deweyzeph
Honorary Master
Presumably ( I am not an expert) "unemployed" means that you were not drawing a salary, hence there is no IRP5 for that period. If you are running a business and are registered as an employee of that business, then there must be an IRP5 which SARS must correlate with your information. If you are not employed, your income must be declared as business income, either by the business (if it is registered with SARS), otherwise in your name.
That would make sense, but they do ask you in a separate question whether or not you received any income on an IRP5, so I don't think it's for that reason. My guess is that it's one of those leading questions they ask so they can turn around say "Look! You claimed you were unemployed, and yet we see you a lot of money went into your bank account". Who knows, but from what I know about tax, your employment status makes absolutely no difference to the amount of tax you pay on any income earned throughout the year. If you earned say, R500k for the year, you are going to pay the exact same amount of tax whether you were employed for 9 months of the year or 12 months. What would make a difference is how much PAYE an employer would have had to deduct. So every month your employer deducts PAYE from your salary on the assumption that you would have worked for the full 12 months. If you only worked 9 months of the year for your employer then they would have deducted too much tax, assuming you didn't earn any other income for the other 3 months. But at the end of the day you will still be assessed on the correct amount of tax and SARS will refund you the difference.