Employees guide for work expenses

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Part C - Commonly claimed expenses

This part covers common scenarios where you might consider claiming a deduction. Each deduction you claim must meet either the basic deduction conditions or the requirements of the capital allowance provisions for the decline in value of a depreciating asset. Consider these for each deduction each time.

The deductibility of an expense depends on the specific duties that you do in your employment. This means that an expense that is deductible by one person may not be deductible by another, even if they have similar jobs.

This list is not exhaustive and doesn't cover every situation that may apply to you. If you can't find content that covers your particular circumstances, you can refer to TR 2020/1 to help you work out if your expense is deductible. It provides a step-by-step instruction on working out deductibility for work-related expenses.

For more information, see:

Claiming a deduction: the basic conditions
Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions
Taxation Ruling TR 2020/1 Income tax: employees: deductions for work expenses under section 8-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997

Accommodation

Normally accommodation expenses are private and not deductible. Accommodation expenses can only be deductible if you:

are travelling for work
sleep away from your home overnight for work, and
pay for the accommodation expenses yourself (and aren't reimbursed by your employer).

However, you can't claim a deduction for accommodation expenses you incur if you choose to stay overnight at a location that is closer to your usual workplace or you are living at a location away from your home.

Example – accommodation expenses

Shaun is a salesperson working between Geelong and Warrnambool in southern Victoria. Once a month, he is required to visit stores in and around Warrnambool and this requires him to stay overnight away from his home in Little River. The cost of the hotel room Shaun pays for when staying overnight in Warrnambool is deductible, as long as the cost is not reimbursed by his employer.

Example – choice to stay closer to workplace

Alanna works in the Melbourne CBD but lives in Lorne. It takes more than 2 hours to travel between her home and her workplace, so Alanna rents a one-bedroom serviced apartment in the Melbourne CBD to stay in during the working week. Alanna returns to her home in Lorne on weekends.
Alanna can't claim the cost of renting the serviced apartment in the Melbourne CBD because the travel to Melbourne isn't part of her employment duties. The expenses are also private because she has made a choice to live in Lorne while working in the Melbourne CBD.

For more information, see:

Overnight travel expenses
Taxation Ruling TR 2021/4 Income tax and fringe benefits tax: employees: accommodation and food and drink expenses travel allowances, and living-away-from-home expenses

Agents and agency fees

This includes, for example, talent agents, employment agents, recruitment agents, modelling agents and booking agents.

You can't claim a deduction for upfront costs of joining or using the services of an employment and recruitment agency or an agent to get work. This is because the expense is incurred before you start the employment.

If your employment contract allows for the renegotiation, review or extending of the contract, the costs of doing so will be an allowable deduction. Such expenses are incurred in gaining your employment income.

Example – agent fees

Zahra joins an acting agency to help further her career. She pays a setup fee as part of joining the agency. Zahra is offered a contract to be one of the leads in a TV series for one year, with a mutual option to extend the contract. The show turns out to be a large success and her agency negotiates to extend the contract for another year.
Zahra can't claim the costs of joining the agency as it enables her to get work. She can claim the costs to renegotiate her contract as it is part of her employment activity.

Annual practicing certificates, professional memberships and accreditations

You can claim a deduction for the cost of renewing an annual practicing certificate, membership or accreditation if you need it to work in your field.

These can include trade licenses for plumbers, electricians and carpenters, crane, hoist and scaffolding licences for construction workers, responsible service of alcohol and gaming licences for hospitality workers and registration for nurses, teachers and doctors.

However, if you're required to have a practicing certificate, professional membership or accreditation before you can be employed in an occupation, the initial cost of obtaining it isn't deductible. This is because you incurred the expense to enable you to start your employment, not during the course of your employment.

Example – ongoing expense

Brenden needs annual registration to work as a nurse. He can claim a deduction for the cost of renewing this each year. He incurs the expense in gaining his employment income.

Example – prerequisite expenses

Drew has finished his legal training in Townsville and is looking to start his career as a solicitor. To practice as a solicitor, Drew needs to apply to the Supreme Court of Queensland to be admitted as a lawyer and then apply for a practicing certificate. Until he is granted both, he can't practice law.
Drew isn't entitled to claim a deduction for the cost of his admission or practicing certificate because he incurs it so he can start earning employment income. Once he is employed, he will be able to deduct the cost of renewing his practice certificate each year, as it allows him to continue earning his employment income.

You can only claim a deduction if the expense is related to your current employment.

For more information, see:

Union and association fees

Bags and cases for work items

This also includes, for example, briefcases, laptop bags, luggage and handbags.

If you use a bag or a case to carry items for work, you are entitled to a deduction to the extent that it is used for work purposes. Work items include laptops, tools, client briefs and protective gear but don't include private and domestic items like gym gear, food or a personal phone or tablet. Your job must require you to transport work items and the bag must be suitable for that purpose.

If the bag or case cost you $300 or less, and you use it for work only, you can claim a deduction for the whole cost in the year you purchase it. Otherwise, you can claim a deduction for the decline in its value over its effective life (see Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions ).

If you use a bag or case to carry both work and private items, you need to apportion the expense between work-related and private use, and you can only claim the work-related portion.

For more information, see:

Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions
Apportioning work-related expenses

Example – bag for personal items

Francisco is employed as a banker. He buys a holdall bag for $250. He uses it every day to take his lunch, personal tablet and gym clothes to work. Francisco can't claim a deduction for the bag, as he only uses it to transport private items to and from work.

Example – bag for a work laptop

Maria is employed as an account executive. Her job requires her to regularly attend meetings with clients. She has to take her work laptop, phone and the client's file with her to the meetings. She frequently works from home and sometimes goes directly to a client meeting before heading into the office. She buys a bag for $565 that she uses to carry her work laptop and phone, chargers and client briefs. She carries her cash and cards, personal phone and other personal items in a smaller clutch bag. As Maria's bag is suitable to carry all the items that are necessary for her to transport, Maria can claim a deduction for the decline in value of the bag over its effective life.

Luggage includes items generally used for overnight or longer trips, such as overnight bags, suitcases and carry-ons which tend not to be used on a day-to-day basis. If you use luggage for travel overnight for work you may be able to claim a deduction for the decline in value of the luggage, or if it cost $300 or less, an immediate deduction under the capital allowance provisions. You need to apportion the cost of the luggage if it is used also for private travel.

Example – cabin crew

Ibrahim works as cabin crew on long-haul international flights. He buys luggage to use exclusively for work for $200. He can claim an immediate deduction for the luggage in the income year he purchases it, as it costs under $300.

Bank fees

You can't claim a deduction for account-keeping fees or overdraft fees you incur. These aren't incurred in earning your employment income.

You can claim a deduction for a transaction fee that you are charged when you make a work-related purchase.

For more information, see:

Interest

Example – transaction fees

Adrienne buys deductible work-related books from an international retailer and is charged an international transaction fee by her bank. Because the purchase is a work-related expense, Adrienne can also claim the cost of the international transaction fee imposed by her bank.

Books, periodicals and digital information services

This includes, for example, online subscriptions, online resources, library subscriptions, academic journals and database subscriptions.

Books, periodicals and digital information expenses incurred as part of earning your employment income may be deductible (either outright or for their annual decline in value) if the content is sufficiently connected to your employment. Examples include midwifery journals for obstetric nurses, annotated legislation for lawyers, automotive reference manuals for mechanics and subscriptions to online technical journals for engineers.

Example – digital subscription

Amy works as an editor and proof-reader for a publishing house. She subscribes to a comprehensive online dictionary service that she uses many times a day. Amy only uses the online dictionary for work purposes. As the subscription is solely used for work, she would be able to claim a deduction for the full cost of her subscription.

Car expenses

In some circumstances, you may be able to deduct car expenses to the extent you use your car for deductible transport. You will first need to check whether you are entitled to claim transport expenses .

What is a car?

Not all vehicles are a 'car' for the purposes of claiming your expenses. A car is defined as a motor vehicle (excluding motorcycles and similar vehicles) designed to carry a load of less than one tonne and fewer than 9 passengers. This includes electric cars that meet this definition.

For more information, see:

Vehicles other than cars

If your vehicle is a car, you may claim a deduction using either:

the cents per kilometre method, or
the logbook method.

You can choose which method to use in any given year and you can use different methods for different cars.

If your vehicle doesn't meet the definition of a car, you may still be able to claim deductions for your transport expenses.

Expenses for using a car you own or lease

You can claim a deduction for using a car that you owned, leased or hired under a hire purchase agreement using the cents per kilometre or logbook method. You can't claim expenses under these methods for cars owned or leased by other people such as your employer or spouse.

However, if you can show that there is a family or private arrangement that made you the owner or lessee you may still claim expenses even if you aren't the registered owner.

Example – family arrangement

When Rory turned 18, she bought a car from her parents for $1,000. Since then, she has paid for all the insurance, fuel, registration and other running costs. No one else has used the car but her. The registration has not been updated and the car is still in her mother's name.
Rory is still eligible to claim her work-related car expenses. Even though the registration has not been changed to her name, she would be treated as the owner because she can demonstrate that she bought the car from her parents and that she is now responsible for all of the ownership and running costs of the car.

If you have access to the car under a salary sacrifice arrangement or a novated lease, it is usually your employer who is leasing the vehicle from the financing company and making it available for your use. As you don't own or lease the car yourself, you aren't entitled to claim any deductions for using the car, but can claim additional expenses, like parking and tolls associated with your work use of the car.

Example – salary sacrifice car under a novated lease

Amy uses a salary sacrifice arrangement to get the use of a car under a novated lease. She starts parking at her office every day, which costs $20. She drives to meetings at a different office and parks in the short-term parking bays which cost $5. She isn't reimbursed for the expense.
Amy can't claim her parking expenses at the main office as these aren't incurred in earning her assessable income. She also can't claim any of the expenses related to the running of her car as it's on a salary sacrifice arrangement. She can claim the $5 parking expense as the expense is incurred in travelling from one work site to another.

Luxury cars

A car is a luxury car if its cost exceeds the car limit in the income year when you purchase it or acquire the lease. If a luxury car is leased, it is treated as if it had been purchased by the lessee. For the purposes of calculating the decline in value of the vehicle, the cost element is limited to the car limit.

For more information, see:

Car limit

Using someone else's car

If you use someone else's car for work, you may be able to claim direct costs, such as fuel and car parking fees, to the extent that they relate to your work-related use of the car.

Cents per kilometre method

Under the cents per kilometre method, you can claim a set rate for each work-related kilometre travelled. Work-related kilometres are the number of kilometres that the car travelled in the course of earning your assessable income. The maximum number of work-related kilometres you can claim under this method is 5,000. 2

You don't need written evidence to show exactly how many kilometres you have travelled but you must make a reasonable estimate calculation. You must be able to show how you worked out your deduction and this may be aided by documents such as calendars and diary records.

