Goods and Services Tax Ruling

GSTR 2001/3

Goods and Services Tax: GST and how it applies to supplies of fringe benefits

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FOI status:

may be releasedFOI number: I 1024423

Contents Para
What this Ruling is about
Background
Date of effect
Ruling and explanation
Definitions
Detailed Contents List

Preamble

This document was published prior to 1 July 2010 and was a public ruling for the purposes of former section 37 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 and former section 105-60 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 .

From 1 July 2010, this document is taken to be a public ruling under Division 358 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 .

A public ruling is an expression of the Commissioner's opinion about the way in which a relevant provision applies, or would apply, to entities generally or to a class of entities in relation to a particular scheme or a class of schemes.

If you rely on this ruling, the Commissioner must apply the law to you in the way set out in the ruling (unless the Commissioner is satisfied that the ruling is incorrect and disadvantages you, in which case the law may be applied to you in a way that is more favourable for you - provided the Commissioner is not prevented from doing so by a time limit imposed by the law). You will be protected from having to pay any underpaid tax, penalty or interest in respect of the matters covered by this ruling if it turns out that it does not correctly state how the relevant provision applies to you.

[Note : This is a consolidated version of this document. Refer to the Legal Database (http://law.ato.gov.au) to check its currency and to view the details of all changes.]

What this Ruling is about

1. This Ruling explains the circumstances under which supplies of fringe benefits are subject to Goods and Services Tax (GST) under A New Tax System (Goods and Service Tax) Act 1999 ('GST Act'). This Ruling explains the entitlement to input tax credits for acquisitions and importations related to providing those benefits. It also explains the operation of the special rules in Divisions 69, 71 and 111 and the interaction of Division 131 with these rules. This Ruling addresses some issues about attribution of GST payable and input tax credits in the context of provision of fringe benefits.

2. The Ruling should be read together with Taxation Ruling TR 2001/2 which discusses the Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) consequences of making supplies by way of fringe benefits.

3. The Ruling adopts interpretations of the GST Act expressed in public rulings issued by the ATO. This Ruling does not alter the views expressed in those rulings, but explains and applies those views in the context of the particular subject matter of this Ruling.

4. Certain terms used in this Ruling are defined or explained in the Definitions section of the Ruling. These terms, when first mentioned in the body of the Ruling, appear in bold type.

5. Unless otherwise stated, all legislative references in this Ruling are to the GST Act. References to 'FBTAA' are references to the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986. References to 'GST Transition Act' are references to the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Transition) Act 1999. A reference to the ITAA 1997 is a reference to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997. A reference to the ITAA 1936 is a reference to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.

Background

Fringe benefits tax and the rules in the FBTAA

6. Fringe benefits tax is a tax payable by employers on the value of certain benefits that have been provided to their employees in respect of the employees' employment. The FBTAA sets out the rules for the taxation of these benefits. A benefit that is not provided in respect of employment is not a fringe benefit.

7. A 'benefit' is widely defined to include any right (including any property right), privilege, service or facility.[1] The benefit can be provided to the employee or employee's associate, by the employee's employer, an associate of the employer or a third party under an arrangement with the employer (or associate) .[2] In the context of providing an amount of remuneration to an employee, the provision of a fringe benefit can give an amount of benefit to an employee which might otherwise have been derived as an amount of salary or wages. Salary or wages is subject to income tax in the hands of the employee.

8. There is a large range of benefits that are provided in respect of employment on which the employer does not pay fringe benefits tax. Under the FBTAA, some benefits are statutorily excluded and some have a specified value which can result in less fringe benefits tax being paid than the amount of income tax that would have been paid if the employee had received the equivalent value of the benefit in the form of salary and wages.

Statutory exclusions

9. The FBTAA excludes payments of salary or wages from being fringe benefits, along with a range of other benefits, such as superannuation and employee share schemes. One specific exclusion from being a fringe benefit is an exempt benefit. Many of these FBTAA exempting provisions concern benefits that are integrally connected with work activities. For example, an exempt benefit includes one where plant or equipment that is located on the business premises of the employer is used wholly or principally by the employee in connection with the operation of that business.

Determination of value of fringe benefits

10. The taxable value of a fringe benefit is calculated in accordance with the valuation rules for the particular benefit involved. For benefits intended for purely private consumption by the employee as remuneration, with no direct link to business activities, there results in many cases an amount of fringe benefits tax equivalent to the amount of income tax that would otherwise have been payable by the employee if received as salary and wages.

11. Nevertheless, there are a number of benefits that attract relatively concessional valuation treatment in this regard, often to take account of the fact that the benefits are connected with work activities, rather than being remuneration for the employee. This achieves an effect equivalent to exemption or partial exemption.

12. The taxable value of certain fringe benefits may be reduced under the 'otherwise deductible rule'. The 'otherwise deductible rule' means that the taxable value of certain fringe benefits may be reduced to the extent that the employee would have been able to claim an income tax deduction had the employee incurred the expense. In many cases this arises from a connection with work activities by the employee. (However, the reduction can also apply where the employee would have been entitled to a deduction if he or she had incurred the expenditure.)

13. For most types of fringe benefits, if the employee makes a payment to the employer as a contribution towards the cost of providing the fringe benefit, the taxable value of that fringe benefit is reduced by that payment. To the extent that the employee has paid for the benefit, it may be taxed as income in the hands of the employer, rather than through fringe benefits tax. A contribution by an employee towards the cost of a car fringe benefit is known as a ' recipients payment' [3]. A contribution by an employee towards the cost of most other fringe benefits is known as a ' recipients contribution'[4]. An employee contribution towards a housing fringe benefit is known as ' recipients rent' [5].

Date of effect

14. This Ruling applies [to tax periods commencing] both before and after its date of issue. However, this Ruling will not apply to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the terms of a settlement of a dispute agreed to before the date of issue of this Ruling (see paragraphs 75 and 76 of Taxation Ruling TR 2006/10).

Ruling and explanation

GST and fringe benefits

15. For GST purposes, fringe benefit 'has the meaning given by section 995-1 of the ITAA 1997 but includes a benefit within the meaning of subsection 136(1) of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 that is an exempt benefit for the purposes of that Act.'[6] The FBTAA specifically excludes exempt benefits from the definition of 'fringe benefit' in that Act. In this Ruling, unless otherwise indicated, 'fringe benefit' means a fringe benefit as defined in the GST Act.

16. GST is payable on the value of taxable supplies. The way the value of a supply of a fringe benefit is worked out is different than for other supplies.[7]

GST payable on supplies of fringe benefits

17. The provision of a fringe benefit can be a supply. The supply of a fringe benefit may be made by you as an employer, your associate or another party (subject to an arrangement with you). The recipient of the supply may be either an employee or an associate of the employee.[8]

Consideration

18. One of the requirements for a supply to be a taxable supply is that 'you make the supply for *consideration'.[9]

19. The services of an employee can be consideration for the supply of a fringe benefit to that employee.

20. Consideration for the supply of a fringe benefit may also take the form of a payment or contribution made by the recipient of the benefit. It is only this consideration that is taken into account in working out the amount of GST on the supply of a fringe benefit.[10]

Value of a fringe benefit supply

21. GST is 10% of the value of a taxable supply[11] where value is 10/11 of the price (being the amount of consideration for a supply).[12] However, subsection 9-75(3) states that the price of a supply of a fringe benefit is the amount of consideration in the form of the recipients payment or the recipients contribution. 'Recipients payment' and 'recipients contribution' are defined in the GST Act.[13]

22. This means that, where you make a taxable supply of a fringe benefit, you are only liable for GST to the extent of the consideration payable on the supply in the form of a recipients payment[14] or recipients contribution.

23. A recipients payment or recipients contribution that reduces the FBT taxable value of a fringe benefit is consideration for the supply of that benefit. Similarly, employee payments made for benefits with no FBT value, or that are FBT exempt benefits, are also employee consideration for the supply of those benefits. The GST Act includes in the definition of recipients contribution, amounts that are paid for exempt benefits.[15]

24. A payment of recipients rent by an employee for the provision of a housing fringe benefit is not taken into account in working out the amount of GST payable on the supply and therefore does not create a GST liability for the provider.

