Understanding Early Access to Retirement Savings for South African Expats
Why Tax Residency Matters
Before you can touch any pension, provident fund or long‑term investment while living abroad, the South African Revenue Service (SARS) must recognise that you are no longer a tax resident. Simply packing your bags and moving overseas does not automatically change your status. SARS looks at two tests:
- Whether you are still “ordinarily resident” in South Africa.
- Whether you meet the physical presence test (more than 91 days in the country during the current year and the past five years).
Only after SARS updates your eFiling profile to show non‑resident status can the withdrawal process begin.
The Three‑Year Waiting Period
From 1 March 2021, SARS introduced a mandatory three‑year waiting period for non‑residents who want to access retirement benefits before the normal retirement age.
How the clock starts
The waiting period begins on the date SARS officially records your tax residency termination – not necessarily the day you left South Africa. If you delay notifying SARS, the clock starts later, pushing back your eligibility date.
What you need to prove
When you finally apply, you must show:
- Proof that SARS has accepted your non‑resident status.
- Evidence of continuous non‑residency for at least three years.
- Updated identification and tax documents.
Keeping a South African Bank Account
Fund managers and insurers will only pay out proceeds into a South African bank account that:
- Is held in your own name.
- Complies with the Financial Intelligence Centre Act (FICA) and anti‑money‑laundering rules.
Maintaining or opening such an account while you are abroad avoids unnecessary delays when the money is ready to be transferred.
Getting a SARS Tax Directive
Before any withdrawal can be processed, the fund manager must obtain a tax directive from SARS. This document:
- Confirms you are eligible to withdraw.
- Sets the applicable tax rate on the lump sum.
- Authorises the payment.
To request the directive, submit:
- Proof of non‑resident status.
- Evidence of the three‑year waiting period.
- Current identification and tax clearance documents.
Applying for an AIT TCS PIN
Once the funds are in your South African bank account, moving the money overseas requires an Approval International Transfer (AIT) Tax Compliance Status (TCS) PIN from SARS.
What the PIN does
It tells the bank that your tax affairs are fully compliant and that the source of the funds has been verified.
Application requirements
- All outstanding tax returns must be filed.
- Any unpaid tax liabilities must be settled.
- Supporting documents proving the source of the funds (e.g., the tax directive, bank statements) must be attached.
SARS will reject the application if any tax returns are missing, taxes are owed, or documentation is incomplete.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Delaying the notification of tax residency termination. This pushes back the three‑year clock.
- Assuming you can send the money directly overseas. Funds must first land in a compliant SA bank account.
- Letting your South African bank account lapse. Without a valid account, payouts are stalled.
- Submitting an AIT TCS PIN application with incomplete tax records. Outstanding returns or unpaid taxes lead to automatic refusal.
Tips for a Smooth Process
- Inform SARS of your change in residency as soon as you leave South Africa.
- Keep a copy of the SARS confirmation of non‑resident status in your records.
- Set a calendar reminder for the three‑year anniversary of that confirmation date.
- Open or maintain a FICA‑compliant bank account in your name well before you need the funds.
- File all tax returns and pay any liabilities promptly; request a tax clearance certificate if needed.
- Gather all required documents (tax directive, proof of non‑residency, bank statements) before starting the AIT TCS PIN application.
Conclusion
Accessing retirement savings while living abroad is possible, but it hinges on meeting SARS’s strict residency and compliance rules. By promptly ending your tax residency, observing the three‑year waiting period, keeping a proper South African bank account, securing a tax directive, and obtaining an AIT TCS PIN with clean tax records, you can avoid costly delays and successfully move your pension or provident fund overseas. Staying organised and proactive turns a potentially confusing process into a straightforward path to financial freedom.


