P1 Personal services income (PSI)
Personal services income (PSI) is income that is mainly a reward for an individual’s personal efforts or skills. Examples of PSI are:
- income of a professional practitioner in a sole practice
- income payable under a contract which is wholly or principally for the labour or services of a person
- income derived by a professional sportsperson or entertainer from the exercise of professional skills
- income derived by consultants from the exercise of personal expertise.
PSI does not include income that is mainly:
- for supplying or selling goods (for example, from retailing, wholesaling or manufacturing)
- generated by a significant income-producing asset (such as a bulldozer)
- for granting a right to use property (for example, the copyright to a computer program)
- generated by a business structure (for example, a large accounting firm).
Item P1 concerns PSI earned as a sole trader only. Answer No to the question below if you gained all your PSI as an employee or through a company, partnership or trust.
Did you receive any PSI?
No |
Print X in the No box at item P1 on your schedule. |
Yes |
Print X in the Yes box at item P1 on your schedule. Read on. |
If you have earned PSI but not as an employee, you may not be able to claim certain deductions in relation to earning that income (for example, rent, mortgage interest, rates or land tax for your home, or payments to your spouse or other associate) for support work, such as secretarial duties. This depends on whether:
- you have a personal services business determination from the Commissioner of Taxation stating that your PSI was from conducting a personal services business for the whole of the period you earned PSI, or
- you satisfied one of the four tests in Part A.
If you earned PSI as a sole trader you need to read on and answer one or more of the questions in Part A. The questions will determine whether deductions in relation to your PSI are affected by the PSI rules.
The PSI rules do not affect your legal, contractual or workplace arrangements; you won’t be treated as an employee as a result of the rules.
Part A
Did you satisfy the results test?
If you earn PSI, you satisfy the results test for 2019–20 if, in respect of at least 75% of your PSI, you can answer yes to all of the following three questions:
- Under your contract or arrangement, was the PSI paid to achieve a specified result or outcome?
- Did you have to provide the tools or equipment necessary to do your work? (If no tools or equipment were required for your work, answer yes.)
- Were you liable for rectifying defects in your work?
Your contract must require the production of a specified result or outcome. The contract must also state that payment is conditional upon the achievement of that outcome. The essence of the contract must be to achieve a result and not just do work as required.
Yes |
Print X in the Yes box at P item P1 on your schedule. |
No |
Print X in the No box at P item P1 on your schedule. Read on. |
Have you received a personal services business determination from the Commissioner that was in force for the whole of the period you earned PSI?
This is a notice from the Commissioner stating that you are conducting a personal services business. If you have a personal services business determination from the Commissioner, the PSI rules do not apply to your PSI and any deductions.
Yes |
Print X in the Yes box at C item P1 on your schedule. |
No |
Print X in the No box at C item P1 on your schedule. Read on. |
Did you receive 80% or more of your PSI from one source?
If you don’t satisfy the results test and 80% or more of your PSI in 2019–20 came from one client and its associates, you cannot self-assess whether you satisfy the other personal services business tests. The PSI rules apply to you unless you get a determination from the Commissioner.
If you don’t satisfy the results test, you can self-assess against the other tests only if less than 80% of your PSI came from each client.
You should consider PSI obtained by merely putting your name with a labour hire firm, placement agency or similar organisation as income from one client.
Commission agents
Special rules apply to commission agents. For more information, phone 13 28 66.
Yes |
Print X in the Yes box at Q item P1 on your schedule. |
No |
Print X in the No box at Q item P1 on your schedule. Read on. |
Did you satisfy the unrelated clients test?
You will satisfy the unrelated clients test for 2019–20 if you can answer yes to the following question:
Did you receive PSI from two or more clients who are not associated with each other or with you?
You must also provide the personal services work as a direct result of making offers to the public, for example, by advertising. Do not count clients obtained by registering with a labour hire firm, placement agency or similar organisation.
No |
Read on. |
Yes |
Print X in the box at D1 item P1 on your schedule. Read on. |
Did you satisfy the employment test?
You satisfy the employment test in 2019–20 if you can answer yes to either of the following questions:
- Did you have one or more apprentices for at least half of 2019–20?
- Did you have employees, or did you engage subcontractors or entities, who performed at least 20% (by market value) of your principal work?
Principal work is the main work that generates the PSI and does not usually include support work, such as secretarial duties. You can count a spouse or a family member who does principal work, but not companies, partnerships or trusts associated with you.
No |
Read on. |
Yes |
Print X in the box at E1 item P1 on your schedule. Read on. |
Did you satisfy the business premises test?
You satisfy the business premises test if you can answer yes to all of the following questions. For the whole period during which you earned PSI, were your business premises:
- maintained by you
- mainly used by you for work earning your PSI, for example, more than 50% of the use
- used exclusively by you
- physically separate from your private residence or the private residence of any of your associates
- physically separate from the business address of your clients or their associates?
No |
Read on. |
Yes |
Print X in the box at F1 item P1 on your schedule. Read on. |
If you printed X at D1, E1 or F1, go to P2 Description of main business or professional activity. Otherwise read on.
Part B
Do not show PSI amounts that were subject to foreign resident withholding in part B. Show these at item P8.
You need to know
You must complete part B of item P1 if you received PSI and you did not:
- receive a personal services business determination in relation to your PSI
- satisfy the results test, or
- satisfy at least one of the other three personal services business tests (if less than 80% of your PSI came from each client).
PSI is divided into:
- income that was subject to a PAYG voluntary agreement to withhold tax
- income from which tax has been withheld because you did not quote your Australian business number (ABN) to one of your payers
- income received under a labour hire arrangement or from a specified payment
- other PSI.
Goods and services tax (GST)
If you are registered or required to be registered for GST, do not include any GST amounts in your assessable income. Your deductions should not include any amounts that relate to input tax credit entitlements.
Former STS taxpayers
If you are eligible and are continuing to use the simplified tax system (STS) accounting method, you must complete the income and deduction parts of item P1 using the STS accounting method.
See also:
You may need to complete an Individual PAYG payment summary schedule
If tax has been withheld from business income, you should have received a payment summary.
You will need to complete the Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020 (NAT 3647) before completing the rest of item P1 if you received one of the following payment summaries:
- PAYG payment summary – business and personal services income
- PAYG payment summary – withholding where ABN not quoted.
While the PAYG payment summary – business and personal services income allows reporting of different payment types (including labour hire or other specified payments and voluntary agreement) you must specify on the schedule the nature of the income and the payment type made to you.
For further information, see How to complete the Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020.
A payer may issue a receipt, remittance advice or similar document in place of the PAYG payment summary – withholding where ABN not quoted. This document must contain the same details as the payment summary and be signed by the payer.
If you received income from which tax was withheld and you did not receive or have lost your payment summary, contact your payer and ask for a copy.
How to complete the Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020
Step 1 Write your tax file number (TFN) and name in the appropriate boxes at the top of the schedule.
Step 2 Nature of income, print X in the Personal services income box.
Step 3 For each payment summary, transfer the following information to the schedule:
- the type of withholding (look at your payment summary to determine its type and complete the Type box, using the following key)
- V voluntary agreement
- N withholding where ABN not quoted
- S labour hire or other specified payments
- the payer’s ABN or withholding payer number (WPN) and the payer’s name in the appropriate boxes
- the total tax withheld in the Tax withheld box
- the gross payment in the Gross payment box.
Step 4 Check that you have recorded details from all relevant payment summaries on your payment summary schedule. Attach the schedule to page 3 of your tax return.
Do not attach the payment summaries to your tax return. You must keep them for a period of five years.
Payers must report to us details of payments where amounts of tax have been withheld. This information will be cross-checked with that on your tax return to make sure that you have declared the correct amount of income and the correct amount of tax withheld.
You may need two payment summary schedules. If you have both PSI (item P1) and business income (item P8), you will need to complete an Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020 for each type of income.
Income
PSI – voluntary agreement
Did you receive any PSI that was subject to a PAYG voluntary agreement?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
The amount you show at M is the total income you received that was subject to a PAYG voluntary agreement, including amounts of tax withheld. You will be able to calculate this amount from your completed payment summary schedule.
Completing this item
Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule that have a V in the corresponding Type box. Write the total at M item P1. Do not show cents.
If you complete M item P1, you must also complete G item 14 on page 13 of your tax return (supplementary section).
PSI – where Australian business number not quoted
Did you have any amounts of tax withheld from your PSI for failure to quote your ABN?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
The amount you show at N is your total PSI from which an amount has been withheld because you did not quote your ABN, including the amounts of tax withheld. You will be able to calculate this amount from your completed payment summary schedule.
Completing this item
Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule that have an N in the corresponding Type box. Write the total at N item P1. Do not show cents.
If you complete N item P1, you must also complete H item 14 on page 13 of your tax return (supplementary section).
PSI – labour hire or other specified payments
Did you receive any PSI under a labour hire arrangement or from a specified payment?
Specified payments include:
- tutorial services you provided for the Indigenous Student Success Programme (formerly known as the Indigenous Tutorial Assistance Scheme) of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
- income from translation and interpretation services for the Translating and Interpreting Service National of the Department of Home Affairs
- income as a performing artist in a promotional activity
- payments of green army allowance (within the meaning of the Social Security Act 1991).
No |
Go to. |
Yes |
Read on. |
The amount you show at O is the total income you received from labour hire or other specified payments, including amounts of tax withheld. You will be able to calculate this amount from your completed payment summary schedule.
Do not include income received as an employee of a labour hire business. These amounts will appear on your PAYG payment summary – individual non-business and you should show them at item 1 on page 2 of your tax return.
Completing this item
Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule that have an S in the corresponding Type box. Write the total at O item P1. Do not show cents.
If you complete O item P1, you must also complete J item 14 on page 13 of your tax return (supplementary section).
PSI – other
Did you receive any other PSI?
No |
Go to Deductions. |
Yes |
Read on. |
Work out the total amount of other PSI and write this amount at J item P1.
If you are registered or required to be registered for GST, do not include any GST amounts in your assessable income.
Deductions
Limited deductions against PSI
The PSI rules affect the deductions you can claim against your PSI. They do not affect your legal, contractual or workplace arrangements; you won’t be treated as an employee as a result of the PSI rules.
The information on this page is a guide only. You may need further information to determine whether a deduction is available in your circumstances; Taxation Ruling TR 2003/10 Income tax: deductions that relate to personal services income explains the PSI deduction limitation rules.
What deductions you may be able to claim
Subject to exceptions, the general rule is that you may claim an amount used to gain or produce your PSI if you could claim that amount if the income was payable to you as an employee.
The following are examples of items you may be able to claim a deduction for:
- premiums for workers compensation, public liability and professional indemnity insurance
- financial institution and other account-keeping fees and charges
- tax-related expenses, such as the cost of preparing and lodging a tax return or business activity statement (BAS)
- registration or licensing fees
- expenses for advertising, tendering and quoting for work
- deduction for decline in value of depreciating assets
- simplified depreciation (if you are a small business entity)
- running expenses for your home office, such as heating and lighting for using a room in your house as a home office (not including rent, mortgage interest, rates or land taxes)
- salary and wages for an arm’s length employee (not an associate)
- contributions to a complying superannuation fund on behalf of an arm’s length employee (not an associate)
- reasonable amounts paid to an associate for principal work
- contributions to a complying superannuation fund or retirement savings account up to the superannuation guarantee amount for an associate doing solely principal work.
Do not include any amount that was a superannuation contribution for yourself. Any deduction for your own superannuation contributions must be claimed at item D12 on your tax return (supplementary section). See question D12 in Individual tax return instructions supplement 2020.
What you cannot claim
You cannot claim an amount for the following if it related to gaining your PSI:
- rent, mortgage interest, rates or land tax for your residence (or the residence of an associate)
- amounts paid to an associate for non-principal work, for example, support such as secretarial work
- contributions to a superannuation fund for an associate doing solely non-principal work.
Deductions for payments to associates for principal work
Do you have deductions for payments to associates for principal work?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
Add up the total amount of payments made to associates for principal work. Write the total at K item P1.
Total amount of other deductions against PSI
Do you have other allowable deductions against your PSI?
No |
Go to Net PSI. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
In answering this question you include only non-commercial business losses deferred from a prior income year if they relate to a business activity which is the same as, or similar to, one of your 2019–20 business activities. See P9 Business loss activity details for an explanation of how the non-commercial business loss rules work.
Your non-commercial business loss deduction may be reduced if:
- you earned net exempt income in 2019–20, or
- you became bankrupt or were released from any debts by the operation of an Act relating to bankruptcy.
See also:
- How to defer your losses
- phone 13 28 66
Completing this item
Add up the total amount of all other expenses (including non-commercial business losses deferred from a prior income year) that you can deduct from your PSI. Write the amount at L item P1.
Do not include amounts already recorded at K item P1.
If you are registered or required to be registered for GST, your deductions should not include the amount that relates to input tax credit entitlements.
Net PSI
Completing this item
To work out your net PSI go through the following steps:
Step 1 Add up the amounts shown at M, N, O and J item P1.
Step 2 Add up the amounts shown at K and L item P1.
Step 3 Take away the amount calculated at step 2 from the amount calculated at step 1. Write your answer at A item P1.
Step 4 Transfer the amount at A item P1 to A item 14 on page 13 of your tax return (supplementary section).
If the amount is a loss, you must:
- print L in the Loss box at the right of A item P1
- print L in the Loss box at the right of A item 14 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Other business income
Did you have any business income other than PSI?
Yes |
Go to P2 Description of main business or professional activity |
No |
Read on |
Finishing your schedule
If the only income you need to show on your schedule is PSI, you need to complete only:
- item P2 Description of main business or professional activity
- item P3 Number of business activities
- item P9 Business loss activity details if you had a loss
- item P10 Small business entity simplified depreciation if you are a small business entity and have chosen to use the simplified depreciation rules.
Check that you have…
- transferred your net PSI amount from A item P1 to A item 14 on your tax return (supplementary section). If this amount is a loss, check that you printed L in the Loss box at the right of A.
- completed and attached your Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020 to page 3 of your tax return (if you received PSI that was subject to withholding).
P2 Description of main business or professional activity
Completing this item
Describe the main business or professional activity that your gross income comes from as accurately as possible (for example, beef cattle breeder, vegetable grower, clothing manufacturer, confectionery wholesaler, or electrical goods retailer). Do not use general descriptions, such as farmer, manufacturer or wholesaler.
Print the description of your main business or professional activity at item P2 on page 2 of your schedule.
P3 Number of business activities
Completing this item
Write at B the number of separate and distinct business activities you operated as a sole trader and in partnership during 2019–20. If you operated only one business activity, write 1. The number of business activities you show at B should not be less than the number you show at item P9 Business loss activity details.
P4 Status of business
Completing this item
If you ceased your main business during 2019–20, enter X at C1 item P4 on page 2 of your schedule.
If you commenced a new business during 2019–20, enter X at C2.
If more than one option applies, enter X at C1 only. If neither option applies, leave both boxes blank.
P5 Business name of main business and ABN
The registered business name of your main business activity should be consistent. It should only be updated when there is a name change or when it is no longer the main business activity.
If the business name is legally changed with the Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC), advise us in writing at the time the change is made. The current business name should be shown on your tax return.
Completing this item
Print the registered business name and Australian business number (ABN) of your main business at item P5 on page 2 of your schedule.
P6 Business address of main business
Completing this item
Print the street address of the place where most of your business operations are conducted at item P6 on page 2 of your schedule.
Write the postcode of this address at D item P6.
P7 Did you sell goods or services using the internet?
You need to know
You must answer yes at this item if, in deriving income, you used the internet for one or more of the following:
- to receive orders for goods or services (rather than by post, phone or facsimile)
- to receive payment for goods or services, for example, you received
- credit card or charge card details by email or web page form, or
- digital cash
- to deliver goods or services, for example, you
- used email, a website or file transfer protocol (FTP) to deliver goods (such as digitised music, software or news articles)
- used email in conjunction with a website to give advice and received a payment
- advertised on the internet goods or services of other businesses for a fee, or
- hosted internet sites or provided access to the internet.
You must answer no at this item if none of the above applied, for example, if you used the internet only to:
- advertise your goods and services
- give support to your customers
- buy your stock
- do your banking online.
Completing this item
If your answer is yes, enter X in the Yes box at Q item P7 on page 2 of your schedule.
If your answer is no, enter X in the No box at Q.
P8 Business income and expenses
This item has three sections:
The amounts to be included in the Income and Expenses sections of item P8 are amounts derived from your accounting system or financial statements, except for:
- the values of opening and closing stock, which are to be shown at tax values, and
- depreciation expenses for small business entities choosing to use the simplified depreciation rules, which are to be shown at tax values.
The income and expense amounts to be included at item P8 should form part of your profit and loss statement and are the basis for calculating your net profit or loss. You should deal with any adjustments to these amounts for tax purposes in the reconciliation items section of item P8.
Show personal services income and related expenses at item P1 and personal services income subject to foreign resident withholding at P8.
Former STS taxpayers
If you are eligible and are continuing to use the STS accounting method, you must use it to complete the income and expenses sections.
See also:
Income
The business income to be shown at item P8 is divided into:
- income from which tax has been withheld because you did not quote your ABN to one of your payers
- gross payments subject to foreign resident withholding (excluding capital gains)
- income that was subject to a PAYG voluntary agreement to withhold tax
- income received under a labour-hire arrangement or from other specified payments
- assessable government industry payments
- other business income.
Cryptocurrencies
Your business income may include the funds or the Australian dollar value of property you received through the disposal of cryptocurrency in the ordinary course of your business, or the Australian dollar value of cryptocurrency you received for goods or services you provide as part of your business.
For more information, see Tax treatment of cryptocurrencies.
Sharing economy
Your business income may include amounts earned through the sharing economy or other marketplaces, such as:
- ride-sourcing
- accommodation
- sharing assets like cars, caravans, tools or personal belongings
- providing services or completing tasks through a digital platform
- amounts you receive through the sharing economy are assessable income, even if you're not carrying on a business. Include them:
- at item 1 on your tax return if you are an employee, or
- at item 24 on your tax return (supplementary section) if other income.
For more information see The sharing economy and tax.