Example 1

25. Kylie has $100 deducted weekly out of her bank account as a recipients payment towards a car that is made available to her for her private use as a fringe benefit. This amount is transferred to her employer's account. It is a recipients payment amount and reduces the FBT taxable value of the car benefit for her employer.

26. Together with her services, the weekly payments constitute Kylie's consideration for the taxable supply by the employer to Kylie for the use of the vehicle. However, only the payments Kylie makes for the car are taken into account in working out the amount of GST payable by her employer on the supply of the fringe benefit.

27. Recipient payments or contributions made for the supply of a fringe benefit that is GST-free or input taxed do not create a GST liability as there is no GST payable on these supplies.

Salary sacrifice arrangements

28. The entry into a salary sacrifice agreement is not consideration for the supply of a benefit. In the United Kingdom VAT Tribunal case Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd.[16], it was stated, when comparing pre and post salary sacrifice contract amounts, that ':...to say the difference between the salaries under the two types of contract was the consideration for the provision of the car was to confuse consideration with motive...'.

Example 2

29. Kylie's employer has a policy in place which permits employees to enter into a salary sacrifice agreement in relation to the provision of a car to employees for wholly private use. The particular agreement between Kylie and her employer involves a reduction of her current gross salary by $15,000. Kylie makes no payments to her employer.

30. The $15,000 that has been 'sacrificed' is not consideration for the supply of the vehicle. Kylie has provided her services as consideration for the supply of the car. Although her employer has made a taxable supply of the car to Kylie, there has been no amount of recipients payment made to the employer. Her employer is not liable to pay any GST on the supply of the car.

Recipients payments for car fringe benefits

31. The whole amount of the recipients payment that is used in calculating the FBT value reduction for a car fringe benefit is not always taken into account in working out the amount of GST payable by the employer. This is because, under the FBTAA, the employee's recipients payment amount during an FBT year can be paid to third parties as consideration for supplies by third parties to the employee, but nevertheless reduce the FBT value of the car benefit for the employer.[17]

Example 3

32. Kylie is an employee of Archimedes Ltd who provides a car benefit (FBT value of $3,300). Kylie pays $1,100 to Archimedes Ltd and $400 directly to her local service station for fuel, oil and servicing. The total recipients payment amount is $1,500 ($1,100 + $400). The FBT taxable value of the benefit is $1,800 ($3,300 - $1,500).

33. Archimedes is liable for GST of $100 (1/11 of $1,100) on Kylie's $1,100 contribution. This $1,100 amount of recipients payment is the amount of consideration that is used to work out the GST on the supply of the fringe benefit. Kylie's payment of $400 is not consideration for the taxable supply of a fringe benefit, but is consideration for supplies to Kylie from other suppliers.

Contributions to accommodation type benefits

34. For housing fringe benefits, as defined in the FBTAA, a contribution towards such a benefit is termed 'recipients rent'. Where your employee makes a payment of recipient's rent for the supply of a housing fringe benefit, the payment is not taken into account in working out the amount of GST payable on the supply. This is because 'recipients rent' is not one of the forms of consideration referred to in subsection 9-75(3). This applies irrespective of whether or not the supply of the housing fringe benefit would be input taxed.

35. However, not all accommodation benefits are provided as housing fringe benefits. In many cases, accommodation provided to employees that is not a housing fringe benefit is a 'residual benefit'. Where accommodation is not provided as a housing fringe benefit, Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2000/20, at paragraphs 37 to 39, provides guidance on whether or not the supply of employee accommodation is input taxed. Employee contributions to taxable supplies of accommodation can be for taxable supplies if they are not made for housing fringe benefits.

Contributions to expense payment benefits

36. The provision of an expense payment benefit to an employee is not a supply for the purposes of the GST Act. This is because it is a supply of money and is not a supply unless it is provided as consideration for a supply that is a supply of money.[18] As the expense payment benefit is not a supply for the purposes of the GST Act, GST is not payable.

37. Under Division 111, an expense payment benefit you make to an employee is treated as consideration for an acquisition from the employee and you may be entitled to an input tax credit.[19] If the employee makes a contribution to the expense payment benefit, this has the effect of reducing the consideration for the acquisition and is an adjustment event under section 19-10.

38. If you have claimed the input tax credit in a previous tax period, you will need to make an adjustment to reduce your input tax credit claim.

Example 4

39. Karen works for the City South Hospital which is operated by a non-profit society. Karen has entered into the lease of a motorcycle with ABC bikes for $990 each month. Karen uses the motorcycle to a small extent for work related activities. City South pays $990 monthly to Karen and is entitled to an input tax credit of $90 under Division 111. At the end of the FBT year, Karen contributes $1,100 to City South. This is treated as a reduction in the amount of reimbursement (consideration for the acquisition) by South City to Karen and gives rise to an adjustment event. City South will need to make an adjustment to reduce the input tax credits claimed in previous tax periods.

Input taxed and GST-free supplies

40. It is important to note that, as with other supplies, supplies of fringe benefits are not taxable supplies if they are input taxed or GST-free, whether or not any amount of recipients payment or contribution is provided.

Example 5

41. Einstein High, a private school, provides discounted education to children of teachers. The supply of an education course to the employee's child is a fringe benefit. However, the supply is GST-free and no GST is payable on the supply of the benefit.

Example 6

42. Best Ltd is a public company that supplies houses (residential premises) for senior executives to live in on an ongoing basis. The supplied premises remain the property of Best Because the supply of such a fringe benefit is input taxed[20], Best is not liable for any GST on the supply of the benefit.

Supplies of fringe benefits spanning 1 July 2000

43. The transitional GST rules set out in the GST Transition Act apply to supplies of fringe benefits that span 1 July 2000.

44. Where a supply of a fringe benefit is made for a period or progressively over a period that spans 1 July 2000, section 12 of the GST Transition Act applies.

Example 7

45. Izzy is provided with a car by his employer for the whole of the FBT year to 31 March 2001 (wholly as remuneration for his services). He makes a recipients payment of $4,000 to his employer on 15 March 2001 as payment for supply of the car during the FBT year. The supply during the period 1 April 2000 to 30 June 2000 is not subject to GST. The supply of the car during the period 1 July 2000 to 31 March 2001 is a taxable supply and a part of the payment is consideration for a taxable supply on which GST is payable.[21]

46. Section 11 of the GST Transition Act applies to rights supplied before 1 July 2000 to the extent that a right could reasonably be expected to be exercised on or after that date. GST is payable on the taxable supply of those rights where a recipients contribution is made.

Example 8

47. On 1 April 2000 Archimedes Store gives an employee a family day pass to Excitement World at a reduced price for employees. The pass is valid until 31 March 2001. GST is payable on the supply by Archimedes to the extent that the pass could reasonably be expected to be used on or after 1 July, where the employee has made a contribution to the employer for the pass.[22]

Input tax credits for acquisitions and importations made to provide fringe benefits

48. You are entitled to an input tax credit for any creditable acquisition[23] or creditable importation[24] that you make. This includes creditable acquisitions and creditable importations made to supply fringe benefits.

49. One of the requirements for an acquisition or importation to be creditable is that it is acquired or imported for a creditable purpose.[25]

Creditable purpose

50. You acquire a thing for a creditable purpose if you acquire it in carrying on your enterprise.[26] You import goods for a creditable purpose if you import the goods in carrying on your enterprise.[27] If you acquire or import something to provide a fringe benefit in respect of employment in your enterprise, you have acquired it in carrying on your enterprise.

51. However, an acquisition or importation is not made for a creditable purpose to the extent that:

the acquisition or importation relates to making supplies that would be input taxed; or
the acquisition or importation is of a private or domestic nature.[28]

52. An acquisition or importation you make to provide a fringe benefit in respect of employment in your enterprise is made in carrying on the enterprise and is not of a private or domestic nature for the purposes of section 11-15 and section 15-10. It is your purpose at the time of making the acquisition or importation that is relevant to whether the acquisition or importation is for a creditable purpose. For example, an acquisition made to provide a car for the private use of your employee is made for a creditable purpose.

