Video Briefing

Offshore Citizen: What is Territorial Tax System?

Sep 17, 2020Video Briefing8:15Watch on YouTube

Territorial taxation applies only to income sourced within a country, not foreign income, but the definition of “local income” varies by jurisdiction and situation.

• Territorial tax systems generally exempt foreign-source income from local taxation for residents, unlike worldwide taxation where all global income is taxed. • Being resident in a territorial-tax country like Panama, Costa Rica, Malaysia, Uruguay, or Paraguay does not automatically exempt income; tax is based on where the company is resident or where the work/permanent establishment occurs. • Misconceptions include assuming income from foreign customers is automatically non-taxable; source, location of work, and payment flows determine taxability. • Dividends, interest, and pensions may have exceptions; Singapore, for example, has a quasi-territorial system but taxable dividends are limited. • Case law can clarify ambiguities, such as a Malaysian taxpayer lending to a European company, where the court ruled the foreign-source interest was not taxable in Malaysia. • Detailed planning is critical because what counts as foreign vs. local income differs by country, activity type, and transaction structure.

Takeaway: Territorial tax can shield foreign-source income, but precise definitions of local income, source rules, and permanent establishments must be analyzed to ensure compliance and maximize benefits.