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T1 Seniors and pensioners tax offset 2024

Complete this question if you meet the conditions to claim the seniors and pensioners tax offset.

Published 29 May 2024

Things you need to know

Seniors and retirees (including self-funded retirees) may be eligible to claim a tax offset if you meet the conditions set out below.

However, you can't claim this tax offset if you were in jail for the whole of 2023–24.

To be eligible, you must meet both conditions:

If you had a spouse:

  • you also need to work out whether they were eligible for the offset
  • you may not get the seniors and pensioners tax offset even if you meet all the eligibility conditions as the amount of the tax offset is based on your individual rebate income, not your combined rebate income.

For the definition of:

If you are eligible for this offset, we will calculate the amount of the offset for you.

Use our beneficiary tax offset and seniors and pensioners tax offset calculator to:

  • work out whether you are eligible for this offset
  • get an estimate of your tax offset.
Beneficiary tax offset and seniors and pensioners tax offset calculator

Condition 1: Eligibility for Australian Government pensions and similar payments

Did any of the following apply to you in 2023–24?

Condition

Explanation

A

You showed at question 6 in your tax return either:

  • an Australian Government pension or allowance from Centrelink
  • a pension, allowance or benefit from the Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA).

B

You met the Centrelink age pension age requirement and were eligible for an Australian Government age pension during 2023–24, but did not receive it because you did not make a claim, or because of the income test or the assets test, and you satisfied one of the following:

  • you had been an Australian resident for age-pension purposes for 10 years or more, of which 5 years were continuous
  • you had a qualifying residence exemption because you arrived in Australia as a refugee or under a special humanitarian program
  • you received a partner allowance, a widow allowance, or a widow B pension immediately before turning age pension age
  • you are a woman who was widowed in Australia, and
    • you and your late partner were Australian residents when your late partner died
    • you are currently in Australia, and
    • you have been an Australian resident for at least the last 2 years
  • you are a woman and on 19 March 2020
    • you were receiving a wife pension and you were not receiving a carer allowance, or
    • you were receiving a special needs widow B pension
  • you are a woman and on 31 December 2021 you were receiving a widow allowance
  • you would have qualified for an age pension under an international social security agreement.

To find out whether you meet the Centrelink age pension age requirement, see Pensioner ages and tests.

To work out whether you were eligible for a social security or Centrelink pension, visit the Services Australia websiteExternal Link.

For all other enquiries about the seniors and pensioners tax offset, contact us.

C

You met the veteran pension age test and were eligible for a pension, allowance or benefit from Veterans’ Affairs during 2023–24, but did not receive it because you did not make a claim, or because of the income test or the assets test, and you were either:

  • a veteran with eligible war service
  • a Commonwealth veteran, allied veteran or allied mariner with qualifying service.

To find out whether you meet the veteran pension age test, see Pensioner ages and tests.

If you are not sure whether you were eligible for a payment, visit the Department of Veterans' affairs websiteExternal Link.

If your answer to any of the above is:

Condition 2: Rebate income amounts

You meet this condition if any of the following applied to you in 2023–24:

  • You did not have a spouse, and your rebate income was less than $50,119.
  • You had a spouse, and the combined rebate income of you and your spouse was less than $83,580.
  • At any time in 2023–24
    • you and your spouse had to live apart due to illness or because one of you was in a nursing home, and
    • the combined rebate income of you and your spouse was less than $95,198.

Your combined rebate income is the total of:

  • your rebate income
  • your spouse's rebate income
  • the amount on which a trustee of a trust was liable to pay tax in respect of your spouse because your spouse was under a legal disability, such as being an undischarged bankrupt or a person who was declared legally incapable because of a mental condition.

If your answer to any of the above is:

Completing your tax return

To complete this question, follow the below steps.

Step 1

Work out which of the following code letters applied to your circumstances at any time in 2023–24.

Seniors and pensioners tax offset code letters

Code letter

Explanation

A

You were single, separated or widowed.

B

You and your spouse:

C

Your spouse was not eligible for the seniors and pensioners tax offset, and you and your spouse

D

You and your spouse:

  • lived together, and
  • were both eligible for the seniors and pensioners tax offset.

E

You and your spouse:

  • lived together, and
  • your spouse was not eligible for the seniors and pensioners tax offset.

Had to live apart due to illness refers to situations where you and your spouse did not live together because one or both of you had an indefinitely continuing illness or infirmity and, as a result, your combined living expenses were increased.

Step 2

Work out the letter code to use if more than one applies to your circumstances.

Did more than one code letter apply?

  • No, print your code letter from Step 1 in the TAX OFFSET CODE box at question T1 – label N. Go to Step 3.
  • Yes, use the first code letter that applied to you in the list above, unless one of the 2 circumstances below applied to you
    • Both A and B applied, and your spouse's taxable income was less than $18,334 – print code B in the TAX OFFSET CODE box at question T1 – label N.
    • Both A and D applied, and your spouse's taxable income was less than $12,494 – print code D in the TAX OFFSET CODE box at question T1 – label N.

      Your spouse's taxable income is the amount you show at label O on page 9 in your tax return.

Step 3

Complete this step if you or your spouse is a veteran, war widow or war widower.

Are you or your spouse a veteran, war widow or war widower?

  • No, go to Step 4.
  • Yes, select the veteran code letter that applies to you
    • V – you were a veteran, war widow or war widower
    • W – your spouse was a veteran, war widow or war widower
    • X – both V and W applied to you.

Print the code letter in the VETERAN CODE box at question T1 – label Y.

Step 4

You must read Income tests 2024 and complete all income tests questions.

Step 5

If you had a spouse during 2023–24, you must complete Spouse details – married or de facto on pages 8 and 9 in your tax return.

Any unused portion of tax offset

If both you and your spouse are eligible for the seniors and pensioners tax offset and one of you does not use it all, the unused portion may be available for transfer to the other person. We will work this out automatically and transfer any entitlement.

To work out whether there is any unused spouse’s seniors and pensioners tax offset available to transfer to you, we do not take your spouse’s other credits and tax offsets into account.

Pensioner ages and tests

To be eligible for an Australian Government age pension from Centrelink, on 30 June 2024 a pensioner must be 67 years or olderExternal Link.

To be eligible for a pension, allowance or benefit from Veterans' Affairs you must meet the veteran pension age test and on 30 June 2024 be 60 years old or older.

You meet the veteran pension age test if one of the following applied to you, and you were eligible for a pension, allowance or benefit under the Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986:

  • you have eligible war service, that is, service in World War II or operational service as a member of the Australian Defence Force
  • you're a Commonwealth or allied veteran who served in a conflict in which the Australian Defence Force was engaged during a period of hostilities, that is, in World War II, Korea, Malaya, Indonesia or Vietnam
  • you're an Australian or allied mariner who served during World War II
  • you're the war widow or widower of a former member of the Australian Defence Force.

Pension, allowance or benefit includes:

  • disability pension
  • service pension
  • white or gold Repatriation health cards for treatment entitlements.

If you are not sure if you meet the veteran pension age test, visit the Department of Veterans' affairs websiteExternal Link.

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