Claiming input tax credits if you have made an annual apportionment election under Division 131

52A. You may make an annual apportionment election (election) under Division 131 if you satisfy the eligibility requirements, which are set out in section 131-5 and are explained in the Fact Sheet GST and annual private apportionment (which can be accessed at www.ato.gov.au).

52B. If you make the election, you may claim a full input tax credit for a creditable acquisition or importation which is partly for a creditable purpose and partly for private purposes. The election does not, however, allow you to claim an input tax credit for an acquisition or importation to the extent that it relates to making input taxed supplies, or for an acquisition that is to any extent a reduced credit acquisition.

52C. You will have an increasing adjustment in a later tax period to account for the private use of the acquisition or importation. The increasing adjustment is made in the business activity statement (BAS) that covers the last day on which your income tax return is due, or you may choose to make that adjustment in an earlier BAS.

Acquisitions and importations related to making input taxed supplies

53. You are not entitled to an input tax credit for an acquisition or importation that relates to making input taxed supplies.[29] However, this reduction of your entitlement to an input tax credit does not apply if the input taxed supplies are financial supplies and you do not exceed the financial acquisitions threshold.[30]

54. In ascertaining the GST implications of the provision of a fringe benefit, a distinction can be drawn between two concepts, namely 'work benefit' and 'remuneration benefit'. This distinction does not apply for the purposes of the FBTAA. Although these terms are not defined in the GST Act, they are important concepts in determining input tax credit entitlement for entities that make both input taxed supplies and provide fringe benefits.

Remuneration benefits

55. 'Remuneration benefits' are benefits provided to employees which, together with salary and wages, are provided by employers in return for employee services. Acquisitions that relate to providing these remuneration benefits will not relate to other supplies that an entity makes, such as input taxed supplies that an entity makes to clients or customers.

56. Examples of Remuneration Benefits would include:

Use of a car to be used for employee's private travel;
Entertainment provided to employees;
Employee holiday travel and accommodation.

Example 9

57. International Bank acquires a car by way of lease, undertaking to make lease payments to a lessor so as to provide employee Eva with a motor vehicle for her private use, entirely as a remuneration benefit. The bank does not require the car to be used for work activities. The supply of the car to International is a taxable supply. International is entitled to input tax credits for the lease payments on the car and for car running costs such as petrol and repairs that it incurs to the extent that it meets the other requirements of section 11-5.

58. However if the supply of a remuneration benefit is one that relates to making an input taxed supply such as the provision of a loan or residential housing, you are not entitled to an input tax credit under paragraph 11-15(2)(a).

Example 10

59. Archimedes Ltd rents houses from various landlords to provide the use of the houses to its employees on an indefinite basis as remuneration benefits. Archimedes Ltd also pays another entity, Adminco, to administer the supply of houses to employees. The acquisition by Archimedes Ltd is not a creditable acquisition. The acquisition relates to the supply of benefits to employees that are input taxed supplies. Paragraph 11-15(2)(a) denies input tax credit entitlements on such payments. This result does not change whether or not the benefits are exempt or reduced in value for FBT purposes. Nor is the result affected by whether or not an amount of rent is received from an employee.

Work benefits

60. In contrast, a 'work benefit' is not provided for consideration (in the form of the employee's services) because the purpose of the benefit is to serve genuine and legitimate ends of the employer's enterprise, and any incidental advantage to the employee is disregarded as a minor outcome.

61. With a work benefit, the provision by an employer of pleasant working premises for employees clearly benefits an employee (when compared to unpleasant working conditions) but primarily serves the employer's purpose of creating an efficient working environment. An employee does not provide his or her services as consideration for the use of a desk or an office or other similar conditions of employment. Employee services are provided for the employer's provision of salary and wages, plus remuneration benefits.

62. Examples of work benefits would include:

Provision of a car to an employee to use for work activities;
Business travel and accommodation;
Uniforms;
Use/benefit of work property on work premises for work activities - desks, computer, chairs, tables, air conditioning.

63. The issue of whether or not employment related benefits are provided for consideration has been discussed in overseas VAT jurisdictions. Decision of overseas cases support the view that there is no consideration furnished by employees for the provision to them of work benefits.

64. Thus in the European Court of Justice case, Julius Fillibeck Sohne[31], the application of article 2(1) of the Sixth Council directive[32] was considered in respect of certain benefits provided to employees. The issue concerned whether transport provided by an employer for employees free of charge constituted a supply of services effected for consideration.

65. The court found that on the facts of that particular case there was not a supply of services for consideration by the employer. It held that there was no link between the supply of the employee services and the benefit received.

66. Given the particular facts of that case, the Court, in its judgment, made the following observation:

'...The personal benefit derived by employees from such transport appears to be of only secondary importance compared to the needs of the business...'.[33]

Acquisitions resulting in work benefits

67. Acquisitions that result in work benefits relate to supplies that the entity makes. Where an entity makes input taxed supplies and the acquisitions relate to those input taxed supplies, paragraph 11-15(2)(a) applies to reduce entitlements to input tax credits.

Example 11

68. The lending segment of ABC Bank has calculated that acquisitions that the bank makes in its lending segment relate 80% to making input taxed supplies.[34] This includes costs such as overheads, including air-conditioning and office furniture. These acquisitions result in benefits to employees, but they are work benefits. Because the acquisitions relate to making input taxed supplies to the extent of 80%, paragraph 11-15(2)(a) applies to these acquisitions. Any input tax credit entitlements on these acquisitions are reduced by 80%.

Division 71

69. Division 71 will deny an input tax credit for acquisitions or importations for the purpose of providing a fringe benefit to employees of an input taxed supplier provided:

FBT is payable on the provision of the fringe benefit; and
the supplier would have been entitled to an input tax credit for the acquisition or importation (but for this Division).

This Division can apply to deny certain input tax credit entitlements where you make input taxed supplies in the course of your enterprise. The whole of the input tax credit is disallowed where Division 71 applies.

70. However Division 71 does not apply to an acquisition or importation if:

the only reason it relates to making input taxed supplies is it relates to making financial supplies; and
you do not exceed the financial acquisitions threshold.[35]

71. The most common application of Division 71 is where an acquisition is made to provide a fringe benefit that is in part a remuneration benefit and in part a work benefit that has a connection with making input taxed supplies. Division 71 can apply where an item is acquired by an employer for the purpose of both making input taxed supplies, and also providing a fringe benefit to an employee on which fringe benefits tax is payable.

Example 12

72. Eastbank Ltd exceeds the financial acquisitions threshold. It acquires a fleet of cars by way of lease, to use primarily in the Loans Division. Certain employees are each allocated a particular vehicle which is required to be garaged at the employee's home at night. FBT is payable on the vehicles because of the home garaging arrangement. The vehicles have been acquired partly to be used for enterprise activities, and partly for private use by employees.[36] These vehicles are valued for FBT purposes using the statutory formula method.

73. In this example, Division 71 applies to deny any input tax credit entitlement on the lease of motor vehicles to Eastbank Ltd as the vehicles are subject to FBT and partly used in making input tax supplies.

Example 13

74. Assuming the same facts in Example 12 except Eastbank Ltd leases a fleet of cars, for use in the Sales Division to make taxable supplies. Division 71 would not deny the input tax credit entitlement for the lease of the cars to Eastbank Ltd as the vehicles were used wholly in making taxable supplies. Division 71 applies only where an acquisition relates, at least in part, to making input taxed supplies.

Interaction between Division 131 (annual apportionment election) and Division 71

74A. If you have made an annual apportionment election under Division 131, that election is only applicable to acquisitions or importations that are creditable acquisitions or importations. If Division 71 applies to an acquisition or importation, that acquisition or importation is not a creditable acquisition or importation (see sections 71-5 and 71-10, respectively) and therefore Division 131 does not apply.

