Do not show the following income at this item or you may be taxed incorrectly:
- attributed foreign income and any other foreign source income from a partnership or trust (unless instructed otherwise); see questions 19 and 20
- a capital gain from a trust (unless instructed otherwise); see question 18
- a capital gain or a capital loss in respect of your interest in a partnership or a partnership asset; see question 18
- income from a corporate limited partnership; see question 11
- income from a public trading trust or a corporate unit trust; see question 11
- interest you received, or were credited with, from a joint account, where you quoted your individual tax file number to the financial institution; see question 10
- that part of a distribution which relates to an amount of trust income on which family trust distribution tax has been paid A5 or trustee beneficiary non-disclosure tax has been paid
- rent derived jointly (or in common) with another person from a jointly held property where you were not a member of a partnership carrying on a business of renting out properties; see question 21.
Did you receive or were you entitled to:
- income or a loss from a partnership
- income from a trust (including a managed fund)
- a credit for amounts of tax paid on, or amounts withheld from, partnership or trust income, or
- a share of the 'national rental affordability scheme' tax offset?
or
Did you have an interest in a trust that made a loss from primary production activities?
If the partnership in which you were a partner paid you salary, wages or allowances, you must show that income at this item.
If you received, or were entitled to, a share of the income of a trust (including a managed fund) you must show your share of the trust's net income (for tax purposes) at this item. Do not show these amounts at item 10 or item 24. The amount of your share of the trust's net income (for tax purposes) may be different from the actual distribution which you receive or are entitled to receive from the trust. Your trustee should provide you with details of your share of the trust's net income in your trust statement of distribution or advice. If you have not been advised about your share of the trust's net income, contact your trustee.
You must show at this item your share of the net income of a managed fund, including a cash management trust, money market trust, mortgage trust, unit trust or managed fund such as a property trust, share trust, equity trust, growth trust, imputation trust or balanced trust. If you are unsure whether you have invested in such a trust, check with your advisor or the entity in which you have invested.
No |
Go to question 14 Personal services income (PSI) 2017, or return to main menu Individual tax return instructions. |
Yes |
If you were a partner in a partnership that made a loss, you cannot lodge a paper tax return. You must lodge your tax return using myTax or a registered tax agent. |
You need to know
If you have received or are entitled to an amount of income from a partnership or trust which includes a dividend with Australian franking credits from a New Zealand franking company, you may be eligible to claim the Australian franking credits. The instructions at question 20 Foreign source income and foreign assets or property provide guidance on how to claim Australian franking credits from a New Zealand franking company. However, you cannot claim New Zealand imputation credits.
If you have deferred non-commercial business losses from a prior year, you may be able to claim them this year if you operated the same or a similar business activity.
The deferred non-commercial business loss deduction you can claim in 2016-17 may be reduced if you earned net exempt income in 2016-17. For more information see How to offset your losses.
If you became bankrupt (or received a relief from debt) the deferred losses will no longer be available. The loss cannot be deducted in the current year or any future year.
For more information about how exempt income and bankruptcy affect deferred non-commercial business losses, phone 13 28 66.
Do not show at this item any distribution from a partnership or trust in relation to a foreign resident capital gains withholding credit. Show them at item 18.
If you were entitled to an amount of trust income at 30 June 2017, you need to include your share of the net income of the trust in your 2016–17 tax return even if you did not receive an amount from the trust until after 30 June 2017. If you have not been advised about all of your trust entitlements, contact your trustee.
If the trust income which you have received or are entitled to includes an amount described as tax-free, tax deferred, tax exempted or as a capital gains tax (CGT) concession, then read the information on non-assessable payments in the Guide to capital gains tax 2017.
While such amounts may not need to be included at this item, they may be relevant in determining the amount of a net capital gain you show at item 18 or may affect the cost base of your unit or trust interest.
Do not show all categories of income from a partnership or trust at this item. If your partnership distribution or your trust statement of distribution or advice includes amounts of the following categories, show them at other items on your tax return as follows:
- show capital gains from trusts at item 18, unless instructed otherwise
- show attributed foreign income at item 19
- show other foreign source income at item 20.
If you are the principal beneficiary of a special disability trust you are considered to be entitled to all the income of the trust.
