The Australian Tax Office has issued guidance1 noting that COVID-19 has created a special set of circumstances that must be taken into account when considering the source of the employment income of a non-resident who usually works overseas but instead performs that same employment in Australia as a result of COVID-19. Whilst the Australian Taxation Office is willing to accept that where the remote working arrangement is short term (three months or less) the income from that employment will not have an Australian source; where the working arrangement is longer than three months, relevant circumstances need to be examined to determine if the employment is connected to Australia. A relevant factor to take into account in determining whether that income is Australian sourced, is whether that non-resident is working from Australia solely as a result of COVID-19 restrictions. However, the guidance further notes that employment income earned by a resident of another country while working in Australia may be deemed by a tax treaty to be from sources in Australia and any applicable treaty should be reviewed carefully, as wording, conditions and time periods vary from treaty to treaty.
The Austrian Federal Ministry of Finance issued guidance noting that a governmental subsidy for a reduction in the working time of employees (of up to 100%) that an employer pays forward to his employees is taxable in the jurisdiction in which the activity to which the subsidy relates would have been carried out as determined under a provision based on Art 15 OECD Model on the basis of the principle of causality. However, if a double tax treaty contains a separate provision for income from statutory social insurance or similar income, the guidance notes that a compensation for this type of subsidy is not within the scope of Art 15 OECD Model, but falls under the respective special provision of the double tax treaty, which – as a rule – assigns the taxation right to the state-of-fund.2
The Austrian Federal Ministry of Finance issued guidance noting that in the context of Art 15(2)(a) OECD Model days of presence caused by illness are not to be counted if the illness prevents the employee from leaving the country and the tax exemption in this jurisdiction would – as a result – not be available anymore. This interpretation applies as well in case the employee is prevented from leaving a jurisdiction due to COVID-19 under the following circumstances:
the employee is prevented from leaving the jurisdiction as a result of COVID-19, and
is not working during the period of time, when he is prevented from leaving the jurisdiction.
As a result, the guidance notes that the additional days spent as a result of COVID-19 would not be counted towards the days of stay and the state of residence would have the exclusive taxing right according to the 183-day rule.
The Austrian Federal Ministry of Finance issued guidance noting that in the context of Art 15(4) of the Austria-Liechtenstein double tax treaty (special provision on cross-border workers) individuals who were previously classified as cross-border workers because they commuted "as a rule every working day", but who now work from home to curb the further spread of the COVID-19 pandemic (among other things due to the recommendations made by the respective governments) do not lose their status as cross-border workers.
A competent authority agreement concerning the COVID-19 pandemic was concluded between Austria and Italy with regard to the application of Art 15(4) of the respective double tax treaty (special provision on cross-border workers). Accordingly, “taxpayers who usually commute to their place of work but work from home to curb the spread of COVID-19 continue to work as cross-border commuters within the meaning of Art 15(4)”.
A competent authority agreement concerning COVID-19 was concluded between Austria and Germany with regard to the application of Art 15(6) of the respective double tax treaty (special provision on cross-border workers). Accordingly, working days for which wages are paid and on which cross-border commuters only exercise work in the home office due to the measures to combat the COVID-19 pandemic will not be included in the calculation of the 45-day limitation3. That competent authority agreement provides with regard to the application of Art 15(1) of the respective double tax treaty, "working days [...] during which employees solely work in the home office due to the measures to combat the COVID-19 pandemic can be considered as working days spent in the contracting state in which the employees would have exercised their work without the measures to combat the COVID-19 pandemic".
Canada’s Revenue Agency has issued guidance4 noting that some U.S. residents who regularly exercise their employment in Canada and who are normally not present in Canada in excess of 183 days (and, for that reason alone, are not taxable in Canada on their employment income) may now be exercising their duties in Canada for an extended period of time, as a result of the travel restrictions. The guidance confirms that until the earliest of certain events, including when the employee returned or was able to return to their jurisdiction of residence and 31 December 2020, those days will not be counted toward the 183-day test in the Canada-United States income tax treaty. Canada will also take this approach in applying the days-of-presence test in other tax treaties.
