On 3 July 2026, South Africa’s Tax Court delivers its first reported judgment squarely addressing the general anti-avoidance rule (GAAR) in the context of dividend-stripping, dismissing all seven appeals brought by Company AF (Pty) Ltd and related entities against the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (CSARS). Sitting in Cape Town, Francis J applied the Absa counterfactual approach to dismantle a multi-step structure that had converted taxable share-sale proceeds into purportedly exempt dividends under section 10(1)(k)(i) of the Income Tax Act. The decision marks a watershed moment for tax avoidance litigation in South Africa, establishing a clear judicial template for how SARS may challenge aggressive transactional planning.
For in-house tax teams, M&A advisors and cross-border practitioners, the ruling demands an immediate review of any existing or contemplated structures that rely on interposed entities to re-route economic substance into exempt dividend streams.
The Tax Court is South Africa’s specialist forum for resolving disputes between taxpayers and SARS. It operates under the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 and has jurisdiction over assessments, additional assessments and penalty disputes. In Company AF (Pty) Ltd & Others v CSARS, the court consolidated seven separate appeals, each arising from a different entity within the same corporate group, and dismissed every one of them.
Francis J held that the arrangements under scrutiny were commercially abnormal, lacked genuine commercial substance, were concluded on non-arm’s-length terms and constituted a misuse of the section 10(1)(k)(i) dividend exemption. The court applied the Absa counterfactual method to reconstruct the transactions as they would have appeared had the avoidance features been stripped away, and assessed the tax consequences accordingly.
Five practical takeaways for advisors:
The dispute in Company AF (Pty) Ltd & Others v CSARS centred on a corporate group that sold a portfolio of operating subsidiaries to a third-party buyer. Rather than receiving the sale proceeds directly, which would have triggered capital gains tax, the group implemented a multi-step dividend-stripping arrangement designed to convert those proceeds into exempt dividends. The structure involved the interposition of newly created holding companies, intra-group share transfers at nominal values and the subsequent declaration of dividends that were purportedly exempt under section 10(1)(k)(i) of the Income Tax Act.
The arrangement followed a recognisable dividend-stripping pattern. First, the selling shareholder transferred its shares in the target companies to a newly incorporated special-purpose vehicle (SPV) in exchange for shares in the SPV. Second, the SPV was capitalised with intercompany loans bearing terms that the court later found fell well below market rates. Third, the SPV sold the target shares to the external buyer at fair market value. Fourth, rather than distributing the sale proceeds as a capital return, the SPV declared dividends upstream to the selling shareholder. The selling shareholder claimed those dividends were exempt from income tax under section 10(1)(k)(i).
The net effect was that a substantial capital gain was recharacterised, at the taxpayer’s election, as a tax-free dividend distribution.
SARS issued additional assessments against each entity in the group, invoking GAAR. The seven taxpayers lodged objections, all of which were disallowed. They then filed seven separate appeals to the Tax Court. The appeals were consolidated by agreement and heard together in Cape Town. Francis J delivered judgment on 3 July 2026, dismissing every appeal with costs.
South Africa’s GAAR provisions are contained in Part IIA of the Income Tax Act (sections 80A to 80L). GAAR applies where an “avoidance arrangement” results in a “tax benefit” and the arrangement (or any step in it) was entered into or carried out for the sole or main purpose of obtaining the tax benefit, is regarded as an “impermissible avoidance arrangement” and meets one or more tainted-element tests. The tainted elements include commercial abnormality, lack of commercial substance, creation of rights or obligations not ordinarily created between persons dealing at arm’s length, and misuse or abuse of the provisions of the Act.
Section 10(1)(k)(i) of the Income Tax Act exempts from normal tax any dividend received by or accrued to a resident from a South African resident company, subject to certain conditions. The exemption is a legitimate and important feature of the tax system, it prevents the economic double taxation of corporate profits. However, as the court emphasised, the exemption was never intended to shelter proceeds that are, in economic substance, capital gains on the disposal of shares.
Francis J structured the GAAR analysis around four key elements, each of which had to be established by SARS on a balance of probabilities:
The Absa counterfactual is a judicial method, refined in prior appellate authority, that asks the court to construct a hypothetical version of the transaction stripped of its avoidance features. The court then compares the tax outcome of the actual arrangement with the tax outcome of the counterfactual to determine whether a tax benefit has been obtained and whether the arrangement is impermissible. Industry observers regard this approach as the most rigorous tool available to South African courts for testing GAAR allegations, because it forces a side-by-side comparison of economic reality against artificial packaging.
The core of the judgment is Francis J’s application of the Absa counterfactual to the facts. The court’s reasoning can be distilled into three stages: constructing the counterfactual, comparing outcomes and drawing legal conclusions from the comparison.
Francis J began by identifying the “arrangement”, defined broadly under GAAR to include any transaction, operation, scheme or understanding. The court held that the entire series of steps, from the initial share transfer to the SPV through to the declaration of dividends, constituted a single arrangement with an overarching purpose of obtaining a tax benefit.
The counterfactual was straightforward: had the selling shareholder simply disposed of its shares in the target companies directly to the external buyer, it would have received capital proceeds and been liable for capital gains tax at the applicable effective rate. The interposition of the SPV, the loans on non-commercial terms and the dividend declarations were the avoidance features. Once stripped away, the transaction was an ordinary share sale.
The court found that the tax benefit was substantial. By routing the proceeds through the SPV and declaring dividends, the group eliminated what would otherwise have been a significant capital gains tax liability. That benefit, the court held, was the sole purpose of the interposition.