Example – reasonable estimate

Once a week, Johan makes a 27 km round trip in his own car travelling from head office in the city to meet with clients. In addition, he makes a 106 km round trip to visit clients at another location, once a month. When Johan consults his diary at the end of the income year, he works out he was at work for 47 weeks but he missed one weekly meeting with clients as he was sick. Although he was on leave for 5 weeks during the income year, he still makes 12 × 106 km round trips to visit clients.
Johan works out his estimated business kilometres as:

Number of weekly trips × Distance of weekly trips = Total weekly trip kilometres
46 × 27 = 1,242 km

Number of monthly trips × Distance of monthly trips = Total monthly trip kilometres
12 × 106 = 1,272 km

Total weekly trip kilometres + Total monthly trip kilometres = Total work-related kilometres
1,242 + 1,272 = 2,514 km

Joint owners

Where a car is owned jointly, each owner can claim up to 5,000 work-related kilometres in respect of the car.

Example – joint owners

Sean and Ashleigh own a car together. While Ashleigh mostly uses the car for her work-related travel as a real estate agent, Sean occasionally uses it for his own deductible work-related travel.
At the end of the income year, Ashleigh works out that she has used the car to travel 4,900 work-related kilometres and Sean works out that he has used the car to travel 450 work-related kilometres. Although the total work-related kilometres the car travelled is over 5,000 kilometres, as joint owners they can each claim their full work-related kilometres, as their own use is each under 5,000 work-related kilometres.

You don't need to keep written records of all your expenses but you will need to be able to show how you worked out your work-related kilometres.

Logbook method

The logbook method allows you to claim the work-related portion of your actual car expenses. These include deductions such as fuel and repairs and the decline in value of capital costs such as the purchase price and improvements. To use this method, you must substantiate most of your car expenses and keep a valid logbook and odometer records.

For the logbook to be valid you must identify an income year for which you are keeping it, choose a period of at least 12 weeks for the logbook to cover and record the journeys that are related to your work-related activities (work-related journeys). One logbook can be used for up to 5 years.

During the record-keeping period, you must record each journey in the logbook by entering the following:

the date the journey began and ended
the car's odometer readings at the start and end of the journey
how many kilometres the car travelled on the journey
why the journey was made.

If you make 2 or more work-related journeys in a row on the same day, you can record them as one journey. You need to record each journey at the end of the journey or as soon as possible afterwards. You can't recreate a logbook at a later date.

For more information, see:

Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions

Example – journey listing

Camilla drives her own car from her office to a client's premises (Thompson Consulting) to have a sales meeting. She returns to the office straight after the meeting. She records the journey in her logbook as soon as she returns.
18 March 2022
Odometer reading start 156,605
Odometer reading end 156,638
Kilometres travelled 33
Reason for journey Return trip from head office to sales meeting with Thompson Consulting
Camilla records both trips as one journey as they were in a row.

The logbook must also contain:

the date the logbook period begins and ends
the car's odometer reading at the start and the end of the logbook period
the total number of kilometres that the car travelled during the logbook period
the number of kilometres that the car travelled in the course of earning your assessable income (work-related kilometres)
the percentage of use for work-related activities.

In addition to a valid logbook, you must keep a record of the car's odometer reading on the first and last day of the period you own or lease the car during the income year. For example, if you own the car for the whole income year, you must record the odometer reading on 1 July and on 30 June.

You must retain your logbook and odometer records until the end of the latest income year in which you rely on them to support your claim and then for another 5 years after that.

Calculate your work-related use percentage as follows:

Work-related kilometres for the income year ÷ Total kilometres the car travelled in the period you held it = Work-related use percentage

You calculate the work-related kilometres by making a reasonable estimate which must take into account:

any logbook, odometer records or other records you have
any variations in the pattern of use of the car, and
any changes in the number of cars you used to undertake your work-related activities.

Although you are required to calculate work-related kilometres by making a reasonable estimate taking the above factors into account, you can generally apply the work-related use percentage established by your logbook to work out your work-related kilometres if your pattern of use for the period you held the car during the year is consistent with the travel you undertook during that logbook period.

However, if the work-related use of your car has changed (for example, because you have a different job, you have moved house or you have changed the number of cars you use to undertake work-related activities), you will need to calculate your work-related kilometres by making a reasonable estimate and recalculate your work-related use percentage. Depending on how different your use is, you may need to keep a new logbook.

Example – working out the percentage

Tim decides to keep a logbook for an income year. He owns the car for the entire year, so he records the odometer reading on the first and last days of the income year (1 July and 30 June respectively). Tim's odometer records show that he travelled a total of 17,000 km during the year. During the 12-week logbook period, Tim drove 4,000 km, of which 2,400 km was work-related travel.
Tim works out that his work-related travel throughout the year is consistent with the travel he made during the period he kept his logbook. He estimates that he drove 10,200 km for work purposes.

Total logbook work-related kilometres ÷ Total logbook kilometres = Logbook work-related use percentage
2,400 ÷ 4,000 = 60%

Total kilometres travelled × Logbook work-related use percentage = Work-related kilometres
17,000 × 60% = 10,200 km

To work out the work-related use percentage, Tim made the following calculation:

Work-related kilometres ÷ Total kilometres travelled × 100 = work-related use percentage
10,200 ÷ 17,000 × 100 = 60%

If Tim changes jobs part way through the following income year, he can't rely just on his logbook to work out his work-related kilometres. He may need to produce a new logbook if there are changes in how he travels for work.

A logbook is valid for up to 5 years but you may start a new logbook at any time or the Commissioner can request that you start a new one. You must keep a logbook for the first year for which you use the method with a car, but if you get a new car during the 5 years, you can nominate the new car to replace the original car.

When you have worked out the work-related use percentage, you can work out your deduction.

Example – working out deduction

Tim has kept a compliant logbook and worked out that his work-related use percentage is 60%. Tim can claim 60% of his actual expenses, including the decline in value on the car.
Tim's actual expenses
Decline in value $3,500
Fuel and oil costs $1,000
Registration $560
Compulsory third party insurance $340
Total expenses $5,400

Total expenses × Work-related use percentage = Claimable deduction
5,400 × 60% = $3,240

Tim also spent $800 to improve the muffler system on the car, but as that is a capital expense, he can't claim it as an immediate deduction and would claim the decline in value. Tim is entitled to claim a deduction for the decline in value of the muffler system under the capital allowance provisions.

To claim a deduction under the logbook method, you need to keep substantiation records for all of the car expenses you incur except for petrol and oil as well as a valid logbook. Substantiation records for petrol and oil costs can be kept but they don't need to be as they can be estimated based on the odometer readings and the average price of petrol.

For a zero emissions vehicle (electric car), you may be able rely on Practical Compliance Guideline PCG 2024/2 Electric vehicle home charging rate – calculating electricity costs when a vehicle is charged at an employee's or individual's home to calculate the cost of charging your electric vehicle at home. If you don't rely on PCG 2024/2 you must keep records to substantiate how much you incurred to charge your electric vehicle at home and at commercial charging stations.

You will need to keep records for any expenses you incur.

For more information, see:

Substantiation requirements
Tolls
Parking fees
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 1999/2 Calculating joint car expense deductions
Taxation Determination TD 97/19 Income tax: substantiation: car expenses: how do you calculate the cost of fuel and oil when using the 'one-third of actual expenses' method or the 'logbook' method, if you have not kept written evidence of the expense?
PCG 2024/2

Child care

You can't claim a deduction for the cost of child care or before or after school care. It is a private expense that doesn't have the relevant connection with earning your employment income.

Clothing expenses

With a few exceptions, clothing is a private expense. Conventional clothing can't be deducted as a work-related expense. 'Conventional clothing' is ordinary everyday clothing worn by people regardless of their occupation.

However, some types of clothing are deductible when they have sufficient connection with your employment activities. These types include:

protective clothing
compulsory uniforms
registered non-compulsory uniforms
occupation-specific clothing.

Each category has different criteria that must be met for the clothing to be deductible.

Protective clothing

You can claim a deduction for the cost of clothing and footwear you wear to protect yourself from specific risks of injury or illness at work. The clothing has to have features or functions that take it out of the class of conventional clothing. These sorts of items could include:

heavy-duty occupational wet-weather gear
protective boots such as steel-capped boots or rubber boots for concreters
boiler suits that protect ordinary clothing
fire-resistant clothing
non-slip nurses' shoes.

There has to be a link between your work-related activities, the risk presented by your work environment and the form and function of the clothing to mitigate that risk.

Example – lack of risk

Wade is an accountant who works in a suburban office. He buys steel-capped boots, which he wears only to work. While the boots provide protection, his office environment doesn't require the protection that the boots provide. Wade can't claim a deduction for the boots.

Ordinary clothes you wear at work (such as jeans, drill shorts, closed shoes and socks) aren't protective clothing if they lack protective qualities designed for the risks of your work environment. Protective clothing needs to be able to cope with more rigorous conditions where conventional clothing would be inadequate. Examples of this include chainsaw-proof pants and abrasion-resistant clothing.

Example – changing to protective clothes

Ryan starts work on a building site which involves him spending prolonged periods in the sun. Ryan wears cotton drill pants and a drill safety shirt to work every day. He wears them as they are comfortable to work in and, though they aren't very durable, they provide some protection.
Ryan wears them at work and never in his private time. He can't claim a deduction for the expense of buying them, because the clothing only provides a small amount of protection from injury and they are mostly fulfilling the private need of having to be clothed.
After a couple of weeks on the site, Ryan notices he is getting sunburnt through his shirt and that his pants are getting ripped and exposing his legs to potential harm. He buys some UPF 50 work shirts and some heavy-duty abrasion-resistant work trousers and starts wearing them to work. Ryan can claim a deduction for these expenses as they are specifically protecting him from harm at work.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 2003/16 Income tax: deductibility of protective items
Taxation Ruling TR 97/12 Income tax and fringe benefits tax: work-related expenses: deductibility of expenses on clothing, uniform and footwear
Protective items

Compulsory uniform

You can claim a deduction for the cost of a compulsory uniform. A compulsory uniform must be sufficiently distinctive to your particular organisation so that a casual observer can clearly identify you as working for a particular employer or identify the products or services provided by your employer. To be considered compulsory, you must be expressly required to wear it by a workplace agreement or policy, which is strictly and consistently enforced. Conventional clothing isn't a compulsory uniform even if your employer requires you to wear it, or you pin a name badge to it.