Do not show at this item your entitlement to an early stage venture capital limited partnership (ESVCLP) tax offset as determined by a partnership or trustee of a trust. Show it at item T8.
Do not show at this item your entitlement to an early stage investor tax offset as a beneficiary of a trust or a partner in a partnership. Show it at T9.
You should not receive a distribution of a net capital gain or a net capital loss from a partnership. For information about how a partner shows their share of a capital gain or capital loss, see the Guide to capital gains tax 2017.
What you may need
- a statement of distribution or advice from the partnership or trustee showing the following details in relation to your share of partnership distribution or share of trust net income for tax purposes:
- the amount of any primary production income or loss and the amount of any non-primary production income or loss
- the amount of net small business income from a small business entity trust or partnership
- the amount of any franked distribution from a trust
- the amount of attributed foreign income and other foreign source income
- the amount of any income on which family trust distribution tax or trustee beneficiary non-disclosure tax has been paid
- that you are a chosen beneficiary if you are the beneficiary of a discretionary primary production trust that has made a loss
- your entitlement to any of the following credits or tax offsets
- credit for amounts of tax withheld because the partnership or trust failed to quote its Australian business number
- credit for amounts of tax withheld by the trustee of a closely held trust because you did not provide your TFN
- credit for amounts of tax withheld due to the imposition of non-resident withholding tax or managed investment trust withholding tax from partnership or trust income you received when you were a resident
- share of the 'national rental affordability scheme' tax offset
- allowable franking credits from franked dividends
- credit for tax file number amounts withheld
- credit for tax paid by the trustee.
- You may need details of any deductions you can claim against your partnership income or your share of the trust's net income that have not already been claimed by the partnership or trust.
If you conducted a business activity as a partner in a partnership that:
- resulted in a loss, or
- resulted in a loss after deducting your expenses
then you must complete items P3 and P9 in the Business and professional items section in Business and professional items 2017 in addition to item 13. If this applies to you, then you must lodge your tax return using myTax or a registered tax agent.
If you think that any details are wrong or are missing from the statement of distribution or advice you received from the partnership or trust, contact the managing partner or trustee.
If you are a foreign resident who has received a fund payment from a managed investment trust on which an amount was withheld, see Withholding tax arrangements for managed investment trust fund payments.
Completing this item
Answer the following three questions.
1. Were you an Australian resident in receipt of, or entitled to receive, Australian source income from a non-resident trust?
If you were an Australian resident, you may be able to claim a credit for Australian withholding tax you have borne on any Australian:
- source dividend
- interest
- royalty, or
- payment from an Australian managed investment trust included in the income of a non-resident trust to which you are entitled. A non-resident trust is a trust which, for all of the income year
- only has non-resident trustees, and
- has its central management and control outside Australia.
2. Were you under a legal disability?
If you were under a legal disability, you may be able to claim a credit for the tax that the trustee has paid on your share of the trust's net income. You are considered to be under a legal disability if you:
- were under 18 years old on 30 June 2017
- are a person who is bankrupt, or
- have been declared legally incapable because of a mental condition.
3. Were you a foreign resident?
If you were not an Australian resident, you may be able to claim a credit for the tax that the trustee has paid on your share of income from a resident trust.
If you answered No to all three questions, go to Part A.
If you answered Yes to one or more of these questions, you will need to provide additional information. Print Schedule of additional information - Item 13 at the top of a separate sheet of paper. Print your name, address, tax file number, the name of the trust, your share of income from the trust and any credits you are entitled to claim for that income, and explain your situation. Print X in the Yes box at Taxpayer's declaration on your tax return. Attach your schedule to page 3 of your tax return. Read on.
Part A
Were you a partner in a partnership that derived income or made a loss?
No |
Go to Part B. |
Yes |
If the partnership made a loss, you cannot lodge a paper tax return. You must lodge your tax return using myTax or a registered tax agent. |
Step 1
Write the total of your share of primary production partnership income or loss at N item 13 on page 13 of your tax return. Do not show cents. If you have a loss, print L in the box at the right of N.
Step 2
Write the total of your share of non-primary production partnership income or loss (excluding any attributed foreign income or other foreign source income) at O item 13. Ensure that your share of any franked distributions (that may be shown on your distribution statement from the partnership) is included at O. The amount included at O should include the amount of any attached franking credits. Do not show cents. If you have a loss, print L in the box at the right of O.