Do not show the following types of income at item P8:
- gross interest; show the amount of income at item 10 on your tax return
- dividends and franking credits; show the amounts at item 11 on your tax return
- distributions from partnerships and trusts; show these at item 13 on your tax return (supplementary section)
- gross rental or similar income, including renting out all or part of your home through the sharing economy, that is not derived from carrying on a business of renting property, such as agistment or hire fees; show this amount at item 21 on your tax return (supplementary section)
- income you earned through the sharing economy or other marketplace not derived from carrying on a business; show this amount at item 24 on your tax return (supplementary section) or item 1 on your tax return if you're an employee of the digital platform
- net capital gains; show these at item 18 on your tax return (supplementary section)
- PSI shown at item P1
- farm management repayments; show these at item 17 on your tax return (supplementary section)
- attributed foreign income; show it at item 19 on your tax return (supplementary section)
- foreign source income; show it at item 20 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Goods and services tax (GST)
If you are registered or required to be registered for GST, the following apply:
- Consider your assessable income, exempt income and amounts received or receivable. For tax purposes you should exclude GST from them when you calculate your income and deductions.
- You should reduce deductible losses and outgoings by the amount of input tax credit entitlement. In certain circumstances you could make an adjustment for GST purposes. This could alter your assessable income or deductibles. For example, a change in how much you use an asset for business purposes could increase or decrease your GST component.
- You should also exclude GST under rules such as capital gains tax and capital allowances.
If you are not registered for GST, or required to be registered for GST, you do not need to adjust your income and deductions for GST. You can claim the GST-inclusive amount incurred on deductible outgoings.
What you may need
- Primary production worksheet: If you are a primary producer, you will need this worksheet to help you determine some of the amounts in this section. Complete the worksheet before proceeding.
- Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020 (NAT 3647)
Did you have amounts withheld from your business income – other than PSI included at item P1?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
If tax has been withheld from business income, you should have received a payment summary.
You will need to complete Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020 (NAT 3647) before completing item P8 if you received any of the following payment summaries:
- PAYG payment summary – business and personal services income (NAT 72545)
- PAYG payment summary – withholding where ABN not quoted (NAT 3283)
- PAYG payment summary – foreign employment (NAT 73297).
The PAYG payment summary – business and personal services income allows reporting of different payment types (including voluntary agreement, labour hire or other specified payments). When completing the individual payment summary schedule, you must specify the nature of the income and the payment type made to you.
For more information, see the next section How to complete the Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020.
A payer may issue a receipt, remittance or similar document in place of the PAYG payment summary – withholding where ABN not quoted containing the same information as a payment summary.
If you received income from which tax was withheld and you did not receive or have lost your payment summary, contact your payer and ask for a copy.
How to complete the Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020
Remember: If you have both business income (item P8) and personal services income (item P1), you must complete an Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020 for each type of income.
Step 1 Enter your TFN and name in the appropriate boxes at the top of the schedule.
Step 2 Nature of income, print X in the Business income box.
Step 3 For each payment summary, transfer the following information to the schedule:
- the type of withholding; look at your payment summary carefully to determine its type and complete the Type box, using the following key
- V voluntary agreement
- S labour hire or other specified payments
- N withholding where ABN not quoted
- F foreign resident withholding
- the payer’s ABN or withholding payer number (WPN) and the payer’s name in the appropriate boxes
- the total tax withheld in the Tax withheld box
- the gross payment in the Gross payment box.
Step 4 Check that you have recorded details from all relevant payment summaries on your payment summary schedule.
You must keep your payment summaries for a period of five years.
Payers must report to us details of payments where amounts of tax have been withheld. This information will be cross-checked with your tax return to make sure that you have declared the correct amount of income and the correct amount of tax withheld.
Gross payments where Australian business number (ABN) not quoted
Did you have amounts of tax withheld for failure to quote an ABN?
No |
Go to Gross payments subject to foreign resident withholding (excluding capital gains). |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
The amounts you show at C and D are the total income you received, from which your payers have withheld tax because you did not quote your ABN. You will be able to calculate these amounts from your completed Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020.
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule, derived from primary production activities that have an N in the Type box. Enter the total at C item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule, derived from non-primary production activities that have an N in the Type box. Enter the total at D. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up the amounts you have written at C and D and enter the total in the adjacent Totals box.
If you complete C or D item P8 you must complete W item 15 on page 14 of your tax return (supplementary section).
Gross payments subject to foreign resident withholding (excluding capital gains)
Did you receive any payments that were subject to foreign resident withholding (excluding capital gains)?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
The amount you show at B is the total income you received from your payers which is subject to foreign resident withholding. It includes any amounts of tax withheld. You will be able to calculate this amount from your completed Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020.
Do not include at this label amounts subject to foreign resident capital gains withholding. Include these amounts at item 18 Capital gains (supplementary section).
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule derived from non-primary production activities that have an F in the Type box. Enter the total at B item P8. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Transfer the amount at B to the adjacent Totals box.
If you complete B item P8, you must complete E item 15 on page 14 of your tax return (supplementary section).
Gross payments – voluntary agreement
Did you receive any income that was subject to a PAYG voluntary agreement?
No |
Go to Gross payments – labour hire or other specified payments. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
The amounts you show at E and F are the total income you received that was subject to a voluntary agreement to withhold tax and include the tax withheld. You will be able to calculate this amount from your completed Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020.
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule derived from primary production activities that have a V in the Type box. Enter the total at E item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule derived from non-primary production activities that have a V in the Type box. Enter the total at F. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up the amounts you have entered at E and F, and enter the total in the adjacent Totals box.
If you complete E or F item P8, you must complete D item 15 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Gross payments – labour hire or other specified payments
Did you receive:
- income under a labour-hire arrangement, or
- a specified payment, including
- income from tutorial services you provided for the Indigenous Student Success Programme (formerly known as the Indigenous Tutorial Assistance Scheme) of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
- income from translation and interpretation services for the Translating and Interpreting Service National of the Department of Home Affairs, or
- income as a performing artist in a promotional activity?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
The amount you show at O is the total income you received from labour hire or specified payments and includes the tax that was withheld. You can calculate this amount from your completed Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020.
Do not include income you received as an employee of a labour-hire business. That income appears on your income statement or PAYG payment summary – individual non-business. Show it at item 1 on your tax return.
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up all the Gross payment amounts on your completed payment summary schedule that have an S in the Type box. These amounts are non-primary production income. Enter the total at O item P8. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Transfer the amount at O to the adjacent Totals box.
If you complete O item P8, you must complete F item 15 on page 14 of your tax return (supplementary section).
You will not have any primary production amounts at this item. Leave N blank.
Assessable government industry payments
Do not include at this item the following grants and payments:
- Cash Flow Boost Payments (COVID-19) (non -assessable, non-exempt income). If cash flow boost payments have been included as income in the accounts, they can be included at both I Other business income and an income subtraction reconciliation amount at this item.
Did you receive assessable government industry assistance?
No |
Go to Other business income. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Generally, government credits, grants, rebates, bounties and subsidies are assessable income of the recipient if they are received in, or in relation to, the carrying on of a business. This includes amounts of a capital nature. Amounts relating to the commencement or cessation of a business may give rise to a capital gain. However, in certain circumstances, a specific grant or payment is considered to be exempt income or non-assessable non-exempt income.
A number of Commonwealth, State and Territory government grants and payments have been made available to businesses in response to recent natural disasters and COVID-19. Only those grants and payments that are assessable income will need to be included at this item.
Do not include at this item the following grants and payments:
- Cash Flow Boost Payments (COVID-19) (non -assessable, non-exempt income)
- Commonwealth and State government grants and payments that are tax free.
Examples of assessable government industry assistance are:
- bounties
- employee subsidies
- export incentive grants
- fuel tax credits
- industry restructuring and adjustment payments
- JobKeeper payments (COVID-19)
- Supporting Apprentices and Trainees wage subsidy (COVID-19)
- producer rebate (wine equalisation tax)
- alcohol manufacturer refund
- product stewardship (oil) benefit.
JobKeeper reporting
The accounting basis you use determines the way you report JobKeeper payments.
Accruals accounting basis
JobKeeper payments are derived when the entity provides a completed and valid Business monthly declaration to the ATO. Payments relating to declarations made on or before 30 June 2020 are assessable in the 2019–20 income year. For declarations made on or after 1 July 2020, payments are not assessable in the 2019–20 income year (even if those declarations relate to JobKeeper fortnights ending on or before 30 June 2020).
Cash accounting basis
JobKeeper payments are derived when the entity receives those payments. Payments received on or before 30 June 2020 are assessable in the 2019–20 income year. Any payments received on or after 1 July 2020 are not assessable in the 2019–20 income year (even if those payments relate to JobKeeper fortnights ending on or before 30 June 2020).
See also:
- Taxation Ruling TR 2006/3 Income tax: government payments to industry to assist entities (including individuals) to continue, commence or cease business
- North Queensland flood recovery package
- Queensland storms measure
- Bushfires 2019–20
Do not show ‘Medicare payments received by medical practices’ at this item. Show them at Other business income.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production government industry payments received by each business at G item P8 on page 2 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
If you have completed the Gross income from primary production worksheet in Information for primary producers 2020, include at G the amount at PP11 on the worksheet.
Step 2 If your assessable primary production government industry payments include fuel tax credits, print D in the Type box at the right of the amount at G.
Step 3 Enter your total non-primary production government industry payments received by each business at H. Do not show cents.
Step 4 If your assessable non-primary production government industry payments include fuel tax credits, print D in the Type box at the right of the amount at H.
Step 5 Add up the amounts you have written at G and H, and enter the total in the adjacent Totals box.
Other business income
Did you receive any other business income?
No |
Go to Total business income. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Other business income includes:
- gross sales of trading stock
- gross sales from produce
- goods taken from stock for your own use
- value of livestock killed for rations
- value of livestock exchanged for other goods or services
- gross earnings from services
- rent derived from carrying on a business of renting property
- income earned through the sharing economy, or other marketplace, where you're carrying on a business
- taxi driver and ride-sourcing earnings (income you earned as a non-employee taxi driver if it is not shown at item P1)
- amounts received as recoupment of expenses
- bad debts recovered
- profit on sale of depreciating assets
- royalties
- insurance recoveries
- subsidies
- employee contributions for fringe benefits
- assessable non-government assistance from all sources
- foreign exchange (forex) gains.
Your ‘other business income’ excludes amounts shown at C, D, B, E, F, N, O, G and H in your schedule.
If you are a primary producer, you must add the amounts shown at PP1, PP2, PP6, PP7 and PP10 on your Gross income from primary production worksheet. This worksheet is included in the publication Information for primary producers 2020. You must add the total to any other income from a business of primary production referred to above. You show the total of all other income from the business of primary production at I item P8 on page 2 of your schedule.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total amount of ‘other’ primary production business income or loss at I item P8 on page 2 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 If you made a loss, print L in the box at the right of the amount at I.
Step 3 Enter your total amount of ‘other’ non-primary production business income or loss at J. Do not show cents.
Step 4 If you made a loss, print L in the box at the right of the amount at J.
Step 5 Add up your ‘other’ primary production and non-primary production business income or loss and enter the total in the adjacent Totals box.
Step 6 If you made a loss, print L in the box at the right of the Totals box.
Total business income
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up the primary production amounts shown at C, E, N, G and I item P8 in your schedule. Enter the total at TOTAL BUSINESS INCOME in the Primary production column.
Step 2 If you made a loss, print L in the box at the right of the amount at TOTAL BUSINESS INCOME in the Primary production column.
Step 3 Add up the non-primary production amounts shown at D, B, F, O, H and J item P8. Enter the total at TOTAL BUSINESS INCOME in the Non-primary production column.
Step 4 If you made a loss, print L in the box at the right of the amount at TOTAL BUSINESS INCOME in the Non-primary production column.
Step 5 Add up the amounts at TOTAL BUSINESS INCOME in the Primary production and Non-primary production columns and enter the total in the adjacent Totals box. If you made a loss, print L in the box at the right of this amount.
Expenses
Do not include the following expenses on your schedule:
- non-business interest and dividend income expenses; claim deductible expenses at items D7 and D8 on your tax return
- farm management deposits; include them at item 17 on your tax return (supplementary section)
- non-business rental expenses; claim deductible expenses at item 21 on your tax return (supplementary section)
- expenses and losses relating to foreign source income; take them into account as required at item 20 or, in the case of certain debt deductions, claim them at item D15 on your tax return (supplementary section)
- expenses relating to your personal services income shown at item P1 on your schedule
- low-value pool deduction, where the pool contains assets used for work-related, self-education or non-business rental purposes; see question D6 in Individual tax return instructions 2020.
Your expenses may include expenditure relating to the acquisition and disposal of cryptocurrency in the ordinary course of your business, or the arm's length value of the business item (including trading stock) acquired using cryptocurrency.
You need to complete all items that relate to your business or businesses.
You cannot deduct salary and wage expenses where you have not complied with your pay as you go withholding obligations. See Removing tax deductibility of non-compliant payments.
If you are a primary producer, you will need a primary production worksheet to help you work out some of the amounts in this section. This worksheet is included in the publication Information for primary producers 2020. Complete the worksheet before proceeding.
Goods and services tax
If you are registered or required to be registered for GST, exclude from the deductions any input tax credit entitlements that arise in relation to outgoings.
If you pay GST by instalments, and incurred a penalty for underestimating a varied GST instalment, you can claim a deduction for the penalty at item D10 on your tax return. Do not show the penalty on your Business and professional items for individuals 2020.
See also:
Records you need to keep
You must keep your business expenses records for five years after you prepared or obtained them, or five years after you completed the transactions or acts to which they relate.
Prepayments of $1,000 or more
If you made a prepayment of $1,000 or more for something to be done (in whole or in part) after 30 June 2019, the timing of your deduction may be affected by the rules relating to prepayments. You will need to apportion your deduction for prepaid business expenditure over the service period, or 10 years, whichever is less. There is an exception for small business entities if the 12-month rule applies.
Where expenses shown at item P8 include prepaid expenses that differ from the amounts allowable as deductions in 2019–20, make an expense reconciliation adjustment at H in the Reconciliation items section of item P8.
See also:
Thin capitalisation
The thin capitalisation provisions apply to entities (including individuals) to reduce certain deductions (called ‘debt deductions’) for costs incurred in obtaining and servicing debt finance, where the debt applicable to Australian operations exceeds the limits set out in Division 820 of the ITAA 1997.
The thin capitalisation rules may apply to you if:
- you are an Australian resident and you, or any of your associate entities, are an Australian controller of a foreign entity or carry on business overseas at or through a permanent establishment, or
- you are a foreign resident with operations or investments in Australia and you are claiming debt deductions.
The thin capitalisation rules will not affect you if:
- your debt deductions (combined with the debt deductions of your associate entities) do not exceed $2,000,000 in 2019–20, or
- you are an Australian resident and the combined value of your associates’ and your Australian assets is not less than 90% of the value of your associates’ and your total assets.
If the thin capitalisation rules affect you, the amount of any debt deductions you can claim may be reduced by these rules.
See also:
Opening stock
Did you have trading stock on hand at the start of the year?
No |
Go to Purchases and other costs. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
The opening value of an item of stock must equal its closing value in the previous year. The total value of all stock on hand at the start of the year is equal to the amount shown as closing stock on your 2019 schedule.
If you are a primary producer, you must add the value of your opening stock from your livestock account at PP4 on your primary production worksheet to the value of your opening stock from your produce account at PP9 on your primary production worksheet. The total of these amounts is the total value of your primary production opening stock.
Do not include any amounts representing opening stock of a business which commenced operations during the year. Include the purchase costs of these items in the relevant Purchases and other costs box.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter the total value of your primary production opening stock at Opening stock in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter the total value of your non-primary production opening stock at Opening stock in the Non-primary production column, item P8. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production opening stock values and enter the total at K.
Purchases and other costs
Did you have purchases and other costs?
No |
Go to Closing stock. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Purchases and other costs represent the direct cost of materials used for manufacture, sale or exchange in deriving the gross proceeds or earnings of the business. It includes inwards freight and also the cost of stock acquired when starting or acquiring a business during the year. It may also include some costs for labour and services provided under contract, if these are recorded in the cost of sales account in your business books of account. If so, do not also include this amount as Contractor, sub-contractor and commission expenses.
If you are a primary producer, you must include the value of your purchases from your livestock account at PP5 on your primary production worksheet.
Completing this item
Step 1 Work out the value of your primary production purchases and other costs directly related to trading stock. If you have more than one business, add up all your primary production purchases and costs.
Step 2 Enter the total value of your primary production purchases and other costs directly related to trading stock at Purchases and other costs in the Primary production column, item P8 in your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Work out the value of your non-primary production purchases and other costs directly related to trading stock. If you have more than one business add up all your non-primary production purchases and other costs.
Step 4 Enter the total value of your non-primary production purchases and other costs directly related to trading stock at Purchases and other costs in the Non-primary production column, item P8. Do not show cents.
Step 5 Add up your primary production and non-primary production purchases and other costs directly related to trading stock, and enter the total at L.
Former STS taxpayers
If you are eligible and are continuing to use the STS accounting method, show at L only purchases and other costs that you have paid.
See also:
Closing stock
Did you have trading stock on hand at the end of the year?
No |
Go to Cost of sales. |
Yes |
Read on. |
If you are a small business entity and are choosing to use the simplified trading stock rules, read on. Otherwise, go to Other businesses.
Small business entities
You need to know
You need to account for changes in the value of your trading stock only if there is a difference of more than $5,000 between the value of all your stock on hand at the start of the income year and a reasonable estimate of the value of all your stock on hand at the end of the income year.
The value of your stock on hand at the start of the income year is the same value as the closing value shown in your schedule in the previous year. This may not necessarily reflect the actual value of your stock if you did not account for the change in value of your stock in the previous year. For more information on a reasonable estimate of the value of stock, see ato.gov.au or phone 13 28 66.
You can still choose to conduct a stocktake and account for changes in the value of trading stock, if you wish.
Is the difference between the value of your opening stock and a reasonable estimate of your closing stock more than $5,000?
Yes |
You must account for changes in the value of your trading stock. Go to step 2. |
No |
If you choose not to account for changes in the value of your trading stock, go to step 1. Otherwise, go to step 2. |
Completing this item
Step 1 If the difference referred to above is $5,000 or less and you choose not to account for this difference, the closing stock values you put in both the Primary production and Non-primary production columns at item P8 on your schedule must be the same as the values you put at Opening stock. Do not put your reasonable estimate.
Add up your primary production and non-primary production closing stock values, and enter the total at M.
Enter in the Type box at the right of M the code letter you used last year to value closing stock:
- C cost
- M market selling value
- R replacement value.
If this is your first year in business, the value of your closing stock will be zero. Print C in the Type box.
Go to Cost of sales.
Step 2 If the difference referred to above is more than $5,000 or you choose to account for the difference in trading stock, the closing stock values must be brought to account under section 70-35 of the ITAA 1997. See Other businesses for how to complete this item.
