Mandatory transfer pricing documentation

19th February 2016

Mandatory transfer pricing documentation

On 15 December 2015, SARS issued a draft Public Notice that sets out the additional record-keeping requirements for transfer pricing transactions.

It proposes extensive and comprehensive documentation requirements that must now be kept by taxpayers with a consolidated South African turnover of R1 billion or more.

Although this provides South African taxpayers with clarity on the information that must be retained for transfer pricing purposes, these requirements are fairly onerous and will increase the compliance burden of these taxpayers, resulting in additional costs.  

The notice introduces the new term of “potentially affected transactions” which refers to all cross border transactions with the connected persons as listed in section 31, regardless of whether the terms and conditions of such transaction are different from the terms and conditions of an arm’s length transaction.  In other words, where the focus on preparing a transfer pricing policy is only on those transactions that are not at arm’s length, the transfer pricing documentation must now deal with all such connected party cross-border transactions.

Despite the need for clarity from SARS on the extent of the transfer pricing documentation that must be retained by taxpayers in South Africa, these proposed record keeping requirements for multinationals will require detailed information which may not be relevant for tax purposes.

Some of the more onerous (and interesting) information to be retained include:

Taxpayers with a South African turnover which does not exceed the R1 billion threshold must also retain records to support any cross-border related-party transaction. In the absence of any indication of what these “records” should include, it seems that these taxpayers should ensure that they have a transfer pricing policy that meets the requirement as set out by the OECD.

It is interesting that the Draft Notice makes no reference to the Master File and Local File transfer pricing documentation approach as recommended by the OECD under the BEPS Action 13.

Although we appreciate SARS’ need for information which will allow it to properly assess the transfer pricing risks of taxpayers, SARS has not aligned itself with the recommendations of the OECD under Action 13.

Written by Okkie Kellerman, executive, tax, ENSafrica