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Three TIPS to prepare your business for Year-End.

Three TIPS to prepare your business for Year-End.

Preparation Tips

ONE

Speak to an Accountant

Unless you’re an accountant, it’s wise to seek help from a professional to understand your tax obligations. You, or your accountant, will use the annual ITR14 declaration on the SARS eFiling system to set out your income and expenses. Your declared profit or loss for the year will determine how much tax you will need to pay, or if you will get a refund from SARS.

Some limited liability companies are required to be audited. 

If you run a sole proprietor or partnership business, it will not be registered with the CIPC. You will submit a form called the ITR12 each year, and provisional tax submissions twice per year. You can do this yourself without needing to appoint an accountant. 

However, a registered tax practitioner can help ensure you comply with SARS regulations and offer advice about how to reduce your tax bill by making full use of the tax deductions to which you’re entitled. 

Look for a firm or professional registered with a professional body such as the South African Institute of Professional Accountants (SAIPA) or the South African Institute of Tax Practitioners (SAIT). Your tax practitioner should also be registered with SARS. Look for someone with good references who has an established base of small business customers.

TWO

Know the
Deadlines

Many small business owners still use Excel spreadsheets and a shoebox full of bank statements, bills and receipts to track their assets, liabilities, inventory, expenses and payments. This approach is time-consuming and prone to error, and it also means you may end up paying an accountant more to capture and reconcile your transactions in a proper accounting system.

You can save time and frustration for yourself and your accountant by capturing every transaction in an electronic accounting system as it takes place.

A good accounting system will make it easy for you to send invoices, track outstanding payments, and monitor expenses, and today’s cloud-based solutions are easy to use and priced on an affordable subscription. An accounting and payroll solution developed for the local market will automate your payroll tax (EMP501 and EMP201) and VAT201 returns for easy submission.

THREE

Automate processes & keep electronic records

l

Registered companies

You must file a compulsory provisional tax return six months from the start of the financial year and another at the end of the financial year.
You may make a voluntary submission and top-up payment six months after year-end.
You must file your annual return within one year of the end of your financial year.

Z

Provisional taxpayers (sole proprietors)

You must file one provisional return and make one tax payment by the end of August.
A second provisional payment is due by the end of February (at the end of the tax season).
You might make an optional third payment at the end of September if the amount paid in previous payments was insufficient. The tax filing season for provisional taxpayers usually begins in early June, with a deadline of 31 January.

PAYE

Submit the monthly EMP201 by the seventh of the following month or the Friday before if the seventh falls on a weekend or public holiday.
File the interim EMP501 reconciliations for the period of 1 March to 31 August between 1 September and 31 October.
File the annual EMP501 reconciliations for the period 1 March to 28 February between 1 April and 31 May.

VAT

Manual submissions of the VAT201 and payment must be complete by the 25th of the month.
Electronic submissions and payment of the VAT201 must be made by the last business day of the month.

Sources: Accounting Weekly & BusinessTechSA