You must include in your closing stock value at M item P8 the value of all stock on hand, regardless of whether you have paid for the stock.
Other businesses
You need to know
The amount that is shown at Closing stock is the total of the value of all items of trading stock, with the value of each item calculated for tax purposes in accordance with section 70-45 of the ITAA 1997.
Trading stock is anything you have on hand which you produced, manufactured, acquired or purchased for the purpose of sale, manufacture or exchange. For example, trading stock includes livestock but not working animals (except those used by a primary producer), crops and timber when harvested, and wool after it is removed from the sheep.
Manufacturers must include as trading stock partly manufactured goods and materials on hand. However, closing stock excludes any amount that represented closing stock of a business that ceased operations during the year. This amount is included in Other business income at I or J in the Income section of item P8.
For more details about what constitutes trading stock, read Simplified trading stock rules or phone 13 28 66.
You can choose one of the following three methods to value your trading stock:
- cost
- market selling value
- replacement value.
You may elect to value an item of trading stock below the lowest value calculated by any of these methods. This may be because it has become obsolete or there are other special circumstances. The value you elect must be reasonable. Where you elect to value an item of trading stock below cost, market selling value and replacement value, you must complete item P19 on your schedule.
You may use different methods to calculate each item of trading stock in different years or for different items in the same year. However, the opening value of each item in a particular year must be the same as the closing value for that item in the previous year.
If you are registered for GST, the value of closing stock should not include an amount equal to the input tax credit that would arise if you had acquired the item solely for business purposes at the end of the income year. Input tax credits do not arise for some items of trading stock, such as shares.
If you are a primary producer, you must add the value of your closing stock from your livestock account at PP3 on your primary production worksheet to the value of your closing stock from your produce account at PP8 on your primary production worksheet.
The total of these amounts is the total value of your primary production closing stock.
As the tax values of closing stock on hand are shown at PP3 and at PP8 on your primary production worksheet, you cannot reduce these values by accounting entries. Keep records showing how each item was valued.
Completing this item
Step 1 Work out the value of your primary production closing stock. If you have more than one business, add up all your primary production closing stock values.
Step 2 Enter the total value of your primary production closing stock at Closing stock in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Work out the value of your non-primary production closing stock. If you have more than one business, add up all your non-primary production closing stock values.
Step 4 Enter the total value of your non-primary production closing stock at Closing stock in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 5 Add up your primary production and non-primary production closing stock values and enter the total at M.
Step 6 From the list below, choose the letter that matches the method you used to value closing stock. If more than one method was used, select the letter that applies to the largest value:
- C cost
- M market selling value
- R replacement value.
Step 7 Print the letter from step 6 in the Type box at the right of the amount at M.
Cost of sales
Did you have any cost of sales?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Goods taken for your own use should not be accounted for as stock on hand at 30 June 2020. Include at I and J Other business income in the Income section of item P8 on your schedule the value of:
- livestock killed for rations
- livestock exchanged for other goods or services
- goods taken for your own use.
Use worksheet 1 to work out your cost of sales.
Row |
Calculation elements |
Primary production |
Non-primary production |
---|---|---|---|
a |
Stock at 1 July 2019 |
$ |
$ |
b |
Purchases at cost |
$ |
$ |
c |
Freight inwards |
$ |
$ |
d |
Other, for example, labour and services |
$ |
$ |
e |
Add the amounts at rows a, b, c and d. |
$ |
$ |
f |
Stock at 30 June 2020 |
$ |
$ |
|
Your cost of sales |
$ |
$ |
For further information on stock on hand at 1 July 2019, see Opening stock. For information on stock on hand at 30 June 2020, see Closing stock.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production cost of sales at Cost of sales in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 If the cost of sales in the Primary production column, after taking away row f from row e, is a negative amount, print L in the box at the right of this amount.
Step 3 Enter your total non-primary production cost of sales at Cost of sales in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 4 If the cost of sales in the Non-primary production column after taking away row f from row e, is a negative amount, print L in the box at the right of this amount.
Step 5 Add up your primary production and non-primary production cost of sales and enter the total at Cost of sales in the Totals column.
Step 6 If your total cost of sales is a negative amount, print L in the box at the right of this amount.
Foreign resident withholding expenses (excluding capital gains)
Did you have any expenses directly relating to income subject to foreign resident withholding (excluding capital gains)?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total non-primary production foreign resident withholding expenses at Foreign resident withholding expenses (excluding capital gains) in the Non-primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Transfer the amount you wrote at step 1 to the adjacent Totals box at U.
You will not have any primary production expense amounts at this item.
Contractor, sub-contractor and commission expenses
Did you have any contractor, sub-contractor or commission expenses in your business?
No |
Go to Superannuation expenses. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
These are expenses for labour and services provided under contract, other than salaries or wages, for example:
- payments to self-employed people, such as consultants and contractors, including payments subject to a PAYG voluntary agreement to withhold, and payments made under a labour-hire arrangement
- commissions paid to people not receiving a retainer
- agency fees (such as for services provided by an advertising agency)
- service fees (such as plant service)
- management fees
- consultant fees.
Do not include the following at this item:
- expenses for external labour which have been included in the business cost of sales account
- expenses for accounting or legal services; include these at All other expenses
- expenses for payments made where the associated withholding obligations have not been complied with. See Removing tax deductibility of non-compliant payments.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production contractor, sub-contractor and commission expenses at Contractor, sub-contractor and commission expenses in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production contractor, sub-contractor and commission expenses at Contractor, sub-contractor and commission expenses in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production contractor, sub-contractor and commission expenses and enter the total at F.
Superannuation expenses
Did you make any superannuation contributions on behalf of eligible employees or their dependants as a business expense?
No |
Go to Bad debts. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Show superannuation expenses for the income year. Do not include any amount that was a contribution for yourself. The deduction for your own superannuation contributions must be claimed at item D12 on your tax return (supplementary section). See question D12 in Individual tax return instructions supplement 2020.
Employers are entitled to a deduction for the contributions they made to a complying superannuation, provident, benefit or retirement fund or retirement savings account (RSA) where the contributions are to provide superannuation benefits for employees or to provide benefits to the employee’s dependants on the employee’s death. A deduction is allowable in the income year in which the contributions are made.
Contributions made to a non-complying fund:
- are not allowable as a deduction, and
- do not count towards superannuation guarantee obligations.
You can check the compliance status of superannuation funds at superfundlookup.gov.auExternal Link Under the superannuation guarantee, an employer needs to provide a minimum level of superannuation for employees. If the employer does not make the minimum contribution by the relevant date, the employer is required to pay the superannuation guarantee charge on the superannuation guarantee shortfall. The superannuation guarantee charge is not a superannuation contribution and is not tax deductible. Contributions made by employers to offset a superannuation guarantee charge liability are not deductible.
Contributions paid by an employer to a non-complying superannuation fund on behalf of an employee are fringe benefits (other than where the contributions are made for a temporary resident) and may be subject to tax under the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986.
There is no age-related limit on deductions for contributions made on or before the 28th day following the end of the month in which the employee turns 75. However, the employee may be liable to pay additional tax if their concessional contributions exceed their concessional contributions cap.
- For more information, see Super contributions – too much can mean extra tax.
For contributions made after the 28th day following the end of the month of the employee’s 75th birthday, the deduction claimable is limited to:
- the amount of the contribution required under an industrial award, determination or notional agreement preserving state awards, or
- the amount of the contribution that reduces an employer's charge percentage under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in respect of the employee, or
- where both amounts are applicable, the greater of the two amounts is to be applied.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production superannuation contributions at Superannuation expenses in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production superannuation contributions at Superannuation expenses in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production superannuation contributions and enter the total at G.
Bad debts
Did you write off any bad debts in your business?
No |
Go to Lease expenses. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Include income from the recovery of bad debts in Other business income at I or J in the Income section of item P8.
You are not allowed a deduction for bad debts unless you have previously included the amount in your assessable income and it relates to money you lent in the ordinary course of a money-lending business or it represents a business loss or outgoing of a revenue nature.
Before you can claim a bad debt, it must be bad and not merely doubtful. The question of whether a debt is a bad debt will depend on the facts in each case and, where applicable, the action taken for recovery.
Do not include accounting provisions for doubtful debts at I. You show them in the Expenses section at All other expenses, then add them back at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section.
- For more information, see Taxation Ruling TR 92/18 Income tax: bad debts.
You can also claim a deduction for:
- partial debt write-offs; where only part of a debt is bad and is written off, you may claim a deduction for the amount written off
- losses incurred for debt written off under a debt-for-equity swap where you discharge, release or otherwise extinguish the whole or part of a debt owed to you in return for equity in the debtor.
In the case of a debt-for-equity swap, you can claim a deduction for the difference between the amount of the debt and the greater of the market value of the equity at the time of issue or the value of the equity recorded in your books at the time of issue.
Records you need to keep
Keep a statement for all debtors whose bad debts you wrote off during the year, showing:
- their name and address
- the amount of the debt
- the reason you regarded the debt as bad
- where applicable, the year that you returned the amount as income.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production bad debts at Bad debts in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production bad debts at Bad debts in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production bad debts and enter the total at I.
Lease expenses
Did you have lease expenses in your business?
No |
Go to Rent expenses. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
This is expenditure incurred on financial leases and on operating leases for assets such as motor vehicles and plant. Do not include the cost of leasing real estate (show this cost at K Rent expenses).
If you include capital expenditure incurred to terminate a lease or licence you will need to add back the amount at H Expense reconciliation adjustments. Although capital expenditure to terminate a lease or licence is not deductible in one year, a five-year straight-line write-off may be allowable (see section 25–110 of the ITAA 1997) for certain capital expenditure incurred to terminate a lease or licence if the expenditure is incurred in the course of carrying on a business, or in connection with ceasing to carry on a business, See worksheet 4 and note 3.
In some circumstances, lease expenses may be debt deductions for the purposes of the thin capitalisation rules.
If you include an amount of lease expense which is not allowable as a deduction, such as amounts disallowed under the thin capitalisation rules, you will need to add back the amount at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section on your schedule.
Expenses incurred under a hire purchase agreement are not lease expenses. Such expenses are dealt with at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items on your schedule.
Special rules apply to leased cars if the cost of the car exceeds the car limit that applies for the financial year in which the lease commences. The car limit for 2019–20 is $57,581.
If you lease a car that is subject to the special rules, the reconciliation between the lease expense and the tax treatment is carried out at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section.
See also:
Records you need to keep
List the assets leased and keep full details of the leasing expenses for each item, including motor vehicles and details of any private use. Leasing expenses of certain cars fall under the substantiation rules.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production lease expenses at Lease expenses in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production lease expenses at Lease expenses in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production lease expenses and enter the total at J.
Rent expenses
Did you have rent as a business expense?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
This is expenditure you incurred as a tenant for rental of land and buildings used in the production of income. Include the cost of leasing real estate.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production rent expenses at Rent expenses in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production rent expenses at Rent expenses in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production rent expenses and enter the total at K.
Interest expenses within Australia
Did you incur interest as a business expense on money borrowed within Australia?
No |
Go to Interest expenses overseas. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Include interest you incurred on money borrowed within Australia to acquire income-producing assets used in your business, to finance business operations or to meet current business expenses.
Do not include interest incurred in deriving rental income. Claim this at item 21 on your tax return (supplementary section).
If you include an amount of interest which is not allowable as a deduction, such as amounts denied by the thin capitalisation rules, you will need to add back the amount at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section on your schedule.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production interest expenses within Australia at Interest expenses within Australia in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production interest expenses within Australia at Interest expenses within Australia in the Non-primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production interest expenses within Australia and enter the total at Q.
Interest expenses overseas
Did you incur interest as a business expense on money borrowed overseas?
No |
Go to Depreciation expenses. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Include any interest incurred on money borrowed from overseas sources to acquire income-producing assets used in your business:
- to finance business operations, or
- to meet current business expenses.
Do not include interest incurred in deriving rental income. Claim this at item 21 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Generally you are required to withhold an amount of withholding tax:
- from interest paid or payable to non-residents, and
- from interest derived by a resident through an overseas branch.
- You must send these withheld amounts to us. You cannot deduct an interest expense if you were required to withhold tax on that interest and you failed to do so.
If you paid or credited any interest or amounts in the nature of interest:
- to a non-resident of Australia, or
- to a resident’s overseas branch
- you need to provide additional information. On a separate piece of paper:
- print the title Schedule of additional information – Item 15
- print your name, address and TFN
- print the name and address of each recipient
- print the total amounts paid or credited
- to each non-resident, and
- to the overseas branch of each resident
- print the amount of tax withheld, if no tax was withheld, state the reason.
- Then:
- print X in the Yes box at Taxpayer’s declaration on your tax return
- attach the schedule to page 3 of your tax return.
For information on the tax treatment of interest paid to non-residents, phone 13 28 66.
If you include an amount of interest which is not allowable as a deduction, such as amounts denied by the thin capitalisation rules, you will need to add back the amount at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section in your schedule.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production overseas interest expenses at Interest expenses overseas in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production overseas interest expenses at Interest expenses overseas in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production overseas interest expenses and enter the total at R.
Depreciation expenses
Did you have depreciation as a business expense?
No |
Go to Motor vehicle expenses. |
Yes |
If you are a small business entity and are choosing to use the simplified depreciation rules, read on. Otherwise go to Other businesses. |
Continuing small business pools
If you are not carrying on a business this year, but in a prior year you allocated assets to a general small business pool or long-life small business pool (or the law allocated the assets to such a pool), do not include the pool deductions at this item. Show such deductions at item D15 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Small business entities
You need to know
You show at M Depreciation expenses item P8 the total depreciation deductions being claimed under the small business entity capital allowances (depreciation) rules and for the business use of other assets under the uniform capital allowances (UCA) rules. This includes your deduction under the small business entity rules for depreciating assets used for work-related or self-education purposes. However, this excludes any amount included at part B of item P1.
Small business entities can claim an immediate deduction for most depreciating assets purchased after 12 May 2015 and first used or installed ready for use for a business purpose:
- from 12 March 2020 to 30 June 2020, if they cost less than $150,000 each
- from 7.30pm (AEDT) on 2 April 2019 until 11 March 2020, if they cost less than $30,000 each
- from 29 January 2019 and before 7.30pm (AEDT) 2 April 2019, if they cost less than $25,000 each
- before 29 January 2019, if they cost less than $20,000 each.
Assets purchased for the relevant threshold amount or more are deducted over time using a small business pool. Some of these assets may have an accelerated rate of depreciation when they are added to the pool under the Backing Business Investment – accelerated depreciation rules.
Some depreciating assets are excluded from these simplified depreciation rules, but a deduction may be available under the UCA rules.
If you are a small business entity and are choosing to use these simplified depreciation rules, you must use immediate write-off and pooling as applicable. You cannot choose to use one and not the other.
Five-year restriction
Small business entities that have previously elected out of the simplified depreciation rules are no longer subject to the ‘lock-out’ rule (which prevented small businesses from re-entering the simplified depreciation regime for five years if they had opted out). These entities may re-elect to use the simplified depreciation rules.
The suspension of the five year restriction only applies from 7.30pm AEST 12 May 2015 to 30 June 2020.
See also:
- Simplified depreciation – rules and calculations
- phone 13 28 66
Calculating your depreciation deductions
If your accounting system or financial statements provide you with the amounts to complete worksheet 2, enter these amounts in the worksheet. Otherwise, use calculations 1 to 5 to calculate your depreciation deductions.
The amounts you enter in worksheet 2 must be tax values and not accounting values.
Calculation 1: Deduction for certain assets (costing less than the relevant instant asset write off threshold)
An immediate deduction is available for certain depreciating assets:
- which you started to use, or have installed ready for use during the income year
- whose cost at the end of the year is less than the relevant instant asset write off threshold (excluding input tax credit entitlements)
- that qualify for a deduction under the small business entity depreciation rules.
Work out the taxable purpose proportion of each of these types of assets. You calculate the deduction as follows:
- multiply each asset's adjustable value by taxable purpose proportion
- add up these results and enter the total at a in worksheet 2.
The adjustable value of an asset, at the time it was first used (or installed ready for use) for a taxable purpose, will be its cost unless the asset was previously used (or installed ready for use) by the small business solely for private purposes.
Example 1
For a vehicle bought on 1 December 2019 at a cost of $19,990 (excluding input tax credit entitlements) and used for producing assessable income from that date at an estimated 70% of the time, the immediate deduction would be
$29,990 × 70% = $20,993
End of exampleDo not include the following amounts in this calculation; allocate these assets to the general small business pool (see Calculation 2):
- depreciating assets costing less than the relevant instant asset write off threshold which you held prior to using the simplified depreciation rules
- depreciating assets where the cost is not less than the relevant instant asset write off threshold. Such assets must be allocated to the general small business pool (see Calculation 2) even if the taxable purpose proportion is less than the threshold. For example, if the vehicle in example 1 cost $30,200, the taxable purpose proportion is $21,140 ($30,200 × 70%). On 1 December 2019 the instant asset threshold was $30,000. However, you cannot obtain an instant deduction and the vehicle must still be allocated to the general small business pool because its cost is not less than the relevant threshold at the time it was first used.
Definitions
Adjustable value of a depreciating asset is its cost (excluding input tax credit entitlements) less its decline in value since you first used it or installed it ready for use for any purpose, including a private purpose.
Assessable balancing adjustment amount arises where the termination value of the depreciating asset is more than the adjustable value.
Cost addition amounts include the cost of capital improvements to assets and costs reasonably attributable to disposing of or permanently ceasing to use an asset (this may include advertising and commission costs or the costs of demolishing the asset).
Decline in value (previously ‘depreciation’) is the value that an asset loses over its effective life.
Deductible balancing adjustment amount arises where the termination value of the depreciating asset is less than the adjustable value.
Depreciating asset is an asset with a limited effective life which declines in value over that life.
Taxable purpose includes the purpose of producing assessable income.
Taxable purpose proportion is the extent to which you use the asset for a taxable purpose, such as for the purpose of producing assessable income.
Termination value includes money received from the sale of an asset or insurance money received as the result of the loss or destruction of an asset. Exclude the GST component where the amount received is for a taxable supply.
Calculation 2: General small business pool deduction
To calculate your deductions for the general small business pool you must first calculate the opening pool balance of the pool.
If 2019–20 was the first income year for which you were a small business entity and chose to apply the simplified depreciation rules, the opening balance of the general small business pool is the sum of the taxable purpose proportions of the adjustable values of the depreciating assets that were:
- used, or held for use, just before the start of 2019–20
- not excluded from the simplified depreciation rules.
