The Israeli Tax Authority (ITA) has considerably expanded the information they want from Israeli residents about shareholdings in foreign companies and partnerships on Tax Form 150. All this is pursuant to an announcement on December 17, 2024, with apparently no need for approval from the Knesset.
Form 150 must be attached to annual tax returns filed from the beginning of 2025 onwards even if they relate to earlier years. The aim is to find out more about offshore and onshore companies. Non-reporting means a valid tax return isn't filed.
The new Form 150 has 49 questions and 29 detailed footnotes. It is everything a form shouldn't be – illegible tiny print, full of jargon and unclear what is needed.
We review below what the new Form 150 asks Israeli residents for. It now requires details of entire groups of foreign companies.
Who must file Form 150?
First, anyone who held any rights directly or indirectly any time in the year in a foreign resident entity, incorporated or not. In the case of a publicly traded foreign entity, only if the taxpayer is a 10%-or-more major shareholder.
Second, lower tier subsidiaries over 50% controlled by the upper entity. Third, any lower tier entity where the taxpayer is a 10%-or-more shareholder. Fourth, if the ITA demands a Form 150.
The old form 150 was required from 10%-or-more shareholders, generally at the year-end. A 0.1% shareholder was off the hook, not anymore.
What are the main things reportable in Form 150?
Section A requires basic details about each foreign entity, their activity, where they reside, and whether they are fiscally transparent (owners taxed).
Section B requires control percentages at the year-end and highest in the year.
Section C1 requires Directors holding 25% or more of the entity to give details of tax reporting abroad.
Section C2 requires details and figures of passive controlled foreign companies (CFC's – mainly passive, 40%-50% or more Israeli residents' control), including the proportion of revenues and profits that are taxable.
Section C3 requires details and figures of closely held foreign professional companies that are 75% or more controlled by Israeli resident shareholders, and 50% or more are Israeli resident shareholders who engage in a "special profession" (see below).
'Special professions'
Form 150 filers are expected to know that a "special profession" is any of the following:
Security, architect, art and artistes including works of art, artistic production, drama, singing, entertaining, astrology, graphology and what is hidden, audit, quality control, modelling, teaching, instruction, training, lecturing, engineering, veterinary, computer hardware production, computer hardware operation, computer hardware treatment, computer programming, investigations, flight, sailing, representing a special professional.
Advice including: financial including personal financial, personal, security, agricultural, technical, engineering, organizational, management, governmental, scientific, tax, business, economic. Writing and composing, Scientific R&D.
Management, including managing portfolios, investments, assets, companies, organizations, institutions, and commercial bodies, including liquidation, bankruptcy, and receivership.
Statistics, Sport, Journalism & Editing, Publicity and Public Relations, Lawyer, Patent Attorney, Barrister, Photography, Accountant.
Medicine including: Psychology, Physiotherapy, Dentist, Para-Medicine, Alternative Medicine, Deficiency Treatment. Religious Services, Appraisal, Agency, Translation,
Media/Communication, Production, Editing.
Is the new Form 150 effective?
No way. New "trapped profits" legislation imposes tax on the profits of many closely held companies (with 5 or fewer shareholders) that engage in any "labor-intensive" activity, which is almost anything non-industrial or hitech.
But Form 150 requires "special profession" data. Form 150 could have been simplified by requiring "labor intensive activity" data.
Typical Example
Suppose an Israeli exporter sells into the US market via a US distribution subsidiary. If the subsidiary acts as a sales agent, Form 150 is required. But if the subsidiary buys and sells Israeli products, the special profession data is apparently not required. In both cases trapped profits taxation may apply unless the US-Israel tax treaty is invoked.
Form may take hours
Israel is an export-led start-up nation. Form 150 adds hours of red tape to our exporters' workload.
Filling in Form 150 is not a 5 minute job, it may take several hours. Multiply that by the number of foreign companies and partnerships in a group that Israelis have an interest in, it's a lot of bureaucracy for exporters and investors, not only offshore exploiters.
Israelis receiving US Form K-1 may not have all the lower level entity date the ITA demands on Form 150.
The ITA's next project is to make Form 150 an online form. Hopefully, they'll increase the print size for taxpayers.
Don't leave until last minute
Don’t leave the new tax form 150 to the last minute to report foreign entities; you won’t have enough midnight oil.
As always, consult experienced professional advisors at an early stage in specific cases.
The writer is a certified public accountant and tax specialist at Harris Consulting & Tax