Shoes, socks and stockings are private, except in very limited circumstances such as where the employer has express guidelines that stipulate specific characteristics of the colour, style and type of those items and other accessories as an integral and distinctive part of the uniform. This differentiates them from ordinary clothing as they have become an integral part of a compulsory uniform.

Example – conventional clothes worn with a uniform

Rick works at a supermarket. He is required to buy and wear a shirt with the supermarket's logo embroidered on it. The employee guidelines include a requirement to wear black pants and closed black shoes but don't stipulate any other qualities of those items. Rick can claim a deduction for the cost of the shirts as they are a compulsory uniform, but he can't claim the cost of the pants or shoes. Even though his employer requires him to wear a specific colour, they aren't distinctive enough to make them part of his uniform and are still conventional clothes.

Non-compulsory uniforms

If wearing a uniform is not compulsory, you won't be entitled to a deduction for the cost of the clothing items comprising the uniform unless the full non-compulsory uniform is approved and registered on the Register of Approved Occupational Clothing and you wear the uniform at work.

A full body item, such as a dress or overalls, can be registered for these purposes, however single items of clothing, such as a shirt, won't be registered. Shoes, socks, and stockings also won't form part of a registered non-compulsory uniform. These items aren't deductible.

Occupation-specific clothing

You can claim a deduction for the cost of occupation-specific clothing that distinctively identifies you as a person associated with a particular profession, trade, vocation, occupation or calling.

Clothing that is considered occupation specific are items like a cleric's ceremonial clothing, a judge's robes or a chef's chequered pants. The fact an item may be traditionally worn in a profession doesn't make it occupation specific if it may be worn by a number of professions.

Example – occupation-specific clothing

Joe is a chef with 2 jobs. When working at a restaurant, he wears the traditional chef's uniform of chequered pants, white jacket and chef's toque. He also works on a food truck but wears jeans and a t-shirt. Joe can claim the cost of his traditional chef's uniform but not his other outfit. The chef's clothing is particular and relevant to his profession but the jeans and t-shirt are conventional clothes.

Conventional clothing

The cost of conventional clothing is ordinarily not deductible. The fact that your employer requires you to wear specific clothing doesn't make the clothing expense deductible. In most cases, the cost of conventional clothing is a private expense that doesn't have the relevant connection with earning your employment income.

Example – conventional clothing

Matt works as a sales assistant in a clothing store. His employer requires him to wear clothes of the kind available in the store. Matt earns his employment income mostly from the activity of selling clothes.
Although he must wear clothing in accordance with his employer's requirements, this is not sufficient to make the cost of the clothing he has purchased deductible. There is no direct connection between his clothing expenditure and his work-related activity of selling clothes.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 94/22 Income tax: implications of the Edwards case for the deductibility of expenditure on conventional clothing by employees

Commissions

If you pay your agency a commission for work you've gained, you can deduct the commission you actually incur. In other words, if your agency charges you a commission for work they have obtained for you, you may be entitled to a deduction. To claim the deduction, you must either pay the commission to the agency separately or the agency must deduct the commission from the fee you receive.

Example – agency commission

Geoff is employed as an agency nurse. He works one night at a hospital and is paid $600. Geoff must pay $48 commission to the agency. Geoff's assessable income includes the $600 but the $48 commission is an allowable deduction. Geoff incurs these fees in the course of earning his wages as an agency nurse.

Computers and software

This includes, for example, laptops, desktop computers, apps, subscriptions, anti-virus and anti-spyware software, virtual private networks and programs.

You can claim a deduction for the decline in value when you purchase and use a computer for your employment. You need to apportion expenses if you use the computer for work and private purposes.

If software is included as part of your purchase price for the computer system, you don't need to break up the costs to calculate the decline in value.

Additional software you purchase, or software that is separately purchased can be deducted if it costs $300 or less. If it is more than $300, you can deduct its decline in value.

Software includes physical CDs, apps that you pay to download and annual subscriptions to software or services. You need to apportion expenses if you use the software for work and private purposes.

You can also claim a deduction for the cost of repairs to your computer. However, you need to apportion the cost of repairs if you use the computer for work and private purposes.

Example – deductible expense

Mateo works from home 2 days a week. He buys a computer which comes with the operating system already installed. He pays for an annual subscription for antivirus software and uses gift cards that he has previously bought to buy some software that he needs for his work.
Mateo can claim a deduction for the decline in value of the computer and operating system. He can also claim a deduction for the anti-virus software and the software he buys using the gift cards. If Mateo also uses the computer or software for personal use, he will need to apportion the expense and claim a deduction only for the percentage of his work use.

For more information, see:

Apportioning work-related expenses
Self-education and study

Conferences, seminars and training courses

You can claim a deduction for the cost of attending conferences, seminars, training courses and other events to maintain or increase the knowledge, capabilities or skills you need to earn your income in your current employment.

The costs you can claim include fares to attend the venue where the conference, seminar or course is held and registration costs. If you need to travel and stay away from home overnight to attend a conference, seminar, training course or other event, you can also claim the cost of accommodation and meals.

If there is a non-work component to attending the conference, seminar, training session or other event, then you may not be able to claim all of your expenses. If the non-work component is incidental to the course (such as catered lunches or a reception for delegates), then you can still claim all of the expenses you incurred to attend the conference, seminar or course. However, if the dominant purpose is non-work, and the conference, seminar or course is merely incidental, you can only claim the direct costs for the conference, seminar or course.

Example – dominant purpose – holiday

Jodie is holidaying in Cairns when she becomes aware of a half-day work-related seminar nearby. Jodie attends the seminar and can claim the cost of attending, but she can't claim her airfares to and from Cairns, or her accommodation and meals, as the primary purpose of her travel is private.

Example – dual purpose

Megan flies to London for a 10-day international, work-related conference. Megan stays over for an extra 15 days to sightsee. As the sightseeing is not an incidental part of the conference or the trip as a whole, Megan can only claim the work-related portion of the airfares (10 days ÷ 25 days) and the accommodation and meals for the 10 days she attends the conference. Megan can't claim the cost of accommodation and meals for the 15 days of private travel.

Example – dominant purpose – work-related

Gary, a qualified architect, attends an 8-day work-related conference in Hawaii on modern trends in architecture. One day of the conference involves a sight-seeing tour of the island and a networking game of golf is held on the final afternoon of the conference. As his main purpose is work-related, Gary can deduct all of the expenses he incurred for the conference (air fares, accommodation and meals).

For more information, see:

Accommodation
Meals (food and drink)
Overnight travel expenses
Self-education and study
Taxation Ruling TR 2024/3 Income tax: deductibility of self-education expenses incurred by an individual

COVID-19 tests

From 1 July 2021, you can claim a deduction for the cost of a COVID-19 test if you:

use the test for a work-related purpose to determine if you can attend or remain at your workplace
get a qualifying COVID-19 test, being a

-
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test
-
test listed in the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods for testing COVID-19, including rapid antigen test (RAT) kits

pay for the test yourself (that is, your employer doesn't give you a test or reimburse you for the cost), and
keep a record to show that you incurred the cost (usually a receipt) and were required to take the test for a work purpose.

You can't claim the cost of a COVID-19 test you buy if any of the following apply:

you use the test for private purposes – for example, to test your children before they return to school or day care
you receive a reimbursement for the expense from your employer or another person
you received a free COVID-19 test
you work from home and don't attend another place to either gain or produce your assessable income, or to carry on a business for that purpose.

You also can't claim a deduction for the travel or parking expenses you incur to buy your COVID-19 test. It doesn't form part of the cost of the test and is private in nature.

You can only claim the work-related portion of the cost of the COVID-19 tests you buy. For example, if you buy a multipack of COVID-19 tests and use some for work-related purposes and some for private purposes, you must only claim the cost of the tests you use for work-related purposes.

Example – personal and work-related use and deductibility

In May 2022, Vinh buys a box of 2 COVID-19 tests at the local pharmacy for $20. He uses one test to confirm he doesn't have COVID-19 before attending a local sporting event. A week later, he realises that he has been exposed to COVID-19 and uses the other test to check his COVID-19 status before attending his place of work.
As Vinh used only one of the tests to determine whether he could attend work, he can only claim a deduction of 50% of the purchase price he paid for the pack of 2 COVID-19 tests, being $10.

Driver's licences

You can't claim a deduction for the cost of acquiring or renewing your driver's licence. Driver's licences are a private expense, even if driving is an essential part of your employment and you must have a licence as a condition of your employment. You can, however, claim a deduction for additional costs you incur to obtain a special licence or condition on your licence in order to perform your duties.

Example – heavy vehicle licence

Rhonda is a long-haul truck driver who needs a driver's licence and a heavy vehicle permit to work. Her driver's licence renewal costs her $45 per year and it costs $73 to apply for the heavy vehicle permit. The $45 to renew her licence isn't deductible because it is a private expense. The cost of the heavy vehicle permit ($73) is deductible as it is an additional expense Rhonda incurs which is directly related to her employment duties and is not a private expense.

Fines

You can't get a deduction for the cost of any fines you get when you travel to work, or during work, including parking fines, speeding fines or penalties (for example, for overloading your truck).

First aid courses

You can claim a deduction if it is necessary for you, as a designated first aid person, to undertake first aid training to assist in emergency situations at work.

You can't claim a deduction if your employer pays for the training or reimburses you.

Example – first aid course

Leanne is required to hold a first aid qualification to be a flight attendant as she is required to use these skills and knowledge in the event of an emergency while in flight. Leanne can claim a deduction for the cost of the first aid course.

Functions and entertainment

You can't claim the cost of attending functions or participating in entertainment involving food, drink or recreation. This includes events, dinners, dances and cocktail parties, even if they are attended exclusively by your work colleagues, you discuss work at the functions and they are compulsory. These aren't deductible expenses.

Example – cost of attending work functions not deductible

Leroy, a business development manager, attends a number of functions such as lunches, cocktail parties and dinners where he engages with potential new clients as part of a strategy to build the customer base of the company that employs him.
Despite the fact that Leroy conducts work-related discussions at these functions, he can't claim a deduction for the cost of attending these functions. The expense is for entertainment (food and drinks).

Glasses and contact lenses

Prescription glasses and contact lenses

You can't claim a deduction for the cost of buying or repairing prescription glasses or contact lenses. These are private expenses.

Sunglasses, photochromatic glasses and anti-glare glasses (including prescription)

You can only claim a deduction for the cost of sunglasses, and glasses with filtering and glare-reducing qualities similar to sunglasses (such as photochromatic glasses or anti-glare glasses) if wearing them:

has the necessary connection with earning your employment income, and
protects you from the risk of illness or injury at work.

You need to apportion expenses if you use the glasses for work and private purposes.