Step 3
Complete items P3 and P9 in the Business and professional items section if the amount at N or O includes a loss from a business activity operated by one or more of your partnerships.
Part B
Did you receive, or were you entitled to, income from a trust, or did you have an interest in a trust that made a loss from primary production activities?
If you are the principal beneficiary of a special disability trust you are considered to be entitled to all of the income of the trust.
No |
Go to Part C. |
Yes |
Read on. |
Your statement of distribution or advice from the trust should show separately your share of primary production and non-primary production income (excluding net capital gains, foreign income and franked distributions) included in the calculation of the trust's net income (for tax purposes). It will also show whether the trust made a loss in relation to either or both of these income categories. This information is needed for averaging purposes.
You show your share of any primary production trust income or loss included in the calculation of the trust's net income at L item 13 on your tax return and your share of other trust income or loss included in the calculation of the trust's net income at the relevant item, either U item 13, C item 13 or items 18, 19 or 20 on your tax return.
If the trust made an overall loss for tax law purposes in 2016–17, the loss is retained in the trust. You will have no share of the net income of the trust.
For more information, phone 13 28 61.
Step 1
Write the total of your share of primary production trust net income or loss at L item 13 on your tax return. Do not show cents. If you have a loss, print L in the box at the right of L.
Step 2
Write at U the total of your share of non-primary production trust net income or loss. If your statement of distribution or advice shows these amounts separately, exclude:
- capital gains
- attributed foreign income
- other foreign source income, and
- franked distributions from trusts.
Include any share of credits to be shown for share of credits from income covered in Part F.
If you have a loss, print L in the box at the right of U.
Your statement of distribution or advice may show that your share of the trust's net capital gain is more than the overall amount of your share of the trust's net income (for tax purposes) included at item 13, for example because it shows a share of primary production or non-primary production loss. In this situation, there may be a limit to the amount of the net capital gain component that you exclude from U and show at item 18.
For more information, see the Guide to capital gains tax 2017.
If your statement of distribution or advice shows your share of franked distributions from trusts separately, write this amount at C, together with any share of franking credits referrable to those franked distributions. The franking credits are also shown at Q under Share of credits from income and tax offsets covered in Part F.
Where you are a partner in a partnership, record the franked distributions shown on your statement of distribution from the partnership at O not C.
Exception for primary producers
You may still be eligible for income averaging even where the trust reports a loss. While beneficiaries of fixed trusts that report a loss continue to be eligible for income averaging, beneficiaries of discretionary trusts are now required to meet some additional requirements.
Completing your claim for income averaging
If you are an eligible beneficiary and you show nothing at L so far, write zero at L.
Part C
Can you claim any deductions in relation to a distribution from a partnership or a share of net income from a trust?
No |
Go to Part D. |
Yes |
If you were a partner in a partnership that made a loss, you cannot lodge a paper tax return. You must lodge your tax return using myTax or a registered tax agent. |
Remember, you cannot claim a deduction for amounts already claimed by the partnership or trust, or for expenses incurred in deriving exempt income or non-assessable non-exempt income (for example, expenses incurred in deriving distributions on which family trust distribution tax or trustee beneficiary non-disclosure tax has been paid).
If you are the beneficiary of a discretionary trust you would not normally be able to claim a deduction for expenses you incurred in relation to your share of any net income of the trust under the general deduction provisions. This is because at the time you incurred the expense, you would not have been entitled to any income of the trust.
If you made a prepayment of $1,000 or more for something to be done (in whole or in part) in a future income year, the amount you can deduct at X and Y may be affected by the rules relating to prepayments.
For more information on prepayments, see Deductions for prepaid expenses 2017.
If you have incurred debt deductions, such as interest and borrowing costs, in deriving assessable income from a trust or partnership, of more than $2,000,000 (alone or combined with those of your associate entities) for 2016–17, the amount that you can deduct at X and Y may be affected by the thin capitalisation rules. For more information, see Thin capitalisation.
Primary production deductions
Step 1
If you were a partner in a partnership that incurred eligible expenditure on landcare operations, water facilities, fencing assets or fodder storage assets, the partnership cannot claim the expenditure. Costs incurred by the partnership are allocated to each partner who can then claim the deduction.
