Singapore’s Inland Revenue Authority (IRAS) has issued an advance ruling (Summary No. 3/2026) clarifying the application of Section 10L economic substance requirements to investment holding entities. The ruling addresses a common practical issue: the eligibility of non-pure equity-holding entities (non-PEHEs) for tax exemption on foreign-sourced disposals gains remitted to Singapore.
Key Issue:
The taxpayer, an investment holding company providing both debt funding and equity injections to subsidiaries/associates, disposed of shares and derived gains. As a non-PEHE under Section 10L(16) of the Income Tax Act, it is subject to stricter economic substance requirements than a PEHE.
Impact & Analysis:
For practitioners, this ruling underscores the critical need to accurately classify entities from the outset. A PEHE benefits from reduced requirements (primarily compliance with corporate governance laws). In contrast, a non-PEHE must demonstrate adequate substance in Singapore, typically assessed on:
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Adequate number of qualified employees physically present.
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Adequate annual operating expenditure incurred.
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Core income-generating activities (CIGAs) being conducted and directed in Singapore.
Practical Takeaway:
The decision to extend funding via loans, not just equity, fundamentally alters an entity’s classification and compliance burden. For groups with similar structures, this necessitates a substantive review of their Singapore operations. Failure to meet the enhanced requirements for a non-PEHE risks subjecting remitted disposal gains to tax under Section 10(1)(g). The ruling reinforces IRAS’s focus on substance-over-form for non-PEHEs seeking excluded entity status.
Source: IRAS, 2 January 2026.