Include only the taxable purpose proportion of the adjustable value of each depreciating asset.
Example 2
For an asset (first used before 12 March 2020) with an adjustable value of $50,000 which is used only 50% for an income-producing purpose, add only $25,000 to the pool
For an asset (first used before 12 March 2020) with an adjustable value of $30,200 which is used 70% for an income-producing purpose, add only $21,140 to the pool.
End of exampleYou can choose not to allocate an asset to your general small business pool if you first used it, or installed it ready for use, for a taxable purpose before 1 July 2001.
For an income year that is not the first income year for which you were a small business entity, the opening pool balance of the general small business pool is the closing pool balance for the previous income year, except where you make an adjustment to reflect the changed business use of a pooled asset.
Example 3
Chantal's Café is a small business and at the end of 2018–19 the closing balance of its general small business pool was $28,000. This becomes the opening balance of the pool for 2019–20.
End of exampleCalculate your deduction for the general small business pool in 2019–20 as follows:
- opening pool balance $ × 30%
- where necessary, make a reasonable apportionment for the general small business pool deduction between primary production and non-primary production activities
- enter the result of your general small business pool deduction at (b) in worksheet 2
- if the pool balance (after taking into account additions and disposals but before calculating the deductions in calculations 2, 3 and 4) is below $150,000 (the relevant threshold at 30 June 2020), you instead work out the deduction for the pool using calculation 5.
You can also work out your depreciation and capital allowance claims by using the Depreciation and capital allowances tool.
Calculation 3: Depreciating assets including motor vehicles first used for a taxable purpose during 2019–20 and cost addition amounts for assets already allocated to a pool
You calculate your deduction at half the general small business pool rate for:
- depreciating assets that are first used or installed ready for use for a taxable purpose until 11 March 2020 (this percentage increases to 57.5% for those assets added from 12 March 2020 to 30 June 2020) , and
- cost addition amounts during 2019–20 for assets already allocated to the pool. Cost addition amounts include the costs of capital improvements to assets and costs reasonably attributable to disposing of, or permanently ceasing to use, an asset. This may include advertising and commission costs or the cost of demolishing the asset.
You calculate the deduction for 2019–20 as follows:
- the taxable purpose proportion of the adjustable value of each depreciating asset first used for a taxable purpose from 1 July 2019 to 11 March 2020 multiplied by 15% for general small business pool assets, plus
- the taxable purpose proportion of the adjustable value of each depreciating asset first used for a taxable purpose from 12 March 2020 to 30 June 2020 multiplied by 57.5% for general small business pool assets, plus
- the taxable purpose proportion of the cost addition amounts multiplied by 15% for general small business pool assets.
Enter the total deduction for general small business pool assets at c in worksheet 2.
You can also work out your depreciation and capital allowance claims by using the Depreciation and capital allowances tool.
Calculation 4: Other depreciating assets
Work out your deduction for the decline in value of all your other depreciating assets that are not included in calculations 1 to 3.
For information on how to calculate the decline in value of these assets, see Guide to depreciating assets 2020 (NAT 1996).
Enter your total deduction for other depreciating assets at e in worksheet 2.
Do not include at e in the worksheet depreciating assets which qualify for a deduction under Subdivision 40-F or 40-G of the ITAA 1997 as water facilities, fencing assets, fodder storage assets or landcare operations in your primary production business and for which you have chosen to claim a deduction under those Subdivisions and not these small business entity depreciation rules. Show these deductions at W Landcare operations and deduction for decline in value of water facility, fencing asset and fodder storage asset item P8 Reconciliation items.
Calculation 5: Disposal of depreciating assets
- Certain assets (costing less than the relevant instant asset write off threshold) and low-cost assets claimed in previous years
If you have disposed of a depreciating asset (costing less than the relevant instant asset write off threshold) for which you have claimed an immediate deduction in calculation 1 this year and/or a low-cost asset for which you have claimed an immediate deduction in a prior year, include the taxable purpose proportion of the termination value in the Reconciliation items section of item P8.
Example 4
You acquired an asset on 1 February 2013 for $6,400 for 100% taxable use and claimed an immediate write-off under the threshold which existed at that time. You disposed of this asset at arm's length on 1 February 2020 for $3,000. Include $3,000 as income at Reconciliation items item 5.
End of example- Assets allocated to the general small business pool
Where you dispose of depreciating assets that have been allocated to the general small business pool, you deduct the taxable purpose proportion of the termination value from the closing pool balance.
Example 5
For a pooled depreciating asset which used only 50% for an income-producing purpose, and was sold for $3,000 (excluding GST), only $1,500 will be deducted from the closing pool balance. If the balance of a pool is below $150,000 but greater than zero (after taking into account any additions and disposals but before calculating the deductions in calculations 2, 3 and 4) you claim an immediate deduction for this amount. Enter this deduction against general small business pool assets at row b in worksheet 2.
End of exampleIf the closing pool balance is less than zero, you include the amount below zero in your assessable income in the Reconciliation items section of item P8.
If expenses are incurred in disposing of a depreciating asset, these expenses may be taken into account in Calculation 3.
- Other depreciating assets
For information on how to calculate any balancing adjustment amounts on the disposal of other depreciating assets, see Guide to depreciating assets 2020.
You can also work out your depreciation and capital allowance claims by using the Depreciation and capital allowances tool.
Balancing adjustment amounts are included in the Reconciliation items section of item P8. See What are income reconciliation adjustments? and What are expense reconciliation adjustments?.
Closing pool balance
The closing balance of each small business pool for an income year is:
- the opening pool balance (see Calculation 2) plus
- the taxable purpose proportion of the adjustable value of assets that were first used, or installed ready for use, for a taxable purpose during the year (see Calculation 3) plus
- the taxable purpose proportion of any cost addition amounts for assets in the pool during the year (see Calculation 3) less
- the taxable purpose proportion of the termination value of any pooled assets disposed of during the year (see Calculation 5) less
- the general small business pool deduction (see Calculation 2) less
- the deduction for assets first used by you during the year (see Calculation 3) less
- the deduction for any cost addition amounts for pooled assets during the year (see Calculation 3).
If your closing pool balance is less than zero, see Calculation 5.
If the balance of the pool (after taking into account additions and disposals but before calculating the deductions in calculations 2 and 3) is below $150,000 (being the relevant threshold at 30 June 2020), you can claim an immediate deduction for this amount.
The closing pool balance for this year becomes the opening pool balance for 2020–21 except where you made an adjustment to reflect the changed business use of a pooled asset.
You will need your opening pool balance to work out the pool deduction next year. Do not write your closing pool balance on your tax return (supplementary section).
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production depreciation deductions at Depreciation expenses in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production depreciation deductions at Depreciation expenses in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Do not show any amount included at part B of item P1.
Step 3 Transfer the amount at row e in worksheet 2 to M Depreciation expenses item P8. Do not show cents.
Step 4 Transfer the amount at row a in worksheet 2 to A item P10 Small business entity simplified depreciation on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 5 Add up the amounts at rows b and c in worksheet 2 and enter the total at B item P10. Do not show cents.
Step 6 Go to Motor vehicle expenses
You can also work out your depreciation and capital allowance claims by using the Depreciation and capital allowances tool.
Other businesses
You need to know
You show at M Depreciation expenses item P8 the depreciation claimed in your books of account other than for those assets allocated in a prior year to a general pool or a long-life pool. For assets allocated to such a pool, include here the amount of the pool deduction to be claimed for tax purposes.
Include here claims for instant asset write off for businesses with a turnover from $10 million and less than $50 million for assets costing less than $30,000 purchased from 7.30pm (AEDT) on 2 April 2019 and first used or installed ready for use by 11 March 2020. Include here claims for instant asset write off for businesses with a turnover from $10 million and less than $500 million for assets costing less than $150,000 purchased from 12 March 2020 to 30 June 2020.
See also:
The depreciation amount shown at M item P8 should not include profit or loss on the sale of depreciating assets. You should include profits on the sale of depreciating assets in Other business income at I or J in the Income section of item P8 on your schedule. You should include losses on the sale of depreciating assets at All other expenses in the Expenses section.
Accounting or book depreciation may differ from the deduction for the decline in value of depreciating assets.
You carry out the reconciliation between accounting depreciation and the deduction for decline in value at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of item P8.
Backing business investment – accelerated depreciation for 2019–20 and 2020–21
Measures introduced in March 2020 provide an incentive to businesses with aggregated turnover of less than $500 million in the income year, to deduct the cost of depreciating assets at an accelerated rate. This applies to eligible assets held and first used or installed ready for use from 12 March 2020 until 30 June 2021.
For each new asset, the accelerated depreciation deduction applies in the income year that the asset is first used or installed ready for use for a taxable purpose. You claim the deduction when lodging your tax return for the income year. The usual depreciating asset arrangements apply in the subsequent income years that the asset is held.
Claim the deduction in this tax return if you first used your new assets, or installed it ready for use, in 2019–20.
For more information see Backing business investment – accelerated depreciation
See also:
Is expenditure revenue or capital in nature?
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2003/8 Practical approaches to low-cost business expenses provides guidance on two straightforward methods that can be used by taxpayers carrying on a business to help determine whether expenditure incurred to acquire certain low-cost items is to be treated as revenue expenditure or capital expenditure.
Subject to certain qualifications, the two methods cover expenditure below a threshold and the use of statistical sampling to estimate total revenue expenditure on low-cost items. The threshold rule allows an immediate deduction for qualifying low-cost business items costing $100 or less. The sampling rule allows taxpayers with a low-value pool to use statistical sampling to determine the proportion of the total purchases on qualifying low-cost business items that are revenue expenditure.
We will accept a deduction for expenditure incurred on low-cost assets calculated in accordance with this practice statement.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production depreciation expenses at Depreciation expenses in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production depreciation expenses at Depreciation expenses in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production depreciation expenses and enter the total at M Depreciation expenses.
Motor vehicle expenses
Did you have motor vehicle expenses in your business?
No |
Go to Repairs and maintenance. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Special substantiation and calculation rules for car expenses apply to an individual. Under these rules, motor vehicle expenses can be claimed using one of two methods where the expense is for a car, station wagon, panel van, utility truck or other road vehicle designed to carry a load of less than one tonne and fewer than nine passengers. For an explanation of these methods, see question D1 in Individual tax return instructions 2020.
Include motor vehicle expenses related to ride-sourcing activities at this item.
Do not include depreciation, finance leasing charges or interest paid. You should include these at M Depreciation expenses, J Lease expenses, Q Interest expenses within Australia or R Interest expenses overseas item P8 on your schedule.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production motor vehicle expenses at Motor vehicle expenses in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production motor vehicle expenses at Motor vehicle expenses in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production motor vehicle expenses and enter the total at N item P8 on your schedule.
Step 4 If you worked out the amount you are claiming for motor vehicle expenses using one of the two methods described in question D1 in Individual tax return instructions 2020, find the code letter that identifies the method you used and print it in the Type box at the right of the amount at N:
- S if you used the ‘cents per kilometre’ method
- B if you used the ‘logbook’ method.
Print the code letter N in the Type box if the amount shown at N relates to a:
- motorcycle
- taxi taken on hire
- road vehicle designed to carry a load of one tonne or more, or nine or more passengers
- any other motor vehicle expenses covered by question D2 in Individual tax return instructions 2020.
If you have more than one code, print the code that applies to the largest claim.
Repairs and maintenance
Did you have repairs and maintenance as a business expense?
No |
Go to All other expenses. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
This is expenditure shown in your accounts for repairs and maintenance of premises, plant, machinery, implements, utensils, rolling stock or articles associated with the production of income. Any non-deductible expenditure, such as items of a capital nature or amounts relating to private use of an item, included at this item, should also be included at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section item P8 on your schedule. The following information on deductions for repairs will assist you to work out whether you need to make an expense reconciliation adjustment.
Repairs
You may deduct the cost of repairs (not being expenditure of a capital nature) to premises and depreciating assets such as plant, machinery or equipment used solely for producing assessable income, or in carrying on a business for that purpose.
Expenditure on repairs to property used partially for business or income-producing purposes (such as where the property is also used for private purposes or in the production of exempt income) is deductible only to the extent that is reasonable, taking account of such use.
Example 6
If the asset was used 45% in the business, 40% for private use and 15% to produce exempt income, a reasonable deduction would be 45% of the expenditure.
End of exampleWhere items are newly acquired, including by way of a legacy or gift, the cost of repairs to defects present at the time of acquisition is generally of a capital nature.
Expenditure incurred in making alterations, additions or improvements is of a capital nature and is not deductible.
See also:
- Taxation Ruling TR 97/23 Income tax: deductions for repairs
Records you need to keep
To support your claim for the cost of repairs, you must keep full details, including source documents of the nature and cost of repairs to each item.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total primary production repairs and maintenance expenses at Repairs and maintenance in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total non-primary production repairs and maintenance expenses at Repairs and maintenance in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your primary production and non-primary production repairs and maintenance expenses and enter the total at O. Do not show cents.
All other expenses
Did you have any other business expenses?
No |
Go to Total expenses. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
This is the total of all other expenses which you incurred in deriving your profit or loss and which you have not already shown elsewhere at item P8. Other expenses include wages, accounting and professional fees, advertising, office supplies, foreign exchange (forex) losses and any loss on the sale of a depreciating asset as shown in your accounts.
You should also include gifts and donations that are a business expense and amounts you pay professionals in managing the tax affairs of the business at item P8. You should not claim these amounts at the gifts and donations label or the cost of managing tax affairs label on your individual tax return.
For information about forex losses, go to ato.gov.au or see question D15 in Individual tax return instructions supplement 2020.
You should also include capital and other non-deductible items (including debt deductions denied by thin capitalisation rules) shown here at H Expense reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of item P8 on your schedule.
See also:
Home office expenses
If part of your home was specifically set aside as your place of business and used solely for the purpose of conducting your business affairs and you had no other place from where they were mainly carried on, the following expenses are partly deductible:
- occupancy expenses, including rent, mortgage interest, rates, and house and contents insurance
- running expenses, including electricity, cleaning, depreciation, leasing charges and repairs to furniture and furnishings in the office.
In most cases, you can apportion expenses on a floor area basis and, if the area of your home was a place of business for only part of the year, on a time basis.
Where you used part of your home as a home office but it did not qualify as a place of business, only the additional running expenses you incurred may be deductible.
See also:
- Taxation Ruling TR 93/30 Income tax: deductions for home office expenses
- Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2001/6 Verification approaches for home office running expenses and electronic device expenses Records you need to keep
You should keep records to show how you have calculated your home office expenses. We may ask you for these at a later date.
Completing this item
Step 1 Enter your total ‘other’ primary production expenses at All other expenses in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 Enter your total ‘other’ non-primary production expenses at All other expenses in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Add up your ‘other’ primary production and ‘other’ non-primary production expenses and enter the total at P item P8 on your schedule.
Total expenses
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up all the expenses you have written in the Primary production column, from Cost of sales down to and including All other expenses. Enter the total at S item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2 If your total of primary production expenses is a negative amount, print L in the box at the right of the amount at S.
Step 3 Add up all the expenses you have written in the Non-primary production column, from Cost of sales down to and including All other expenses. Enter the total at T. Do not show cents.
Step 4 If your total of non-primary production expenses is a negative amount, print L in the box at the right of the amount at T.
Step 5 Add up your primary production and non-primary production expenses. Enter the total at TOTAL EXPENSES in the Totals column.
Step 6 If your total expenses is a negative amount, print L in the box at the right of this amount.
Reconciliation items
Consider the following items to see whether you qualify for a deduction.
Any adjustments to your income and expense amounts are dealt with at Income and expense reconciliation adjustments.
Section 40-880 deduction
Can you deduct business-related costs under section 40-880?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
Immediate deductibility for small business start-up expenses
Section 40-880 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 allows for certain start-up expenses, including costs associated with raising capital, to be immediately deductible where they are incurred by a small business entity or an entity that is not in business. These provisions applied from 2015–16.
If you are an individual (operating either alone or in partnership), the non-commercial loss provisions may apply to defer your deduction to a later income year.
Claimable business related start-up costs
Expenses can be fully deductible in the year in which the expenditure is incurred if the expenditure relates to a small business that is proposed to be carried on and is either:
- incurred in obtaining advice or services relating to the proposed structure or the proposed operation of the business
- a payment to an Australian government agency of a fee, tax or charge incurred in relation to setting up the business or establishing its operating structure.
See also:
Five-year write-off for a range of business related costs not recognised elsewhere in the tax law
Section 40-880 also provides a five-year write-off for certain capital expenditure incurred by you in relation to a past, present or prospective business if the expenditure is not already taken into account or not denied a deduction by another provision.
You can claim a deduction for capital expenditure:
- in relation to your business
- in relation to a business that used to be carried on, such as capital expenses incurred in order to cease the business
- in relation to a business proposed to be carried on, such as the costs of feasibility studies, market research or setting up the business entity
- as a shareholder, beneficiary or partner to liquidate or deregister a company or to wind up a trust or partnership (the company, trust or partnership must have carried on a business).
If you incur expenditure in relation to your existing business, a business that you used to carry on or a business that you propose to carry on, the expenditure is deductible to the extent the business is, was or is proposed to be carried on for a taxable purpose.
You cannot deduct expenditure in relation to an existing business that is carried on by another entity. However, you can deduct expenditure you incur in relation to a business that used to be, or is proposed to be, carried on by another entity. The expenditure is only deductible to the extent that:
- the business was, or is proposed to be, carried on for a taxable purpose
- the expenditure is in connection with the business that was or is proposed to be carried on and with you deriving assessable income from the business.
You can deduct 20% of the expenditure in the year you incur it and in each of the following four years. However, for some pre- and post-business expenditure, you may have to defer your claim for a deduction because the non-commercial loss rules apply.
Example 7
If you were carrying on a business during 2019–20, but your relevant capital expenditure relates to a new business that did not commence before 1 July 2019, you cannot claim a deduction for the expenses incurred until the business activity commences.
If you incur such expenditure in these circumstances, you should not claim the deductible amount (20%) but note it in your business or taxation records and claim the amounts deferred for this item in the year the business commences. However, these claims may be subject to further deferral to the extent that they would otherwise give rise to a business loss in the current year.