Write your share of the total of any such expenditure that relates to primary production income or loss from partnerships that you can deduct this year at I item 13 on your tax return.
If a trustee incurred eligible expenditure on landcare operations, water facilities, fencing assets or fodder storage assets, only the trustee, not a beneficiary of the trust, can claim deductions for that expenditure.
For more information on deductions for expenditure on landcare operations, water facilities, fencing assets and fodder storage assets, see the Guide to depreciating assets 2017 (NAT 1996).
Step 2
Write at X item 13 the total of any other deductions (including non-commercial business losses deferred from a prior year) you can claim in relation to your share of:
- primary production income or loss from a partnership, or
- primary production income of a trust.
If you were a partner in a partnership and you can claim a deduction in relation to your share of eligible expenditure incurred by the partnership on horticultural plants, grapevines, electricity connections or phone lines, include any such deduction that relates to primary production income or loss from a partnership at X. For information about deductions for expenditure on horticultural plants, grapevines, electricity connections and phone lines, see the Guide to depreciating assets 2017 (NAT 1996).
Include a non-commercial business loss deferred from a prior year business activity only if it relates to one of your current year partnership business activities which is the same as, or similar to, the prior year business activity which generated the loss. See the Example.
The deferred non-commercial business loss deduction you can claim in 2016-17 may be reduced if you earned net exempt income in 2016-17. For more information see How to offset your losses.
If you became bankrupt (or received a relief from debt) the deferred losses will no longer be available. The loss cannot be deducted in the current year or any future year.
For more information about how exempt income and bankruptcy affect deferred non-commercial business losses, phone 13 28 66.
Step 3
From the list below, print the code letter in the Type box at the right of X that describes business losses from a prior year that you are claiming at X.
- Print D if the entire amount at X is a deferred non-commercial business loss from a prior year.
- Print P if only part of the amount at X is a deferred non-commercial business loss from a prior year.
Leave the Type box blank if the amount at X does not include any deferred non-commercial business losses from a prior year.
Non-primary production deductions
Step 1
If a partnership incurs eligible expenditure on landcare operations, the partnership cannot claim the expenditure. Costs incurred by the partnership are allocated to each partner who can then claim the deduction. Write your share of the total of any such expenditure that relates to non-primary production income or loss from partnerships that you can deduct this year at J item 13.
If a trustee incurred eligible expenditure on landcare operations, only the trustee, not a beneficiary of the trust, can claim deductions for that expenditure. For more information on deductions for expenditure on landcare operations, see the Guide to depreciating assets 2017 (NAT 1996).
Step 2
Write at Y item 13 the total of other deductions (including non-commercial business losses deferred from a prior year) you can claim in relation to your share of:
- non-primary production income or loss from a partnership, and
- non-primary production income of a trust, including any deductions relating to franked distributions from trusts.
If you were a partner in a partnership and you can claim a deduction in relation to your share of eligible expenditure incurred by the partnership on electricity connections, include any such deduction that relates to non-primary production income or loss from partnerships at Y item 13. For information about deductions for expenditure on electricity connections, see the Guide to depreciating assets 2017 (NAT 1996).
Include non-commercial business losses deferred from a prior year only if they relate to a partnership activity which is the same as, or similar to, your current year partnership activity. See the Example.
The deferred non-commercial business loss deduction you can claim in 2016-17 may be reduced if you earned net exempt income in 2016-17. For more information see How to offset your losses.
If you became bankrupt (or received a relief from debt) the deferred losses will no longer be available. The loss cannot be deducted in the current year or any future year.
For more information about how exempt income and bankruptcy affect deferred non-commercial business losses, phone 13 28 66.
Step 3
From the list below, print the code letter in the TYPE box at the right of Y that describes business losses from a prior year that you are claiming at Y.
- Print D if the entire amount at Y is a deferred non-commercial business loss from a prior year.
- Print P if only part of the amount at Y is a deferred non-commercial business loss from a prior year.
- Leave the Type box blank if the amount at Y does not include any deferred non-commercial business losses from a prior year.
In 2015–16 Lisa deferred total non-commercial business losses of $6,000 from her share of partnership business activities made up of:
- $5,000 from a furniture restoration business, and
- $1,000 from a computer consultancy business.
