
On 16 February 2026, SARS published its Automatic Exchange of Information (AEOI) document, confirming the automatic sharing of data with over 100 countries. The AEOI framework is a central mechanism for exchanging taxpayer information, incorporating the Common Reporting Standard protocols (CRS) and the United States Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA).
Under CRS, foreign financial institutions report account balances, investment income, capital gains and identifying details to their local tax authorities, which then exchange this information with SARS. Where a South African tax reference number, identity number or historical linkage exists, SARS can readily detect undeclared income, unexplained asset growth or inconsistencies with claimed non-residency.
Beyond CRS and FATCA, SARS integrates exchanged data with domestic and third-party information, applying sophisticated risk profiling to high-net-worth individuals. Key indicators include:
- Offshore bank accounts, investment portfolios and custodial holdings disclosed through AEOI
- Trusts, foundations and nominee structures identified through beneficial ownership reporting
- Ongoing South African banking relationships and transactional activity
- Local property ownership, rental income and financing
- Shareholdings, directorships and private company interests
- Insurance policies, medical aid membership and vehicle registrations
- Lifestyle indicators inconsistent with declared non-residency or offshore income profiles
Assessed collectively, these data points enable SARS to identify silent exits, challenge asserted non-residency and pursue retrospective tax exposure with confidence.
Taken together, these indicators reinforce the importance of full tax compliance and proper disclosure of income in the relevant jurisdictions. For South Africans — particularly high-net-worth expatriates — they serve as a clear incentive to formalise non-tax residency status.
Emigration Numbers vs. Tax Reality
Over the past decade, an estimated one million South Africans have moved abroad. However, SARS data paints a more revealing picture regarding tax residency. According to the 2025 Tax Statistics bulletin published by SARS and National Treasury, just over 51,500 individuals formally declared they had ceased to be South African tax residents between the 2017 and 2024 tax years.
The gap between those leaving the country and those officially ending their tax residency is significant. Many may be relocating physically, but far fewer complete the formal process required to break tax residency.
This trend is particularly noticeable among high-income professionals and business owners, whose ability to earn and invest globally makes relocation easier. The BRICS Wealth Report 2024 shows a 20% decline in South Africa’s millionaire population over the past decade.
The reality is that wealth is moving, not just people — making it all the more important to protect your worldwide wealth while remaining compliant.
Ensure Your Wealth Does Not Work Against You
For high-net-worth expatriates, the consequences are rarely limited to a single tax year.
Once SARS identifies an undeclared cessation of residency, it may reassess multiple prior years, potentially triggering:
- Tax on previously undisclosed foreign income and gains
- Interest compounded over several years
- Significant understatement penalties
- Extended prescription periods where non-disclosure is alleged
- Escalation to criminal investigation in extreme cases
Complex structures, offshore vehicles, and layered investments, while legitimate, often attract deeper scrutiny, not protection.
Making Your Move Count: The Importance of Formalising Tax Residency
Formally ceasing South African tax residency is not merely an administrative exercise; it is a strategic event with lasting consequences. When handled correctly, it establishes a defensible legal breakpoint, aligns SARS’ records with reality, and triggers the appropriate exit tax treatment at a controlled point in time. Handled poorly or ignored, it leaves taxpayers exposed to retrospective challenge, often when offshore income and asset values have materially increased.
In today’s tax environment, there are few blind spots and even less tolerance for assumption. SARS’ visibility extends far beyond South Africa’s borders and, with greater wealth, comes greater scrutiny and consequence.
For high-net-worth expatriates, the question is no longer whether SARS can see you, but whether your position will withstand scrutiny. A deliberate, well-documented and defensible approach, guided by experienced cross-border tax specialists, is essential.
Leaving quietly can cost you loudly, unless you take control of your tax position now.