74B. However, subsections 71-5(2) and 71-10(2) provide exceptions to the special rule in Division 71. As explained at paragraph 70 of this Ruling, Division 71 does not apply to an acquisition or importation that you make if it relates to making input taxed financial supplies and you do not exceed the financial acquisition threshold. In these circumstances, such acquisitions or importations are creditable acquisitions or creditable importations and Division 131 may apply.

74C. You will have an increasing adjustment in a later tax period to account for the private use.

Car expenses and Division 71

75. Acquisitions made to provide fringe benefits with no FBT value are not subject to Division 71.[37] This includes acquisitions relating to exempt benefits and benefits to which the 'otherwise deductible rule' has reduced the value to nil. Exempt benefits include car running costs incurred by an employer in providing car benefits (section 53 of the FBTAA). This includes petrol, oil and repairs incurred by an employer in providing a car as a taxable supply to an employee.

76. Although the employer's entitlement to input tax credits on the acquisition costs of the car are denied by Division 71, (for example, the input tax credits for the lease payments), Division 71 would not apply to deny the input tax credit entitlement for the car running costs. Where the entity is making input taxed supplies, input tax credit entitlements for car running costs would be reduced only to the extent that the acquisitions related to making input taxed supplies, and not the whole amount of the entitlements.[38]

Example 14

77. Assuming the same facts in Example 12 except that the motor vehicles are in a general pool and the employees of Eastbank Ltd keep a car log book for each vehicle. The extent of business use that Eastbank Ltd is makes for car running costs such as fuel, oil, tyres and maintenance is derived from the car log book. Division 71 does not deny Eastbank Ltd entitlement to input tax credits for car running costs. However the extent of entitlement to input tax credits would need to be determined under the basic rules. If Eastbank could not determine the extent of making input taxed supplies from the log book then other methods suggested in Goods and Services Tax Rulings GSTR 2006/4 and GSTR 2006/3 could be used to determine the extent to which the acquisition related to making input taxed supplies. A business segment of Eastbank uses a car which has '80% business use' as determined by a log book. The business segment has also determined that similar acquisitions (such as general overheads) relate 70% to making input taxed supplies. Eastbank would have potential input tax credits for its car running costs reduced to 24% as follows:

A business segment of Eastbank uses a car which has '80% business use' as determined by a log book. The business segment has also determined that similar acquisitions (such as general overheads) relate 70% to making input taxed supplies. Eastbank would have potential input tax credits for its car running costs reduced to 24% as follows:

non-business use of 20%, and
input taxed use of 56%, (70% of the remaining 80%)

This means that the extent of creditable purpose is:

100% - 20% - 56% = 24%

Therefore, if Eastbank Ltd had potential input tax credits of $100 for car running cost acquisitions, Eastbank Ltd would be entitled to an input tax credit of:

$100 * 24% = $24

78. Where car use is measured more precisely for each vehicle (and input taxed apportionment is able to be made from use measurement), these proportions can be used to determine extent of creditable purpose for each vehicle, where this process gives a more accurate reflection of entitlements for all vehicles.

Example 14A

78A. Assume the same facts in Example 14 and that Eastbank Ltd has made an annual apportionment election. The extent of input tax credits able to be claimed for the car running cost acquisitions is worked out according to the following formula under subsection 13-40(2):

Full input tax credit x Extent of non-input taxed purpose x Extent of consideration

The extent of the input taxed purpose, as worked out in Example 14, is 56%. Therefore the extent of the non-input taxed purposes is 44% (including the 20% non-business use). Thus applying this formula Eastbank Ltd is entitled to claim an input tax credit of $44 under the Division 131 election. That is:

$100 * 44% x 100% = $44

78B. Eastbank Ltd will have to make an increasing adjustment of $20 in a later tax period to account for the 20% non-business use.

Effect of differences between intended and actual use on Division 71

79. Division 71 applies to entitlements to input tax credits. It is determined on the intended use of the thing providing the fringe benefit. Where the actual use of the thing is different to intended use, Division 71 does not retrospectively operate to deny or permit an entitlement to input tax credits at the time of acquisition. Where there is a later change of use, adjustments may be required under Division 129.

80. However, it is important to consider the likely use of the benefit as a guide to purpose. Where an employee has restrictions or potential obligations on the use of an item acquired by an employer, such as a car, it would be reasonable to assume that, at the time of employer acquisition of the car, it was intended to be used to some extent for enterprise activities. Where part of those activities involves making input taxed supplies, the purpose would relate to making input taxed supplies and Division 71 could apply.

Example 15

81. A bank manager is provided with a motor vehicle that can also be used privately. As part of the bank manager's duties the motor vehicle is also used to attend work appointments or work travel. Division 71 would apply to deny credits where the car acquisition related to making input taxed supplies, such as the bank manager performing work that involved approving loans to customers.

Division 71 and expense payment benefits

82. Division 71 can apply to expense payment benefits provided the acquisition or importation that is subject to FBT is used in making input taxed supplies. It does not matter whether the employee acquired the expense payment benefit by way of reimbursement under Division 111 or some other arrangement.[39]

Example 16

83. Francesca purchases a desk top computer for home use. She is reimbursed in full by Topdeck Ltd, her employer. Topdeck knows that Francesca will use the computer privately, but she is also required to use it for her work activities in the finance division. FBT will be payable on this expense payment benefit.

84. But for Division 71 there would be a partial entitlement to input tax credits reduced by the intended use of the computer for enterprise activities concerning input taxed supplies.

85. In this example, Division 71 operates to deny input tax credits in full for the reimbursement. This is because the computer's intended use means that the acquisition made by the employer relates, in part, to its finance division's input taxed supplies. Therefore, if Topdeck had given the computer to Francesca as part of a remuneration benefit, under the same usage requirements, the same result would have been obtained, that is, a denial of input tax credits for the acquisition to Topdeck because of Division 71.

Special Rules for input tax credits

Division 111 - expense payment benefits

86. Division 111 provides that an employer makes an acquisition that can be a creditable acquisition, subject to certain conditions, where:

an employee is reimbursed for an expense that constitutes an expense payment benefit ; or
a payment is made on behalf of an employee for an expense that constitutes an expense payment benefit.

87. The expense payment benefit, in these circumstances, is not a creditable acquisition unless the supply of the thing acquired by the employee is a taxable supply.[40] For instance, where an employee is reimbursed for an expense incurred in acquiring a GST-free supply, such as a secondary school education for the employee's child, the reimbursement is not a creditable acquisition for the employer. Similarly, reimbursement by the employer of an employee's home rental payments to a landlord is not a creditable acquisition of the employer.

88. Furthermore it is not a creditable acquisition to the extent that the employee is entitled to an input tax credit for the thing acquired in incurring the expense.[41] Finally, the special rules set out in Division 69[42] and 71[43] may also prevent the acquisition from being a creditable acquisition. The GST consequences of these provisions are discussed further at paragraphs 96 to 109 and 69 to 85 respectively of this Ruling.

88A. Although an employee may have made an annual apportionment election under Division 131, this does not affect the extent to which an acquisition is not a creditable acquisition for the employer. In particular, subsection 111-5(3AA) requires that sections 131-40 and 131-50 are disregarded when working out the extent to which an employee is entitled to an input tax credit for the purposes of paragraph 111-5(3)(a).

89. Division 111 also requires that the reimbursement be made for a particular expense. Employers need to have some understanding or agreement with their employees about the types of expenses they will reimburse so that a particular acquisition is involved. Types of requirements that indicate such agreements include:

the employer requiring the employee's invoices to demonstrate that relevant purchases have been made; or
the employer requiring the employee's credit card statement to evidence particular purchases (or all of the particular purchases) that are itemised on the statement.

For Division 111 to apply, the arrangement between the employer and the employee needs to be for the reimbursement of a particular purchase or purchases incurred on the credit card. An arrangement that involves no more than reimbursing the balance owing on the employee's credit card statement, an input taxed financial supply, does not meet the requirements of Division 111.

