Quote Originally Posted by tobo View Post
Yep, any Aus company big enough to be paying dividends are typically exempt from FIF, but you still lose the franking (Aus tax dept steals it, in essence) and you got to pay NZ tax on the net smaller div amount after franking, so Aus co needs to be making 30% more than a NZ co.

Non-dividend Aus companies (juniors and the like), of which there are many, means gains are solely in SP appreciation. SP appreciation are capital gains (and there is no capital gains tax in NZ). And then you must pay 5% FIF tax on appreciation for that year. 5% on (effectively) entire earnings for FIF companies versus 30% on a dividend that has already been shaved by 30% Franking.

Of course FIF versus non-FIF businesses is not comparing apples with apples (more like apples with screwdrivers).

I may have it wrong here but my understanding is that ASX listed company's are exempt from FIF tax regardless of whether they pay a dividend, are large or small cap etc. For other jurisdictions FIF only kicks in where initial investment exceeds $50K NZD.