Example – prescription sunglasses and glasses

Sergei works as a landscaper and spends most of his days outdoors in the sun. He gets prescription sunglasses to help protect his eyes from the glare. When he is working in his office, he wears his regular prescription glasses.
Sergei can claim a deduction for his prescription sunglasses as they protect him from the risk of illness or injury while performing his work-related activity. The prescription glasses he wears in the office offer no protection and have the character of a private expense so he wouldn't be able to claim a deduction for the cost of those glasses.
As Sergei wears his prescription sunglasses on his days off, he apportions the cost of his sunglasses to account for his private use.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 2003/16 Income tax: deductibility of protective items
Taxation Ruling IT 2477 Income tax: deductibility of tinted glasses used by a visual display unit (VDU) operator
Protective items
Apportioning work-related expenses

Gym fees and fitness-related expenses

Except in very limited circumstances, gym fees and other fitness expenses (such as skipping ropes, weights and other fitness equipment) are private expenses and can't be claimed as a deduction. This is the case even if you're required to pass medical examinations and fitness tests to maintain your employment.

Members of the regular Australian Defence Force, police officers and firefighters can't claim their fitness expenses.

However, there are very limited circumstances where employees who require an extremely high level of fitness can claim a deduction for these expenses. This will be the case where strenuous physical activity is an essential and regular element of your work. No deduction is available in any circumstances in respect of expenditure on items of conventional clothing which may be used in the course of keeping fit. This would include such things as tracksuits, running or aerobic shoes, socks, T-shirts or shorts.

Example – private fitness expense

Mahendra is an intelligence officer for the Royal Australian Navy. He prepares intelligence briefings and generally carries out intelligence analysis tasks. Most of this work is done at his desk. Mahendra has a membership at a private gym and goes there 3 times a week to maintain the fitness levels required for his employment in the Navy.
Mahendra can't claim the costs of his gym membership as it is a private expense. While Mahendra needs to keep a level of fitness for his employment, his role doesn't entail strenuous physical activity as part of the performance of his duties.

Example – deductible fitness expense

Nola is a trapeze artist and tumbler with a circus. She has a gym membership and takes regular Pilates and yoga classes. She also trains and rehearses with her company to develop new trapeze and tumbling routines and performs 6 nights a week.
Nola would be able to claim her fitness costs. Her job is to rehearse and perform trapeze and tumbling acts for the circus which is a strenuous physical activity that is an essential and regular part of her duties. Maintaining an extremely high level of physical fitness is essential to her job.

Example – deductible expense and private expense

Bill is a police academy physical training instructor. Strenuous physical activity is an essential and regular part of his duties. He regularly attends a commercial gym to ensure that he can perform his specific duties. Bill's fitness expenses for the year include gym fees and the cost of a tracksuit. As Bill's ordinary duties require regular strenuous physical activity, he can deduct his gym fees but not the cost of the tracksuit. The tracksuit is conventional clothing, so the expense is private in nature.
If Bill was a general duties police officer, he wouldn't be entitled to claim a deduction for his gym fees. Although he would have to maintain a standard level of fitness, his role would not involve regular strenuous physical activity. Bill's expenses in these circumstances would be private.

For more information, see:

Taxation Determination TD 93/114 Income tax: is a police officer, who is required to maintain an adequate level of physical fitness in order to undertake police duties, entitled to claim a deduction for fitness related expenditure?

Insurance

Some employment-related insurance policies may be deductible, depending on what the policies cover.

Income protection

You can claim the cost of premiums you pay for insurance against the loss of your employment income. If the policy provides a benefit of an income nature during a period of disability (income protection or continuing salary cover) as well as a capital sum to compensate for injury, only the expense related to the income portion of the policy is deductible. You can't claim a deduction for policies that are taken out through your superannuation where the premiums are deducted from your contributions.

Example – apportioned deduction

Dee takes out an income protection and personal injury policy through her insurer. She pays $250 a month, of which $175 is for the income protection cover and $75 is for the personal injury cover. Dee can claim $175 a month for the insurance policy. The remaining $75 is not deductible, because it is capital in nature.

Professional indemnity insurance

You can deduct the cost of professional indemnity insurance for work-related purposes. If the insurance fee is paid by your employer or later reimbursed, you can't claim the deduction.

Example – professional indemnity insurance not deductible

Ezra is required to have professional indemnity insurance in his role as a financial planner. As part of his salary package, his employer has agreed to pay his insurance each year he is employed at the firm. As Ezra didn't incur the expense, he is unable to claim a deduction.

Interest

You can claim a deduction for interest incurred on money borrowed to pay for work-related expenses. This includes the purchase of tools, equipment and other items or services. You must be able to show that the interest relates specifically to the work-related expenses you have paid for and claimed as a deduction. You can deduct the interest only to the extent that the expenses are deductible.

For more information, see:

For further information on the general principles regarding the deductibility of interest expenses, refer to paragraphs 2 and 3 of Taxation Ruling TR 95/25 Income tax: deductions for interest under section 8-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 following FC of T v. Roberts: FC of T v. Smith
For examples on how to do the calculation, refer to paragraphs 53 to 73 in Taxation Ruling TR 2000/2 Income tax: deductibility of interest on moneys drawn down under line of credit facilities and redraw facilities

Internet expenses

You can claim a deduction for the cost of your internet use to the extent it relates to your employment activities. You need to apportion expenses if you use the internet for work and private purposes. You apportion your use by keeping records showing a detailed usage pattern by you and other members of your household.

Keeping a diary for a 4-week representative period is the easiest way to determine the extent of your deduction. If you don't have a representative period, you will need to keep records for the full year. You can't claim a deduction for installation or set-up costs.

If you used the fixed rate method to claim your working from home expenses, you can't claim a separate deduction for your internet expenses.

For more information, see:

Apportioning work-related expenses
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2001/6 Verification approaches for electronic device usage expenses
Working from home expenses

Example – apportioning internet expenses

Sometimes, Sam works from home connecting to his office via a virtual desktop. He keeps a work diary for a 4-week period and compares it to his data usage on his home internet. Sam calculates his work use percentage on either the time used or download amounts for the work and private use.
Sam chooses to calculate his deduction based on the download amounts. His household uses 240 GB of data in the 4-week period, and Sam calculated that he used 48 GB while he was on work duty. This gives him a work use percentage of:

Data used for work ÷ Total data use = Work use percentage
48 ÷ 240 = 20%

Sam's internet costs $60 per month, so the total claim he could make in a month would be:

Total bill for each month × Work use percentage = Monthly amount to be claimed
$60 × 20% = $12

As Sam took all of December off, he wouldn't be able to claim a deduction for that month, so his total deduction at the end of the year would be:

Monthly amount to be claimed × Number of months = Total claim amount
$12 × 11 = $132

Laundry expenses

You can claim a deduction for the cost of cleaning and maintaining clothing that falls into one or more of the categories of deductible clothing (see Clothing expenses ). You can also deduct laundry expenses for clothing supplied by your employer. If your employer launders your clothing or reimburses you, you can't claim a deduction.

When working out your laundry expenses (including washing, ironing and drying), we consider that a reasonable basis for working out your laundry claim is:

$1 per load if the load is just made up of work-related clothing, or
50c per load if other laundry items are included.

Repair and dry-cleaning expenses are based on the actual cost you incurred for those services.

You don't require written evidence for your laundry expenses (apart from dry-cleaning and repair expenses) if your claim is $150 or less. This is so even if your total claim for work-related expenses is more than $300. However, this $150 substantiation exception doesn't increase the $300 work-related total expenses substantiation exception to $450.

Example – laundry expenses

Jelani is provided with a uniform from her employer which is compulsory for her to wear when she is working. She washes, dries and irons her uniforms in a separate load of washing twice a week. Jelani works 48 weeks during the income year. Her claim of $96 for laundry expenses is worked out as follows:

Number of claimable laundry loads per week × Number of weeks = Total number of claimable laundry loads
2 × 48 = 96

Total number of claimable laundry loads × Reasonable cost per load = Total claim amount
96 × $1 = $96

Jelani also claims $250 in union fees for her job but no other work-related expenses. As her total claim for laundry expenses is under $150 ($96), she doesn't have to provide written evidence of her laundry expenses. As her total claim for work-related expenses is over $300 ($346), Jelani will have to keep written records of her other work expenses (that is, her union fees). Although Jelani isn't required to substantiate her claim for laundry, if asked she will still be required to explain how she calculated her claim.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 98/5 Income tax: calculating and claiming a deduction for laundry expenses
Substantiating laundry expenses

Lunch boxes, travel mugs, coolers and similar

You can't claim a deduction for the cost of items that you use to take your food or drink to work, or use at work, even when travelling overnight for work. These are private expenses.

Example – travel mug

Olivia is a train driver. As the train sways, she uses a travel mug to drink out of while she is driving. Olivia isn't entitled to claim a deduction for the cost of her travel mug. It is a private expense. This would be the case even if Olivia used the travel mug on a shift where she was required to sleep away from home overnight.

Meals (food and drink)

With limited exceptions relating to overnight travel and overtime, the cost of food and drink is private and not deductible.

Example – purchasing food at work

Scarlett works evenings at the candy bar in a movie theatre. She gets a long break on which she buys dinner and she usually buys some peanuts and water to snack on throughout her shift. Scarlett can't claim a deduction for the cost of snacks or her evening meal. The cost of the food and drink she has bought is private and has no relevant connection to her employment activities.

Similarly, you can't claim the cost of a meal purchased when you are going between different jobs.

Example – moving between jobs

Owen is a bank teller. He finishes work at 5:00 pm and commences work at a liquor store at 6:00 pm. Before starting work at his second job, Owen buys an evening meal. The cost of the food and drink is private and has no relevant connection to his employment activities.

You can generally claim the cost of meals you incur when you travel and stay away from your home overnight for work in the course of performing your employment duties.

For more information, see:

Overnight travel expenses
Conferences, seminars and training courses
Taxation Ruling TR 2021/4 Income tax and fringe benefits tax: employees: accommodation and food and drink expenses travel allowances, and living-away-from-home allowances

You may also be able to claim a deduction for the cost of a meal you buy and eat while working overtime.

For more information, see:

Overtime meal expenses

Newspapers and other news services and subscriptions

The cost of newspapers, news services and other news subscriptions are private, and you generally can't claim a deduction for them. The benefits of staying informed on news matters will usually be no more than incidental to your work and the expense too remote from your income earning activities to be deductible.

You can claim a deduction if you can show there is sufficient connection between your specific employment duties and the content of the specific publication. You need to apportion expenses if you use the publication for work and private purposes.

You can also claim a deduction for the cost of buying or subscribing to magazines that have content specifically related to your employment and that aren't general in nature.