90. Where a creditable acquisition arises under Division 111, the employer is entitled to claim an input tax credit of 1/11 of the reimbursement. The requirement to hold a tax invoice,[44] in order to claim the input tax credit, is satisfied if the employer holds the employee's tax invoice for the particular expense.[45] Alternatively, where the employer holds the employee's credit card statement listing the expense, the statement may satisfy the need for a tax invoice.[46]

Example 17 - Division 111 reimbursement

91. Employerco reimburses employee expenses for which the employee has given proof of an expense being incurred. This can include an invoice or an expense listed on an employee credit card statement.[47]

92. The employee purchases a watch for $299 from a registered supplier. Although the employer does not hold the employee's invoice, the expense is listed on a credit card statement, as a taxable supply to the employee from the retailer. The reimbursement of the employee's expense in acquiring the watch meets the requirements of Division 111 as being the reimbursement of an expense that was an acquisition to the employee. The employer is entitled to an input tax credit. The input tax credit will be attributable to the tax period in which a tax invoice is held by the employer.[48]

Example 18 - reimbursement to which Division 111 does not apply

93. Employee Frank's credit card balance at the end of a month is listed as $1,100. The employer, an FBT exempt employer[49], reimburses Frank $1,100. The employer checks the transactions on the credit card statement only to make sure that there are no cash withdrawals on the card, as it is a requirement by the employer that no cash withdrawals are to be made on this card.

94. Where the arrangement between the employer and the employee is that the employer will pay the outstanding balance of the employee's credit card at the end of each month, irrespective of what form of acquisitions were made to increase the balance, the employer payment will not be a creditable acquisition and will not be entitled to an input tax credit for the reimbursement. The same result would apply to a charge card.

95. The payment of an allowance is not a reimbursement.[50] Input tax credits can not be claimed on payment of an allowance to an employee. There can be no input tax credit entitlement under Division 111.

Entertainment

96. Division 69 limits input tax credits for certain acquisitions and importations, including entertainment, to the extent that they would not be deductible expenditure under certain provisions of the ITAA 1997.

97. Whilst section 32-5 of the ITAA 1997 denies a deduction for entertainment under section 8-1 of that Act, section 32-20 of the ITAA 1997 allows an exception where entertainment is provided by way of a fringe benefit. Consequently, Division 69 does not apply to disallow input tax credits for entertainment expenses made in providing fringe benefits (as defined in the FBTAA). This rule also applies to fringe benefit acquisitions and importations for recreational club expenses and expenses for a leisure facility or boat.

98. Although acquisitions and importations made to provide fringe benefits are an exception to the Division 69 denial of deductions for entertainment expenses, exempt benefits are not fringe benefits for these purposes.[51] For example, in income tax, expenses for entertainment that are exempt under section 41 of the FBTAA, being provided and consumed on a working day, are not deductible expenses because of section 32-5 of the ITAA 1997. See Taxation Ruling TR 97/17 for an explanation of the interaction between entertainment as a fringe benefit and as a deductible expense in the context of meal entertainment. Under Division 69 of the GST Act these FBT exempt entertainment benefit expenses are not creditable acquisitions.

99. Paragraph 69-5(3)(f) disallows any entitlement to input tax credits for acquisitions and importations for providing entertainment to clients rather than employees. However, to the extent that the acquisitions and importations are made in providing entertainment to employees and are otherwise creditable, Division 69 will not deny those entitlements.

100. Where an entity, such as a public benevolent institution, provides any benefits to employees which are in respect of employment, section 57A of the FBTAA provides that these are exempt benefits. As the fringe benefit exception rule in section 32-20 of the ITAA 1997 does not apply where entertainment benefits are exempt from FBT, paragraph 69-5(3)(f) can apply to deny any input credits for entertainment acquisitions and importations[52] for public benevolent institutions. As subsection 69-5(4) applies the rules in subsection 69-5(3) to entities that are exempt from income tax as if they were subject to that tax, the fact that the benefit is exempt from FBT means that subsection 69-5(3) can apply to these entities in addition to entities that are subject to income tax.

Example 19

101. During March 2002, Archimedes Ltd incurs meal entertainment expenditure of $5,500 for employees and $4,400 for client entertainment and for exempt benefits. This includes providing social functions where employee meals are provided on a working day on the work premises (section 41 of the FBTAA). $5,500 is a deductible income tax expense for the year to 30 June 2002 and Archimedes is entitled to an input tax credit of $500 (1/11 of $5,500). $4,400 is not deductible (due to the operation of section 32-5 of the ITAA 1997) and Archimedes is not entitled to an input tax credit for the $400 (1/11 of $4400 because the provision of client entertainment is not a fringe benefit and is not excluded from the operation of paragraph 69-5(3)(f).

Special rules apply for meal entertainment and entertainment facility leasing

102. Where you have incurred meal entertainment expenses or entertainment facility leasing expenses, you may elect to apply Division 9A of Part III or section 152B of the FBTAA in working out your fringe benefits tax liability for the FBT year. Where you make this election, the taxable value of a meal entertainment benefit can be calculated by using either a 50/50 split or by a 12 week register method.[53] You can also elect to use the 50/50 split method to calculate the taxable value of your entertainment facility leasing expenses.

103. Where the FBT election is made, the employer will be entitled to a part deduction for the expenses under section 51AEA, 51AEB or 51AEC of the ITAA 1936.

104. For GST purposes, an acquisition or importation of goods that constitutes meal entertainment or entertainment facility leasing will only be available for an input tax credit to the extent that it is deductible under sections 51AEA, 51AEB and 51AEC of the ITAA 1936.[54]

105. Where you incur meal entertainment or entertainment facility leasing expenditure, you may elect for GST purposes to have the input tax credits disallowed in a tax period to the same extent as the income tax deductions would have been disallowed for such expenses if you had made an FBT election.[55] This election is allowed in conjunction with the fact that input tax credits for tax periods during an FBT year are only claimable to the extent that FBT is paid on such benefits at the same rate (for example 50%, 12 week register percentage, actual employee benefit income tax deductible percentage).

106. However, it is not necessary for you to intend to make a particular FBT election when you make a GST election as provided for in Division 69. After the conclusion of the FBT year you may choose which FBT valuation method you use for meal entertainment or entertainment facility leasing.

Example 20

107. Xenia Ltd incurs substantial meal entertainment expenses and usually calculates its FBT taxable value by using the 50/50 split method. It accounts for GST on a quarterly basis. It makes a GST election from 1 October 2000. In that tax period Xenia incurred $5,500 meal entertainment expenses as taxable supplies to it. The amount of potential input tax credits that could be claimed is 1/11 of $5,500, or $500. As it has made the 50/50 split election under the GST Act, it is able to claim $250 input tax credits in respect of the acquisitions relating to meal entertainment ($500 ( 50%).

108. If you do not make a GST election you can only claim input tax credits for meal entertainment and entertainment leasing expenses to the extent it relates to benefits provided to an employee (that is, to the extent deductible under Division 32 of the ITAA).

109. Whichever GST method is adopted for claiming input tax credits on entertainment expenses for particular tax periods, if the amount of input tax credits for such acquisitions in tax periods during an FBT year is not of the same proportion of total meal entertainment or entertainment facility leasing amounts as made in your FBT return, an adjustment event will arise. You will need to make an increasing or decreasing adjustment, for GST purposes in the tax period in which you have to lodge your FBT return or would have lodged your FBT return if so required.

109A. Although you may have made an annual apportionment election under Division 131, that election has no application to a meal entertainment or entertainment facility leasing expense that is partly a creditable acquisition or importation and partly a non-creditable acquisition or importation under Division 69. Division 131 is only applicable to a creditable acquisition or importation which is partly for private purposes. Although the meal entertainment or entertainment facility leasing expense may be a partly creditable acquisition or importation it is not partly for private purposes as it relates to a supply of a fringe benefit by you to your employee. As explained at paragraph 52 of this Ruling an acquisition or importation that an employer makes to provide a fringe benefit to an employee is not of a private or domestic nature.

