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Home News

Reform of SMSF expat restrictions called for

Australian SMSF trustees that live abroad should not face penalties or be forced to switch to an APRA-regulated fund, the SMSF Association has argued.

by Staff Reporter
January 16, 2018
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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In a statement issued yesterday, SMSFA chief executive John Maroney highlighted the status quo for SMSF trustees living outside Australia, arguing that the current laws “effectively compel” people to switch out of their current fund.

“The definition of an Australian superannuation fund under the Income Tax Assessment Act means SMSF members who continue contributing to their fund while overseas face penalties as well as having it taxed as a non-complying fund,” the statement said.

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“The effective consequence for many SMSF members is being forced to switch to an APRA-regulated fund while overseas and then transferring those contributions back to their SMSF on returning to Australia – a costly and cumbersome exercise.

“Aside from the fact it’s not members’ preference, it creates significant additional costs by having an extra superannuation fund and subsequently transferring the benefit to their SMSF. The end result is higher administrative and compliance costs, reducing the superannuation balance.”

SMSFA proposes removing the ‘active member test’ ensuring a fairer system for the SMSF sector.

“Removing the ‘active member’ test will ensure that SMSF members who are working overseas can still contribute to their fund where their SMSF balance exceeds 50 per cent of the fund’s assets,” the statement said.

“This will mean that, provided the fund was established in Australia and the central control and management remains in Australia, then an SMSF member can contribute to their fund of choice.”

 

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Comments 2

  1. Peter says:
    8 years ago

    Agreed. It seems very logical we go down this road. We must be thinking global economy in regards to employment and as long as the tax is being paid in australia I don’t see why the trustees can’t continue to look after their SMSF.

    Reply
  2. Robert Northcoat CFP SSA says:
    8 years ago

    Time for the Law Makers to acknowledge the “Global Village” economy and the reality that Aussies, increasingly do work overseas. The residency requirements for SMSFs discriminates and should be abolished… The overhaul proposed by the SMSFA is no more than a band aid, a kick with the wind. It does not truly address this inequity in Australia’s retirement saving system.

    Reply

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