The Kenya
Revenue Authority (KRA) says it is poring through bank records, tax
returns and other transaction details of more than 30 real estate
companies in effort to recover up to Sh20 billion.
Among
the firms on the KRA radar are Banda Homes, Greenspan, Superior Homes
Kenya and Nexgen Office Suites, Muga Developers and Chigwell.
Concerns
that developers are cheating the tax system have also been raised by
the Lands ministry, which processes all transfers of land and buildings.
Taxation
of capital gains has however remained a sticky issue even as the
government moved to more than double the levy on gains from sale of
property to 12.5 percent this financial year, up from five percent.
The
taxman says holding individual directors accountable will facilitate
the collection of taxes on all gains made in constructing and selling of
homes and commercial buildings that are currently being lost in
fraudulent schemes.
“We have unearthed elaborate
schemes involving the formation of separate companies to develop homes
and use of different ones to sell the same as a means of erasing the
traceability of earnings from the business,” said Mr Edward Mbugua, a
deputy commissioner in the department of domestic taxes.
Realtors have frequently blamed poor sales for the
underperformance of the segment that has lately been flagged for
increased loans defaults that has seen many half-done houses being
auctioned.
Mr Mbugua said the use of multiple entities
to transact real estate businesses is helping tax cheats to condense the
magnitude of the housing projects, depress profit margins and the
resultant tax liability.
He cited investigation from
the KRA officials showing that most off-plan housing projects fold up
phony companies as soon as the developers are done with construction
when the properties are transferred to different entities to complicate
the tax recovery process.
Landlords are also said to
reduce number of units or declare those being occupied as vacant so as
to avoid paying monthly rental income. Mr Mbugua said that the KRA
officers were mapping houses and have acquired data bases to link from
the ministry of lands, Kenya power and various water utilities.
“There
is also non-payment of taxes on development of huge real estate
projects where the government is denied three percent withholding tax on
contracts by the contractors and other real estate professionals. Most
contracts also fail to declare income earned from real estate
development in the annual tax return,” he added.
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