Phasing in of input tax credits for motor vehicles

110. Section 20 of the GST Transition Act applies to deny input tax credits for acquisitions or importations of certain motor vehicles. An entity is not entitled to an input tax credit for the purchase, hire purchase, or importation of certain motor vehicles prior to 23 May 2001.[56]

Example 21

111. Archimedes Ltd makes a creditable acquisition of a vehicle by way of hire purchase on 1 May 2001 for a four year term for a retail price of $44,000. Archimedes accounts on a cash basis for GST purposes. It intends to supply the vehicle as a remuneration benefit. Archimedes is required to make 48 monthly payments. Under the basic GST rules, Archimedes would be entitled to an input tax credit of 1/11 of each repayment of principal because the employer's supply of the car to the employee is a taxable supply. However, section 20 of the GST Transition Act reduces Archimedes' credit entitlement to nil for each payment over the four year term. For example, if a particular repayment in the third year was $990 (exclusive of term charges), the potential input tax credit of $90 would be reduced to nil.

Acquisitions spanning 1 July 2000

112. An acquisition that spans 1 July 2000 made to supply a fringe benefit, is subject to the GST Transition Act in the same way as other acquisitions.

Attribution: GST payable and input tax credits for the provision of fringe benefits

113. The basic rules for attributing GST payable on taxable supplies, input tax credits for creditable acquisitions and creditable importations and adjustments are set out in Division 29. These rules apply to taxable supplies of fringe benefits and creditable acquisitions relating to making those supplies in the same way as they apply to other taxable supplies and creditable acquisitions.

114. Subsection 9-75(3) does not operate as an attribution rule for supplies of fringe benefits.

115. If you account for GST on a cash basis, the GST payable on the supply of a fringe benefit is attributable to the tax period or periods in which consideration in the form of a recipient contribution or recipient payment is received.[57]

116. If you do not account for GST on a cash basis, GST payable on the supply of a fringe benefit is attributable to the tax period in which any of the consideration for the supply is received or an invoice is issued, whichever is the earlier.[58]

Recipients contributions and recipients payments made by journal entry

117. Where your employee makes a recipients contribution or recipients payment reducing FBT taxable value by journal entry in the circumstances described in Taxation Ruling MT 2050, and the requirements set out in that Ruling are satisfied, it will be accepted that consideration for the supply of the fringe benefit is received at the time of making of the journal entries, to the amount of the offset that those journal entries reflect.

Example 22

118. Jess has a car provided to him as a fringe benefit by his family company. The FBT taxable value in respect of the benefit is $5,500. The family accountant prepares the company's income tax return for the year to 30 June and makes journal entries in September to reduce the FBT taxable value to nil in accordance with Taxation Ruling MT 2050. The reduction of $5,500 is a recipient payment and the GST payable by the company ($500) is attributable to the September quarter (the company is a quarterly GST lodger).

Application of Division 156

119. Division 156 can apply to the supply of a fringe benefit made for a period or on a progressive basis where the consideration is to be provided on a progressive or periodic basis. The GST payable on a supply to which Division 156 applies is attributable in accordance with the basic attribution rule in section 29-5 as if each periodic or progressive component of the supply were a separate supply.[59]

120. If consideration for the supply of a fringe benefit is to be provided on a progressive or periodic basis, for example by way of regular payments for a car fringe benefit, the fact that a further payment is made after the end of the relevant period does not prevent Division 156 applying.

Definitions

121. The following terms are defined for the purposes of this Ruling. Terms with asterisks are defined in section 195-1.

Exempt benefit

The FBTAA sets out what is an exempt benefit. For example, section 58H sets out that newspapers and periodicals used for business purposes are exempt.

Expense payment benefit means a fringe benefit that is a benefit of a kind referred to in section 20 of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986.[60]

Section 20 of the FBTAA provides:

Where a person (in this section referred to as the 'provider'):

(a)
makes a payment in discharge, in whole or in part, of an obligation of another person (in this section referred to as the 'recipient') to pay an amount to a third person in respect of expenditure incurred by the recipient; or
(b)
reimburses another person (in this section also referred to as the 'recipient'), in whole or in part, in respect of an amount of expenditure incurred by the recipient;

the making of the payment referred to in paragraph (a), or the reimbursement referred to in paragraph (b), shall be taken to constitute the provision of a benefit by the provider to the recipient.

Financial supply has the meaning given by the regulations made for the purposes of subsection 40-5(2).[61]

Fringe benefit has the meaning given by section 995-1 of the ITAA 1997 but includes a benefit within the meaning of subsection 136(1) of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 that is an exempt benefit for the purposes of that Act.[62]

Subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA states in part that:

Fringe benefit, in relation to an employee, in relation to the employer of the employee, in relation to a year of tax, means a benefit:

(a)
provided at any time during the year of tax; or
(b)
provided in respect of the year of tax,

being a benefit provided to the employee or to an associate of the employee by:

(c)
the employer; or
(d)
an associate of the employer; or
(e)
a person (in this paragraph referred to as the 'arranger') other than the employer or an associate of the employer under an arrangement covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of 'arrangement' between:

(i)
the employer or an associate of the employer; and
(ii)
the arranger or another person; or

(ea)
a person other than the employer or an associate of the employer, if the employer or an associate of the employer:

(i)
participates in or facilitates the provision or receipt of the benefit; or
(ii)
participates in, facilitates or promotes a scheme or plan involving the provision of the benefit;
and the employer or associate knows, or ought reasonably to know, that the employer or associate is doing so;
in respect of the employment of the employee but does not include:

(f)
a payment of salary or wages or a payment that would be salary or wages if salary or wages included exempt income for the purposes of the ITAA 1936; or
(g)
a benefit that is an exempt benefit in relation to the year of tax; or
(h)
a benefit constituted by the acquisition by the employee, or by a relative of the employee, of a share in a company, or of a right to acquire a share in a company, under a scheme for the acquisition of shares by employees, where section 26AAC of the ITAA 1936 applies in relation to the acquisition; or
(ha)
a benefit constituted by the acquisition by a person of a share or right under an employee share scheme (within the meaning of Division 13A of Part III of the ITAA 1936); or
(hb)
a benefit constituted by the acquisition by a trust of money or other property where the sole activities of the trust are obtaining shares, or rights to acquire shares, in a company (the 'employer'), or a holding company (within the meaning of the Corporations Law) of the employer, and providing those shares or rights to employees of the employer; or
(j)
a benefit constituted by:

(i)
the making of a payment of money to a superannuation fund (as defined by subsection 6(1) of the ITAA 1936) that the person making the payment had reasonable grounds for believing was a complying superannuation fund (as defined by subsection 267(1) of the ITAA 1936)
(ii)
the making of a payment of money to a non-resident superannuation fund (within the meaning of section 6E of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936) in respect of a person who is an exempt visitor to Australia for the purposes of section 517 of that Act in relation to the year of income in which the payment is made; or
(iii)
the making of a payment of money to an RSA (within the meaning of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997); or

(k)
a payment within the meaning of Subdivision AA of Division 2 of Part III of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 that would be an eligible termination payment within the meaning of that Subdivision if -

(i)
subparagraphs (a)(ii), (iii), (iiia) and (iv) of the definition of 'eligible termination payment' in subsection 27A(1) of that Act were omitted;
(ii)
a reference in paragraph (b) of that definition to a superannuation fund included a reference to a fund of the kind referred to in subparagraph (a)(ii) or (iiia) of that definition;
(iii)
subparagraphs (b)(i), (ii) and (iii) of that definition were omitted; and
(iv)
paragraph (k) of that definition were omitted; or

(ka)
an 'exempt resident foreign termination payment', or an 'exempt non-resident foreign termination payment', as defined by subsection 27A(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936; or
(kb)
a payment to which section 27CAA or 27CE of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 applies; or
(m)
consideration of a capital nature for, or in respect of:

(i)
a legally enforceable contract in restraint of trade by a person; or
(ii)
personal injury to a person; or

(n)
a payment of an amount that, under any provision of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, is deemed to be a dividend paid to the recipient; or
(p)
a payment made, or liability incurred, to a person to the extent that the payment or liability is, by virtue of subsection 65(1A) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, deemed not to be income of the person for the purposes of that Act; or
(q)
a benefit constituted by the conferral of a present entitlement to, or a distribution of, income or capital to the extent that subsection 271-105(1) of Schedule 2F to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 would prevent the inclusion of the amount or value of the income or capital in assessable income, assuming that it would otherwise be so included.
(q†)
anything done in relation to a shareholder in a private company (as those terms are defined in section 6 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936), or an associate of such a shareholder, that causes (or will cause) the private company to be taken under Division 7A of Part III of that Act to pay the shareholder or associate a dividend.

