The Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) has clarified significant tax changes affecting individuals, including revised relief structures, stock-based remuneration rules, and guidelines for gig economy/hobby income. These updates, effective from Year of Assessment (YA) 2025, aim to address cost-of-living pressures and evolving work models.
Major Tax Relief Reforms
- Working Mother’s Child Relief (WMCR):
- For Singaporean children born/adopted on or after 1 January 2024, WMCR shifts to a fixed amount (based on child order), replacing the previous percentage-of-income model.
- Relief for children born/adopted before 2024 remains unchanged.
- Total Child Relief cap: $50,000 per child, capped at 100% of the mother’s earned income.
- Dependent/Caregiver Income Thresholds:
- Income thresholds for Spouse Relief, Parent Relief, and related schemes rise from $4,000 to $8,000, reflecting higher living costs.
- Standardized Tax Filing Deadline:
- Paper tax forms (Forms P, B, B1, M) must now be filed by 18 April 2025, aligning with e-Filing deadlines.
Tax Treatment of Stock-Based Compensation
IRAS confirmed that gains from Employee Share Options (ESOP) or Employee Share Ownership (ESOW) are taxable in Singapore if granted during Singapore-based employment. Key rules:
- Taxable Point: The later of grant, vesting, exercise (ESOP only), or lifting of selling restrictions.
- Foreign Employees: Ceasing Singapore employment triggers a deemed exercise—taxed at the later of grant date or one month before cessation.
- Gain Calculation: Market value at taxable point minus price paid by the employee.
Gig Economy & Hobby Income: Critical Distinctions
IRAS emphasized that income from systematic side hustles (e.g., freelance gigs) is taxable as business income. Conversely, hobby earnings may escape taxation unless activities show profit-seeking patterns. A case study illustrates:
Alan, a real estate agent, sold trading cards ($800/card) and cryptocurrency ($2,000 profit) sporadically. IRAS deemed these gains non-taxable due to low frequency, absence of trade intent, and lack of organized profit-seeking.
Determining Taxable “Badges of Trade”:
- Transaction frequency and volume
- Profit-seeking motive
- Financial capacity to hold assets long-term
- Duration of ownership
Investment Gains & Cryptocurrency
Capital gains from investments (property, shares, crypto) remain non-taxable unless IRAS identifies trading patterns. The “badges of trade” framework applies holistically.
Compliance Guidance
Tax practitioners and individuals filing YA 2025 returns should:
- Apply new WMCR thresholds and relief caps accurately.
- Assess ESOP/ESOW grants for Singapore employment links.
- Document intent and patterns for hobby/gig income.
Source: IRAS, 8 April 2025