Steps on How To Get TIN Number for Mixed-Income Individuals & the Requirements
HOW TO GET TIN NUMBER FOR MIXED-INCOME INDIVIDUALS – Here is a complete guide in getting a Tax Identification Number from the BIR.
Everyone who is earning money in the Philippines may be it from working in a public or private company or through a business must register to the Bureau of Internal Revenue for the tax payment. More popularly called BIR, it is the tax-collecting body in the country.
The Bureau of Internal Revenue issues a Tax Identification Number or more popularly called TIN or TIN number to earning individuals, partnerships, and corporations. It is composed of a unique set of digits certifying that the individual or corporation is a tax payer in the country.
The TIN application to the Bureau of Internal Revenue is open to a lot of people and groups of individuals. It has set categories for the taxpayers such as the following:
- anyone who earns an income in the Philippines (Filipinos and foreign nationals)
- self-employed Filipino and foreign individuals including:
- freelancers
- sole proprietors
- online sellers
- professionals
- mixed-income earners
- local and foreign estates in the Philippines
- Filipino-owned and foreign-owned corporate tax payers in the Philippines
- persons registering under EO 98 to be able to transact with other government offices
- one-time taxpayers including the individuals who will be paying any of the following:
- capital gains tax
- donor’s tax
- estate tax
- tax on winnings
How to get a TIN number for the mixed-income individuals? Take the first step of preparing TIN Number requirements including the money for the TIN number fee.
If you already have the documents and the amount needed, here are the steps on how to get a TIN number for mixed-income individuals:
- Step 1 — Go to the Revenue District Office (RDO) with jurisdiction over the place where your housee, head office, or branch office is located.
- Step 2 — Submit the required documents to the New Business Registrant Counter (NBRC).
- Step 3 — Pay for the annual registration fee, the documentary stamp tax, and the fee for the BIR-printe receipt/invoice.
- Step 4 — Attened the initial briefing for new business registrations conducted by the RDO.
- Step 5 — Receive the following documents from BIR:
- Certificate of Registration (BIR Form 2303)
- Notice to Issue Receipt/Invoice
- BIR-printed receipts/invoices or Authority to Print, whichever is applicable
- Received copy of BIR Form 1901
- Proof of payments
Mixed-income individuals must make the Tax Identification Number (TIN) application on or before the start of the business such as whichever comes first between the day when the first sale was made or within 30 calendar days from the date that the Business Permit was issued.