Meal entertainment

Section 37AD of the FBTAA states that a reference to the provision of meal entertainment is a reference to the provision of:

(a)
entertainment by way of food or drink; or
(b)
accommodation or travel in connection with, or for the purpose of facilitating, entertainment to which paragraph (a) applies; or
(c)
the payment or reimbursement of expenses incurred in providing something covered by paragraph (a) or (b);
(d)
whether or not:
(e)
business transactions occur; or
(f)
in connection with the working of overtime or otherwise in connection with the performance of the duties of any office or employment; or
(g)
for the purposes of promotion or advertising; or
(h)
at or in connection with a seminar.

Recipients contribution

Recipients contribution has the meaning:

'... given by subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA 1986 of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 but includes any consideration paid in respect of the provision of a benefit that is an exempt benefit for the purposes of the Act.'[63]
Recipients contribution is defined in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA as:

(a)
in relation to an airline transport fringe benefit, a car parking fringe benefit, a property fringe benefit, a residual fringe benefit or a board fringe benefit, being a fringe benefit provided in respect of the employment of an employee of an employer, means the amount of any consideration paid to the provider or to the employer by the recipient or by the employee in respect of the provision of the recipients transport, the recipients parking, the recipients property, the recipients benefit or the recipients meal, as the case may be, reduced by the amount of any reimbursement paid to the recipient in respect of that consideration; and
(b)
in relation to an expense payment fringe benefit provided in respect of the employment of an employee of an employer, being a fringe benefit to which paragraph 20(a) applies - the amount paid to the provider or to the employer by the recipient or by the employee in respect of the provision of the fringe benefit;

Recipients payment

Recipients payment has the meaning:

'... given by paragraphs 9(2)(e) or 10(3)(c) of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986.'[64]
Paragraph 9(2)(e) of the FBTAA states:

(e)
the amount of the recipients payment is the sum of:

(i)
in a case where expenses were incurred to the provider or employer during the holding period by recipients of the car fringe benefits by way of consideration for the provision of the car fringe benefits - the amount of those expenses paid by the recipients less any amount paid or payable to the recipients by way of reimbursement of those expenses;
(ia)
in a case where car expenses in respect of fuel or oil for the car were incurred during the holding period by recipients of the car fringe benefits and -

(A)
the persons incurring those expenses give to the employer, before the declaration date, declarations, in a form approved by the Commissioner, in respect of, those expenses; or
(B)
documentary expenses is obtained by the persons incurring the expenses and given to the employer before the declaration date;

the amount of those expenses paid by the recipients less any amount paid or payable to the recipients by way of reimbursement of those expenses; and
(ii)
in a case where:

(A)
car expenses in respect of the car (other than car expenses in respect of fuel or oil for the car) were incurred during the holding period by recipients of the car fringe benefits; and
(B)
documentary evidence of those expenses is obtained by the persons incurring the expenses and given to the employer before the declaration date:

the amount of those expenses paid by the recipients less any amount paid or payable to the recipients by way of reimbursement of those expenses.

Paragraph 10(3)(c) has identical wording.

Recipients rent

Recipients rent is defined in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA as meaning:

In relation to a housing fringe benefit in relation to an employee of an employer in relation to a year of tax, means the amount of any rent or other consideration paid to the provider or to the employer by the recipient or the employee in respect of the subsistence, during the year of tax, of the recipients housing right reduced by the amount of any reimbursement paid to the recipient in respect of that consideration.

Detailed contents list

122. Below is a detailed contents list for this Ruling:

  Paragraph
What this Ruling is about 1
Background 6
Fringe benefits tax and the rulies in the FBTAA 6
Statutory exclusions 9
Determination of value of fringe benefits 10
Date of effect 14
Ruling and explanation 15
GST and fringe benefit 15
GST payable on supplies of fringe benefits 17
Consideration 18
Value of a fringe benefit supply 21
Example 1 25
Salary sacrifice arrangements 28
Example 2 29
Recipients payments for car fringe benefits 31
Example 3 32
Contributions to accommodation type benefits 34
Contributions to expense payment benefits 36
Example 4 39
Input taxed and GST-free supplies 40
Example 5 41
Example 6 42
Supplies of fringe benefits spanning 1 July 2000 43
Example 7 45
Example 8 47
Inupt tax credits for acquisitions and importations made to provide fringe benefits 48
Creditable purpose 50
Acquisitions and importations related to making input taxed supplies 53
Remuneration benefits 55
Example 9 57
Example 10 59
Work benefits 60
Acquisitions resulting in work benefits 67
Example 11 68
Division 71 69
Example 12 72
Example 13 74
Car expenses and Division 71 75
Example 14 77
Effect of difference between intended and actual use on Division 71 79
Example 15 81
Division 71 and expense payment benefits 82
Example 16 83
Special rules for input tax credits 86
Division 111 - expense payment benefits 86
Example 17 - Division 111 reimbursement 91
Example 18 - reimbursement to which Division 111 does not apply 93
Entertainment 96
Example 19 101
Special rules apply for meal entertainment and entertainment facility leasing 102
Example 20 107
Phasing in of input tax credits for motor vehicles 110
Example 21 111
Acquisitions spanning 1 July 2000 112
Attribution: GST payable and input tax credits for the provision of fringe benefits 113
Recipients contributions and recipients payments made by journal entry 117
Example 22 118
Application of Division 156 119
Definitions 121
Exempt benefit 121
Expense payment benefit 121
Financial supply 121
Fringe benefit 121
Meal Entertainment 121
Recipients contribution 121
Recipients payment 121
Recipient's rent 121
Detailed contents list 122

Commissioner of Taxation
18 May 2001

Footnotes

1 Subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA.

2 References to 'employer' will also include an associate of the employer where relevant.

3 Recipients payment is defined in paragraph 9(2)(e) and 10(3)(c) FBTAA.

4 Recipients contribution is defined in subsection 136(1) FBTAA.

5 Recipients rent is defined in subsection 136(1) FBTAA.

6 Section 195-1. (The sections of the ITAA 1997 and the FBTAA referred to in this definition are reproduced in the 'Definitions' section.)

7 Section 9-75.

8 A reference in this Ruling to an employee includes an associate of an employee. In section 136 of the FBTAA the definition of a fringe benefit means a benefit: '.provided to the employee or an associate of the employee...'.

9 Paragraph 9-5(a).

10 Subsection 9-75(3).

11 Section 9-70.

12 Subsection 9-75(1).

13 See section 195-1.

14 In this Ruling the words 'recipient's payment' are referred to as 'recipients payment'.

15 See the definition of recipients contribution in the Definitions section of this Ruling.

16 [1992] BVC 694.

17 Paragraph 9(2)(e) of the FBTAA.

18 Subsection 9-10(4).

19 Section 111-25.

20 Paragraph 40-35(1)(a).

21 See Goods and Services Tax Bulletin GSTB 2000/4 for instructions on how to calculate the amount of GST.

22 See Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2000/7 for guidance on the operation of section 11 of the GST Transition Act.