End of exampleSee also:
The deduction cannot be claimed for capital expenditure if it:
- can be deducted under another provision
- forms part of the cost of a depreciating asset you hold, used to hold or will hold
- forms part of the cost of land
- relates to a lease or other legal or equitable right
- would be taken into account in working out an assessable profit or deductible loss
- could be taken into account in working out a capital gain or a capital loss
- would be specifically not deductible under the income tax laws if the expenditure was not capital expenditure
- is specifically not deductible under the income tax laws for a reason other than the expenditure is capital expenditure
- is of a private or domestic nature
- is incurred in relation to gaining or producing exempt income or non-assessable non-exempt income
- is excluded from the cost or cost base of an asset because, under special rules in the UCA or capital gains tax regimes respectively, the cost or cost base of the asset was taken to be the market value
- is a return of or on capital or is a return of a non-assessable amount (for example, repayments of loan principal).
Claim the amount deductible under section 40-880 here if:
- you carried on a business as an individual at any time during 2019–20, or
- the amount relates to a proposed primary production or performing arts business.
If you have incurred relevant capital expenses that relate to a business that ceased in a previous income year and you carried on the business as a sole trader or through a partnership, claim the expenses here. If you carried on the business through a company or trust, you claim the amount deductible (20%) at item D15 on your tax return (supplementary section).
You must show any recoupment of the expenditure as assessable income, either at Other business income or as part of your Income reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of item P8 on your schedule.
Completing this item
Step 1
Enter your deduction for primary production business-related costs at Section 40-880 deduction in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2
Enter your deduction for non-primary production business-related costs at Section 40-880 deduction in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3
Add up your primary production and non-primary production deductions for business-related costs and enter the total at A.
Business deduction for project pool
Did you have capital expenditure directly connected with a business project?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Certain capital expenditure you incurred after 30 June 2001 which is directly connected with a project you carry on or propose to carry on for a taxable purpose can be allocated to a project pool and written off over the life of the project. Each project has a separate project pool. The project must be of sufficient substance and be sufficiently identified that it can be shown that the capital expenditure said to be a ‘project amount’ is directly connected with the project.
You are carrying on a project if it involves a continuity of activity and active participation. Merely holding a passive investment, such as a rental property, would not be regarded as carrying on a project.
Such capital expenditure, known as a project amount, is expenditure incurred on:
- creating or upgrading community infrastructure for a community associated with the project; this expenditure must be paid (not just incurred) to be a project amount
- site preparation for depreciating assets (other than to drain swamp or low-lying land or to clear land for horticultural plants, including grapevines)
- feasibility studies for the project
- environmental assessments for the project
- obtaining information associated with the project
- seeking to obtain a right to intellectual property
- ornamental trees or shrubs.
Project amounts also include mining capital expenditure and expenditure on certain facilities used to transport minerals or quarry materials.
See also:
The expenditure must not be otherwise deductible or form part of the cost of a depreciating asset. If the expenditure incurred arises from a non-arm’s length dealing and is more than the market value of what it was for, the amount of the expenditure is taken to be that market value.
Project amounts are allocated to a ‘project pool’. Your deduction for project amounts allocated to a project pool is spread over the ‘project life’. The project life is the period from the date on which the project starts to operate until the date on which it stops operating. The period must be limited by something inherent in the project. If there is no limited project life, no deduction is available under these rules.
A deduction is available from the income year in which you started to operate a project to gain or produce assessable income. The deduction is worked out on the value of the project pool at the end of the income year at the rate of 150%. For pools containing only project amounts incurred on or after 10 May 2006 for projects starting on or after that day, the rate is 200%. Your deductions are capped at 150% if on or after 10 May 2006 you abandon, sell or otherwise dispose of an existing project and then restart it after that date in circumstances where it would be reasonable to conclude that this was done for the main purpose of ensuring that deductions would be calculated using the higher rate.
Use worksheet 3A or worksheet 3B to work out your deduction.
Row |
Calculation elements |
Amount |
---|---|---|
a |
Value of the project pool at 30 June 2020. This is the closing pool value for 2018–19 (if any) plus the sum of the project amounts you allocated to the pool in 2019–20. |
$ |
b |
Your estimate of the life of the project (in years) |
years |
c |
Divide the amount at row a by the amount at row b. |
$ |
d |
Multiply the amount at row c by 200%. This is your 2019–20 deduction for the project pool. |
$ |
Your deduction at row d must not be more than the amount at row a.
If a project operated in 2019–20 for purposes other than earning assessable business income, you must reduce your deduction at row d by a reasonable amount for the extent to which the project operated for such other purposes.
Row |
Calculation elements |
Amount |
---|---|---|
a |
Value of the project pool at 30 June 2020. This is the closing pool value for 2018–19 (if any) plus the sum of the project amounts you allocated to the pool in 2019–20. |
$ |
b |
Your estimate of the life of the project (in years) |
years |
c |
Divide the amount at row a by the amount at row b. |
$ |
d |
Multiply the amount at row c by 150%. This is your 2019–20 deduction for the project pool. |
$ |
Your deduction at row d must not be more than the amount at row a.
If a project operated in 2019–20 for purposes other than earning assessable business income, you must reduce your deduction at row d by a reasonable amount for the extent to which the project operated for such other purposes.
The pool value can be subject to adjustments, for example, a foreign exchange (forex) adjustment may apply where you met an obligation to pay foreign currency incurred as a project amount which you had allocated to a project pool.
Closing pool value for 2019–20
This is row a minus row d in worksheet 3A and worksheet 3B. You will need the closing pool value for 2019–20 to work out your deduction for the project pool next year.
Any recoupment of the expenditure must be shown as assessable income either at Other business income or as part of your Income reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of item P8 on your schedule.
Where a project was abandoned, sold or otherwise disposed of in 2019–20
In this case, whether or not the project had begun to operate, you can claim a deduction for the 2018–19 closing pool value (if any) plus any project amounts allocated to the pool in the 2019–20 year. You must show any proceeds from the abandonment, sale or disposal of the project as assessable income either at Other business income or as part of your Income reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of your schedule.
Completing this item
Step 1
Enter your total primary production project pool business deduction at Business deduction for project pool in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2
Enter your total non-primary production project pool business deduction at Business deduction for project pool in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3
Add up your primary production and non-primary production project pool business deductions and enter the total at L.
Landcare operations and deduction for decline in value of water facility, fencing asset and fodder storage asset
Did you have any of the following expenses:
- landcare operations
- water facilities
- fencing assets
- fodder storage assets?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
Landcare operations expenses
You can claim a deduction for capital expenditure you incur on a landcare operation for land in Australia in the year it is incurred.
If the water facilities and landcare operation rules both apply, you can only deduct the expenditure as expenditure on a water facility; see Water conservation and conveyance facilities. If the carbon sink forest and landcare operation rules both apply, you can only deduct the expenditure as expenditure on carbon sink forests.
Unless you are a rural land irrigation water provider, the deduction is available if you use the land for either:
- a primary production business, or
- in the case of rural land, a business for the purpose of producing assessable income from the use of that land, except a business of mining or quarrying.
However your deduction is reduced by a reasonable amount to reflect your use of the land other than for the purpose of carrying on the relevant business in an income year after you incurred the expenditure.
You may claim the deduction even if you are only a lessee of the land.
Rural land irrigation water providers can claim a deduction for certain expenditure they incur. A rural land irrigation water provider is an entity whose business is primarily and principally supplying water to entities for use in primary production businesses on land in Australia or businesses (except mining or quarrying businesses) using rural land in Australia. The supply of water by using a motor vehicle is excluded.
If you are a rural land irrigation water provider, you can claim a deduction for capital expenditure you incurred on a landcare operation for land used by other entities that you supply with water if the land is:
- land in Australia that those entities use at the time for primary production businesses, or
- rural land in Australia that those entities use at the time for carrying on businesses for a taxable purpose, except a business of mining or quarrying.
If you are a rural land irrigation water provider your deduction is reduced by a reasonable amount to reflect an entity’s use of the land for other than a taxable purpose in an income year after you incurred the expenditure.
A landcare operation is one of the following:
- erecting fences to separate different land classes in accordance with an approved land management plan
- erecting fences primarily and principally to keep animals out of areas affected by land degradation in order to prevent or limit further damage and assist in reclaiming the areas
- constructing a levee or similar improvements
- constructing drainage works, other than the draining of swamps or low-lying land, primarily and principally to control salinity or assist in drainage control
- an operation primarily and principally for eradicating or exterminating animal pests from the land
- an operation primarily and principally for eradicating, exterminating or destroying plant growth detrimental to the land
- an operation primarily and principally for preventing or fighting land degradation other than by erecting fences, or
- an extension, alteration or addition to any of the assets described in 1 to 4 above or an extension of an operation described in 5 to 7 above.
A landcare operation also includes:
- a repair of a capital nature to an asset described in 1 to 4 above
- constructing a structural improvement that is reasonably incidental to levees (or similar improvements) or drainage works deductible as capital expenditure on a landcare operation
- a repair of a capital nature, or an alteration, addition or extension to a structural improvement that is reasonably incidental to levees (or similar improvements) or drainage works deductible as capital expenditure on a landcare operation.
An example of a structural improvement that may be reasonably incidental to drainage works is a fence constructed to prevent livestock entering a drain that was constructed to control salinity.
No deduction is available if the capital expenditure is on plant unless it is on certain fences, dams or other structural improvements.
If the expenditure incurred arose from a non-arm’s length dealing and was more than the market value of what the expenditure was for, the amount of the expenditure is taken to be that market value instead.
These deductions are not available to a partnership. Expenses for landcare operations incurred by a partnership are allocated to each partner, who can then claim the relevant deduction for their share of the expenditure.
You may need to show any recoupment of the expenditure as assessable income either at Other business income in the Income section of item P8 on your schedule or as part of your Income reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of item P8.
See also:
Water conservation and conveyance facilities
You can claim a deduction for the decline in value of a water facility. A water facility includes plant or a structural improvement, or an alteration, addition or extension to plant or a structural improvement, that is primarily or principally for the purpose of conserving or conveying water.
Water facility includes dams, tank stands, bores, wells, irrigation channels, pipes, pumps, water towers and windmills. Water facility also includes certain other expenditure incurred on or after 1 July 2004 for:
- a repair of a capital nature to plant or a structural improvement that is primarily or principally for the purpose of conserving or conveying water, for example, if you purchase a pump that needs substantial work done to it before it can be used in your business, the cost of repairing the pump may be treated as a water facility
- a structural improvement, or an alteration, addition or extension to a structural improvement that is reasonably incidental to conserving or conveying water
- a repair of a capital nature to a structural improvement that is reasonably incidental to conserving or conveying water.
Examples of structural improvements that are reasonably incidental to conserving or conveying water include a bridge over an irrigation channel, a culvert (a length of pipe or multiple pipes that are laid under a road to allow the flow of water in a channel to pass under the road), or a fence preventing livestock entering an irrigation channel.
If you incurred the expenditure from 7.30pm (AEST), 12 May 2015 you claim the full amount in the year you incurred it. If you incurred the expenditure before this time, you deduct one-third of the amount in the income year in which you incurred it, and one-third in each of the following two years.
Unless you are an irrigation water provider, the expenditure must be incurred primarily and principally for conserving or conveying water for use in a primary production business you conduct on land in Australia. You may claim the deduction even when you do not own the land. Therefore, if you are a lessee carrying on a business of primary production on the land, you can still claim the deduction. Your deduction is reduced where the facility is not wholly used for either:
- carrying on a primary production business on land in Australia, or
- a taxable purpose, for example, producing assessable income.
Irrigation water providers are entitled to a deduction for water facilities expenditure incurred on or after 1 July 2004. An irrigation water provider is an entity whose business is primarily and principally the supply of water to entities for use in primary production businesses on land in Australia. The supply of water by using a motor vehicle is excluded.
If you are an irrigation water provider, you must incur the expenditure primarily and principally for the purpose of conserving or conveying water for use in primary production businesses conducted by other entities on land in Australia (being entities supplied with water by you). The deduction is reduced if the facility is not used wholly for a taxable purpose.
If the expenditure incurred arose from a non-arm’s length dealing and was more than the market value of what the expenditure was for, the amount of the expenditure is taken to be that market value instead.
These deductions are not available to a partnership. Costs incurred by a partnership for facilities to conserve or convey water are allocated to each partner who can then claim the relevant deduction for their share of the expenditure.
You may need to show any recoupment of the expenditure as assessable income either:
- at Other business income in the Income section of item P8 on your schedule, or
- as part of your Income reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of item P8.
See also:
Fencing assets
You can claim a deduction for the decline in value of a fencing asset. A fencing asset includes a structural improvement, a repair of a capital nature, or an alteration, addition or extension to a fence.
If you incurred the expenditure from 7.30pm (AEST), 12 May 2015 you claim the full amount in the year you incurred it. If you incurred the expenditure before this time (or if the expenditure relates to a stockyard, pen or portable fence), the previous decline in value rules that apply to fences based on their effective life continue to apply.
The expenditure must be incurred by you on the construction, manufacture, installation or acquisition of a fencing asset that is used primarily and principally in a primary production business you conduct on land in Australia. You may claim the deduction even when you do not own the land. Therefore, if you are a lessee carrying on a business of primary production on the land, you can still claim the deduction. Your deduction is reduced where the fencing asset is not wholly used for either:
- carrying on a primary production business on land in Australia, or
- a taxable purpose, for example, producing assessable income.
If the expenditure incurred arose from a non-arm’s length dealing and was more than the market value of what the expenditure was for, the amount of the expenditure is taken to be that market value instead.
These deductions are not available to a partnership. Costs incurred by a partnership on fencing assets are allocated to each partner who can then claim the relevant deduction for their share of the expenditure.
You may need to show any recoupment of the expenditure as assessable income either at Other business income in the Income section of item P8 on your schedule or as part of your Income reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of item P8.
See also:
Fodder storage assets
You can claim a deduction for the decline in value of a fodder storage asset. A fodder storage asset is an asset that is primarily and principally for the purpose of storing fodder. It includes a structural improvement, a repair of a capital nature, or an alteration, addition or extension, to an asset or structural improvement, that is primarily and principally for the purpose of storing fodder.
Fodder refers to food for livestock, usually but not exclusively dried, such as grain, hay or silage. Fodder can include liquid feed and supplements. Examples of typical fodder storage assets include:
- silos
- liquid feed supplement storage tanks
- bins for storing dried grain
- hay sheds
- grain storage sheds, and
- above-ground bunkers.
If you incurred the expenditure from 19 August 2018 you deduct the full amount in the income year in which you incurred it. If you incurred the expenditure between 7.30pm (AEST), 12 May 2015 and 18 August 2018 you deduct one-third of the amount in the income year in which you incurred it, and one-third in each of the following two years, except if you first used the asset or installed it ready for use on or after 19 August 2018. In that case, you deduct the full amount in the income year in which you incurred it (this may require an amendment to a prior year tax return).
If you incurred the expenditure before 7.30pm (AEST), 12 May 2015, the previous decline in value rules that apply to fodder storage assets based on their effective life continue to apply.
The expenditure must be incurred by you on the construction, manufacture, installation or acquisition of a fodder storage asset that is used primarily and principally in a primary production business you conduct on land in Australia. You may claim the deduction even when you do not own the land. Therefore, if you are a lessee carrying on a business of primary production on the land, you can still claim the deduction. Your deduction is reduced where the fodder storage asset is not wholly used for either:
- carrying on a primary production business on land in Australia, or
- a taxable purpose, for example, producing assessable income.
If the expenditure incurred arose from a non-arm’s length dealing and was more than the market value of what the expenditure was for, the amount of the expenditure is taken to be that market value instead.
These deductions are not available to a partnership. Costs incurred by a partnership on fodder storage assets are allocated to each partner who can then claim the relevant deduction for their share of the expenditure.
You may need to show any recoupment of the expenditure as assessable income either at Other business income in the Income section of item P8 on your schedule or as part of your Income reconciliation adjustments in the Reconciliation items section of item P8.
See also:
Small business entities
Small businesses are able to claim an immediate deduction for assets they start to use, or have installed ready for use for a taxable purpose, provided they choose to use the simplified depreciation rules.
Under these rules, if you purchased assets from 7.30pm (AEST) on 12 May 2015 and first used or installed them ready for use:
From 7.30pm (AEST) on 12 May 2015 until 28 January 2019 |
From 29 January 2019 until before |
From 7.30pm (AEDT) on |
From 12 March 2020 to 30 June 2020 |
---|---|---|---|
You can immediately deduct the business portion of most depreciating assets costing less than $20,000 each (the instant asset write-off threshold). |
You can immediately deduct the business portion of most depreciating assets costing less than $25,000 each (the instant asset write-off threshold). |
You can immediately deduct the business portion of most depreciating assets costing less than $30,000 each (the instant asset write-off threshold). |
You can immediately deduct the business portion of most depreciating assets costing less than $150,000 each (the instant asset write-off threshold). |
The car limit applies to limit the instant asset write off deduction where a car is designed to mainly carry passengers.
The amount you show at W must not include any amount relating to a depreciating asset used in your primary production business if you have chosen to claim a deduction for it under the small business entity depreciation rules.
Completing this item
Step 1
Enter your total deductions for primary production landcare operations expenses, water facilities, fencing assets and fodder storage assets at Landcare operations and deduction for decline in value of water facility, fencing asset and fodder storage asset in the Primary production column, item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 2
Enter your total deduction for non-primary production landcare operations expenses, water facilities, fencing assets and fodder storage assets at Landcare operations and deduction for decline in value of water facility, fencing asset and fodder storage asset in the Non-primary production column. Do not show cents.
Step 3
Add up your primary production and non-primary production deductions for landcare operations, water facilities, fencing assets and fodder storage assets and enter the total at W.
Income and expense reconciliation adjustments
Do you need to make any income or expense reconciliation adjustments?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
You may need to make income reconciliation adjustments or expense reconciliation adjustments. These adjustments reconcile your business operating profit or loss with your business taxable income.
Do not complete any income reconciliation adjustments or expense reconciliation adjustments if all the amounts you have written at C Gross payments where Australian business number not quoted to W Landcare operations and deduction for decline in value of water facility, fencing asset and fodder storage asset item P8 on your schedule are assessable income or allowable tax deductions for income tax purposes.
If you have included amounts such as exempt income or non-deductible expenses or have not included amounts which are assessable income or expenditure that is deductible, you must work out your reconciliation adjustments.
Worksheet 4 will assist you with your calculations.
What are income reconciliation adjustments?
Income reconciliation adjustments include:
- income add backs; this is income not shown in the accounts which is assessable income for tax purposes, such as
- assessable balancing adjustment amounts on disposal of depreciating assets
- other assessable income not included in the profit and loss statement
- income subtractions; this is income shown in the accounts which is not assessable income, such as
- profit on sale of depreciating assets
- other income that is not assessable for income tax purposes, for example, gross exempt income and non-assessable non-exempt income.