Example – newspaper

Judy is a real estate agent who subscribes to the local paper to keep abreast of real estate. As the real estate section only appears in the Wednesday and weekend editions, Judy can claim a portion of the cost of the Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday newspapers.

Example – deductible professional journal

Jason is a civil engineer who subscribes to an engineering technical journal. Jason can claim a deduction as the content specifically relates to his work.

For more information, see:

Pay television and streaming services

Overnight travel expenses

You can claim accommodation (see Accommodation ), meals (see Meals (food and drink) ) and incidental expenses you incur when you travel in the course of performing your employment duties and are required to sleep away from your home overnight for work.

Receiving an allowance from your employer doesn't automatically entitle you to a deduction for overnight travel expenses.

You will generally be travelling away from your home overnight for work in the course of performing your employment duties if:

there is no change to your regular place of work (the usual or normal place where you start and finish your work duties for your employer)
you are away from your home for short periods of time
you stay in short term accommodation, such as a hotel, and
you aren't, and can't be, accompanied by family or visited by family and friends.

Example – attending an interstate meeting

Beth is an executive in a large banking company. She travels from her usual workplace in Melbourne to Sydney for a 3-day meeting with some clients. Beth pays for her flights between Melbourne and Sydney, her hotel and all of the meals she has while she is in Sydney. She also incurs some incidental expenses, including the cost of taxi fares from her hotel to her clients' offices. Beth has receipts for all of these expenses and her employer doesn't reimburse her.
As Beth's regular place of work remains her usual workplace in Melbourne, she is in Sydney for a short period of time and she stays in a hotel, Beth is travelling away from her home overnight in the course of performing her employment duties. As such, Beth can claim a deduction for the cost of her flights, accommodation, meals and incidental expenses.

You won't be travelling away from home overnight for work in the course of performing your employment duties if:

because of your personal circumstances, you live a long way from where you work
you are living at a location where you are working, or
you have relocated.

Example – living a long way from work

Michelle lives in Brisbane with her family but her job is located in Canberra. Early on a Monday morning, Michelle catches a flight to Canberra and on Friday afternoon she returns to Brisbane. On Monday to Thursday nights, Michelle stays in a serviced apartment near her office in Canberra. Michelle's travel to Canberra is explained by her personal circumstances of living in Brisbane while working in Canberra. The expenses Michelle incurs for flights, taxis, accommodation and meals are private and domestic in nature and she can't claim a deduction for them.

Example – living at a location

Maria works in Adelaide and lives close to the office with her family. Maria's employer is setting up an office in Perth and has assigned her to that office for 6 months to assist in establishing it. During the 6-month period, Maria lives close to the Perth office in a 2-bedroom unit, which is big enough to accommodate her family when they visit her. As the Perth office has become her regular place of work and she is staying away from home for a relatively long period in long-term accommodation, Maria is living in Perth for the 6-month period. The expenses Maria incurs for her accommodation and meals while she is working in Perth aren't deductible. They are private and domestic expenses.

For more information, see:

Removal and relocation expenses

Incidental expenses

Incidental expenses are minor but necessary expenses associated with your work-related travel. They might include a car parking fee, a bus ticket or a charge for using the phone or internet for work-related purposes at your overnight accommodation. These are deductible to the extent that your accommodation and meals are deductible.

Apportionment

Only those expenses you incur while travelling for work purposes are deductible. You need to apportion your accommodation, meal and incidental expenses if the travel is for work and private purposes. If you add a few days onto a work trip to visit a relative you can't claim the cost of your transport, accommodation, meals and incidentals during that time.

Substantiation rules

There are special substantiation rules for accommodation, meals and incidental expenses.

For more information, see:

Substantiation requirements

On duty while away from home

Employees who are on duty while sleeping at a workplace near their home, such as a personal carer living on site or an overnight supervisor at a boarding house, aren't sleeping away from home overnight for work. This is also true of employees who choose to sleep near their workplace rather than return home between shifts. Accommodation and meal costs in these instances aren't deductible.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 2021/4 Income tax and fringe benefits tax: employees: accommodation and food and drink expenses travel allowances, and living-away-from-home allowances

Overtime meal expenses

Although meals are a private expense, in limited circumstances meals eaten while working overtime can be deductible. You can claim a deduction for the cost of a meal you buy and eat while working overtime if you receive an overtime meal allowance under an industrial award or enterprise agreement and the allowance is reported on your income statement and declared in your tax return.

An amount for overtime meals that has been folded or included into normal salary or wages (for example, under a workplace agreement) isn't considered to be an overtime meal allowance.

There are special substantiation rules for overtime meals – refer to Substantiating overtime meals .

Example – overtime meal

Moana completes her 8-hour shift and is asked to work for an additional 3 hours. She is given a meal break and paid a meal allowance of $20 under her enterprise bargaining agreement. Moana buys and eats a meal costing her $21 during her overtime. Moana can claim a deduction for $21 as the expenditure on meals she eats while on duty for extended hours is incurred in earning her employment income and is not private in nature.

Example – food consumed after overtime

Michael is asked to work 3 hours overtime after finishing his normal shift. He is given a meal break and paid a meal allowance of $20 under his enterprise agreement. Michael takes his break but doesn't buy any food. After his overtime shift finishes, he buys some food on the way home. Michael can't claim a deduction for this food as he didn't incur the expense as part of earning his assessable income.

Parking fees

You can't claim a deduction for parking expenses that you incur to go to your workplace. This is a private expense.

You can claim a deduction for parking expenses when they relate to a work journey and aren't reimbursed by your employer.

For more information, see:

Transport expenses

Example – non-deductible parking expense

Carissa is an engineer working in the city centre. There is no parking for employees in her building, so Carissa pays for car parking nearby. Carissa can't claim a deduction for the cost of the car parking.

Example – deductible parking expense

Karlyn works for a suburban law firm. She has to rush some legal documents to the court before it closes for the day. Karlyn drives and parks directly in front of the court and pays a fee for parking. Karlyn can claim the cost of the car parking.

Pay television and streaming services

You can't claim a deduction for the cost of pay television or streaming services. This is a private expense.

Example – non-deductible pay television

Glenn is a pilot for a domestic airline. He subscribes to a pay television service that has a real-time weather channel. Glenn checks the weather channel in the morning before flights as he does some preliminary planning for his flights that day. Glenn's employer also supplies weather information to him when he arrives at the airport. He is expected to use the information his employer provides to him in his flight planning.
Glenn can't claim any part of the cost of his pay television subscription as the benefit he gains from the subscription is too remote and the proportion that relates to his work is incidental.

Personal appearance and grooming

Generally, the costs related to personal appearance, including cosmetics or makeup, skin care, shaving products, haircuts, hairdressing and hair products, aren't deductible as they are private expenses. The fact that your employer expects you to maintain certain standards of grooming or pays you an allowance to cover your grooming expenses doesn't make the expense deductible.

Example – cosmetics not deductible

Isabella works as an executive assistant to the managing director of a large international company. She is always required to be well groomed at work and her employer has advised that her presentation will be regularly monitored. In recognition of the importance of grooming to her employer, Isabella is paid a grooming allowance of $50 a week.
Even though Isabella buys cosmetics that she uses solely for work with the allowance she receives, and her employer expects her to be well groomed, she can't claim a deduction. The connection between Isabella's expenditure on cosmetics and her employment activities is insufficient. The character of the cosmetics remains private.

Example – haircuts not deductible

Hugo is in the army and is required to maintain a short hairstyle. Hugo can't claim a deduction for the cost of haircuts, as this is a private expense.

In limited circumstances, there may be sufficient connection between personal appearance expenditure and earning your employment income to make the expenditure deductible.

Example – performer incurring hairdressing and makeup expenses

Johannes is employed to perform in a touring production that runs for 6 months. The role requires him to keep his hair in a short buzz cut and he buys makeup to age his appearance by 20 years. As the makeup and hairdressing expenses have a sufficient connection to the earning of his employment income, Johannes can claim a deduction.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 96/18 Income tax: cosmetics and other personal grooming expenses

Phones, other telecommunication devices and phone usage

You can claim a deduction for the cost of phones and other telecommunication devices if you use the devices for work purposes. If the device cost more than $300, you can only claim its decline in value as a deduction. You can also claim a deduction for the cost of any work-related phone calls or work-related data.

You need to apportion the decline in value and usage expenses if you use your phone or devices for work and private purposes. You can't claim a deduction for installation and set up costs.

If you used the fixed rate method to claim your working from home expenses, you can't claim a separate deduction for the cost of phone calls and data you incur regardless of whether you only use the phone or telecommunication device when you are working from home.

Example – connection expense

Mark is transferring his home phone and internet connection to the National Broadband Network. He must pay a one-off fee for the cost of the modem and connection. He can't claim a deduction for this fee. The expense is capital in nature.

You can't claim a deduction for obtaining or maintaining a silent number. Obtaining and maintaining a silent number preserves anonymity and privacy and is therefore private in nature.

Example – silent number

Hunter is an employee lawyer who works on criminal cases. He maintains a silent home telephone number because he doesn't wish to expose his family to threatening calls. The additional cost of maintaining the silent telephone number isn't deductible. The expense is not incurred in the course of earning his employment income. It is a private expense.

For more information, see:

Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions
Apportioning work-related expenses
Working from home expenses
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2001/6 Verification approaches for electronic device usage expenses

Protective items

This also includes, for example, hardhats, helmets, safety glasses, safety goggles, ear plugs, gloves, face masks or face shields and sanitiser or anti-bacterial spray.

You may be able to claim a deduction for protective items you purchase and use at work. To be deductible both of the following must apply:

you must have incurred the expense yourself.
the expense must have a sufficient connection with the earning of your assessable income, which means

-
you are exposed to the risk of illness or injury in the course of carrying out your income-earning activities
-
the risk is not remote or negligible
-
the protective item is of a kind that provides protection from that risk and would reasonably be expected to be used in the circumstances
-
you use the item in the course of carrying out your income-earning activities.

Example – helmet and safety visor

Wiremu works on a building site. He is required to wear a helmet and safety visor on site and if he doesn't wear them, he is at risk of being injured. There is a connection between the expense he incurred on the helmet and safety visor and the protection the items provide for him during his employment. Wiremu can claim a deduction for the cost of the helmet and safety visor.

Example – non-deductible protective item

Kate is a manager who works in an air-conditioned building. She applies moisturiser to her face and hands while at work. The risk of illness from Kate's work environment is not sufficient to make it necessary for her to use moisturiser to counter that risk. Kate can't claim a deduction as there is no connection between her expenditure and her employment activities.

Removal and relocation expenses

You can't claim a deduction for expenses you incur to transfer to a new work location for an existing job or when taking up a new job. This is the case even if relocating is a condition of your employment. Where you choose to live and the expenses related to it never have a sufficient connection to earning your employment income and remains private or domestic.

