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Dividends and non-resident companies and shareholders

Work out what you need to do for dividends paid or credited by non-resident companies or to non-resident shareholders.

Published 29 May 2025

Dividends paid or credited by non-resident companies

If you're a temporary resident and receive dividends from a non-resident company, you won't need to show the dividend in your Australian tax return. For more information, see Temporary resident foreign income exemption.

If you're a shareholder of a New Zealand franking company that has paid a dividend that is franked with Australian franking credits, you may be able to claim a franking tax offset. For more information on how to claim the franking tax offset, see Trans-Tasman imputation special rules.

Non-resident companies, other than certain New Zealand franking companies, are not subject to the imputation system and you won't be entitled to claim a franking tax offset for any tax paid by the company.

However, you may find that foreign tax has been withheld from the dividend so that the amount paid or credited to you is reduced.

In most circumstances, you'll be liable to pay Australian income tax on the dividend. You must include the full amount of the dividend in your tax return. This means the amount you're paid or credited plus the amount of any foreign tax that has been deducted. You may be able to claim a foreign income tax offset for the foreign tax paid.

In certain circumstances, foreign dividends may be exempt from tax. For example, they may be exempt to avoid any double taxation, or because the portfolio out of which the dividends have been paid has already been taxed at a comparable rate.

There are special rules that need to be satisfied for you to claim a foreign income tax offset. For more information, see Guide to foreign income tax offset rules 2025.

Example 9: payments by foreign companies

Emma has shares in a company resident in the United States of America. She is entitled to be paid a dividend of $400. Before she is paid the dividend, the company deducts $60 in foreign tax, sending Emma the remaining $340. All amounts are translated into Australian dollars.

When she completes her Australian tax return, Emma includes $400 as foreign source income and may be able to claim a foreign income tax offset of $60.

End of example

Dividends denominated in a foreign currency

You must translate all assessable dividends you receive denominated in a foreign currency into Australian dollars before including them in your Australian tax return.

For more information on the exchange rates that should be used in translating foreign currency amounts, see:

Dividends paid or credited to non-resident shareholders

Non-resident individuals can also be paid or credited franked dividends or unfranked dividends from Australian resident companies. However, they are taxed differently from resident shareholders.

If your residency status changed during the year (for example, you became a resident in the second half of the year) there may be occasions where withholding tax was not deducted from payments made to you before you became a resident. If this happens, you should attach a schedule to your tax return explaining your circumstances. We'll work out the amount of withholding tax you have to pay on these dividends and advise you of this amount.

Franked dividends

If you're a non-resident of Australia, the franked amount of dividends you're paid or credited are not subject to Australian income and withholding taxes. The unfranked amount will be subject to withholding tax.

However, you're not entitled to any franking tax offset for franked dividends. You can't use any franking credit attached to franked dividends to reduce the amount of tax payable on other Australian income and you can't get a refund of the franking credit. You should not include the amount of any franked dividend or any franking credit in your Australian tax return.

Unfranked dividends

A resident company may pay or credit to you an unfranked dividend. There is no franking credit attached to these dividends.

You can declare the whole or a portion of an unfranked dividend to be conduit foreign income on your dividend statement. If you declare an unfranked dividend to be conduit foreign income, it's not assessable income and is exempt from withholding tax.

Any other unfranked dividends paid or credited to a non-resident are subject to a final withholding tax.

Withholding tax is imposed on the full amount of the unfranked dividends. That is, no deductions may be made from the dividends, and a flat rate of withholding tax is applied whether or not you have other Australian taxable income. If you're paid or credited any partly franked dividends, withholding tax is deducted from the unfranked amount.

Before you're paid a dividend, withholding tax is deducted by the company. The company will only pay or credit you the reduced amount. It's deducted at a rate of 30% unless you're a resident of a country with which Australia has entered into a tax treaty that varies the amount of withholding tax that can be levied on dividends.

Australia has entered into tax treaties with more than 40 countries and the rate of withholding tax on dividends is limited to 15% in most of these agreements. Details of the rates that apply to residents of specific countries can be obtained from us. Dividends paid on shares that are classified as non-equity shares under the debt and equity rules are treated as interest payments for withholding tax purposes. For the residents of many countries, the rate of withholding tax on these payments is 10%.

The withholding tax on unfranked dividends is a final tax, so you'll have no further Australian tax liability on the dividend income. Therefore, if the only income you earn is dividend income that is a fully franked dividend or an unfranked amount of a dividend which either has withholding tax deducted or declared to be conduit foreign income, you don't need to lodge an Australian tax return.

If you're paid or credited dividends that are not fully franked and are not declared to be conduit foreign income (and from which withholding tax isn't deducted), you should attach a separate schedule to your tax return showing details of those dividends. We'll work out the amount of withholding tax you have to pay on these dividends and advise you of this amount.

However, if you receive that dividend under a demerger that happened on or after 1 July 2002 and the head entity hasn't elected for it to be assessable, you don't include it in your tax return. This applies even though it's an unfranked dividend and no withholding tax has been paid on that dividend. If you're in any doubt, contact us.

Deductions

You can't claim any expenses you incur in deriving dividends that aren't assessable in Australia, including any dividend that you don't need to show in your Australian tax return.

Continue to: Franking tax offsets and franking credits

Return to: Deductions from dividend income

 

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