- cash flow boost payments if they have been included in other business income.
Your income reconciliation adjustment is your total income add backs less your total income subtractions.
Use worksheet 4 to work out your income reconciliation adjustments for your primary and non-primary production businesses. The amount you enter at X Income reconciliation adjustments item P8 on your schedule is the total of your primary production and non-primary production income adjustments.
If the amount is negative, print L in the box at the right of the amount.
What are expense reconciliation adjustments?
Expense reconciliation adjustments include the following.
- Expense add backs are expenses shown in the accounts which are not tax deductible, such as
- prepaid expenses not deductible in this year
- depreciation
- loss on sale of a depreciating asset
- other items not allowable as a deduction, for example, capital expenditure, additions to provisions and reserves, income tax expense, expenses relating to exempt income, debt deductions denied by the thin capitalisation rules, other non-deductible expenses.
- Expense subtractions are items not shown as expenses in the accounts but which are deductible for tax purposes, such as
- prepaid expenses from a prior year that are deductible this year but not included elsewhere
- deduction for decline in value of depreciating assets
- deductible balancing adjustment amounts on disposal of depreciating assets
- deduction for environmental protection expenses
- other items deductible for tax purposes.
Your expense reconciliation adjustment is your total expense add backs less your total expense subtractions.
Use worksheet 4 to work out your expense reconciliation adjustments for your primary and non-primary production businesses. The amount you enter at H Expense reconciliation adjustments item P8 on your schedule is the total of your primary production and non-primary production expense adjustments.
If the amount is negative, print L in the box at the right of the amount.
See also:
Specific reconciliation adjustments
Following are examples of specific reconciliation adjustments that may apply to you.
If you were previously in the STS read Former STS taxpayers below first.
Next steps:
Former STS taxpayers
Make adjustments in this section of item P8 on your schedule if you:
- are eligible and have chosen to continue using the STS accounting method and the amounts you have shown at the Income and Expense sections of item P8 are not based on the STS accounting method, or
- stopped using the STS accounting method in 2019–20.
These adjustments are explained in more detail at Adjustments when ceasing to use the STS accounting method.
Worksheet 4 will assist you with your calculations.
Income derived but not received at 30 June 2020 and expenses incurred but not paid at 30 June 2020
If you are eligible and have chosen to continue using the STS accounting method and have included at item P8 amounts of ordinary income that have been derived but not received in 2019–20, the amounts not received are not assessable this year, for example, trade debtors at 30 June 2020.
These amounts form part of your income reconciliation adjustments at X at P8. Include these amounts at row f on worksheet 4.
If you are eligible and have chosen to continue using the STS accounting method and have included at item P8 amounts for general deductions, repairs and tax-related expenses that have been incurred but not paid in 2019–20, the amounts not paid are not deductible this year, for example, trade creditors at 30 June 2020.
These amounts form part of your expense reconciliation adjustments at H item P8. Include these amounts at row n on worksheet 4.
Adjustments when ceasing to use the STS accounting method
If you have discontinued using the STS accounting method read on.
If you have not included at Income at item P8 any amounts of ordinary income that were derived but not received while using the STS accounting method, these amounts are assessable this year, for example, trade debtors at 30 June 2019.
Include these amounts at row b on worksheet 4.
If you have not included at Expenses at item P8 any amounts of general deductions, repairs or tax-related expenses that were incurred but not paid while using the STS accounting method, these amounts are deductible this year, for example, trade creditors at 30 June 2019.
Include these amounts (other than tax-related expenses) at row t on worksheet 4. Enter your deduction for tax-related expenses at item D10 on your tax return.
Depreciating assets deducted under the simplified depreciation rules
Disposal of depreciating assets
If you disposed of any depreciating assets during the income year, the following amounts (if any) form part of your Income reconciliation adjustments at X item P8.
- the taxable purpose proportion of the termination value of assets that have been disposed of for which an immediate deduction has been claimed either this year or in a prior year
- if the closing pool balance of a general small business pool is less than zero, the amount below zero
- assessable balancing adjustment amounts on the disposal of depreciating assets not allocated to a general small business pool.
Include the amounts at row b on worksheet 4.
Any deductible balancing adjustment amounts on the disposal of depreciating assets that you have not allocated to a small business pool form part of your Expense reconciliation adjustments at H item P8. Include these amounts at q on worksheet 4.
See also:
Prepaid expenses
Special rules may affect the timing of deductions for prepaid expenditure. Under these rules you may need to apportion certain prepaid expenses over more than one income year. You must make an expense reconciliation adjustment to add back that part of the expense that is not deductible in the year it is incurred. Show the adjustment at row k on worksheet 4.
If you had a prepaid expense in a prior year which is to be apportioned over the service period and you are entitled to a deduction for part of the expense this year but have not included it elsewhere, show the adjustment as an expense subtraction at row s on worksheet 4.
See also:
Deduction for decline in value
A deduction for a decline in value of a depreciating asset calculated under income tax law may differ from the accounting or book calculation of depreciation. Different rules regarding such things as effective life, the calculation of balancing adjustment amounts and the treatment of debt forgiveness amounts can produce a discrepancy between the two calculations.
Under income tax law you can deduct an amount equal to the decline in value of a depreciating asset in 2019–20 if you held the depreciating asset for any time during the year and used it (or installed it ready for use) for a taxable purpose, such as for producing assessable income.
The deduction is reduced to the extent you do not use the asset for a taxable purpose.
To help you calculate your deduction for decline in value, see the Depreciation and capital allowances tool or Guide to depreciating assets 2020, which also provides explanations of relevant terms. The publication also explains the instant asset write-off for businesses, the backing business investment accelerated depreciation and the option to allocate to a low-value pool depreciating assets that cost less than $1,000 (excluding input tax credit entitlements) and depreciating assets that have an opening adjustable value of less than $1,000.
If you choose to use the low-value pool method to calculate the decline in value of low-cost or low-value depreciating assets and the pool contains assets used for work-related, self-education or non-business rental purposes, read question D6 in Individual tax return instructions 2020. Do not include the deduction at item P8 on your schedule. If none of the depreciating assets in the pool is used for any of those purposes, include the amount of your low-value pool deduction at row r on worksheet 4. Where necessary, make a reasonable apportionment between primary production and non-primary production activities.
You should also include the deduction for decline in value of depreciating assets not allocated to a pool at row r on worksheet 4.
You should also add back the depreciation charged in your accounts and shown at M Depreciation expenses in the Expenses section of item P8 as an expense reconciliation adjustment. Include the amount at row h on worksheet 4. The amount at row h should not include any small business pool deductions which you have claimed at M.
Luxury car leasing
A leased car, either new or second-hand, is a luxury car if its cost exceeds the car limit that applies for the income year in which the lease commences. The car limit for- 2019–20 is $57,581.
A luxury car lease (other than genuine short-term hire arrangements) is treated as a notional sale-and-loan transaction.
The cost or value of the car specified in the lease (or the market value if the parties were not dealing at arm’s length in connection with the lease) is taken to be the cost of the car for the lessee and the amount loaned by the lessor to the lessee to buy the car.
In relation to the notional loan, the actual lease payments are divided into notional principal and finance charge components. That part of the finance charge component for the notional loan applicable for the particular period (the accrual amount) is deductible to the lessee, subject to any reduction required under the thin capitalisation rules.
The amount forms part of your expense reconciliation adjustments at H item P8 on your schedule. Include the amount at row p on worksheet 4.
In relation to the notional sale, the lessee is treated as the holder of the luxury car and may be entitled to claim a deduction for the decline in value of the car. If the lessee is a small business entity using the simplified depreciation rules for the income year in which the lease is entered into, the lessee allocates the car to their general small business pool.
For the purpose of calculating the deduction, the cost of the car is limited to the car limit for the income year in which the lease is granted.
For more information on deductions for the decline in value of leased luxury cars, see Guide to depreciating assets 2020.
In summary, the lessee is entitled to deductions equal to:
- the accrual amount
- the decline in value of the luxury car, based on the applicable car limit, unless the car is allocated to the general small business pool.
You reduce both deductions to reflect any use of the car for a non-taxable purpose.
Where you allocated the car to the general small business pool with the cost based on the applicable car limit, see Calculating your depreciation deductions.
If you have included the lease expense at J Lease expenses in the Expenses section of item P8 in your schedule, the amount should also form part of your expense reconciliation adjustments at H item P8. Include the amount at row i on worksheet 4. Include the deduction for the accrual amount at row p.
If the lease terminates or is not extended or renewed and the lessee does not actually acquire the car from the lessor, the lessee is treated under the rules as disposing of the car by way of sale to the lessor. This constitutes a balancing adjustment event. If the car is not subject to the simplified depreciation rules, any assessable or deductible balancing adjustment amount for the lessee must be determined. If the car has been allocated to the lessee’s general small business pool, see calculation 4 for small business entities.
Hire-purchase agreements
Hire-purchase and instalment sale agreements of goods are treated as a sale of the property by the financier (or hire-purchase company) to the hirer (or instalment purchaser).
The sale is treated as being financed by a loan from the financier to the hirer at a sale price of either their agreed cost or value or the property’s arm’s length value.
The periodic hire-purchase (or instalment) payments are treated as payments of principal and interest under the notional loan. The interest component is deductible to the hirer, subject to any reduction required under the thin capitalisation rules. This amount forms part of the expense reconciliation adjustments at H item P8 on your schedule. Include the amount at row t on worksheet 4.
In relation to the notional sale, the hirer of a depreciating asset is treated as the holder of the asset and either allocates the asset to the appropriate small business pool if they are a small business entity using the simplified depreciation rules for the income year, or may be entitled to claim a deduction for the decline in value of the depreciating asset. The cost of the asset for this purpose is taken to be the agreed cost or value, or the arm’s length value if the dealing is not at arm’s length.
If you have included hire-purchase charges as an expense at item P8 on your schedule, the amount should also form part of your expense reconciliation adjustments at H item P8. Include the amount at row n on worksheet 4.
Termination of a limited recourse debt
Excessive deductions for capital allowances are included in assessable income under the limited recourse debt rules contained in Division 243 of the ITAA 1997. This will occur where:
- expenditure on property has been financed or re-financed wholly or partly by the limited recourse debt
- the limited recourse debt is terminated after 27 February 1998 but has not been paid in full by the debtor
- because the debt has not been paid in full, the capital allowance deductions allowed for the expenditure exceed the deductions that would be allowable if the unpaid amount of the debt was not counted as capital expenditure of the debtor. Special rules apply in working out whether the debt has been fully paid.
A limited recourse debt is a debt where the rights of the creditor as against the debtor, in the event of default in payment of the debt or of interest, are limited wholly or predominantly to the property which has been financed by the debt or is security for the debt, or rights in relation to such property. A debt is also a limited recourse debt if, notwithstanding that there may be no specific conditions to that effect, it is reasonable to conclude that the creditor’s rights as against the debtor’s are capable of being so limited.
A limited recourse debt includes a notional loan under a hire-purchase or instalment sale agreement of goods to which Division 240 of the ITAA 1997 applies, see section 243-20.
The amount that is included within assessable income as a result of these provisions forms part of your income reconciliation adjustments at X item P8 on your schedule. Include the amount at row b on worksheet 4.
Worksheet 4 – Reconciliation statement
Row |
Calculation elements |
Primary production |
Non-primary production |
---|---|---|---|
a |
Assessable balancing adjustment amounts on disposal of depreciating assets |
$ |
$ |
b |
Assessable business income not included in the profit and loss statement |
$ |
$ |
c |
Subtotal: add the amounts at row a and row b. |
$ |
$ |
Row |
Calculation elements |
Primary production |
Non-primary production |
---|---|---|---|
d |
Net exempt income (gross exempt income less expenses relating to that exempt income) |
$ |
$ |
e |
Profit on sale of depreciating assets included in accounts |
$ |
$ |
f |
Other non-assessable income included in the profit and loss statement |
$ |
$ |
g |
Subtotal: add the amounts at rows d, e and f. |
$ |
$ |
|
Income reconciliation adjustments: take the amount at row g away from the amount at row c. |
$ |
$ |
Row |
Calculation elements |
Primary production |
Non-primary production |
---|---|---|---|
h |
Depreciation charged in accounts [see note 1.] |
$ |
$ |
i |
Lease payments for luxury cars |
$ |
$ |
j |
Loss on sale of depreciating assets included in accounts |
$ |
$ |
k |
Part of prepaid expenses not deductible this year |
$ |
$ |
Row |
Calculation elements |
Primary production |
Non-primary production |
---|---|---|---|
l |
Capital expenditure |
$ |
$ |
m |
Additions to provisions and reserves |
$ |
$ |
n |
Other non-deductible items, including income tax |
$ |
$ |
o |
Subtotal: add the amounts at rows h, i, j, k, l, m and n. |
$ |
$ |
Row |
Calculation elements |
Primary production |
Non-primary production |
---|---|---|---|
p |
Accrual amount deduction for lessee of luxury cars |
$ |
$ |
q |
Deductible balancing adjustment amounts on disposal of depreciating assets |
$ |
$ |
r |
Deduction for decline in value of depreciating assets |
$ |
$ |
s |
Part of prepaid expenses deductible this year but not included elsewhere |
$ |
$ |
t |
Other items deductible for tax purposes not included in the profit and loss statement [See note 4.] |
$ |
$ |
u |
Subtotal: add the amounts at rows p, q, r, s and t. |
$ |
$ |
|
Expense reconciliation adjustments: take the amount at row u away from the amount from row o. |
$ |
$ |
Notes
- Include amounts at row h only if you are not using the simplified depreciation rules. However, exclude any pool deductions which you have included at M item P8 which relate to a continuing small business pool.
- See Guide to depreciating assets 2020 for an explanation of depreciating assets.
- If you have included an amount of capital expenditure incurred to terminate a lease or licence at J Lease expenses item P8, make a reconciliation adjustment at H Expense reconciliation adjustments by including the amount of capital expenditure as an expense add back and taking away that part of the expense which is allowed as a tax deduction.
- Do not include in the amount at row t:
- section 40-880 deductions
- business deductions for project pools
- deductions for landcare operations, water facilities, fencing assets and fodder storage assets.
Completing this item
Step 1
Complete worksheet 4 using the explanations provided. This will give you your total income and expense reconciliation amounts (primary and non-primary production) that you need for your schedule.
Step 2
Transfer the totals in the Income reconciliation adjustments (below row g) and the Expense reconciliation adjustments (below row u) on the worksheet to the appropriate boxes on your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 3
If any of the reconciliation adjustment amounts is negative, print L in the box at the right of the amount.
Step 4
Add up your primary production and non-primary production income reconciliation adjustments and enter the total at X.
Step 5
Add up your primary production and non-primary production expense reconciliation adjustments and enter the total at H.
Step 6
If the total income reconciliation adjustment amount is negative, print L in the box at the right of the amount at X. If the total expense reconciliation adjustment amount is negative, print L in the box at the right of H.
Worksheet 5
Row |
Calculation elements |
Amount |
---|---|---|
a |
Enter your primary production total business income shown in the Primary production column at TOTAL BUSINESS INCOME item P8. |
$ |
b |
Enter your primary production total business expenses shown at S item P8. |
$ |
c |
Add up the amounts of any deductions for section 40-880 expenditure, project pool and landcare operations, water facilities, fencing assets and fodder storage assets and enter the total at row c. |
$ |
d |
Add the amount at row b to the amount at row c. |
$ |
e |
Take the amount at row d away from the amount at row a. |
$ |
f |
Enter your primary production income reconciliation adjustment (if any). |
$ |
g |
Enter your primary production expense reconciliation adjustment (if any). |
$ |
h |
Your net income or loss from your primary production business: add the amounts at rows e, f and g. |
$ |
If the amount at row d is more than the amount at row a, the amount at row e is a loss. If it is, or if you have a negative amount at rows f or g, the examples below will help you to work out your loss from primary production business.
Worksheet 6
Row |
Calculation elements |
Amount |
---|---|---|
i |
Enter your non-primary production total business income shown in the Non-primary production column at TOTAL BUSINESS INCOME item P8. |
$ |
j |
Enter your non-primary production total business expenses shown at T item P8. |
$ |
k |
Add up the amounts of any deductions for non-primary production section 40-880 expenditure, project pool and landcare operations and enter the total at row k. |
$ |
l |
Add the amount at row j to the amount at row k. |
$ |
m |
Take away the amount at row l from the amount at row i. |
$ |
n |
Enter your non-primary production income reconciliation adjustment (if any). |
$ |
o |
Enter your non-primary production expense reconciliation adjustment (if any). |
$ |
p |
Your net income or loss from your non-primary production business: add the amounts at rows m, n and o. |
$ |
If the amount at row l is more than the amount at row i, the amount at row m is a loss. If it is, or if you have a negative amount at rows n or o, the examples below will help you to work out your loss from non-primary production business.
Examples 8
If the amount at row e is a $5,000 loss, the amount at row f is $12,000 income and the amount at row g is a $1,000 loss, the net income from the primary production business at row h is $6,000.
If the amount at row e is $5,000 profit, the amount at row f is $2,000 income and the amount at row g is an $8,000 loss, the loss from the primary production business at row h is $1,000.
If the amount at row m is a $5,000 loss, the amount at row n is a $4,000 loss and the amount at row o is a $1,000 loss, the loss from the non-primary production business at row p is $10,000.
End of exampleNet income or loss from business for 2019–20
Use worksheet 5 and worksheet 6 to work out your net income or loss from your primary and non-primary production businesses for 2019–20, not including any non-commercial business losses deferred from a prior year.
Completing this item
Step 1
Transfer the amount at row h on worksheet 5 to B item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents. If the amount is a loss, print L in the box at the right of this amount.
Step 2
Transfer the amount at row p on worksheet 6 to C item P8 on your schedule. Do not show cents. If the amount is a loss, print L in the box at the right of this amount.
Step 3
Add B and C and enter the total in the adjacent Totals column. The amount shown should not include any non-commercial business losses deferred from a prior year (which are shown at D or E, see Deferred non-commercial business losses from a prior year).
If you made a loss from your business, print L in the box at the right of this amount.
If the amount at B or C includes details from more than one business activity, and any one of these activities resulted in a net loss, you also need to complete items P3 and P9 on your schedule.
Deferred non-commercial business losses from a prior year
Do you have any deferred non-commercial business losses from a prior year?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
A deferred non-commercial business loss is a loss you incurred in a prior year which you were unable to claim against other income. If your activity is carried on partly in Australia and partly overseas please phone 13 28 66 or see How to defer your losses.
