Tax break package for new immigrants and returning residents

The main benefits for new immigrants and returning residents who became citizens since January 1st 2007 and onwards are as follows:

 10 years exemption from tax paying on foreign-source income (i.e., income derived outside of Israel).

 10 years exemption from declaring on foreign-source income which are exempted.

 10 years exclusion from definition as an Israeli company resident – for a company established abroad and owned by an “Oleh” or a “Senior Returning Resident”.

 Option to be considered a foreign resident for taxation purposes, for one year from arrival.

 3.5 years of entitlement to tax credit, with options of extension.

Who is entitled to the tax benefits?

 “Oleh” – New immigrant.

 “Senior Returning Resident” – Individuals who returned to Israel after they lived continuously outside of Israel, and returned to Israel not sooner than 10 years after having ceased to be a resident of Israel. Those individuals will be considered as “Oleh”.

 One-time measure – Individuals who returned to Israel during the years 2007– 2009 are considered as “Senior Returning Resident” even if lived continuously outside of Israel for at least 5 years (instead of 10 years).

Income entitled to tax benefits:

 Passive income – 10 year exemption on dividends, interest, rent, royalties and pensions generated by assets held overseas.

 Capital gain – 10 year exemption on capital gain from the alienation of assets located abroad. Extended to assets located abroad acquired after becoming Israeli resident.

 Business income – 10 year exemption on business income generated by assets held overseas.

 Vocational and labor income – 10 year exemption on salaries and income from activities of independent nature, generated abroad. Applies to business and occupation acquired or started before or after becoming an Israeli resident. Optional track for adapting: A one-year period of adjustment from the date of arrival in Israel is granted upon request, which enables the individual to choose not to be considered as an Israeli resident for tax purposes during this one-year period.
The request for the adjustment year must be submitted within 90 days from the date of arrival in Israel.

Foreign companies held and owned by “Olim” and Senior returning residents: A company established abroad and owned by an “Oleh” or a “Senior Returning Resident”, will not be considered as an Israeli company for taxation purposes for a period of 10 years, and thus will be exempt from taxes in Israel during this period on foreignsource income (i.e., income derived outside of Israel).

Tax credits: All Israeli residents are entitled to 2 credit points (reduction of NIS 436 per month from the tax liability), as well as 0.25 additional points for a working man and 0.75 points for a working woman, which are not taxed.

Working Olim (salaried employees- ME) are entitled to additional points on top of that, for a period of three and a half years following their Aliyah. This benefit may be extended whilst carrying out compulsory army service and whilst studying at university or college. Apply for this benefit by filling out the relevant sections of form 101 (filled out upon start of employment and at the beginning of every year through your employer) and attaching a photocopy of your teudat oleh to the 101 form. the extra tax credit points for olim are as follows:

 For the first 18 months – 4.5 additional credit points (reduction of NIS 654 per month or NIS 11,772 for the first 18 months)

 For the following 12 months – 2 additional credit points (reduction of NIS 436 per month or 5232 annually)

 For the following 12 months – 1 additional credit points (reduction of NIS 218 per month or NIS 2616 annually) Additional reductions are available for parents of young children, working mothers, discharged soldiers and many other reasons

2014 income grant (negative tax)

The updated criteria for the 2014 income grant, otherwise know as negative tax, is a s follows:

1. Filing a request in the post office by 30.09.2015
You will need your Israeli ID card (Teudat Zehut) and a cancelled check (for proof of bank account info)
Requests must be filled out individually, you cannot fill one out for anyone else, not even your spouse.
2. You need to be at least age 23 with children or age 55 or more, even without children.
3. Average monthly income of more than 2,070 sh and less than 6,157 sh (or if you have 3 or more children 6,766 sh)
4. During 2014 you did not have (other than an apt/home where you live) the right of more than 50% to any other property in Israel or elsewhere.
This includes: apartments, houses, stores, etc.
5. If you are self-employed you have to file your 2014 taxes. If you are a salaried employee, your employer will have to file the 126 tax report for 2014 before your
eligibility can be determined. The Tax Authority will send you a notification via the mail. Make sure your address is updated in your ID card.

All the information is available on the income grant website: http://www.mahanak.org.il

This is not income tax, but the handling of the applications is currently done by the Tax authority.

