Small business skills and training boost
Enter the amount claimed by the AMIT for the small business skills and training boost. Don't include the total amount for skills and training expenditure at this label.
The amount of the boost, or bonus deduction, is equal to 20% of the total eligible skills and training expenditure that you can claim as a general deduction or under another deduction provision of the tax law.
The small business skills and training boost provides a temporary bonus deduction to businesses (with aggregated annual turnover of less than $50 million). The bonus deduction is for expenditure that the entity incurs in providing eligible external training courses to employees by eligible registered training providers.
The bonus deduction is an additional tax deduction of 20%, on top of their ordinary deduction, for eligible expenditure incurred from 7:30 pm (AEDT) on 29 March 2022 to 30 June 2024. It applies to enrolments or arrangements for the provision of eligible training made or entered into at or after 7:30 pm (AEDT) on 29 March 2022.
The small business entity must also meet the following criteria for the bonus deduction:
- expenditure must be for training employees, in-person in Australia or online
- expenditure must be charged, directly or indirectly, by an eligible registered training provider and be for training within the scope of the provider's registration
- the eligible registered training provider must not be the small business entity or an associate of the small business entity
- expenditure must already be deductible under the taxation law.
Expenditure for training persons other than employees is not eligible for the bonus deduction.
The ordinary deduction for eligible skills and training expenditure is claimable under the usual rules in the income year in which the expenditure is incurred. However, special rules apply in claiming the bonus deduction for the eligible expenditure.
When the bonus deduction is claimed
When you claim the bonus deduction also depends on your balancing date if the small business has a substituted accounting period.
Normal balancers
For eligible expenditure incurred between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024, you claim the bonus deduction in your 2023–24 tax return.
Late balancers
For eligible expenditure incurred between the start of your 2023–24 income year and 30 June 2024, you claim the bonus deduction in your 2023–24 tax return.
Early balancers
For eligible expenditure incurred in your 2023–24 income year, you claim the bonus deduction in your 2023–24 tax return.
For eligible expenditure incurred in your 2024–25 income year (up until 30 June 2024), you claim the bonus deduction in your 2024–25 tax return.
Small business energy incentive
The Treasury Laws Amendment (Support for Small Business, Charities, and other Measures) Act 2024External Link provides businesses with an aggregated annual turnover of less than $50 million with access to a temporary bonus deduction equal to 20% of the cost of eligible assets or improvements to existing assets that support more efficient energy use.
The bonus deduction applies to the cost of eligible assets and improvements up to a maximum amount of $100,000, with the maximum bonus deduction being $20,000.
The bonus deduction is separate and additional to other deductions you would ordinarily claim under taxation law.
Enter the amount claimed by the AMIT for the small business energy incentive bonus deduction at this label. Don't include the total energy incentive expenditure amount at this label for which you claim an ordinary deduction.
Criteria for claiming the bonus deduction
You must meet the following criteria for the bonus deduction:
- Your business needs to meet the aggregated annual turnover rules (with an increased 50 million threshold).
- The expenditure being claimed must be deductible to your business under other provisions in the taxation law.
- For expenditure on eligible assets, the asset must be both: first used or installed ready for use for any purpose between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024; and used or installed ready for use for a taxable purpose between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024.
- For expenditure on eligible improvements to existing assets, the expenditure must be incurred between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024.
- Neither the expenditure nor the asset is excluded.
You can't claim the bonus deduction for the cost of an eligible asset, or an improvement to an existing asset, if a balancing adjustment event occurs to the asset (for example, you sell it) during the income year in which you hold the asset and incur the expenditure, unless the balancing adjustment event is an involuntary disposal.
You calculate the bonus deduction as 20% of the cost of the eligible asset or improvement, irrespective of whether your ordinary deduction for the decline in value of the asset is claimed in one income year (under instant asset write off) or over its effective life.
Eligible assets
A depreciating asset may be eligible for the bonus deduction if it uses electricity and when one or more of the following apply:
- there is a new reasonably comparable asset that uses a fossil fuel available in the market
- the asset is more energy efficient than the asset it is replacing
- if it is not a replacement, it is more energy efficient than a new reasonably comparable asset available in the market.
A depreciating asset may also be eligible if it is an energy storage, time-shifting or monitoring asset, or an asset that improves the energy efficiency of another asset.
Eligible improvements
An improvement to a depreciating asset may be eligible for the bonus deduction if it:
- enables the asset to only use electricity, or energy that is generated from a renewable source, instead of a fossil fuel
- enables the asset to be more energy efficient, provided that asset only uses electricity, or energy generated from a renewable source
- facilitates the storage, time-shifting or usage monitoring of electricity, or energy generated from a renewable source (for example, a battery that stores electricity).
Excluded assets and expenditure
The following types of assets and expenditure are not eligible for the bonus deduction:
- assets and expenditure on assets that can use a fossil fuel (except if that use is merely incidental such as where an asset uses an oil-based lubricant)
- assets and expenditure on assets which have the sole or predominant purpose of generating electricity (such as solar panels)
- capital works
- motor vehicles (including hybrid and electric vehicles) and expenditure on motor vehicles
- assets and expenditure on assets allocated to software development pools
- financing costs, including interest and borrowing expenses.
When the bonus deduction is claimed
For eligible expenditure on depreciating assets you claim the bonus deduction for that expenditure in your 2023–24 tax return when the asset is both:
- first used or installed ready for use for any purpose between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024
- used or installed ready for use for a taxable purpose between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024.
For eligible expenditure on improvements to assets incurred between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024, you will also claim the bonus deduction for that expenditure in your 2023-24 tax return.
An entity with a substituted accounting period may claim the bonus deduction across more than one income year, provided the eligible asset was first used or installed ready for use, or the improvement cost was incurred, between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024.
Continue to: Withholding obligations for AMITs
Return to: Instructions to complete the AMIT tax return 2024