Your prior year deferred non-commercial business loss for a business activity may be reduced if you earned net exempt income in 2019–20.
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.
See also:
- How to offset your losses
- phone 13 28 66
Completing this item
Step 1
At D item P8 on your schedule enter the amount of any primary production losses you deferred in a prior year from activities that are the same or similar to your current year activity. Do not show cents.
Step 2
At E enter the amount of any non-primary production losses you deferred in a prior year from activities that are the same or similar to your current year activity. Do not show cents.
Step 3
Add up your primary and non-primary production deferred non-commercial business losses. Enter the total at Deferred non-commercial business losses from a prior year in the Totals column.
Net income or loss from business
This amount takes into account non-commercial losses deferred from a prior year.
Completing this item
Step 1
If you have net income from primary production business this year at B, take away from it the amount of your deferred non-commercial primary production business losses from a prior year shown at D. Enter the answer at Y Net income or loss from business item P8 on your schedule.
If the amount at Y is negative, print L in the box at the right of the amount.
If you have a loss from primary production business this year at B, add it to the amount of your deferred non-commercial primary production business losses from a prior year shown at D. Enter the total at Y Net income or loss from business item P8 on your schedule and print L in the box at the right of the amount.
If you have printed L in the box at the right of the amount at Y, you also need to complete items P3 and P9 on your schedule.
Step 2
If you have net income from non-primary production business this year at C, take away from it the amount of your deferred non-commercial non-primary production business losses from a prior year shown at E. Enter the answer at Z Net income or loss from business item P8 on your schedule.
If the amount at Z is negative, print L in the box at the right of the amount.
If you have a loss from non-primary production business this year at C, add it to the amount of your deferred non-commercial non-primary production business losses from a prior year shown at E. Enter the total at Z Net income or loss from business item P8 on your schedule and print L in the box at the right of the amount.
If you have printed L in the box at the right of the amount at Z, you also need to complete items P3 and P9 on your schedule.
Step 3
Add up the amounts at Y and Z.
Enter the answer at Net income or loss from business in the Totals column. If the total is negative, print L in the box at the right of the amount.
Step 4
Transfer the amounts at Y and Z on your schedule to B and C (respectively) item 15 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Small business income tax offset
Are you a small business entity with a turnover less than $5 million?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to work out your net small business income so we can calculate your tax offset. The maximum offset is $1,000 per year per person from all your sources of small business income.
Your net small business income is your assessable income from carrying on your business less your deductions to the extent that they are attributable to that assessable income.
If you carry on multiple businesses combine the profit or loss from each business activity to work out your net small business income from all your businesses. If one or more of your business activities made a loss you must first apply the non-commercial loss rules to work out how each loss is to be treated. Any loss you are unable to claim because of these rules is not taken into account in working out net small business income.
See also:
Use your Y and Z amounts as your starting point for working out your net small business income. Any prior year deferred non-commercial losses being claimed as a deduction this year are already included in the amounts shown at Y and Z. You do not need to include them again in your net small business income calculation.
Do not include:
- any net capital gains you made from assets used in carrying on your business
- any personal services income unless you were a personal services business
- any of the following deductions
- tax-related expenses
- gifts or contributions
- personal superannuation contributions
- tax losses from prior years.
Completing this item
Step 1
Did you have either of the following:
- business income or deductions shown at items other than Y or Z item P8 (see Worksheet 7 for a list of these items)
- business losses that are not deductible under the non-commercial loss rules – see P9 Business losses activity details.
To work out your net small business income, use the worksheet or our Small business income tax offset calculator.
No |
The amount at Y and Z item P8 is your net small business income. Add Y and Z together, a negative amount will offset a positive amount. Show the result at A item 15 on your tax return (supplementary section). You are finished with this item. Go to P9. |
Yes |
Go to step 2. |
Step 2
Use the worksheet below to adjust your Y or Z item P8 amount. Show these amounts at rows a and b in the worksheet.
Step 3
If any business losses are not allowable deductions for non-commercial loss purposes show them at row h. If the loss includes a net capital gain, deduct the amount of net capital gain from the loss and show the result at row h.
Step 4
Add up all the amounts at rows a to h and deduct the amount at rows I and j. Show the result at row k. If the result is positive this is your net small business income. Show this amount at A item 15 on your tax return (supplementary section). If the result is a loss show zero. Do not show cents.
Worksheet 7
Row |
Calculation elements |
Amount |
---|---|---|
c |
FMD withdrawals at item 17 relating to the business |
$ |
d |
Foreign source business income from item 19 or 20 |
$ |
e |
Business interest income (do not include interest on an FMD as it is not business interest income) |
$ |
f |
Business dividend income |
$ |
g |
Other business income not already shown at this item |
$ |
h |
Business losses which are not allowable deductions (excluding any net capital gains) |
$ |
Row |
Calculation elements |
Amount |
---|---|---|
i |
FMD deductible deposits at item 17 relating to the business |
$ |
j |
Other business deductions not already claimed at this item |
$ |
Row |
Calculation elements |
Amount |
---|---|---|
k |
Add up all the amounts at rows a to h in Worksheets 7a and 7b. Then deduct the amounts at row I and j in Worksheet 7c. Show the result at row k. |
$ |
P9 Business loss activity details
Did you have:
- a loss from a business activity you carried on either as a sole trader or in partnership (including a loss after deducting your partner expenses)
- a loss at
- N or O item 13 Partnerships and trusts
- A item 14 Personal services income
- B or C item 15 Net income or loss from business, or
- a foreign business loss at M item 20 Other net foreign source income?
No |
If you are a small business entity using the simplified depreciation rules, go to P10 Small business entity simplified depreciation. Otherwise, go to Other business and professional items. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You must complete Activity 1.If you have more than one loss, then each loss must be considered separately.
Before you complete item 16 on your tax return (supplementary section), include foreign business losses shown at M item 20 here. If you carry on an activity that is partly in Australia and partly overseas, you must consider if you have an overall loss from the activity before completing this item. Combine the results of the activity that is carried on partly in Australia and overseas to determine if you have an overall loss for the activity.
While this question is about business losses you may have to report an investment loss or a business profit if you answered Yes.
See also:
- Non-commercial losses
- Taxation Ruling TR 2001/14 Income tax: Division 35 – non-commercial business losses
What you need
If you are a partner in a partnership, you will need the following details for each business activity that you, as a partner, were involved in:
- the amount of assessable income earned by the partnership for the activity
- the share of the partnership's assessable income, real property and certain other assets, attributable to partners who are not individuals
- your share of income or loss of the partnership from the activity.
Investment losses
If you have a partnership non-primary production loss from a passive investment at O item 13 – for example, from a rental property, then you are not required to report that loss. If, however, that is your only loss, you need to complete Activity 1 at P9 and show:
- the description of the activity at D as 'Investment'
- the industry code '67110' at E
- P for partnership at F
- 0 for type of loss at G
- 0 for net loss at I.
If you have completed Activity 1 as directed above:
- and are a small business using the simplified depreciation rules, go to P10 Small business entity simplified depreciation
- otherwise, go to Other business and professional items.
If you have not completed Activity 1 as directed above, read on.
Work out whether you have a loss for the business activity
Complete Worksheet 1a for each business activity to determine whether you have a loss for that activity when both of the following apply:
- you have a loss from a business activity at any of
- N or O item 13
- A item 14
- B or C item 15
- M item 20
and
- you have any of the following from the same business activity
- gross interest at L item 10 (interest on a farm management deposit is not business income)
- dividends at S, T or U item 11
- farm management repayments at N or R item 17
- net capital gain at A item 18
- net foreign source income or loss at M item 20
- partner deductions attributable to that business activity at I, J, X or Y
item 13.
Complete Worksheet 1a
- Add up the income from the activity shown at items 10, 11, 17, 18 and 20 and write the result at a
- Write at b the loss from this activity reported at items 13, 14 or 15
- If the activity is carried on in partnership, write at c any partner deductions that relate to this activity which you showed at I, J, X or Y item 13
- Write at d any net foreign loss from this activity you showed at M item 20
- Add up b, c and d and write the result at e
- Subtract the amount at e from a and write the result at f
- If the result at f is negative this activity has a loss, see You need to know
- If the result at f is zero or positive this activity does not have a loss, see Profitable activities
Worksheet 1a – Working out whether you have a loss for the business activity
To help you work out whether you have a loss for the business activity, you can use this worksheet. If you use it, keep the completed worksheet with your other records.
Row |
Calculation element |
Amount |
---|---|---|
a |
Income from the activity at other items:
|
$ |
b |
Loss from the activity shown at: distribution from partnerships N item 13, O item 13 net personal services income A item 14 net income or loss from business B item 15, C item 15
|
$ |
c |
Partner deductions attributable to the activity shown at I, J, X, Y item 13 |
$ |
d |
Loss from the activity at M item 20 Other net foreign loss |
$ |
e |
Add b, c and d. |
$ |
f |
Subtract e from a. |
$ |
Profitable activities
If the amount at f in Worksheet 1a is zero or positive and:
- you have more than one business activity net loss to report at P9, then you need to report all of them, or
- you do not have a net loss from another business activity then you need to complete Activity 1 as follows in respect of one profitable business activity. Write:
- the description of activity at D
- the industry code at E
- P for partnership or S for sole trader at F
- 5 for type of loss at G
- AN as reference for code 5 at C
- 200926 for number at A
- 0 for net loss at I.
If you have completed Activity 1 as directed above:
- and are a small business using the simplified depreciation rules, go to P10 Small business entity simplified depreciation
- otherwise, go to Other business and professional items.
If you have not completed Activity 1 as directed above, read on.
You need to know
Under the rules for non-commercial business losses, you can use a 2019–20 loss from a business activity you conduct either as a sole trader or in partnership to calculate your 2019–20 taxable income if it meets one of these conditions:
- an exception applies
- you meet the income requirement and one of the four tests is satisfied
- you meet the income requirement and none of the four tests is satisfied, but the Commissioner of Taxation has exercised his discretion, or ruled that it will be exercised, to allow you to claim the loss
- you do not meet the income requirement, but the Commissioner has exercised his discretion, or ruled that it will be exercised, to allow you to claim the loss.
You cannot claim losses arising from activities you conduct that are a private recreational pursuit or hobby, or if there is no likelihood of profit.
The rules for non-commercial business losses apply to both foreign and Australian business activities.
Keep records of each of the net losses deferred for your separate business activities.
The exceptions
If you operated or proposed to operate a primary production business or a professional arts business and your unrelated assessable income for 2019–20 (except any net capital gain) from other sources is less than $40,000, you may claim your business loss for 2019–20.
A professional arts business is a business you carry on as an author of a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, as a performing artist, or as a production associate.
GST excluded
Your assessable income excludes any goods and services tax (GST) on a taxable supply you make. You must be registered or required to be registered for GST to make a taxable supply.
The four tests
You will not have to defer your loss from your business activity if you meet the income requirement and the activity satisfies at least one of the following four tests:
- There is at least $20,000 of assessable income from the business activity for 2019–20.
- The business activity has produced a profit for tax purposes in three out of the past five years, including 2019–20.
- The value of real property assets (excluding any private dwelling) used on a continuing basis in carrying on the business activity is at least $500,000.
- The value of certain other assets (except cars, motorcycles and similar vehicles) used on a continuing basis in carrying on the business activity is at least $100,000.
See also:
- Non-commercial losses
- Taxation Ruling TR 2001/14 Income tax: Division 35 – non-commercial business losses
- Partnerships
- phone 13 28 66
The income requirement
You must meet the income requirement to continue to access the four tests to offset your loss from a business activity against other assessable income.
If you do not meet the income requirement, you may request the Commissioner to exercise his discretion to allow your loss, see The Commissioner’s discretion.
You will meet the income requirement and have access to the four tests if the total of the following amounts is less than $250,000:
- Taxable income is the amount shown, or that would be shown, on page 4 of your tax return if the loss from this activity is claimed and not added back at item 16 less any assessable first home super saver (FHSS) amount. If your taxable income is zero or a loss, and the loss from this activity is $250,000 or more, you will need to complete Worksheet 1b. You will need to complete Worksheet 1b for each activity with a loss of $250,000 or more.
- Total reportable fringe benefits amounts shown on your payment summary and totalled at N and W item IT1 on your tax return.
- Reportable superannuation contributions are your reportable employer superannuation contributions (shown on your payment summary and totalled at T item IT2 on your tax return), plus any deductible personal superannuation contributions shown at item D12 on your tax return (supplementary section).
- Net investment losses are the total of your financial investment losses (shown at X item IT5 on your tax return) and rental properties losses (shown at Y item IT6 on your tax return).
If you do not meet the income requirement, you will have to defer your loss unless the Commissioner has exercised his discretion or ruled that it will be exercised, or you satisfy another exception.
Complete Worksheet 1b
- Write your taxable income or loss at a. Include your non-commercial losses that would be deductible if the income requirement was satisfied. Show a loss as a negative.
- Write the total of your deductible non-commercial losses at b.
- Add up a and b and write the result at c.
- Write any losses carried forward from earlier income years (shown at Q and R item L1 on your tax return) but not claimed (claimed losses shown at F and Z item L1 on your tax return) at d.
- Write any gifts or donations (shown at D9 item J on your tax return) that were not allowed as a deduction because they added to or created a tax loss at e.
- Write any personal superannuation contributions (shown at D12 item H on your tax return) that were not allowed as a deduction because they added to or created a tax loss at f.
- Add up d, e and f and write the result at g. This cannot exceed the amount at c.
- Subtract g from c and write the result at h. This is your taxable income excluding your non-commercial losses.
- Write at i your total reportable fringe benefits amounts shown on your payment summary and totalled at N and W item IT1 on your tax return.
- Write at j your reportable superannuation contributions (shown on your payment summary and totalled at T item IT2 on your tax return).
- Write at k your total net investment losses being the sum of your financial investment losses (shown at X item IT5 on your tax return) and rental properties losses (shown at Y item IT6 on your tax return).
- Add up h, i, j and k and show the result at l.
Worksheet 1b: Your deductible non-commercial losses are $250,000 or more and your taxable income is zero or a loss
To help you work out if your deductible non-commercial losses are $250,000 or more and your taxable income is zero or a loss, use this worksheet. If you use it, keep the completed worksheet with your records.
Row |
Calculation element |
Amount |
---|---|---|
a |
Your taxable income or loss - excluding any assessable First home super saver released amount (show a loss as a negative) Include your non-commercial losses that would be deductible if the income requirement test was satisfied |
$ |
b |
Your total deductible non-commercial losses (show as a positive figure) |
$ |
c |
Add a and b |
$ |
d |
Your losses carried forward from earlier income years shown at Q and R item L1, but not claimed at F and Z item L1 |
$ |
e |
Your gifts or donations shown at J item D9, that were not allowed as a deduction because they added to or created a tax loss |
$ |
f |
Your personal superannuation contributions shown at H item D12 that were not allowed as a deduction because they added to or created a tax loss |
$ |
g |
Add d, e and f. If the result exceeds the amount at c, write the amount from c |
$ |
h |
Subtract g from c. The result is your taxable income excluding your non-commercial loss |
$ |
i |
Your total reportable fringe benefits amounts shown at N and W item IT1 |
$ |
j |
Your reportable superannuation contributions shown at T item IT2 |
$ |
k |
The sum of your total net investment losses shown at X item IT5 and rental properties losses shown at Y item IT6 |
$ |
l |
Add h, i, j and k The result is your income for non-commercial loss purposes. |
$ |
The Commissioner’s discretion
If you meet the income requirement for the most recent income year ending before you request that the discretion be exercised, the Commissioner can exercise his discretion to allow a loss from a business activity to be claimed in the year it arises. This can occur even if none of the four tests are satisfied, provided either:
- the business activity was affected by special circumstances outside the control of the business operators (for example, natural disasters) where the activity would have satisfied one of the four tests but for these special circumstances, or
- the business activity, because of its nature, has a lead time and for this reason, does not or will not satisfy any of the four tests. However, there is an objective expectation that within a period that is commercially viable for the industry either
- it will satisfy one of the four tests, or
- produce assessable income for an income year greater than the tax deduction attributable to that income for that year. ‘Commercial viability’ is measured against independent industry standards.
If you exceed the income requirement for the most recent income year ending before you request that the discretion be exercised, the Commissioner can exercise his discretion to allow a loss from a business activity in more limited circumstances. The Commissioner can exercise his discretion in this instance if:
- the business activity was affected by special circumstances outside the control of the business operators (for example, natural disasters) where the activity was unable to produce a tax profit and would have satisfied one of the four tests but for these special circumstances, or
- the business activity, because of its nature, has a lead time and, for this reason, does not or will not produce assessable income greater than the tax deduction attributable to that income. However, there is an objective expectation that it will do so within a period that is commercially viable for the industry concerned. ‘Commercial viability’ is measured against independent industry standards.
Applying for the Commissioner’s discretion
You must apply in writing for advice on whether the Commissioner will exercise discretion. To do this, complete the Application for a private ruling on the Commissioner’s discretion for non-commercial business losses.
See also:
- Commissioner's discretion
- phone 13 28 66
Deferring your loss
If you are unable to claim your loss in 2019–20 because of these rules, you must defer the loss.
This deferred loss is not disallowed. Instead, you take it into account for the next income year in which you carry on this business activity, or one of a similar kind.
The deferred loss is a deduction when calculating any net profit or loss from the activity in that future year. Your deferred loss deduction may be reduced if:
- you earn net exempt income in the future year, or
- you become bankrupt or are released from any debts by the operation of an Act relating to bankruptcy.
Whether any overall loss can be taken into account when you calculate taxable income for that future year depends on the application of the deferral rules for non-commercial business losses in that year.
If you are unable to claim your loss against other income in 2019–20 because of these rules, you must defer your loss by showing the amount at item 16 on your tax return (supplementary section). The amount shown at item 16 cannot be used to reduce your 2019–20 taxable income.
See also:
Make sure you complete Activity 1, and if necessary, Activity 2 and Activity 3 at P9 on page 4 of your schedule before you complete item 16 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Completing the activities
If you have more than one loss activity to report, list your activities from the largest loss to the smallest loss and complete the activities in that order. Only the first three activities are to be reported.
If you were not required to complete Worksheet 1b, go to Activity 1. Otherwise, each activity needs to be completed as follows:
- the description of activity at D
- the industry code at E
- P for partnership or S for sole trader at F
- 5 for type of loss at G
- AN as reference for code 5 at C
- 200926 for number at A
- your net loss amount at I.
Activity 1
Description of business activity – Completing this item
Describe the business activity from which you made the largest loss and enter this at D item P9 on page 4 of your schedule. If your business activity is the result of an investment in a tax-effective arrangement, enter the name of the project at D.