The partnership did not carry on the computer consultancy business in 2016–17. Lisa cannot include her $1,000 loss from the computer consultancy business at Y. This amount does not relate to a business activity which is the same as, or similar to, her current year partnership business activity.
In 2016–17 Lisa's partnership distribution from the furniture restoration business was $2,000. Lisa includes the $2,000 at O, $5,000 as a deferred loss relating to the furniture restoration business at Y and prints D in the TYPE box. Therefore, her net distribution from this partnership business activity is a loss of $3,000.
Lisa must also show her $5,000 loss from the furniture restoration business against Deferred non-commercial business loss from a prior year at item P9 in the Business and professional items section. She must also show the net distribution of the $3,000 loss from the furniture restoration business against Net loss at item P9.
Lisa should keep a record of her $1,000 deferred loss from the computer consultancy business, as she may be able to claim it in a later year if that business starts again or she starts a similar business.
End of examplePart D
Working out net amount from primary production and non-primary production
Step 1
Net primary production amount
Add the income amounts or loss amounts at N and L and take away the amounts at I and X. Write the answer at item 13 Net primary production amount on your tax return. Do not show cents.
If your answer is a loss, print L in the Loss box at the right of Net primary production amount.
If you have a total net loss from a partnership business activity, complete items P3 and P9 in the Business and professional items section in addition to item 13 on your tax return.
Step 2
Net non-primary production amount
Add the income amounts or loss amounts at O and U. Then add any amount at C and take away the amounts at J and Y. Write the answer at item 13 Net non-primary production amount.
If your answer is a loss, print L in the Loss box at the right of Net non-primary production amount.
If you have a total net loss from a partnership business activity, complete items P3 and P9 in the Business and professional items section in addition to item 13 on your tax return.
Professional income
If the partnership or trust income which you have received, or to which you are entitled, includes income from activities as an author of a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, or as an inventor, performing artist, production associate or active sportsperson, you must also write the amount of this taxable professional income at Z item 24. You will not be taxed twice on this income. For more information, see question 24 Other income 2017.
Part E
Did either of the following apply:
- your distribution or share of net income included a share of net small business income?
- you had a farm management repayment or other amount you received as a partner or beneficiary in a small business entity?
No |
Go to Part F. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You may be entitled to the small business income tax offset.
Complete this item to work out your:
- Partnership share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share
- Trust share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share.
Amounts you show at this item are not included in your income. Tthey are only used for the purpose of working out your small business income tax offset.
Your statement of distribution or advice from the partnership or trustee should include details of your ‘Share of net small business income’ from each partnership or trust that is a small business entity. If a partnership made an overall loss, you are not entitled to a tax offset in relation to that share of net small business income.
You are entitled to the offset only in respect of your share of net small business income from:
- a small business entity partnership in which you are a partner, where the business income was derived by that partnership from carrying on its own business activities, or
- a small business entity trust in which you are a beneficiary, where the business income was derived by that trust from carrying on its own business activities.
You must reduce your share of net small business income and other partner or beneficiary income amounts by any deductions you are entitled to, to the extent they are attributable to that share of income or other income amounts.
The deductions you can claim against your share of net small business income are explained at Part C. Include any deductions for farm management deposits you made as a partner or beneficiary.
Your deductions from Part C plus your deductible farm management deposits from D item 17 cannot be greater than your share of net small business income from that partnership or trust.
At this item also include any:
- farm management repayments included in your income this year as a partner or beneficiary.
- other business income that is only included in your income because you were a partner or beneficiary, for example, a recoupment or reimbursement of a deduction that you previously claimed as a partner or beneficiary.
Do not include interest on your farm management deposits at this item.
Any deductions that are attributable to a farm management repayment, or other business income, cannot be greater than the amount to which the deduction relates.
Do not reduce your share of net small business income or other income amounts by any of the following deductions:
- tax-related expenses
- gifts or contributions
- personal superannuation contributions.
For more information, see Small business income tax offset.
Completing this item
To work out your partnership or trust share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share, use:
- the worksheet provided below the step-by-step instructions, or
- the Small business income tax offset calculator.
Partnership share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share
If you are a partner in a partnership the statement of distribution or advice should also include details of any business loss activities. If the partnership made an overall loss, treat your share of net small business income from that partnership as zero.