Moshe Egel-Tal, CSPP
CEO and Founder Israpay “making payroll simplified”

www.israpay.com
054-4992705
moshe.israpay@gmail.com

Read my blogs on www.israpay.com and http://jobshuk.com/motal7/blog
as well as my guest blog on www.jobmob.co.il

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New info on Tax reconciliation

bankrupt cartoon

 

The Israel Tax Authority has updated their website for citizens who want to apply for a tax reconciliation due to several simultaneous sources of income as a salaried employee. In the past, applying on line may have saved the time of physically going in to your local tax authorityoffice and waiting on line, but you still had to wait two weeks for the official documents to be sent to you via snail-mail. So, the first improvement of this process is an immediate procurment of the documents and the ability to immediately print them directly from the site !

In addition, every application recieves a serial number that can be accessed from any computer with internet capability to print extra copies at will.

The 3rd upgrade is that in the past, this was limited to a combined gross salary ceiling (from all sources) of 188,712 sh, this amount was updated to 436,272 sh !

And last, but not least, in the past you were allowed 3 tries, if you input mistaken information via the site, now that has been doubled to 6 tries, three and another three tries after 24 hours have past from the first three tries.

Save the time and do your tax reconciliation on your own time and in the comfort of your home ! No lines and no waiting !

Highly recommended

 

https://www.misim.gov.il/shteumeimas/frmPreMain.aspx

 

New Havra’a rates for 2014

The new rates for convalescence pay (dmei havra’a) have been updated as of July 2014 as follows:

Private sector = 378 sh per day

Public sector – 427 sh per day

Payment is mandatory for all employees with min 1 year tenure with the present employee.

The number of days an employee is entitled to depends on the sector and the number of years of tenure they have incurred.

 

Everything you wanted to know about travel expenses to and from work

reimbursement of travel expenses to and from work to salaried employees is an expanded regulation order. As such it is mandatory for all employers in Israel.

The only exceptions are:
1. employees whose terms of employment are under a collective work agreement that has favorable terms.
2. employees with physical or mental disabilities who are employed in protected places of employment that the State of Israel contributes towards their upkeep.
3. employees who live within walking distance from the place of work (less than 2 bus stops).
4. employees who receive a ride to and from work at their employer’s expense or on behalf of the employer. (employees who receive a ride one way are eligible for
half of the travel expenses below). This includes employees who have a company/leasing/rental car from their employer.

The maximum mandatory amount per day is 26.40 sh (from Jan 2014). This amount is updated periodically according to the changes in public transportation rates and it is incorporated into the expanded regulation order.

All employees who need transportation in order to get to work, are entitled via the expanded regulation order, to their employer’s participation for travel expenses by public transportation (bus and or train, not taxis). If an employee needs more than one bus to get to work, he is entitled to participation for that as well (under the condition that he needs at least 3 city bus stops to reach the place of work), up to the maximum mandatory amount per day.

Payment is via the payslip along with salary, in a separately itemized line on the payslip. In general, travel expenses are paid gross (not net) and are subject to income tax, social security and health tax (as salary is). If an employee’s contract or work agreement specifies that travel expense will be paid as a net payment, this means that the taxes are paid by the employer, which is legal but not very common.

The amounts are the fare for a single ride multiplied by the number of rides per day needed by the employee multiplied by the number of days worked (regardless of the number of hours worked). If there is a monthly bus card or a reduced rate bus card, the employer can pay the cheapest of the options. For absent days (no matter what the reason, even if they are paid absences, employees are not eligible for travel expense reimbursement).

 

 

 

 

 

Employer’s contribution towards employee’s meals

Employees in the public sector, that are able to benefit from discounted meals. the new ceiling for employer participation, effective from Jan 1, 2014, is 569 shekels per month.

This memorandum doesn’t enable employers, who previously did not participate in the cost, to now do so. The above regards places of employment that offer discounted meals or via meal tickets (which are regarded as employer participation).

this has no bearing on the private sector.

 

Source:  Ministry of Finance bulletin

2014 tax update for salaried employees

1. The tax brackets that were in effect since Jan 2013 will remain in effect in 2014, unchanged.

10%        up to 5,280 sh

14%        from 5,281 sh –  9,010 sh

21%       from 9,011 sh –  14,000 sh

31%       from 14,001 sh – 20,000 sh

34%      from 20,001 sh –  41,830 sh

48%      from 41,831 sh –   67,630 sh

50%  each additional sh.