Example – relocation due to transfer

Cailyn, a Commonwealth public servant, is transferred by her department from a state office to the central office in Canberra. Cailyn can't claim a deduction for her removal or relocation costs, as the move is private in nature and doesn't have the necessary connection with earning her employment income.

Example – relocation due to promotion

Otto is a regional sales manager for Tasmania. His employer offers him a promotion to become the national sales manager for Australia. A condition of accepting the job is that he moves to the head office in Sydney. Otto isn't able to claim for any of his removal or relocation expenses as his decision to move is private in nature and doesn't have sufficient connection with earning his employment income.

School fees (including university and TAFE fees)

You can't claim a deduction for the cost of educating your children (or any other students), including school fees, university fees and TAFE fees. This has no relevant connection with earning your employment income and is a private expense.

Example – private school fees

Troy, a single father, works 2 jobs so that he can afford private school fees for his twins Yasmine and Jasmine. Troy can't claim a deduction for the school fees. The expense has no connection to Troy's employment income and is private in nature.

For more information, see:

Self-education and study

Self-education and study

Self-education and study include courses undertaken at an educational institution (whether it leads to a formal qualification or not), attendance at work-related conferences or seminars, self-paced learning and study tours.

For more information, see:

Conferences, seminars and training courses

You can claim a deduction for study and self-education expenses you incur when the education or study has a sufficient connection to your current employment activities and it either:

maintains or improves the specific skills or knowledge you need to perform your current employment activities, such as a trainee accountant studying commerce part-time at university
results in, or is likely to result in, an increase in your income from your current employment, such as a lawyer upgrading their Bachelor of Laws to a Master of Laws.

Example – maintains or improves specific skills or knowledge

Cyril is employed as a communications officer at a large company. He enrols in a weekend seminar on emergency communications, which is part of the duties he performs at work. The course deepens his knowledge on communications issues and it directly ties into his day-to-day work activities and is therefore deductible.

Example – doesn't maintain or improve specific skills or knowledge

Brunhilda works at the university computer labs. Her duties consist of mostly making sure the labs are kept tidy, setting up new computers and providing some minor technical support for students. She is studying a Master of Computer Science – Data Science. Even though there is some minor connection between the work she performs and her study, the duties she undertakes with her job and the specific knowledge she gains from her study are unrelated. She can't, therefore, claim a deduction for the costs of obtaining the master's degree.

You can't claim a deduction for self-education or study expenses that:

you incur when you aren't employed
don't have a sufficient connection with your current employment activities, such as undertaking an engineering degree when you are employed as a primary school teacher
relate only in a general way to your current employment or profession, such as undertaking a full-time fashion photography course and working as a casual sales assistant on the weekends, or
may enable you to get employment or change employment, such as moving from employment as a personal care assistant to a nurse or from employment as a nurse to a doctor.

Example – different work activities

Terry works as an orderly in a hospital. He is also studying a Bachelor of Nursing to become a registered nurse. The duties of an orderly are to ensure the wards are kept tidy, to lift and turn patients and transport them in wheelchairs and moveable beds, to make beds and serve food. An orderly doesn't administer medication or maintain medical records for patients.
Terry's employer promises him a job as a registered nurse (which would lead to an increase in pay) if he successfully completes the course. The duties of a registered nurse include assessing and evaluating patients, working in consultation with doctors and specialists to care for patients, maintaining medical records, administering medication and monitoring for side effects and implementing nursing care plans.
While Terry works with nurses when he is carrying out his duties, becoming a registered nurse would significantly change his work activities. When he completes the degree, although he will be engaged with the same employer, he will change jobs and have significantly different responsibilities. He will also enter into a new employment contract.
While the study to become a registered nurse will allow Terry to obtain a new job and increase his income, there isn't a sufficient connection with his current employment as an orderly. Therefore, Terry can't claim a deduction for the expense of his study.

Example – deductible study expense

Renee is employed as a senior manager in a business consulting firm. Her employer offers an increase in pay grade for staff members who gain a Master of Business Administration. Renee enrols in the course and, once she completes it, receives the pay increase. Renee can deduct her self-education expenses as it has led to increased income from her current employment activities.

Expenses you can claim

If your self-education expenses are deductible, you can claim expenses such as course fees , student and amenities fees, textbooks, academic journals and stationery expenses. If any of the assets cost over $300, you may be able to claim the decline in value of the asset. You may also be able to claim your additional running expenses for heating, cooling and lighting if you study at home, but not occupancy expenses.

For more information, see:

Course fees
Working from home expenses
Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions

Travel, meals and accommodation

Meals and accommodation are private in nature and not deductible, except in very limited circumstances. However, if you are required to travel away from home for one or more nights for your self-education, you may be able to claim your transport, meal and accommodation costs.

For more information, see:

Transport expenses
Accommodation
Overnight travel expenses

Example – interstate study travel

Renee is studying her Master of Business Administration at an interstate university. The successful completion of the course will result in an increase in her income from her current employment and her self-education expenses relating to the course are deductible. She completes most of the course online but there are mandatory parts to the course where she needs to attend the university in person.
Renee needs to attend a 4-day workshop to complete a subject. She flies in on the morning of the first day and flies out on the evening of the last day. The cost of the flights, meals and accommodation while she is studying are deductible, as she has had to spend 3 nights away from home.

You may also be able to claim your daily travel from your home to your place of education and back, and from your place of work to your place of education and back.

However, you can't claim the cost of the last leg of your journey if you go from your home to your place of education and then to work, or your place of work to place of education and then home.

Example – daily travel for study

Arjun is a solicitor who is studying his Master of Laws. Arjun has to attend 2 classes each week. One is on Saturday morning and one is on Tuesday afternoon. He drives from home to class on Saturday morning and then drives straight back home. Arjun can claim both trips between home and the university when he attends a class on a Saturday as a self-education expense.
On Tuesdays, Arjun drives to work. He then drives to university and heads home straight after. He would only be able to claim the cost of the trip from work to university on those days.

If you receive a taxable scholarship and you aren't employed by the scholarship provider, you are unable to claim the cost of travel from your home to your normal place of education and back.

It is important to keep records of travel related to self-education.

Course fees

While course fees may be deductible, fees incurred under the Higher Education Contribution Scheme Higher Education Loan Program (HECS-HELP) scheme aren't deductible. HECS-HELP is the Australian Government loan scheme that covers degrees at universities and other higher education providers that offer Commonwealth supported places. These are usually at the undergraduate level.

You can claim a deduction for course or tuition fees paid using a FEE-HELP loan or a VET Student loan (formerly VET-FEE-HELP). However, you can't claim a deduction for any repayments you make (whether compulsory or voluntary) of these loans.

You also can't claim a deduction for repayments you make (whether compulsory or voluntary) to your HECS-HELP loan, Australian Apprenticeship Support Loans (AASL) (formerly Trade Support Loans (TSL)), Student Financial Supplement Scheme (SFSS) loans, Student Start-up Loan (SSL), ABDSTUDY Student Start-up Loans (ABSTUDY SSL), OS-HELP and SA-HELP loans.

With other deductible course fees, you claim the deduction when the debt is incurred, not when the repayment is made. Debts are generally incurred when they become a legal obligation you need to pay back.

Example – when the expense is incurred

Tara enrols in 2 subjects for her Master of Business Administration course. The subjects have a census date of 22 March, meaning if she withdraws prior to that date she doesn't have to pay the course fees. Due to an unexpected increase in her workload, Tara withdraws from one subject on 17 March. On 22 March, Tara incurs the cost of the one subject she is still enrolled in, even though she has deferred payment through the FEE-HELP system. Tara can claim a deduction for one subject at the time it is incurred.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 2024/3 Income tax: deductibility of self-education expenses incurred by an individual

Stationery

You can claim a deduction for the cost of diaries, pens, logbooks or other stationery that has the necessary connection with earning your employment income.

Example – diary

Phillip is a salesperson. His duties require him to meet with several different clients every day. Phillip prefers to keep a paper diary to record his meetings with clients, so he buys one at the start of each year. Phillip is entitled to a deduction for the cost of the diary.

Sunscreen

You can only claim a deduction for the cost of sunscreen if wearing it:

has the necessary connection with earning your employment income, and
protects you from the risk of illness or injury at work because your employment duties require you to spend prolonged periods outdoors.

You need to apportion your expenses for sunscreen if you use it for work and private purposes.

You can't claim a deduction for sunscreen if:

your work doesn't require you to perform your duties in the sun, or
you purchase a cosmetic with added sunblock protection.

If a product is safe and effective as a sunscreen, it is given an Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG ID) number by the Therapeutic Goods Administration, which is displayed on the product as an AUST L or AUST R number.

Any product with an ARTG ID and an AUST L or AUST R number on the label will be accepted as sunscreen. The AUST L or AUST R number is different to the SPF number.

For more information, see:

To find out whether a product has been given an ARTG ID, visit the Therapeutic Goods Administration website

Example – deductible sun protection

Jackie, a teacher, buys a bottle of high-protection sunscreen to wear once a week at the school sports afternoons held outdoors, which she is required to attend. She also wears a sunhat and sunglasses to protect herself from exposure to the sun. She doesn't wear that sunscreen at any other time. Jackie can claim a deduction for the cost of the sunscreen, as well as the sunglasses and sunhat. If Jackie uses the sunglasses and sunhat for private purposes as well, she will have to apportion her deduction for those items.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 2003/16 Income tax: deductibility of protective items

Tolls

You can claim a deduction for tolls you incur when they relate to a work journey.

Example – deductible toll

Kath, an employee hairdresser, is required by her employer to travel from her usual salon to one of their other salons for a meeting. She drives her car and uses a tollway to get to the other salon. Kath can claim a deduction for the cost of the road toll as she is undertaking a work-related journey.

For more information, see:

Car expenses
Transport expenses

Tools and equipment

Purchasing tools and equipment

You can claim a deduction for the cost of tools or equipment if you use them for a work-related purpose. You need to apportion the cost of the tools or equipment if you use them for work and private purposes.

Example – private use of tools

Deric works as an aircraft maintenance engineer and buys a coupler kit to use at work. He also occasionally uses the coupler kit to maintain his personal plane on the weekends. Deric calculates that during the income year, he uses the kit for his personal plane for 10% of the time. He therefore reduces his deduction by this amount.

Tools and equipment are generally depreciating assets. If it is a depreciating asset and it cost you more than $300, or is a part of a set that cost you more than $300, you need to claim a deduction for its decline in value over the effective life of the asset.

