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France – South Africa Tax Treaty

The France-South Africa tax treaty caps withholding on dividends at 15% for portfolio investors and 5% for qualifying direct investment, with interest payments fully exempt at 0%. Royalties are taxed at a uniform 0% across all categories. Private pensions are taxable only in the country of residence, with no withholding at source. This is one of 49 active treaties in France's network and one of 37 in South Africa's. The general dividend rate of 15% compares to a median of 15% across France's network and 15% across South Africa's.

Verified data

DGFiP Conventions Internationales (impots.gouv.fr) (Treaty list verified April 2026. Rates from individual treaty texts (Articles 10-12).)

Withholding Rate Summary

Source: France Treaty Reference
Income TypeTreaty RateStatutory Rate (France)
Dividends (general)

Portfolio investors

15%saves 11%26%
Dividends (qualified)

Beneficial owner is a company holding >= 10% of voting stock

5%saves 21%26%
Interest

Bank interest, bonds, loans

0%0%
Royalties (avg)

Patents, copyright, know-how, film/TV

0%β€”
Pensions

Private pension distributions

0%β€”
Social Security

Government social security benefits

0%β€”

β€œTreaty Rate” is the maximum withholding permitted under this treaty. The actual effective rate may be lower if domestic law provides a more favorable rate independently. β€œStatutory Rate (France)” shows the rate that applies when no treaty benefit is claimed. Qualified dividend rate requires: Beneficial owner is a company holding >= 10% of voting stock.

Dividends
General Rate15%saves 11% vs statutory
Qualified Rate5%saves 21% vs statutory
Statutory Rate26%without treaty

The general dividend rate of 15% applies to portfolio investors. A reduced rate of 5% is available when beneficial owner is a company holding >= 10% of voting stock. Without the treaty, the statutory withholding rate on dividends is 26%.

Source: France Treaty Reference

Interest
Treaty Rate0%treaty rate
Statutory Rate0%without treaty

Interest payments (bank interest, bonds, loans) are subject to 0% withholding under this treaty, compared to the 0% statutory rate. Interest is fully exempt from source-country withholding under this treaty.

Source: France Treaty Reference

Royalties
Know-how0%
Patents0%
Film & TV0%
Copyright0%

Royalty withholding rates vary by the type of intellectual property. This treaty distinguishes 4 categories, with rates ranging from 0% to 0%.

Source: France Treaty Reference

Pensions & Social Security
Pensions0%exempt at source
Social Security0%exempt at source

Private pension distributions are taxable only in the country of residence, with no withholding at source. Government social security benefits are exempt from source-country withholding.

Source: France Treaty Reference

Comparative Context

πŸ‡«πŸ‡·France's Network

Among France's 49 active treaty partners, the 15% general dividend rate ranks 49th (median: 15%).

PartnerRate
Turkey15%
United States15%
Vietnam15%
South Africa (this treaty)15%

πŸ‡ΏπŸ‡¦South Africa's Network

Among South Africa's 37 active treaty partners, the 15% general dividend rate ranks 18th (median: 15%).

PartnerRate
Germany15%
Egypt15%
Finland15%
France (this treaty)15%
United Kingdom15%
Greece15%
Hungary15%

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the dividend withholding rate under the France-South Africa tax treaty?
The general dividend withholding rate is 15%. A reduced rate of 5% applies when beneficial owner is a company holding >= 10% of voting stock. Without the treaty, the statutory rate is 26%. Source: France Treaty Reference.
What is the interest withholding rate between France and South Africa?
The treaty rate on interest is 0%, compared to the 0% statutory rate. Source: France Treaty Reference.
How are pensions taxed under the France-South Africa treaty?
The treaty withholding rate on pensions is 0%. Source: France Treaty Reference.

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