⚠ Leaving HK Without Tax Clearance Can Be Costly
Employers who allow employees to leave Hong Kong before IRD clearance is obtained may be held liable for the employee's unpaid tax. Similarly, companies cannot be deregistered without clearance from the IRD. Attempting to bypass the clearance process creates significant legal and financial risk.
Common Challenges
Individual Leaving Hong Kong
Individuals emigrating or leaving HK for extended periods must settle all outstanding tax and obtain a tax clearance letter from the IRD before departure.
⚠ Risk: Leaving without clearance → employer held responsible for unpaid salaries tax
Company Deregistration
Companies applying for deregistration must obtain tax clearance from the IRD as a prerequisite. Outstanding returns, unpaid tax, or ongoing investigations must all be resolved first.
⚠ Risk: Deregistration refused without clearance → company remains alive, annual filing obligation continues
Employee Departure Notification
Employers must notify the IRD when an employee is about to leave HK (using IR56G) at least 1 month before departure. The employer must then withhold the final month's salary until clearance is received.
⚠ Risk: No IR56G notification → employer liable for employee's unpaid tax
Estate Administration Clearance
Executors and administrators of estates must obtain IRD clearance for the deceased's tax liabilities before distributing estate assets to beneficiaries.
⚠ Risk: Distributing estate without clearance → executor personally liable for unpaid tax
Who Is This For?
Individuals emigrating from HK
Individuals who are leaving Hong Kong permanently or for more than 1 year.
Companies being wound up
Companies applying for voluntary deregistration or formal winding-up.
Employers with departing employees
Employers needing to notify the IRD and obtain clearance for departing employees.
Estate executors & administrators
Executors dealing with deceased estate tax clearance requirements.
What We Do
Individual Departure Tax Clearance
Prepare all outstanding tax returns, settle tax liabilities, and obtain IRD clearance letter for departing individuals.
Salaries tax, profits tax, and property tax clearance included
Company Deregistration Clearance
Prepare final accounts, outstanding returns, and all documentation required for IRD tax clearance for company deregistration.
Final BIR51, dissolution accounts, and clearance liaison
Employee Departure Notifications
Prepare IR56G notification and manage the salary withholding and clearance process for departing employees.
IR56G filing, salary holdback, and clearance follow-up
Estate Tax Clearance
Manage the full IRD clearance process for deceased estates, including filing deceased's final returns and settling any outstanding tax.
Deceased's final tax returns and estate tax clearance letter
How It Works
Clearance Review
1-2 daysReview all outstanding returns, unpaid tax, and pending issues that must be resolved before clearance.
Return Filing
1-2 weeksFile all outstanding tax returns for the clearance period.
Tax Settlement
2-4 weeksSettle all outstanding tax liabilities with the IRD.
Clearance Letter
4-8 weeks totalObtain and deliver IRD tax clearance letter.
Case Studies
Senior executive — emigrating to Canada, complex stock awards
- •Unvested stock awards and deferred compensation
- •Multiple years' returns filed and settled
- •Stock award tax treatment negotiated with IRD
- •Clearance obtained in 6 weeks
“Efficient, professional, and they handled the complex stock award issues expertly.”
Company deregistration — HK holding company
- •3 years' returns outstanding
- •6 group companies to be deregistered
- •All returns filed, liabilities settled
- •Clearance letters obtained — all 6 companies deregistered
“Systematic and efficient. They cleaned up 3 years of backlogs and got us clean.”
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Hong Kong tax clearance certificate and who needs one?
A tax clearance letter (also called a letter of no-objection) is written confirmation from the IRD that a taxpayer has no outstanding tax liabilities. It is required in several situations: (1) Individuals leaving HK — employers must withhold the final month salary until clearance is received; (2) Companies deregistering — the Companies Registry requires IRD clearance before deregistration; (3) Estates — executors should obtain clearance before distributing assets to beneficiaries; (4) Certain property transactions — where the buyer wants confirmation that the seller has no outstanding tax.
How far in advance should I start the tax clearance process before leaving Hong Kong?
Start at least 3 months before your planned departure date. The process involves: preparing and filing any outstanding tax returns (which may take 2-4 weeks); paying any outstanding tax liabilities; and awaiting IRD processing of the clearance request (which typically takes 4-8 weeks but can take longer if returns are complex or issues arise). Employers are required to notify the IRD at least 1 month before an employee's departure using IR56G.
What happens if my employer doesn't notify the IRD before I leave Hong Kong?
Employers who fail to notify the IRD of a departing employee's departure (using IR56G at least 1 month before departure) and who fail to withhold the final month's salary pending clearance may be assessed as the agent of the employee for any unpaid tax. Under s.52 of the IRO, the employer can be held personally liable for the departing employee's unpaid salaries tax. This is a significant risk that most employers are unaware of.
Can a company be deregistered without IRD tax clearance?
No. The Companies Registry requires a letter of no-objection from the IRD and a similar letter from the Commissioner for Revenue (which covers business registration) before it will process a company's application for deregistration. The IRD will not issue the letter until all outstanding tax returns have been filed and all tax liabilities are settled. Companies with outstanding tax investigations cannot be deregistered until the investigation is concluded and settled.
How should executors handle the tax clearance for a deceased person's estate?
The executor should: (1) Notify the IRD of the deceased's death; (2) File the deceased's final tax returns for all periods up to the date of death; (3) Pay any outstanding tax from the estate assets; (4) Obtain IRD clearance letter confirming no further tax liability; (5) Distribute the remaining estate to beneficiaries. Distributing estate assets before obtaining clearance can make the executor personally liable for any tax the IRD subsequently assesses on the estate. It is strongly recommended to obtain clearance before distribution.
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