For more information, see:

Apportioning work-related expenses
Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions
Depreciating assets

Insuring tools and equipment

You can claim a deduction for the cost of insuring tools and equipment to the extent of their work-related use.

Example – insuring tools

Mark, an employee carpenter, has an extensive collection of tools that he uses solely at work. He has portable and valuable items cover in case his tools are ever lost, damaged or stolen at work. Mark can claim a deduction for the cost of the insurance for the tools.

Repairs to tools and equipment

You can claim a deduction for the cost of repairs to tools and equipment to the extent of their work-related use.

Example – repairs to tools

Rod is a tree lopper. The chainsaw that Rod uses solely for work breaks down and needs to be repaired. Rod can claim the entire cost of repairing the chainsaw.

Transport expenses

This includes, for example, car expenses, flights, taxis, ride-share and ride-sourcing costs and other public transport costs.

You can claim transport expenses when you travel in the course of performing your employment duties. This includes the cost of driving your car, flying or catching a train, taxi or bus.

Home to work travel

You can't claim a deduction for transport expenses incurred in travelling between your home and your regular place of work (the usual or normal place where you start and finish work) as this is a private expense. This doesn't change even if:

you do incidental tasks on the way, such as stop at the post office to collect mail for your employer, or
you work outside usual business hours or are on call.

Example – private travel to work

Tim works at his local cinema. He is often required to work late into the night. The only available bus doesn't operate past 7:00 pm, so Tim has to drive to and from work. The cost of Tim's travel between the cinema and his home isn't deductible as it is private in nature. The expense is incurred to put Tim in the position to earn his employment income.

See more

Trips you can and can't claim
Car expenses
To determine if the vehicle you use is a car, refer to What is a car?
Taxation Ruling TR 2021/1 Income tax: when are deductions allowed for employees' transport expenses?

Bulky tools and equipment

Where the nature of your job creates a practical necessity to transport bulky tools or work equipment by car between home and work, the journey may be a deductible work journey rather than ordinary private travel to and from work. This will only apply if:

the tools or work equipment are essential for the performance of your employment duties
the tools or work equipment are bulky, meaning they are of such large size or weight that transportation by car or other private vehicle is the only realistic option, and
transporting the items between home and work is a practical necessity (for example, there is no appropriate storage for such items at the workplace, or the items need to be transported to a different work site on a subsequent day).

These requirements are necessary for the cost of the trip to be deductible. It won't be sufficient if you transport items merely as a matter of choice. For example, if your employer provides reasonably secure storage, your decision to transport items home will be a matter of choice and not a practical necessity. The cost of the trip won't be deductible.

Example – bulky equipment

Masahito is employed to play double bass in an orchestra. The orchestra plays in a number of locations and he often travels directly from home to the various venues. He practices regularly at home, which is also the only place available to store his instrument when not being used. When the double bass is in its case, it is over 2 m tall and 75 cm wide and is awkward to transport. Masahito can claim a deduction for the car travel between home and his workplaces. The need to transport his cumbersome double bass by car to the different workplaces means that the journeys aren't ordinary home to work travel.

Example – non-bulky tools

Yandi works at a mobile phone repair booth in the shopping mall. There is no room to store her tools at the kiosk, so her employer expects her to bring her tools to and from work. Yandi keeps her tools in a toolbox that is 30 cm by 20 cm by 10 cm. The toolbox is easy to carry in her backpack when she takes it home each day. While there is no place to store the tools and she needs them to do her work, the tools themselves aren't bulky and would not affect the way she travels to and from work. Those journeys still have the character of private home to work travel and the travel expenses wouldn't be deductible.

Example – transport of tools due to personal choice

Marcus is a short-haul truck driver who decides it is important to take his truck repair tool kit with him on every trip. The tool kit needs 2 people to move it and there is nowhere for him to store the tools safely at the home depot. His employer supplies a basic tool kit for minor repairs in each truck and, if the trucks break down, employees must call the duty mechanic to come out and do the repairs. While the tools would be considered bulky and there is no safe space to store them at work, Marcus doesn't require the tools to perform his job. Marcus wouldn't be able to claim a deduction for his travel to work as it is his personal choice to carry tools that aren't relevant to his driving duties. His employment hasn't created a need to transport bulky tools between home and work. The costs of travelling between home and work are private expenses.

Example – secure storage available

Merinda works as a fitter and turner on a mine site. She drives to work every day. Her work depot is surrounded by a fence and people need to go through a security gate in order to enter the premises. There is a building supplied for staff to store their tools when not on duty. The staff have their own personal tool lockers which have combination locks.
Merinda requires a number of tools to do her job, so her toolkit is large and heavy. While there is room to store her toolkit in her work locker, she chooses to take it home every day. Although her toolkit would be considered bulky, Merinda has a secure place to store it at the work depot and it is her personal decision to transport it between home and work each day. Her work has not created a practical need to transport the bulky toolkit between home and work, and so the daily trips to and from work remain ordinary private journeys. She wouldn't be able to claim a deduction for this travel.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 2021/1 Income tax: when are deductions allowed for employees' transport expenses?
Taxation Ruling TR 95/34 Income tax: employees carrying out itinerant work – deductions, allowances and reimbursements for transport expenses.
Taxation Ruling IT 2543 Income tax: transport allowances: deductibility of expenses incurred in travelling between home and work

Itinerant work

If your work is itinerant, you will be entitled to claim a deduction for transport expenses incurred in travelling between home to work. Your work is itinerant if you have shifting places of work. The following factors may indicate you do itinerant work:

travel is a fundamental part of your work
you have a web of workplaces you travel to throughout the day; that is, you have no fixed place of work
you continually travel from one work site to another
you are often uncertain of the location of your worksite
your home is a base of operations – that is, you start work at home and must go to another site to complete it
your employer provides an allowance in recognition of the need to travel between different work sites.

Example – work that is not itinerant

Chloe is a substitute teacher, who travels to different schools when teachers are away. She sometimes attends a school for just one day and at other times for a few weeks. Chloe is not carrying out itinerant work. While she may not know where she is going to teach each day, she will only ever work at one location during the day. She can't claim a deduction for the cost of the transport between home and work.

Example – work that is itinerant

Mitchell works as an apprentice roof tiler and is dispatched to various sites each day. He travels to the first location from his home and returns home at the end of the day from the last site at which he has worked. Mitchell is carrying out itinerant work as he is travelling between sites all day and can claim a deduction for the transport expenses he incurs when he travels between home and work each day.
Mitchell can also claim the cost of his transport to travel between each site during the day. However, if Mitchell only attended one site and worked there for several days until the job was finished, he wouldn't be carrying out itinerant work.

It is important to also note that the travel needs to be fundamentally tied to your employment income. If the travel is merely a matter of convenience for you or the employer, it will still be considered a private expense and therefore not deductible.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 95/34 Income tax: employees carrying out itinerant work – deductions, allowances and reimbursements for transport expenses

Home as a base of employment

Your home may be a base of employment if:

you commenced work at or before the time of leaving home to travel to work, and
the responsibility for completing that work is not discharged until you attend the worksite.

Undertaking the work in 2 locations must be a necessary obligation arising from the nature of your duties, not merely a matter of convenience.

If you do small tasks at home or work at home as a matter of convenience, you can't claim that your home is a base of employment.

Example – home is a base of employment

Tom is the IT Security Director of a data storage company. He is on call 24 hours a day. His employer has installed a secure terminal so he can work from home if he receives a call out of hours. Normally, Tom would provide advice over the phone to the staff on site, and sometimes he would log into the secure terminal at his home to correct the issue.
At times, Tom needs to drive into head office out of hours so he can resolve the issue on site. On those occasions when he starts working from his home terminal but then is required to drive into work to resolve the issue, the transport expenses incurred for this journey are deductible, as his home has become a base of employment. However, his regular daily drive into work isn't deductible.

Example – home is not a base of employment

Una is employed as a copywriter at an advertising agency. She often works from home as it is more convenient for her. Occasionally, she starts the day working at home but drives into the office in the afternoon to meet with her colleagues or check in with her manager. As she chooses to work from home and it isn't generally necessary for her to go to her office, her home isn't a base of employment and the journey to work remains private. She can't claim a deduction for the transport expenses she incurs when travelling from her home to work.

Travel to earn your income

You can claim a deduction for your transport expenses when they are incurred in the course of earning your employment income. This is when:

you travel directly between 2 separate places of employment, as long as one of them is not where you live
you attend work-related conferences or meetings away from your usual workplace
you travel from your regular place of work to an alternative place of work (a place of work you don't regularly work) and back to your regular place of work
you travel to and from your home to an alternative place of work.

Example – regular workplace

Brock works for a large company with 2 offices in Melbourne. He usually works from the city location but occasionally he is required to attend training at the office in Box Hill. Brock can claim a deduction for the cost of driving to and from the Box Hill office as it is an alternative place of work. However, if Brock works from the city location every Monday to Thursday and from the Box Hill office every Friday as a standard arrangement, then the city office is his regular place of work on Monday to Thursday and the Box Hill office is his regular place of work on Friday. Brock can't get a deduction for his travel from home to his regular places of work.

Example – direct travel between two separate workplaces

Ahmit works primarily as a drafter but has another part-time job as a security guard. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, he drives directly from his job as a drafter to his job as a security guard. As the travel is between 2 separate workplaces, he can claim a deduction for that travel.

Example – non-deductible travel

Michelle is a piano teacher who offers lessons from her home after work and on weekends. Monday to Friday she works as a receptionist at the local doctor's surgery. Michelle can't claim a deduction for travel to and from the doctor's surgery, as this is home to work travel, even though she earns income as a piano teacher at home.

For more information, see:

Taxation Ruling TR 2021/1 Income tax: when are deductions allowed for employees' transport expenses?
For car expenses when you undertake self-education, see Self-education and study

Travel

Travel includes transport expenses (refer to Transport expenses ) and overnight travel expenses, being accommodation (refer to Accommodation ), meals (refer to Meals (food and drink) ) and incidental expenses (refer to Overnight travel expenses ).

Union and association fees

You can claim a deduction for the cost of union, trade, business or professional association fees for the industry in which you are employed.

You can also claim up to $42 per income year for each subscription you incur for membership of a trade, business or professional association that is not directly related to the earning of your assessable income.

Example – union fees

Justin is an employee high school teacher in Cairns. He belongs to the Queensland Teachers Union. Each year, Justin pays an amount to the Queensland Teachers Union to be a member. Justin can claim a deduction for the fees he pays.

Example – subscriptions

Michael is an accountant and pays $700 a year for membership of his professional accounting body. He is also studying actuarial science and decides to join that professional body as a student member, which costs $200 per year.
Michael can claim the full amount of $700 for the accounting body membership as that relates to his employment. He can claim $42 of the actuarial professional membership, as it is not related to his employment activity.