If the partnership carried on more than one business activity and one or more activities made a loss, the non-commercial business loss rules apply to that loss activity. If overall the partnership made a profit but your share of the partnership's net small business income has been reduced (but not to zero or below) by a loss you may be required to adjust your share of the partnership's net small business income. For more information about the non-commercial loss rules see the instructions to item P9.
Step 1 Add up all your 'share of net small business income' amounts that relate to partnership distributions you have shown at item 13 and at item 20 and write this at row a.
Step 2 If the following applies write your share of that loss at row b:
- your distribution from a partnership included a share of a business loss that was not deductible this year due to the non-commercial loss rules, and
- your share of that loss reduced a 'share of net small business income' amount included at row a (but not to zero or below).
Step 3 Add up rows a and b and write the result at row c.
Step 4 Write any farm management repayments from N or R item 17 that relate to your partnership share at row d.
Step 5 Write any other business income amounts included in your income because you were a partner at row e.
Step 6 Add up rows c, d and e and write the result at row f.
Step 7 Write any deductible farm management deposits from D item 17 that are attributable to your partnership share of net small business income at row g.
Step 8 Write any deductions claimed at I or J item 13 that are attributable to your partnership share at row h.
Step 9 Write any deductions claimed at X or Y item 13 that are attributable to your partnership share at row i.
Step 10 Write any deductions that relate to your farm management repayments or other partner business amounts at row j.
Step 11 Add together rows g, h, i and j then write the total at row k.
Step 12 Subtract row k from row f and write this at row l. If the result is a loss, write zero.
Write the amount at row l at D item 13 Partnership share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share.
Trust share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share
If the trust made an overall loss, treat your share of net small business income from that trust as zero.
If you are a beneficiary who is a minor (under 18 years old and you are not an excepted person) you are not entitled to this offset. Write ‘0’ at E item 13 Trust share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share.
If you are the beneficiary of a discretionary trust you would not normally be able to claim a deduction for expenses you incurred in relation to your share of any net income of the trust under the general deduction provisions. This is because at the time you incurred the expense, you would not have been entitled to any income of the trust.
Step 1 Add up all your ‘share of net small business income' amounts that relate to trust distributions you have shown at item 13 and at item 20 and write this at row a.
Step 2 Write any farm management repayments from N or R item 17 that relate to your trust share at row b.
Step 3 Write any other business income amounts included in your income because you were a beneficiary at row c.
Step 4 Add together rows a, b and c and write the result at row d.
Step 5 Write any deductible farm management deposits shown at D item 17 that are attributable to your trust share of net small business income at row e.
Step 6 Write any deductions claimed at X or Y item 13 that are attributable to your trust share at row f.
Step 7 Write any deductions that relate to your farm management repayments or other beneficiary business amounts at row g.
Step 8 Add together rows e, f and g then write the total at row h.
Step 9 Subtract row h from row d and write this at row i. If the result is a loss, write zero.
Write the amount at row i at E item 13 Trust share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share.
Row |
Calculation |
Amount |
---|---|---|
a |
Trust share of net small business income from trusts |
|
b |
Farm management repayments at N or R item 17 |
|
c |
Other business income because you were a beneficiary |
|
d |
Add rows a, b and c and write the result at row d. |
|
e |
Farm management deposits at D item 17 |
|
f |
Deductions claimed at X or Y item 13 |
|
g |
Deductions that relate to your farm management repayment or other beneficiary business income |
|
h |
Add up rows e, f and g then write the total at row h. |
|
i |
Subtract row h from row d and show this at row i. If the result is a loss write zero. This is your trust share of net small business income less deductions attributable to that share. |
|
Part F
Share of credits from income and tax offsets
If the partnership or trust income you have shown at N, L, O, U or C item 13 on your tax return includes or is attributable to:
- income from which an amount of tax was withheld because an Australian business number was not quoted, then write your share of the credit at P item 13 (show cents)
- interest, dividends and unit trust distributions from which tax file number (TFN) amounts have been withheld, then write the total of your share of credits for TFN amounts withheld at R item 13 (show cents)
- payments from a closely held trust from which TFN amounts have been withheld, then write the total of your credits for those amounts withheld at M item 13 (show cents)
- income that
- you received when you were an Australian resident from which an amount of tax was withheld because of the imposition of non-resident withholding tax or managed investment trust withholding tax, or
- you derived as a foreign resident from which an amount of tax was withheld because of the operation of the foreign resident withholding rules
- then write the total amount of these credits for amounts withheld at A item 13 (show cents)
- national rental affordability scheme (NRAS) rent, then write your share of the NRAS tax offset at B item 13 (show cents)
- other credits for tax paid by a trustee on trust income, then write the total of your share of credits for tax paid by a trustee at S item 13 (show cents). However, if you are the principal beneficiary of a special disability trust, do not include your share of credits for tax paid by the trustee here. Include your share of credits for tax paid by the trustee at T11.
