| Agency overview | |
|---|---|
| Formed | 1 April 1947 (1947-04-01) |
| Headquarters | Inland Revenue Centre, 5 Concorde Road, Kai Tak,Kowloon, Hong Kong |
| Employees | 2,925 (2020–21)[1] |
| Agency executive |
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| Website | ird |
| Inland Revenue Department | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Chinese | 稅務局 | ||||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 税务局 | ||||||||||||
| Literal meaning | Tax Service Office | ||||||||||||
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TheInland Revenue Department (IRD) is theHong Konggovernment department responsible for collecting taxes and duties.
The Inland Revenue Department was established on 1 April 1947. Initially it administered only one piece of legislation, the Inland Revenue Ordinance, which was enacted on 3 May 1947.[2]
The department subsequently absorbed various elements of theTreasury, including the Estate Duty Office (in 1949), the Stamp Duty Office (1956), and responsibility for collection of entertainments, bets and sweeps, and public dance-halls taxes (1956).[2]
In December 1979, the department's headquarters moved toWindsor House in Causeway Bay, a building that was specially designed with a second lift core for the department.[2][3] In order to save on rental costs, the department moved again, in December 1991, to the eponymous government-ownedRevenue Tower in Wanchai, where it remains headquartered as of 2020.[2]
The IRD is responsible for the administration of the following Hong Kong ordinances ontaxes andduties and the related rules and regulations: