There are various statutory requirements regarding the types of records to be kept, the form in which they should be maintained, and the length of time for which they must be retained. In practice, it may be necessary or advisable to keep additional records or to retain them for a longer time to provide evidence for litigation or other purposes.
The Companies Act states specifically what types of company records must be retained, what must be available for public inspection, and how long such records must be retained. Generally, this period is 7 years.
The company records that must be kept, usually at the company’s registered office, include:
Accounting records must be kept for at least 7 years after the completion of the transactions or the period to which they relate.
These records must correctly record and explain the company’s transactions and enable its financial position to be determined at any time with reasonable accuracy. They should also enable the directors to ensure that financial statements comply with statutory requirements and can be readily and properly audited.
If a company’s accounting records are kept outside New Zealand, accounts and returns must be sent to New Zealand to enable the company’s financial position at 6-monthly intervals to be disclosed with reasonable accuracy, and to enable financial statements to be prepared as required by statute.
Accounting records must be kept in written form and English or readily accessible and convertible into a written English form.
The Companies Act 1993 also specifies what must be kept available for inspection. Anyone may seek to inspect the:
Shareholders may also seek to inspect:
Business taxpayers must retain relevant records in New Zealand for at least 7 years after the end of the income year to which they relate. The CIR may require records to be kept up to a further 3 years where there is a current or intended audit or investigation of the taxpayer’s affairs. These requirements apply to everyone who:
The records may be in a manual, mechanical, or electronic format. They must be kept in English and be sufficient to establish gross income and allowable deductions, fringe benefits, foreign dividends, entries to the various imputation or tax credit accounts, R&D tax credits, a listed research provider’s compliance, transfers of payroll donations, superannuation fund, and retirement scheme contributions, and a foreign trust’s financial position, as appropriate.
Where income tax returns are filed electronically, the signed hard-copy transcript must also be retained for at least 7 years after the end of the income year to which it relates.
The records should include details of:
Regarding the trading stock, taxpayers must now keep all accounting records relating to the calculation of the value of the closing stock. This requirement is relaxed slightly for small taxpayers, being those with a turnover not exceeding $3m. Such taxpayers have to retain records of valuation methods and their application in calculating the value of the closing stock, except where they are not materially different from the previous income year.
Trustees of trusts which have debt forgiven by creditors must keep records of those amounts together with records of distributions to beneficiaries “for as long as the trust exists”. Furthermore, the trustee must take all reasonable precautions for the safe custody of these records.
Pay-period taxpayers whose income has had tax deducted at its source do not need to keep records for more than 12 months after the year in which that income is received.
Records do not need to be kept once a company has been liquidated. Employer monthly schedules are also exempt from the above requirements.
The key requirements for all types of electronic record retention are that the records must:
Allow Inland Revenue to readily ascertain the amount of tax payable;
Be complete and accurate copies;
Be readily accessible, secure from alteration, and unauthorized access;
Be capable of being retrieved and produced as a legible hard copy or supplied to Inland Revenue in electronic form; and
Be identical in format and all other respects to the original records when they are reproduced in printed form.
Taxpayers who carry out transactions electronically or through the internet must ensure that their systems capture all transactions completely and accurately. IRD approval should be sought for the use of symbols or abbreviations to facilitate the electronic transfer of GST tax invoices, credit notes, or debit notes.
Emails, including details of origin, destination, and time, must be retained and accessible if they constitute business records. Taxpayers should ensure that their backup and recovery procedures will guarantee the availability of electronic records for the statutory record retention periods.
Care must also be taken to ensure retrieval remains possible following changes in computer hardware or software.
To assist you in meeting the necessary legal or financial requirements.
If you consider that any of the issues contained in this fact sheet may affect you.