Industry code – Completing this item
Show the appropriate industry code for the business activity.
Code the business activity as accurately as possible. The industry code is made up of five digits. For example, if the industry is dairy cattle farming, the code you show on the tax return is 01600.
An incorrect code may result in you not receiving a necessary service or material from us, or could lead us to incorrectly target audits. Taxation statistics use the industry code you provide to publish industry benchmarks.
The industry codes we use are a modified version of the Australian and New Zealand Standard Industrial Classification (ANZSIC) produced jointly by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) and Statistics New Zealand. Use our Business industry code (BIC) tool to help you find the correct BIC for your business activity.
Partnership or sole trader – Completing this item
At F item P9, enter either P in the box at Partnership (loss from a business activity carried on in partnership with others) or S in the box at Sole trader (loss from a business activity carried on as a sole trader).
Type of loss – Completing this item
Select the most appropriate number code from the following list and enter it at G item P9 on page 4 of your schedule:
- Your assessable income from the business activity for 2019–20 was at least $20,000 and you met the income requirement.
- The business activity produced a profit for tax purposes in three out of the past five years (2015–16 to 2019–20) and you met the income requirement.
- The value of real property assets or interests in real property (excluding any private dwelling) used on a continuing basis in carrying on the business activity was at least $500,000 and you met the income requirement.
- The value of certain other assets (except cars, motor cycles or similar vehicles) used on a continuing basis in carrying on the business activity was at least $100,000 and you met the income requirement.
- We have written to advise you that the Commissioner will exercise his discretion to allow you to claim a loss for that business activity for 2019–20. This is where the Commissioner has issued a product ruling or a private ruling allowing losses to be claimed from an activity you participated in.
- Some business activities may be covered by a product ruling or private ruling that does not relate to 2019–20. Use loss code 5 only if you have advice in writing that the Commissioner will exercise his discretion for 2019–20.
- If you have applied for a private ruling for the Commissioner to exercise his discretion for 2019–20, but have not yet received the ruling, use loss code 8 unless another code applies.
- The loss was from a business activity you operated that was a professional arts business and your assessable income (excluding any net capital gain) from unrelated sources was less than $40,000. A professional arts business is a business you carry on as an author of a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, as a performing artist, or as a production associate.
- The loss is from a business activity you operated that is a primary production business, and your assessable income (excluding any net capital gain) from unrelated sources was less than $40,000.
- The above loss codes don’t apply. You must defer your loss and complete item 16 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Did you use loss code 5 at G item P9?
No |
Go to Deferred non-commercial business losses from a prior year. |
Yes |
You must complete Reference for code 5 at C item P9 on page 4 of your schedule. Read on. |
Reference for code 5 – Completing this item
If your business activity is covered by a product ruling that states that the Commissioner will exercise his discretion to allow a loss from that business activity:
- enter PR at C in the Code section of Reference for code 5 item P9 on page 4 of your schedule
- enter the year of the product ruling at Y in the Year section
- enter the product ruling number at A in the Number section (do not include the year of the product ruling nor the slash).
If your business activity is covered by a private ruling that states that the Commissioner will exercise his discretion to allow a loss from that business activity, write AN at C in the Code section of Reference for code 5 item P9 on page 4 of your schedule.
Deferred non-commercial business loss from a prior year – Completing this item
Write the amount of your deferred non-commercial business loss from a prior year for the business activity at H item P9 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents. Your prior year deferred non-commercial business loss for a business activity may be reduced if you earned net exempt income in 2019–20.
See also:
If you became bankrupt (or received a relief from debt) the deferred losses will no longer be available. The loss cannot be deducted in 2019–20 or any future year.
For more information about how exempt income and bankruptcy affect deferred non-commercial business losses, phone 13 28 66.
Net loss – Completing this item
Write your net loss from the business activity for 2019–20 at I item P9 on your schedule. Do not show cents. If you completed Worksheet 1a for the activity and the result at f was negative, this is your net loss amount. The example below will help you work out what to include at item P9.
Activity 2 and Activity 3
Fill out details for the second and third-largest losses (if applicable) in the same way you have done for Activity 1.
If you made a loss from more than three business activities, determine whether you need to defer the loss for each additional business activity. You will need the total amount of your deferred non-commercial business losses to complete item 16 on your tax return (supplementary section).
The following example shows how to complete items P8 and P9 on your schedule and how the amounts link to your tax return (supplementary section).
Example 9
In 2018–19, Kieren had to defer his non-commercial business loss of $6,000 from his beef cattle primary production business activity. He also had to defer his non-commercial business loss of $3,000 from his retail (computer repairs) business activity. Because he operated the same activities in 2019–20 and if he is not required to defer the losses from either activity, he can claim the $6,000 business loss from the beef cattle primary production business activity as a deduction for calculating any net profit or loss from that business activity for 2019–20. He can also claim the $3,000 business loss from the retail non-primary production business activity as a deduction for calculating any net profit or loss from that business activity for 2019–20.
Kieren would show the amount of $6,000 as a deduction at D item P8, the amount of $3,000 as a deduction at E item P8, and $9,000 at Totals on his Business and professional items schedule for individuals 2020.
In 2019–20, Kieren made a loss of $4,000 from the beef cattle primary production business. After taking into account his deferred non-commercial primary production business loss of $6,000 from 2018–19, he made a net loss of $10,000 that was shown at B item 15. He withdrew $9,000 from a farm management deposit account related to his beef cattle primary production business shown at R item 17. Kieren completed Worksheet 1 as follows:
Row |
Calculation element |
Amount |
---|---|---|
a |
Income from the activity at other items such as: gross interest L item 10, dividends S, T, U item 11, farm management repayments N, R item 17, net capital gain A item 18 and other net foreign source income M item 20 |
$9,000 |
b |
Loss from the activity as shown at: distribution from partnerships N item 13, O item 13, net personal services income A item 14, net income or loss from business B item 15, C item 15 (show the loss as a positive amount) |
$10,000 |
c |
Partner deductions attributable to the activity shown at I, J, X, Y item 13 |
$0 |
d |
Loss from the activity at M item 20 Other net foreign loss (show the loss as a positive amount) |
$0 |
e |
Add b, c and d |
$10,000 |
f |
Net loss Subtract e from a |
$(1,000) |
Kieren’s assessable income from unrelated sources (excluding any net capital gain) was less than $40,000 and he met the income requirement. Kieren would show the $6,000 deferred non-commercial business loss from 2018–19 at H item P9, and the overall net loss of $1,000 at I item P9 on his Business and professional items schedule for individuals 2020. He would show loss code 7 at G item P9 in the Type of loss box.
See also:
In 2019–20, Kieren made a loss of $5,000 from the computer repairs non-primary production business. After taking into account his deferred non-commercial non-primary production business loss of $3,000 from 2018–19, he made a net loss of $8,000 that he entered at C item 15. Kieren also earned interest of $10 on his business account that he entered at L item 10. He completes Worksheet 1 as follows:
Row |
Calculation element |
Amount |
---|---|---|
a |
Income from the activity at other items such as: gross interest L item 10, dividends S, T and U item 11, farm management repayments N and R item 17, net capital gain A item 18 and other net foreign source income M item 20 |
$10 |
b |
Loss from the activity as shown at: distribution from partnerships N and O item 13, net personal services income A item 14, net income or loss from business B and C item 15 (show the loss as a positive amount) |
$8,000 |
c |
Partner deductions attributable to the activity shown at I, J, X and Y item 13 |
$0 |
d |
Loss from the activity at M item 20 Other net foreign loss (show the loss as a positive amount) |
$0 |
e |
Add b, c and d |
$8,000 |
f |
Net loss Subtract e from a. |
$(7,990) |
Kieren did not satisfy any of the non-commercial business loss criteria that allow a business loss to be used to reduce other income, so he must defer the net loss beyond 2019–20.
Kieren shows the $3,000 deferred non-commercial business loss from 2018–19 at N item P9, and the overall net loss of $7,990 at O item P9 on his Business and professional items schedule for individuals 2020. As the loss is deferred, he shows loss code 8 at M item P9 in the Type of loss box.
See also:
Kieren also needs to complete G, I and J item 16 on his tax return (supplementary section), deferring his net loss of $7,990 from non-primary production. He is not able to use this net loss to reduce his other 2020 income.
End of exampleP10 Small business entity simplified depreciation
Item P10 is only for small business entities using the simplified depreciation rules.
Small business entities can claim an immediate deduction for most depreciating assets purchased after 12 May 2015 and first used or installed ready for use for a business purpose:
- from 12 March 2020 to 30 June 2020, if they cost less than $150,000 each
- from 7.30pm (AEDT) on 2 April 2019 until 11 March 2020, if they cost less than $30,000 each
- from 29 January 2019 and before 7.30pm (AEDT) 2 April 2019, if they cost less than $25,000 each
- before 29 January 2019, if they cost less than $20,000 each.
If you are a small business using the simplified depreciation rules, and the cost of the asset was the same as, or more than, the relevant instant asset write-off threshold, you place the asset in the small business pool.
The balance of the general small business pool is also immediately deducted in 2019–20 if the balance on 30 June (before applying the depreciation deductions) was less than $150,000.
For eligible new assets that cost more than the instant asset write-off threshold, use the Backing business investment – accelerated depreciation.
If you are not using the simplified depreciation rules, and the cost of the asset is the same as, or more than, the relevant instant asset write-off threshold, use the general depreciation rules.
Completing this item
To complete this item, use the amounts you calculated for small business entity depreciation deductions in worksheet 2.
At A Deduction for certain assets item P10 on page 4 of your schedule, enter the amount from row a in the worksheet.
At B Deduction for general small business pool, enter the total of the amounts from rows b and c in the worksheet.
Write the depreciation deductions at A and B, not the pool balances.
Other business and professional items
For P11 to P19, you need to fill in all items relating to your business expenses.
If you have more than one business you must add the figures for all businesses, irrespective of whether they are primary or non-primary production, and enter only one figure at each item.
P11 Trade debtors
Did you have any trade debtors?
No |
Go to P12 Trade creditors. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
This is the total amount owing to the business at the end of the year for goods and services provided during 2019–20 (that is, current trade and other debtors).
Completing this item
Step 1 Work out the total amount owing from trade and other debtors. If you have more than one business, add up all trade and other debtor amounts.
Step 2 Enter the total at E item P11 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
P12 Trade creditors
Did you have any trade creditors?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
This is the total amount owed by the business at the end of the year for goods and services received during 2019–20 (that is, current trade and other creditors).
Completing this item
Step 1 Work out the total amount owing to trade and other creditors. If you have more than one business, add up all trade and other creditor amounts.
Step 2 Enter the total at F item P12 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
P13 Total salary and wage expenses
Did you pay salary and wages as a business expense?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Salary, wages and other labour costs actually paid or payable to persons employed in your business (excluding those forming part of capital expenditure or paid for private domestic assistance) are usually deductible. However, you cannot be an employee of your business. Payments to you of salary are not allowable deductions in calculating your income or loss; treat these payments as an allocation of profits.
Include any salary and wage component of Cost of sales, such as allowances, bonuses, casual labour, retainers and commissions paid to people who received a retainer, and workers compensation paid through the payroll.
Also include direct and indirect labour, holiday pay, locums, long service leave, lump sum payments, other employee benefits, overtime, payments under an incentive or profit-sharing scheme, retiring allowances and sick pay. Include any salary or wages paid to relatives and other related entities both here and at H item P14 on your schedule.
Exclude agency fees, contract payments, sub-contract payments, service fees, superannuation, management fees, consultant fees and payments made from 1 July 2019 where you have not complied with the pay as you go (PAYG) withholding and reporting obligations for those payments.
See also:
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up total salary and wage expenses from each business.
Step 2 Enter the total at G item P13 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
Step 3 Select from the following list the letter that matches the description of the expense component where the salary and wage expenses have been wholly or predominantly reported at item P8:
C All included in the expense component Cost of sales
A All included in the expense component All other expenses
B Included in the expense component of both Cost of sales and All other expenses
O Included in expense components other than Cost of sales and All other expenses.
Step 4 Enter the appropriate letter in the Type box at the right of the amount at G.
P14 Payments to associated persons
Did you make any payments to associated persons as a business expense?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
These are amounts, including salary, wages, commissions or allowances, paid to your relatives. These also include superannuation contributions paid for the benefit of your relatives.
You must also include amounts of salary or wages paid to your relatives and a partnership in which your relatives are partners at G item P13 on your schedule.
You need to keep the following records:
- full name of relatives or related partnerships
- age, if under 18 years old
- relationship
- nature of duties performed
- hours worked
- total remuneration
- salary or wages claimed as deductions
- other amounts paid, for example, retiring gratuities, bonuses and commissions.
Excessive or unreasonable payments to your relatives, or a partnership in which your relatives are partners, may not be deductible. The PSI rules (see P1 Personal services income (PSI)) also limit deductions for payments to associates.
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up payments made to relatives and related partnerships from each business.
Step 2 Enter the total at H item P14 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
P15 Intangible depreciating assets first deducted
Small business entities using the simplified depreciation rules do not complete this item.
Did you start to deduct the decline in value of any intangible depreciating assets?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
The following intangible assets are regarded as depreciating assets (as long as they are not trading stock):
- certain items of intellectual property, such as patents, registered designs, copyrights and certain types of licences
- computer software (or a right to use computer software) that you acquire, develop or have someone else develop for your use for the purposes for which it is designed (in-house software)
- mining, quarrying or prospecting rights and information
- certain indefeasible rights to use a telecommunications cable system
- certain telecommunications site access rights
- spectrum licences
- datacasting transmitter licences.
A depreciating asset that you hold starts to decline in value from the time you use it or install it ready for use for any purpose, including a private purpose. However, you can only claim a deduction for the decline in value to the extent that you use the asset for a taxable purpose, such as for producing assessable income.
At item P15 you need to show the cost of all intangible depreciating assets for which you are claiming a business deduction for decline in value for the first time. If you have allocated any intangible depreciating assets with a cost of less than $1,000 to a low-value pool for the income year, you also need to include the cost of those assets at item P15. Do not reduce the cost for estimated non-taxable use.
Expenditure on in-house software that you allocated to a software development pool is not shown at item P15.
See also:
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up the costs of intangible depreciating assets first deducted from each business.
Step 2 Enter the total at I item P15 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
P16 Other depreciating assets first deducted
Small business entities using the simplified depreciation rules do not complete this item.
Did you start to deduct the decline in value of any other depreciating assets in 2019–20?
No |
Go to P17 Termination value of intangible depreciating assets. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
A depreciating asset that you hold starts to decline in value from the time you use it or install it ready for use for any purpose, including a private purpose. However, you can claim a deduction for the decline in value only to the extent you use the asset for a taxable purpose, such as for producing assessable income.
At item P16 you need to include the cost of all depreciating assets (other than intangible depreciating assets) for which you are claiming a business deduction for the decline in value for the first time.
If you have allocated any depreciating assets with a cost of less than $1,000 to a low-value pool for 2019–20, you also need to include the cost of those assets at item P16. Do not reduce the cost for estimated non-taxable use.
To calculate the decline in value of these assets use the Depreciation and capital allowances tool.
See also:
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up the costs of other depreciating assets first deducted from each business.
Step 2 Enter the total at J item P16 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
P17 Termination value of intangible depreciating assets
Small business entities using the simplified depreciation rules do not complete this item.
Did you stop holding or using any intangible depreciating assets in 2019–20?
No |
|
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
Do not show at this item any consideration you received during 2019–20 in relation to in-house software for which you have allocated expenditure to a software development pool.
Include the termination values for intangible depreciating assets (including intangible assets allocated to a low-value pool) that you stopped holding or using during 2019–20 (for example, assets you sold, or that were lost or destroyed).
Generally, the termination value is the amount you received or are deemed to have received for the asset that you stopped holding or using. It includes the market value of any non-cash benefits, such as goods and services, you received for the asset.
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up the amounts you received or are deemed to have received for all intangible depreciating assets that you stopped holding or using in your business, other than:
- assets allocated in a prior year to the general small business pool or the formerly available long-life small business pool
- low-cost assets for which an immediate deduction has been allowed under the simplified depreciation rules
- in-house software for which you allocated expenditure to a software development pool.
If you have more than one business, add up the termination value of intangible depreciating assets amounts for each business.
Step 2 Enter the total at D item P17 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
See also:
P18 Termination value of other depreciating assets
Small business entities using the simplified depreciation rules do not complete this item.
Did you stop holding or using any other depreciating assets in 2019–20?
No |
Go to P19 Trading stock election. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
At item P18 you include the termination values for other depreciating assets (including assets allocated to a low-value pool) that you stopped holding or using during 2019–20 (for example, assets you sold, or that were lost or destroyed).
Generally, the termination value is the amount you received or are deemed to have received for the asset that you stopped holding or using. It includes the market value of any non-cash benefits, such as goods and services, you received for the asset.
Completing this item
Step 1 Add up the amounts you received or are deemed to have received for all depreciating assets that you stopped holding or using in your business other than:
- intangible depreciating assets
- assets allocated in a prior year to the general small business pool or the formerly available long-life small business pool
- low-cost assets for which an immediate deduction has been allowed under the simplified depreciation rules
- buildings or structures for which a deduction is available under the capital works provisions
- assets falling within the provisions relating to investments in Australian films.
If you have more than one business, add up the termination value of other depreciating assets for each business.
Step 2 Enter the total at K item P18 on page 4 of your schedule. Do not show cents.
See also:
P19 Trading stock election
Have you made a trading stock election?
No |
Go to Check that you have…. |
Yes |
Read on. |
You need to know
If you have valued trading stock on hand at the end of 2019–20 at an amount that is less than the lowest amount available using one of the valuation methods at Closing stock, you must notify the Commissioner.
Completing this item
If you must notify the Commissioner about your trading stock election, enter Y at P item P19 on page 4 of your schedule. Otherwise leave P blank.
Check that you have …
- written the correct amount on your schedule for each item that applies to you
- correctly transferred the amount at A Net PSI item P1 on your Business and professional items schedule for individuals 2020 to A item 14 on page 13 of your tax return (supplementary section)
- correctly transferred the amounts at Y and Z NET INCOME OR LOSS FROM BUSINESS item P8 on your Business and professional items schedule for individuals 2020 to B and C (respectively) item 15 on page 14 of your tax return (supplementary section)
- completed and attached the Individual PAYG payment summary schedule 2020 to page 3 of your tax return, if you received business income that was subject to withholding
- kept your records to prove your claims, where required