⚠ Social Enterprise Commercial Activities Are Taxable
A charity with s.88 exemption is only exempt on income from charitable activities. Commercial trading income — even if profits are used for charitable purposes — may be fully taxable. Failure to ring-fence commercial from charitable activities is a common and costly mistake.
Common Challenges
Charity vs Taxable Income Separation
Social enterprises and charities that mix charitable income with commercial trading income risk having the IRD tax all income, or denying the s.88 exemption entirely.
⚠ Risk: No ring-fencing → commercial income triggers full profits tax on all activities
S.88 Exemption Application
Not all charities automatically qualify for tax exemption. The s.88 exemption requires a formal application to the IRD with governing documents, and ongoing compliance with charity conditions.
⚠ Risk: No s.88 application → charity pays profits tax unnecessarily
Donation Deductibility
Donations to approved charities under s.88 are deductible by donors (up to 35% of assessable income). However, the charity must be correctly registered, and donations of property have specific valuation rules.
⚠ Risk: Unregistered charity → donors cannot claim donation deduction
Social Enterprise Profits Tax
A social enterprise that is not registered as a charity — even if its mission is social — is a regular taxable entity. Its profits are subject to full profits tax. Many founders are surprised by this.
⚠ Risk: Assuming charity status without registration → all trading profits fully taxable
Who Is This For?
Registered charities
Charities with s.88 exemption needing ongoing tax compliance advice.
Social enterprise companies
Non-charity social enterprises trading with a social mission.
Charity applicants
Organisations applying for s.88 charitable status and tax exemption.
Non-profit organisations
NPOs, associations, and clubs seeking to minimise their tax exposure.
What We Do
S.88 Charity Exemption Application
Prepare and submit the application for s.88 charitable status and tax exemption to the IRD.
Governing document review, charitable purpose analysis, and IRD submission
Social Enterprise Tax Return
Prepare annual profits tax return for social enterprises with charitable and commercial income separation.
Charitable vs commercial income ring-fencing analysis
Donation Deduction Compliance
Ensure the charity's donation receipts are compliant for donor deduction purposes and advise on property donation valuation.
Approved donation receipt format and s.26C deduction guidance
Social Enterprise Structure Review
Review and advise on the optimal structure for a social enterprise to achieve its mission with minimal tax cost.
Charity vs company limited by guarantee vs co-operative structure analysis
How It Works
Organisation Review
1-2 daysReview governing documents, activities, income sources, and current tax status.
Structure & Compliance Analysis
1-2 daysDetermine optimal structure and identify compliance gaps.
Application & Return Filing
2-6 weeksFile s.88 application and annual tax returns as appropriate.
Ongoing Charity Compliance
AnnualAnnual tax compliance for charitable and social enterprise activities.
Case Studies
Social enterprise — catering for employment of PWDs
- •Annual revenue HKD 4.2M (catering + grants)
- •S.88 application for charitable catering purpose
- •Commercial and charitable income ring-fenced
- •Partial exemption achieved — net tax saving HKD 185K
“They helped us get the structure right. Both mission and tax efficiency achieved.”
Environmental charity — fundraising and trading
- •S.88 approved charity
- •Commercial trading subsidiary established
- •Charitable income exempted — trading taxable
- •Annual donation receipts made compliant for donor deductions
“Expert guidance on charity and social enterprise tax. Highly recommended.”
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the s.88 charitable tax exemption in Hong Kong?
Under s.88 of the IRO, charities that are established exclusively for charitable purposes (relief of poverty, promotion of education, promotion of religion, or other charitable purposes beneficial to the community) are exempt from profits tax on income from their charitable activities. To benefit from the exemption, the charity must apply to the IRD and be approved. Approved charities are also eligible to accept tax-deductible donations under s.26C.
Is a social enterprise company automatically tax-exempt?
No. A company that describes itself as a "social enterprise" is not automatically tax-exempt. Tax exemption requires s.88 charitable status — which requires the entity's purposes to be genuinely charitable under IRD guidelines, its governing documents to reflect this, and the IRD to approve the exemption. A company limited by shares operating with a social mission but without s.88 status is fully taxable on its profits, just like any other company.
What happens if a charity engages in commercial activities?
A charity with s.88 exemption is exempt only on income from its qualifying charitable activities. Commercial trading income — even if profits are applied to charitable purposes — may be taxable. The key question is whether the commercial activity is integral to the charitable purpose (e.g., a charity shop selling donated goods) or a separate trading activity. Commercial activities that are separate from the charitable purpose should be ring-fenced in a separate taxable subsidiary to protect the charity's exempt status.
What is the maximum donation deduction for individuals in Hong Kong?
Under s.26C of the IRO, individuals can deduct donations made to approved charities (s.88 approved entities) up to 35% of their assessable income after allowances. The minimum deductible donation per tax year is HKD 100. For companies, the same 35% of assessable profits limit applies. There is no overall cap on the absolute amount — a very high earner donating a very large amount can deduct up to 35% of their total assessable income/profits.
Can a charity accept property donations and what are the tax implications?
Yes. Charities can accept property (real estate, shares, art) as donations. For the donor, the deductible amount is the market value of the property at the date of donation. For stamp duty purposes, the transfer of property to a charity may be exempt or reduced, depending on the charity's constitution and the nature of the transfer. The property must be properly valued by a qualified valuer. We advise charities on managing property donations and donors on the deductibility of property gifts.
전문 세무 서비스가 필요하신가요?
지금 바로 전문 팀에 문의하여 무료 상담 및 견적을 받아보세요. 개인 및 기업을 위한 종합 홍콩 세무 서비스를 제공합니다.
무료 상담
아래 양식을 작성하시면 24시간 이내에 전문가 팀이 연락드립니다.