Franking credits
Write the amount of your share of any allowable franking credits which you are entitled to claim as a franking tax offset through a partnership or trust at Q item 13. Show cents.
You can only claim a share of a franking credit which relates to the share of a franked dividend paid to a partnership or trust which is indirectly included in the amount of partnership income or loss you show at O item 13, or in the amount of trust income you show at U item 13 or franked distribution you show at C item 13.
Therefore, you cannot claim a franking credit for a dividend paid to the partnership or trust which was exempt income or non-assessable non-exempt income (for example, a distribution on which family trust distribution tax or trustee beneficiary non-disclosure tax has been paid).
You cannot claim a share of a franking credit through a trust in the following circumstances:
- the trust has an overall loss for tax purposes for 2016–17, or
- you did not show an amount of franked distributions from trusts at C item 13, or
- the amount of income from the trust you have shown at U item 13 is not attributable to the franked dividend which has generated the franking credit.
In addition, in order to claim a franking credit in respect of a particular dividend both you and the partnership or trustee must be qualified persons in relation to that dividend, see Qualified person below.
Qualified person
There are rules, known as franking credit trading rules, designed to prevent the use of franking credits by persons who only briefly own their shares or who do not effectively own their shares. Under these rules, known as the 'holding period rule' and the 'related payments rule', you must satisfy certain criteria before you are considered to be a qualified person.
If you derived dividends indirectly through a partnership or trust (except a widely held trust) you need to determine what component of the trust net income or partnership distribution is attributable to a particular dividend, and then determine whether you have satisfied the holding period rule and the related payments rule in relation to that dividend.
The trustee or the partnership itself must also have satisfied these rules.
The holding period rule applies to shares bought on or after 1 July 1997. It applies to you if you (or the partnership or trust) sold shares within 45 days of buying them. It also applies to you if you (or the partnership or trust) entered into a risk reduction arrangement, such as a derivative transaction, within that time. The holding period is 90 days for certain preference shares.
The related payments rule applies to arrangements entered into after 7.30pm (Australian Eastern Standard Time) on 13 May 1997. It applies to you (or the partnership or trust) if you were under an obligation to make a related payment for a dividend and you did not hold your shares 'at risk' during a specified qualifying period.
Special rules apply if you are the beneficiary of a trust and the trustee has made a family trust election.
If you are a beneficiary in a widely held trust, you are treated as holding an interest in all the shares or interests held by the trust. You are only required to satisfy the 45-day rule in relation to your interest in the trust as a whole, rather than in relation to each share in which you had an interest under the trust. The trustee should be able to advise if a particular trust qualifies as a widely held trust.
If you failed to satisfy the holding period rule, and the related payments rule does not apply to you, you may still be entitled to a franking tax offset if you qualify for the small shareholder exemption. The small shareholder exemption applies provided that you do not exceed the franking tax offset ceiling of $5,000 on all your franking tax offset entitlements in a given year, whether received directly or indirectly through a partnership or trust.
If any of these measures are likely to affect you, see You and your shares 2017 (NAT 2632).
Check that you have...
- completed as necessary parts A, B, C, D, E and F
- attached to page 3 of your tax return your Schedule of additional information - Item 13, if you need to send us one
- kept a record of each partnership distribution or share of net income from a trust with your other records. You need the following information: name and tax file number of the partnership or trust, amount and source of each partnership distribution or share of net income from a trust, amount of any taxable professional income, amount and type of deductions claimed, and amount and type of any share of credits.
Where to go next
- Go to question 14 Personal services income (PSI) 2017
- Return to main menu Individual tax return instructions
- Go back to Income that you show on the supplementary section of the tax return 2017