South Africans are entering a new tax reality: SARS no longer hunts for clues. It already has the data — and it’s using it.
Banks now send SARS detailed third‑party reports showing total deposits, withdrawals, interest and loan activity. As one recent article put it, “your bank reports total deposits into your account, total withdrawals, and loan activity too.”
SARS feeds this into its AI systems. If your lifestyle and your tax return don’t match, the system flags you. The audit letter that follows isn’t guesswork — it’s confirmation.
And the enforcement machine is roaring:
- R523bn in unpaid tax
- 1 700 new SARS staff
- R7.5bn extra enforcement funding
- Crypto reporting kicks in from March 2026
If you’re mixing personal and business money, SARS sees that too. Personal expenses pushed through a company account are one of the easiest wins for auditors. Expect:
- Deemed dividends
- PAYE reclassification
- Penalties up to 200%
- Possible criminal charges
Durban’s owner‑managed businesses — long used to informal banking habits — are now squarely in the spotlight. If R1.5m flows through your personal account but you declare R800k, you carry the burden of proof.
The fix is simple: Separate accounts. Keep records. Clean up loan accounts. Disclose past issues before SARS forces the issue.
SARS can see your financial footprint.
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