23 Section 11-20.

24 Section 15-15.

25 Paragraph 11-5(a) and paragraph 15-5(a).

26 Subsection 11-15(1).

27 Subsection 15-10(1).

28 Subsection 11-15(2) and subsection 15-10(2).

29 Paragraphs 11-15(2)(a) and 15-10(2)(a).

30 Subsection 11-15(4) and subsection 15-10(4). Refer to Division 189 for an explanation of the financial acquisitions threshold.

31 Julius Fillibeck Sohne GmbH & Co KG v Finanzamt Neustadt (Case C-258-95) [1998] BVC 206.

32 Directive 77/388 of 17 May 1977 on the harmonisation of the laws of the member states relating to turnover taxes- common system of value added tax: uniform basis of assessment.

33 See paragraph 45 of the opinion of Mr Advocate Leger, not inconsistent with the subsequent judgment.

34 See Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2006/3 for an explanation of how such a calculation can be done for entities that make financial supplies.

35 See Division 189 for an explanation of whether you exceed the financial acquisitions threshold.

36 Subsection 7(2) of the FBTAA.

37 Subsection 71-5(1)(b).

38 Under paragraph 11-15(2)(a).

39 Paragraph 111-5(3)(c).

40 Paragraph 111-5(3)(b).

41 Subparagraph 111-5(3)(a)(i).

42 Subparagraph 111-5(3)(a)(ii).

43 Paragraph 111-5(3)(c).

44 Subsection 29-10.

45 Section 111-15.

46 Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2000/26 sets out when a corporate credit card statement satisfies the need for a tax invoice.

47 Employer vouching requirements are not necessarily sufficient to meet the requirements of there being a tax invoice so as to obtain an input tax credit.

48 Section 111-15 and subsection 29-10(3).

49 For example, section 57A of the FBTAA makes a benefit provided by a public benevolent institution in respect of employment an exempt benefit.

50 Taxation Ruling TR 92/15 and Roads and Traffic Authority v FCT of (1993) 26 ATR 76; 93 ATC 4508; refer.

51 See the definition of fringe benefit in ITAA 1997 section 995-1 which applies to the exception for fringe benefits in section 32-20.

52 Although subsection 69-5(4) applies to entities who are exempt from income tax, the fact the benefit is exempt from fringe benefits tax means that if the entity had been subject to income tax it would still be providing exempt benefits. Section 32-20 accordingly does not prevent section 32-5 from applying with the result that paragraph 69-5(3)(f) applies.

53 Sections 37BA and section 37CB of the FBTAA.

54 Subsection 69-5(3A).

55 Sections 69-25, 69-30, 69-35.

56 The transitional provisions only apply to the acquisition of vehicles by way of purchase, hire purchase, or importation. Specific exceptions are listed in subsection 20(4) of the GST Transition Act.

57 Subsection 29-5(2).

58 Subsection 29-5(1).

59 Section 156-5.

60 Section 195-1.

61 Section 195-1.

62 Section 195-1.

63 Section 195-1.

64 Section 195-1.

Previously released as GSTR 2000/D17.

References

ATO references:
NO 99/18059-5

ISSN: 1443-5160

Related Rulings/Determinations:

TR 92/15
TR 97/17
TR 2001/2
TR 2006/10
GSTb 2000/4
GSTR 2000/7
GSTR 2000/26
GSTR 2006/3
GSTR 2006/4
MT 2050

Subject References:
attribution rules
creditable acquisition
creditable purpose
expense payment benefits
FBT
fringe benefit
fringe benefits tax
goods & services tax
GST
GST consideration
GST-free
GST supplies and acquisitions
GST supply
input taxed
input taxed supplies
input tax credit
price
reimbursements
supplies
taxable supply

Legislative References:
ANTS(GST)A 99 9-5(a)
ANTS(GST)A 99 9-10(4)
ANTS(GST)A 99 9-70
ANTS(GST)A 99 9-75
ANTS(GST)A 99 9-75(1)
ANTS(GST)A 99 9-75(3)
ANTS(GST)A 99 11-5
ANTS(GST)A 99 11-5(a)
ANTS(GST)A 99 11-15
ANTS(GST)A 99 11-15(1)
ANTS(GST)A 99 11-15(2)
ANTS(GST)A 99 11-15(2)(a)
ANTS(GST)A 99 11-15(4)
ANTS(GST)A 99 11-20
ANTS(GST)A 99 15-5(a)
ANTS(GST)A 99 15-10
ANTS(GST)A 99 15-10(1)
ANTS(GST)A 99 15-10(2)
ANTS(GST)A 99 15-10(2)(a)
ANTS(GST)A 99 15-10(4)
ANTS(GST)A 99 15-15
ANTS(GST)A 99 19-10
ANTS(GST)A 99 Div 29
ANTS(GST)A 99 29-5
ANTS(GST)A 99 29-5(1)
ANTS(GST)A 99 29-5(2)
ANTS(GST)A 99 29-10(3)
ANTS(GST)A 99 40-5(2)
ANTS(GST)A 99 40-35(1)(a)
ANTS(GST)A 99 Div 69
ANTS(GST)A 99 69-5(3)
ANTS(GST)A 99 69-5(3)(f)
ANTS(GST)A 99 69-5(3A)
ANTS(GST)A 99 69-5(4)
ANTS(GST)A 99 69-25
ANTS(GST)A 99 69-30
ANTS(GST)A 99 69-35
ANTS(GST)A 99 Div 71
ANTS(GST)A 99 71-5(1)(b)
ANTS(GST)A 99 Div 111
ANTS(GST)A 99 111-5
ANTS(GST)A 99 111-5(3)(a)(i)
ANTS(GST)A 99 111-5(3)(a)(ii)
ANTS(GST)A 99 111-5(3)(b)
ANTS(GST)A 99 111-5(3)(c)
ANTS(GST)A 99 111-15
ANTS(GST)A 99 111-20
ANTS(GST)A 99 111-30
ANTS(GST)A 99 Div 129
ANTS(GST)A 99 Div 131
ANTS(GST)A 99 Div 156
ANTS(GST)A 99 156-5
ANTS(GST)A 99 Div 189
ANTS(GST)A 99 195-1
ANTS(GSTT)A 1999 11
ANTS(GSTT)A 1999 12
ANTS(GSTT)A 1999 20
FBTAA 1986 7(2)
FBTAA 1986 9(3)(e)
FBTAA 1986 10(3)(c)
FBTAA 1986 20
FBTAA 1986 37AD
FBTAA 1986 37BA
FBTAA 1986 37CB
FBTAA 1986 41
FBTAA 1986 57A
FBTAA 1986 58H
FBTAA 1986 136
FBTAA 1986 136(1)
FBTAA 1986 149A
FBTAA 1986 152B
FBTAA 1986 Div 9A Pt III
ITAA 1936 6
ITAA 1936 6(1)
ITAA 1936 6E
ITAA 1936 26AAC
ITAA 1936 27A(1)
ITAA 1936 27CAA
ITAA 1936 27CE
ITAA 1936 65(1A)
ITAA 1936 Div 7A Pt III
ITAA 1936 Div 13A Pt III
ITAA 1936
ITAA 1936 271-105(1) Schedule 2F
ITAA 1936 51AEA
ITAA 1936 51AEB
ITAA 1936 51AEC
ITAA 1936 517
ITAA 1997 Div 8
ITAA 1997 8-1
ITAA 1997 Div 32
ITAA 1997 32-5
ITAA 1997 32-20
ITAA 1997 995-1
TAA 1953 Sch 1 Div 358

Case References:
Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd
[1992] BVC 694


Julius Fillibeck Sohne Embtl & Co. KG v. Finanzamt Neustadt (Case C- 258-95)
[1998] BVC 206

Roads and Traffic Authority v. FC of T
93 ATC 4508
(1993) 26 ATR 76

GSTR 2001/3 history
  Date: Version: Change:
  18 May 2001 Original ruling  
  18 December 2002 Consolidated ruling Addendum
  13 September 2006 Consolidated ruling Addendum
You are here 31 October 2012 Consolidated ruling Addendum
  23 April 2014 Consolidated ruling Addendum