You must keep the following information for a depreciating asset:
- the first and second elements of cost
- the opening adjustable value for 2020–21
- any adjustments made to cost or adjustable value
- the date you started holding the asset and its start time
- the rate or effective life used to work out the decline in value
- the method used to work out the decline in value
- the amount of your deduction for the decline in value and any reduction for use of the asset for a non-taxable purpose
- the closing adjustable value for 2020–21
- any recoupment of cost you have included in assessable income, and
- if a balancing adjustment event occurred for the asset in 2020–21
- the date of the balancing adjustment event
- the termination value
- the adjustable value on the date of the balancing adjustment event
- the balancing adjustment amount
- any reduction of the balancing adjustment amount, and
- details of any rollover or balancing adjustment relief.
You must also keep:
- details of how you worked out the effective life of a depreciating asset where you have not adopted the effective life determined by the Commissioner
- if you have recalculated the effective life of an asset
- the date of the recalculation
- the recalculated effective life
- the reason for the recalculation, and
- details of how you worked out the recalculated effective life
- original documents such as suppliers’ invoices and receipts for expenditure on the depreciating asset.
You must keep additional records if:
- you acquire an asset from an associate, or
- you acquire a depreciating asset and
- the new user is the same as the former user, or
- the new user is an associate of the former user.
- See Depreciating asset acquired from an associate and Sale and leaseback arrangements.
Failure to keep proper records will attract penalties.
Record keeping for low-value pools
For depreciating assets in a low-value pool, you need to keep the following details (some details relate to the asset and some to the pool):
- the date you started holding the asset
- the date the asset started in the low-value pool and the date you started holding them
- the closing low-value pool balance at the end of 2019–20
- any second element of cost you incurred in 2020–21 for assets in the pool at the end of 2019–20
- the opening adjustable value of any low-value asset you allocated to the pool in 2020–21
- the first element of cost of any low-cost asset you allocated to the low-value pool in 2020–21
- the second element of cost of low-cost assets and low-value assets you allocated to the low value pool in 2020–21
- the taxable use percentage of each amount added to the pool in 2020–21
- the termination value and the taxable use percentage for assets in the pool for which a balancing adjustment event occurred in 2020–21
- the income year and the date of the balancing adjustment event
- the closing pool balance
- the decline in value
- any amount included in assessable income because the taxable use percentage of the termination value exceeds the closing pool balance, and
- any recoupment of cost you have included in assessable income.
A capital gain or capital loss may arise when a balancing adjustment event occurs either:
- for a depreciating asset which you expect to use for a non-taxable purpose
- for a depreciating asset which you have allocated to a low-value pool and expect to use for a non-taxable purpose.
If either of the above occurs, you must keep the following information:
- the first and second elements of cost
- the termination value
- the taxable use percentage.
Keep records about a depreciating asset allocated to a low-value pool for five years, starting from the end of the income year in which the asset was allocated to the pool.
There are two exceptions:
- If an amount is included in the second element of an asset’s cost after the asset is allocated to a low-value pool, keep the records of the cost for a period of five years from the time you incurred the expenditure.
- Keep records of acquisitions relating to delayed claims for GST input tax credits for at least five years after lodgment. If a claim for input tax credits relates to a depreciating asset in a low-value pool, keep the record of acquisition for five years from a date which begins later than the end of the income year in which the asset was allocated to the pool.
Record keeping for rollover relief
If automatic rollover relief applies (see Rollover relief) the transferor must give the transferee a notice:
- containing enough information for the transferee to work out how UCA apply to the transferee’s holding of the depreciating asset
- within six months after the end of the transferee’s income year in which the balancing adjustment event occurred.
The transferee must keep a copy of the notice for five years after the asset is:
- disposed of
- lost, or
- destroyed.
If a transferor and transferee jointly choose rollover relief, the decision:
- must be in writing, and
- must contain enough information for the transferee to work out how UCA apply to the transferee’s holding of the depreciating asset
- must be made within six months after the end of the transferee’s income year in which the balancing adjustment event occurred.
The transferor must keep a copy of the agreement for five years after the balancing adjustment event occurred.
The transferee must keep a copy of the agreement for five years after the next balancing adjustment event that occurred for the asset.