 

2. The value of tax credit points remains unchanged at 218 sh.

3. The following tax amounts have been updated from Jan 2014:
A.  Ceiling for employer’s contribution toward pension – 36,356 sh per month.
B. Expense for foreign expert – 330 sh per day.
C. Salary for foreign expert – 13,100 sh per month.
D. Ceiling for linked to consumer index only loans to employees  – 7,800 sh. (any loan above this amount carries a mandatory interest rate of 4.31%
(+ v.a.t. where applicable).
E. Value added to taxable income for cell phone usage – 105 sh.
F. Ceiling for employer’s contribution toward Keren Hishtalmut – 15,712 sh per month.
G. Tax benefit for shift work:  Ceiling – 10,710 sh.  Tax credit 15% – up to 940 sh anually.
H. Ceiling for tax exemption from severance pay – 12,360 sh per year for amounts paid from 1.1.2014 onwards.
I. Income credits for deposits to Gemel/ Pension plan savings:  section 45 – 169 sh per month, section 47 – 8,700 sh per month.
J. Value added to taxable income for company/leasing car (per month):
group 1  – 2,730 sh
group 2 – 2,960 sh
group 3 – 3,810 sh
group 4 – 4,570 sh
group 5 – 6,330 sh
group 6 – 8,200 sh
group 7 – 10,550 sh
L3 motorcycle (engine capacity over 125 cc and over 33 hp) – 910 sh

For cars first registered from Jan 1, 2010 onwards (linear module), the ceiling for list prices is 506,580 sh and the deduction for Hybrid cars is 560 sh.
K.  Update for extra tax credit points for higher education (starting in Jan 2015):
Anyone completing an academic BA during 2014-2015, will be eligible for 1 additional tax credit point per month in the following tax year or the year after
(employee’s choice) .
Anyone completing an academic MBA during 2014-2015, will be eligible for 1/2 additional tax credit point per month in the following tax year or the year after
(employee’s choice) .
In fields where an apprenticeship is required, the employee can defer receipt of the additional tax credit point (or half point) to the tax year following the end of
apprenticeship.
Anyone completing an academic Phd in medicine or direct track, during 2014-2015, will be eligible for 1 additional tax credit point per month in the following
tax year or the year after  (employee’s choice), and another 1/2 additional tax credit point per month in the year following.

In 2014, all employees claiming additional tax credit points for academic studies, must fill out the appropriate boxes on the 101 from, attach a tax form 119 and all required documents.

L. Tax discounts for settlements / border areas:   Ceiling for section 11 (Kiryat Shmona, Eilat and confrontation line settlements – 241,320 sh annually.
Ceiling for residents of other communities as defined in section 11 B of the first section   – 160,800 sh annually.

The validity of tax benefits to the southern confrontation line residents (Sderot and the western Negev) has been extended until Dec 31, 2014.

The following communities have been removed from the list of eligible places, effective 23.02.2014: Eilot regional council, Bet Shean, Hazor Haglilit, Arava
Tichona regional council. This section is not final and may be subject to change.

The tax discounts for settlements have changed from Jan 2014:

section 1 (north settlements) –  11% (in 2013 was 12%)
section 2 (Kiryat Shmona) – 22% (in 2013 was 24%)
section 3 A – (Mitzpeh Ramon)  – 22% (in 2013 was 24%)
section 3B (Dimona and Yerucham) – 18% (in 2013 was 19%)
section 3C – 14% (in 2013 was 15%)
section 3D & 3E – 11% (in 2013 was 12%)

Employees who work at more than one place of employment and received a tax co-ordination, need to reapply before Feb 28, 2014, otherwise employers have been instructed to deduct maximum tax (currently 48%)!

Raise in employer’s social security contribution rates from Jan 2014

Employer’s contribution rates towards Social Security (Bituach Leumi) for salaried employees, on the portion of salary over 60% of the average salary (currently 5,297 sh but due to be updated) will be 7% starting January 2014’s payroll (up until Dec 2013 it was 6.5%).

Israeli soldiers to receive 21% pay raise in Jan 2014

Israel’s Chief of Staff ordered a pay raise of 21% for all conscripted (sadir or chova) soldiers, starting in January 2014. Their pay has not been updated since 2002, while salaried employee’s pay has been updated a few times since then.

a few examples:

combat soldiers will earn 847 sh (700 sh- up until Dec 2013)

level A combat support soldiers will earn 618 sh ( 511 sh -up until Dec 2013)

non-combat soldiers will earn 426 sh (352 sh -up until Dec 2013)

Employer’s expense to rise over next 3 years !

Change in Employer’s contribution to Social Security

 

As part of “the law to reduce the national deficit and change in the burden of taxes”, which was published today – August 13, 2012, a raise in the employer’s contribution towards Social Security has been authorized for the next 3 years, as follows:

From the higher level (on the part of salary over 60% of the average wage)

In 2013 – 6.5%

In 2014 – 7%

In 2015 – 7.5%

 

The current rate in 2012 is 5.9%.

This does not include employees who are pension-age, receiving a old-age stipend from Social Security or foreign workers or employees under age 18.