Practice Statement Law Administration

PS LA 1999/2

Calculating joint car expense deductions

Contents  
1. How taxpayers should calculate a joint car expense deduction
2. Method 1 – cents per kilmetre
3. Method 2 – 12% of the original value
4. Method 3 – one-third of actual expenses
5. Method 4 – logbook
6. More information

This Practice Statement is an internal ATO document and an instruction to ATO staff.

Taxpayers can rely on this Practice Statement to provide them with protection from interest and penalties in the following way. If a statement turns out to be incorrect and taxpayers underpay their tax as a result, they will not have to pay a penalty, nor will they have to pay interest on the underpayment provided they reasonably relied on this Practice Statement in good faith. However, even if they do not have to pay a penalty or interest, taxpayers will have to pay the correct amount of tax provided the time limits under the law allow it.

This Practice Statement explains how car expense deductions are calculated if the car is jointly owned, leased or hired under a hire purchase agreement.

1. How taxpayers should calculate a joint car expense deduction

For income years before 1 July 2015, taxpayers can use any one of the 4 calculation methods to calculate a joint car expense deduction:

cents per kilometre
12% of the original value
one-third of actual expenses
logbook.

Only the first and last method apply from 1 July 2015.

A taxpayer should use only one method in any one income year in relation to a specific vehicle. However, each of the joint owners can use a different method to calculate their deductions if they wish.

2. Method 1 – cents per kilometre

Each joint owner or joint lessee can claim a maximum deduction of 5,000 kilometres for each income year. That limit applies to a particular taxpayer in relation to a particular car, not to the car itself. So, if each of the joint owners uses the car for separate income-producing purposes, they can each claim up to 5,000 kilometres.

3. Method 2 – 12% of the original value

If the taxpayer travels more than 5,000 work-related kilometres in the car during in an income-producing period, they can use Method 2 to calculate their deduction.

Method 2 allows each of the joint owners to claim a proportion of the original cost of the car, to a total of 12%. That is, if there are 2 joint owners, then they can each claim a deduction of 6% of the original cost of the car.

4. Method 3 – one-third of actual expenses

Like Method 2, Method 3 is only available to taxpayers who have travelled more than 5,000 work-related kilometres in the car in an income year.

Taxpayers using this method can deduct one-third of the car's expenses (whether wholly their own or incurred jointly with other owners or lessees; and not including capital expenses) plus one third of their share of the decline in value of the car.

5. Method 4 – logbook

If the taxpayer uses a vehicle logbook, it must state:

when the logbook period begins and ends
the car's odometer readings at the start and end of the logbook period
the total number of kilometres that the car travelled
the number of kilometres travelled for work
the business use percentage.

For each logbook period, the taxpayer would calculate their deductions as:

(total kilometres the taxpayer travelled to produce their assessable income ÷ total number of kilometres the car travelled) × (total car expenses incurred + the decline in value for the period)

6. More information

For more information, see:

Motor vehicle and car expenses
Work-related car expenses calculator

Amendment history

14 November 2024
Part Comment
Sections 4 and 5 The term depreciation updated to 'decline in value'.
Throughout Content checked for currency and technical accuracy.

Updated in line with current ATO style and accessibility requirements.

28 November 2017
Part Comment
Contact details Updated.

11 February 2016
Part Comment
Section 1 Included dates when different calculations can be used.

21 May 2015
Part Comment
All Updated to new LAPS format and style.

22 April 2014
Part Comment
Contact details Updated.

6 December 2011
Part Comment
Related public rulings References to IT 2398 and TD 93/177 (withdrawn) removed.

28 April 2011
Part Comment
Various 'Tax Office' updated to 'ATO' as per Style Guide recommendations.
Contact details Updated.

16 September 2008
Part Comment
Contact details Updated.

7 April 2008
Part Comment
Contact details Updated.

1 June 2004
Part Comment
Various Legislative references updated.
Contact details Updated.

© AUSTRALIAN TAXATION OFFICE FOR THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA

You are free to copy, adapt, modify, transmit and distribute this material as you wish (but not in any way that suggests the ATO or the Commonwealth endorses you or any of your services or products).

Date of Issue: 29 April 1999

Date of Effect: Ongoing

File 99/4924-1; 96/9842-6; 96/4745-7; 1-7P6KYPU; 1-14ISSDHD

Business Line:  IAI

ISSN: 2651-9526

PS LA 1999/2 history
  Date: Version:
  29 April 1999 Original statement
  21 May 2015 Updated statement
  11 February 2016 Updated statement
You are here 14 November 2024 Updated statement

Copyright notice

© Australian Taxation Office for the Commonwealth of Australia

You are free to copy, adapt, modify, transmit and distribute material on this website as you wish (but not in any way that suggests the ATO or the Commonwealth endorses you or any of your services or products).