On commercial abnormality, Francis J was emphatic. No rational business person, dealing in the ordinary course and absent the desire to avoid tax, would have created a new company, transferred shares to it at a nominal value, extended interest-free or below-market loans and then declared dividends rather than receiving the sale proceeds directly. The steps added complexity and cost without any commercial upside other than the tax saving.
The lack of commercial substance was closely linked. The SPV had no employees, no independent management and no assets other than the shares temporarily transferred to it. It existed on paper, performed a transitory function and was, in the court’s view, a conduit.
On the arm’s-length test, the court focused on the intercompany loan terms. The loans bore no interest or were priced well below market rates, which no unrelated lender would have accepted. The share transfer prices were similarly disconnected from fair market value. These features, taken together, confirmed that the arrangement did not reflect genuine commercial bargaining.
The taxpayers advanced several defences. They argued that the SPV had a legitimate holding-company function, that the dividend declarations were lawful under the Companies Act, and that section 10(1)(k)(i) applied on its plain terms to any dividend received from a South African resident company. Francis J rejected each argument. The SPV had no holding-company function beyond its momentary role in the avoidance arrangement. The legality of the dividend under company law did not, the court held, determine its treatment under tax law. And while the dividends technically met the formal requirements of section 10(1)(k)(i), using that provision to exempt what were in substance share-sale proceeds constituted a misuse of the provision within the meaning of GAAR.
| Transaction Step | Arrangement as Done | Counterfactual / Tax Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Sale proceeds routed via interposed SPV | Treated as exempt dividends under s 10(1)(k)(i) | Recharacterised as capital gain, taxable proceeds; SARS assessment follows |
| Intercompany loans with below-market or zero interest | Non-arm’s-length; no genuine commercial substance | Properly priced or removed entirely, no dividend conversion possible |
| Absence of independent valuation for share transfers | Court treated as strong indicator of artifice | Arm’s-length valuation assumed, materially different tax result |
| SPV with no employees or independent management | Conduit entity with no commercial purpose | Entity removed from the chain, direct sale to buyer |
The judgment has immediate practical consequences for anyone advising on share disposals, group restructurings or M&A transactions in South Africa. Early indications suggest that SARS will use this decision as a template for challenging similar structures already under audit. Advisors should act now to review existing and planned arrangements against the following checklist.
Structuring red flags to watch for:
Pre-deal due diligence to reduce GAAR risk:
Post-deal remediation:
For groups that have already implemented structures bearing the hallmarks identified in this judgment, the likely practical effect will be increased audit activity from SARS. Advisors should consider whether a voluntary disclosure programme (VDP) application is appropriate to manage penalty exposure. Documentation of the commercial rationale, even retrospectively, is better than no documentation at all, although it will carry less evidentiary weight than contemporaneous records. Where a sale of business in South Africa is currently in progress, the deal team should model the GAAR risk as part of the tax due diligence workstream.
The judgment’s implications extend beyond purely domestic arrangements. Where dividend-stripping structures involve non-resident shareholders, offshore holding companies or cross-border fund flows, additional layers of risk emerge.
South Africa is a signatory to the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and has an extensive network of double taxation agreements (DTAs). SARS has the ability to obtain information from foreign tax authorities, and to share information about South African structures with those authorities. A dividend-stripping arrangement that crosses borders may therefore trigger scrutiny not only from SARS but also from the revenue authority in the recipient jurisdiction.
Withholding tax on dividends paid to non-residents (currently levied under the Dividends Tax provisions in Part VIII of the Income Tax Act) adds a further complication. If SARS recharacterises purported dividends as capital gains, the withholding tax treatment may also be adjusted, potentially creating a mismatch that is difficult to resolve under the applicable DTA. Industry observers expect SARS to pay particular attention to structures where proceeds are routed through jurisdictions with favourable DTA rates, as these add an additional avoidance dimension to the arrangement.
Advisors handling conveyancing changes in South Africa or cross-border asset transfers should factor these risks into their advice. Understanding how to enforce a court order in South Africa may also become relevant where tax debts arise from recharacterisation assessments.
The table below summarises the key differences between the arrangement as structured and the Absa counterfactual outcome applied by the Tax Court. It is designed as a quick-reference tool for advisors assessing whether an existing structure may attract GAAR scrutiny.
| Feature | Arrangement as Implemented | Absa Counterfactual Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Nature of receipt | Exempt dividend under s 10(1)(k)(i) | Taxable capital gain on direct share sale |
| Tax liability | Nil (claimed exemption) | Capital gains tax at applicable effective rate |
| Intercompany loan terms | Below-market / interest-free | Arm’s-length pricing or loan removed from chain |
| SPV commercial function | Temporary conduit, no employees or assets | Entity does not exist in counterfactual |
| Reporting obligation | Dividend reported; no CGT return filed | CGT event reported on IT return; additional assessments issued |
| Penalty exposure | Understatement penalty risk if SARS challenges | Reduced penalty risk if voluntary disclosure filed |
Advisors who need to register for VAT in South Africa or manage other SARS compliance obligations should note that a GAAR recharacterisation may trigger consequential adjustments across multiple tax heads, not only income tax.
In the wake of this landmark ruling, South Africa’s Tax Court delivers its clearest guidance yet on the boundaries of permissible tax planning involving dividend-stripping. Advisors should take three immediate steps. First, audit all existing structures involving interposed entities and dividend declarations linked to share disposals. Second, ensure that contemporaneous documentation of commercial substance is in place, or create it now where gaps exist. Third, monitor the SARS Tax Court judgments index and SAFLII for any notice of appeal. Should the matter proceed to the SCA, the appellate court’s treatment of the Absa counterfactual will have far-reaching implications for tax avoidance litigation across all sectors.
For tailored guidance on GAAR risk, M&A structuring or Tax Court litigation, consult a qualified South African tax specialist through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
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