Finland’s tax authority has issued guidance5 noting that the COVID-19 pandemic does not affect the way the Finnish tax authorities determine how to interpret tax treaty articles on employment income. The same guidance outlines how domestic force majeure rules can result in days spent in Finland not counting for the purposes of Finland’s domestic six month rule where a Finland resident was assigned to work abroad but returns to Finland as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Germany’s Federal Ministry of Finance has concluded consultation agreements6 with the competent authorities of Austria, Belgium, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland and Switzerland that contain a mutual agreement on a temporary and factual fiction. For the period of time during which the health authorities continue to advise to work from home due to a high risk of infection, days on which cross-border workers work remotely can be considered as being spent in the state where the work would have been carried out without the COVID-19 related measures. However, this fiction does not apply to working days that would have been spent at home or in a third State independently from these measures. The fiction is optional, i.e. a cross-border worker for whom the fiction would be disadvantageous has the right to apply the rules of the tax treaty as they stand. In relation to Austria, it has also been agreed that days on which cross-border workers work remotely due to COVID-19 related measures shall not be deemed harmful for the qualification as „commuter“. Further, the mutual agreements with Austria, France, Luxembourg and the Netherlands also contain a provision regarding the treatment of social security payments received for days spent idle at home (e.g. „Kurzarbeitergeld“). It is the common understanding that these payments fall within the scope of the respective treaty article governing social security payments.
Greece's Independent Authority for Public Revenue issued guidance7 noting that, for tax treaty purposes, payments that employees receive from their employers despite restrictions to the exercise of their employment (i.e. wage subsidies) fall within the scope of Article 15 OECD Model and are attributable to the place where the employment used to be exercised before the COVID-19 outbreak.
Ireland’s Revenue issued guidance8 on domestic law confirming that Irish Revenue will not seek to enforce Irish payroll obligations for foreign employers in genuine cases where an employee was working abroad for a foreign entity prior to COVID-19 but relocates temporarily to Ireland during the COVID-19 period and performs duties for his or her foreign employer while in Ireland.
New Zealand’s Inland Revenue issued guidance9 on domestic law under which a non-resident person will become subject to New Zealand income tax on their employment income if they exercise their employment in New Zealand for 92 days or more. The guidance notes that the COVID-19 pandemic could cause employees to have to stay in New Zealand longer than 92 days despite their plans to leave. The guidance provides that if the employee leaves or returns to their jurisdiction within a reasonable time after they are no longer practically restricted in travelling, then any extra days when the person was unable to leave (that are in addition to the 92 days) will be disregarded.
The UK HM Revenue & Customs issued guidance10 noting that there is no change to the employment article and how it applies will depend on the employee’s circumstances. The UK accepts that a non-resident is not liable on employment income relating to employment exercised in the UK during a period of unexpected enforced stay due to the COVID-19 pandemic.11
The US Internal Revenue Service issued guidance12 confirming that for purposes of computing days of presence in the United States under the 183 day test in the dependent services provision of US treaties, days of presence (comprising a single period not exceeding 60 consecutive days, starting on or after February 1, 2020 and on or before April 1, 2020) during which the individual was unable to leave the United States due to COVID-19 Emergency Travel Disruptions, as the term is described in the relevant guidance, will not be counted.
The sample of jurisdictions’ guidance referenced includes guidance on both domestic law and application of treaties. It is noted that for most jurisdictions, guidance on the domestic law does not affect interpretation of treaty provisions and the Commentary. The inclusion of references to guidance on domestic law is for illustrative purposes only and is not intended to suggest that domestic law ought to be applied or interpreted in conformity with the Commentary.
3. The 45-day limitation is a limitation previously agreed between Austria and Germany concerning the status of cross-border workers. It refers to days on which the border is not actually crossed (due to home office work). Exceeding this limitation leads to a loss of the cross-border worker status. As a result, the general provisions of Art 15 would apply in such cases.