Vehicles other than cars

This includes, for example, motorcycles, bikes, bicycles, scooters, trucks, heavy vehicles and buses.

If the vehicle you drive while travelling for work is not a car as defined, you can claim the actual expenses related to your work travel. Vehicles other than cars include motorcycles, a vehicle with greater than one tonne carrying capacity or a van with capacity for 9 or more passengers.

These expenses include fuel, oil, and repair and maintenance costs. You can't claim the purchase of the vehicle but you can claim the decline in value of the vehicle over its effective life.

You need to keep records of all your expenses to prove deductions you claimed, as well as records that show how you have calculated your work-related travel as a percentage of your overall travel. While it is not a requirement to keep a logbook, it is the easiest way to show how you have calculated your work-related use of the vehicle.

Example – claimable expenses

Samid buys a motorcycle that he uses for his work making local deliveries. He also uses his motorcycle when he's not working. To help work out his work-related use he decides to keep a record, similar to a logbook, that shows his work-related and private trips.
Samid's logbook shows he travelled a total of 3,000 km during the income year and, during the 12-week logbook period, he travelled 800 km in total with 600 km being work-related kilometres. He calculates his work-related use percentage as 75%.

Total logbook work-related kilometres ÷ Total logbook kilometres = Work-related use percentage
600 ÷ 800 = 75%

Samid keeps receipts for his expenses. These were for:
Fuel and oil $560
Repair $400
Registration $540
CTP $300
Decline in value $1,800
Total $3,600
Samid multiplies his work-related use percentage by the total expense to get his deduction.

Total expenses × Work-related use percentage = Claimable deduction
$3,600 × 75% = $2,700

For more information, see:

Logbook method

Wages

If you are an employee who earns commission-only income, you may be able to claim a deduction if you pay someone to provide you with services and assistance directly relating to your employment activities. You need to demonstrate that the arrangement is not a private arrangement and that hiring the person allows you to earn additional income from your employment activities.

Example – deductible expense

Claire is employed as a regional wine sales executive and works on a commission-only basis. She hires Jake as an administration support person who works 4 hours a day, 5 days a week. Jake ensures Claire's sales orders are processed and sent to her customers. He also books her appointments with clients and undertakes other administrative tasks. Hiring Jake allows Claire to earn more income from selling wine as she has more time to see potential customers and promote the product she is selling. Claire can claim a deduction for Jake's wages expense as there is a clear connection with her employment activity.

Example – non-deductible expense

Pawel is employed as a computer systems salesperson and he only receives commission income. He pays his son $100 a week to answer the home phone when he isn't around. Pawel doesn't expect his son to be at home at certain times and if he doesn't answer the phone, it will divert to his mobile. He rarely gives his home phone number out to clients. Pawel can't deduct the expense of paying his son as there is no connection between the expense and his employment activities.

If you are paying wages to a relative, a deduction is only available to the extent it is no more than a reasonable payment for the service performed. A reasonable payment is the amount the employee would be expected to pay to an unrelated person who had similar skills and experience in the same role.

Example – overpayment

Verity is employed as a real estate agent on a commission-only basis. She pays her son $50 an hour to deliver advertising leaflets in the region in which she operates. The market rate for such a service is $21 an hour. Therefore, Verity can only claim a deduction of $21 an hour for the wage expenses.

Watches

A deduction isn't allowable for the cost of purchasing or repairing an ordinary wristwatch as the expense is generally considered private or domestic. However, you may be able to deduct the cost of purchasing or repairing a speciality watch that has the necessary connection with your work.

If the watch cost more than $300, you can only claim its decline in value as a deduction.

You need to apportion expenses if you use the watch for work and private purposes

Smart watches

Similarly to ordinary watches, a smart watch (that connects to a phone or other device to provide notifications, apps and GPS, for example) is a private expense and not deductible under ordinary circumstances.

However, if you require some of the smart watch's functions as an essential part of your employment activities you may be able to apportion the expense between your private and work use. In order to show your work-related use of the watch, you will need to keep a diary or similar record of your use of the device for a representative period.

For more information, see:

Phones, other telecommunication devices and phone usage
Apportioning work-related expenses
Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions

Example – specialty watch deductible

Alastair is employed as a nurse. When he started working in a hospital, he bought a nurses' fob watch for $150, which he wears only during work hours. Alastair can't wear a wristwatch at work for hygiene reasons. Alastair can claim a deduction for the expense.

Example – specialty watch apportioned for private use

Bianca works on the police Diving Squad. She buys a diving watch that she uses every day for work. She also uses the watch when she goes diving recreationally. As the watch cost more than $300, she is entitled to claim the decline in value of the watch as a deduction. However, Bianca would need to apportion the decline in value amount between her work and private use and claim only the portion that relates to her work.

Example – ordinary watch not deductible

Carlos is a travelling salesman. He buys a watch so he can make sure he is on time for his appointments. Carlos can't claim a deduction for his expense as it isn't a speciality watch and the expense is private and domestic in nature.

Example – smart watch not deductible

Dianna is a police officer who primarily works on bicycle patrol. As part of her role, she needs to keep GPS records of where she travels. The department has provided her with a GPS for this purpose. Dianna purchases a smart watch so it is easier for her to keep personal GPS records and to check messages sent to her phone while she is on patrol. She receives both private and work-related messages via the smart watch. Dianna can't claim a deduction for the smart watch because her employer provides her with the necessary tools to fulfil her work functions. The ability to check messages on her phone with her watch isn't a part of her employment duties and the cost of the watch is not a deductible expense for her work.

Working dogs

Generally, the cost of acquiring and taking care of dogs or other pets is a private expense. However, if your dog has a necessary connection to earning your employment income, you may be able to claim a deduction for the purchase and care of the dog. Working dogs are trained for their role from a young age and aren't treated like pets.

Example – working dog connected to employment

Greg is a truck driver who exclusively transports cattle. He owns Hamish, an Australian cattle dog, which is a breed developed for droving cattle. Hamish has also been raised and trained as a cattle dog. Greg takes Hamish on his cattle runs and Hamish herds the cattle in and out of the truck. Because of the connection with Greg's employment, he can claim a deduction for the costs incurred with maintaining Hamish to the extent of the work-related use of the dog.

Example – companion dog not connected to employment

Sammy works as a long-haul truck driver who hauls a variety of goods around Australia. She owns Buster, who is an Australian kelpie, a breed that was developed for herding livestock. Sammy takes Buster on her trips as a companion and guard dog, but he is never used for herding livestock. There is no connection between Buster and Sammy's employment and therefore Sammy can't claim a deduction for expenses for Buster's upkeep.

Example – guard dog not connected to employment

Gabby is a police officer who owns a German shepherd as a guard dog for her protection at home. Gabby can't claim a deduction for maintaining the dog as it is a private expense.

Working from home expenses

Working from home expenses may also be referred to as home office expenses.

You can claim the additional running expenses you incur as a result of working from home. This may include heating, cooling, lighting, cleaning and the decline in value of home office furniture and equipment.

Expenses relating to the use or ownership of a home ( occupancy expenses ) are domestic and are generally not deductible. However, in specific cases, some expenses may be allowed as a deduction if there is a sufficient connection with your employment activities.

Example – working from home

Calvin is employed as a software developer by ABC Pty Ltd, a company based in the Melbourne CBD. Calvin lives in a rented property in Geelong and wants to limit his need to commute to the office in the Melbourne CBD. His employer gives him permission to work frequently from home but he needs to come into the office for team meetings and on other days as required.
Calvin sets up a spare room as his work office and he doesn't use it for any other purpose. Calvin would be able to claim additional running expenses in respect of his home office but he wouldn't be able to claim any portion of his rent as it is a cost of maintaining a place to live and is domestic in nature (that is, an occupancy expense).

Example – additional running expenses

Ian occasionally works from home. As Ian has a dedicated room to work from, he is entitled to claim the additional running expenses that he incurs as a result of working from home during the day. This would include the cost of lighting, heating and cooling the room he works in for the time he spends working there.
If Ian had instead worked from his dining room or living room when other family members were present, he would not be entitled to claim a deduction for the running expenses such as the cost of lighting or heating and cooling as he incurs no additional cost as result of working from home in those circumstances.

Running expenses

If you are entitled to claim running expenses, you can claim the work-related portion of the following expenses:

Electricity or gas (energy expenses) for heating, cooling and lighting
cleaning costs (if you have a room set aside as a home office)
computer consumables (such as printer paper and ink), and stationery
home office equipment such as computers, printers, furniture and telephones – for these, you can claim the

-
full cost for items up to $300
-
decline in value for items over $300.

Internet expenses and phone expenses incurred as a direct result of working from home will also be deductible as running expenses.

You can either claim the actual additional running expenses you incurred as a result of working from home or you can use the fixed-rate method to calculate your deduction for running expenses..

Fixed-rate method for running expenses

Instead of calculating and keeping records of all of your actual expenses for heating, cooling, lighting, home and mobile internet expenses, home and mobile phone usage expenses, stationery and computer consumables, you can claim a deduction of 67 cents for every hour you work at home.

To use this method, you must keep a record of the actual hours you spend working at home over the income year along with one record for each of the expenses included in the rate per hour that you incurred. For example, if you incur internet and electricity expenses, keep one bill for each expense. A diary or similar record for a 4-week period that represents your usage over the income year will not be accepted as evidence of the hours you worked from home.

You don't need to have a dedicated work area, such as a home office, that you use when you work from home.

A separate deduction can't be claimed for any expenses included in the rate per hour. For example, if you use your mobile phone while working from home and while working elsewhere, you can't claim a deduction for your other work-related use.

Any additional expenses you incur as a result of working from home which are not covered by the rate per hour, can be claimed as a separate deduction, including:

the decline in value of depreciating assets used while working from home, for example, a desk, laptop computer or mobile phone handset
repairs and maintenance of depreciating assets
the cost of cleaning a separate home office if you have one.

You still need to have documents to substantiate the expenses you claim as a separate deduction.

Example – fixed-rate method

Rosemary keeps a record of the total number of hours she worked from home for the entire 2023–24 income year. This record shows that Rosemary worked from home for a total of 1,236 hours.
Rosemary uses her personal mobile phone, which she purchased for $1,349 on 1 July 2023, while working from home and when she is working at the office. Based on the records that Rosemary kept of use for work and private purposes, she works out her work-related use of the phone is 60%. She also incurs expenditure to heat, cool and light the area she works from.
Rosemary uses a work-supplied computer and her own desk and chair. Rosemary has had her desk and office chair for a period longer than the effective life of those items.
The receipt for the purchase of the mobile phone, a mobile phone bill and an electricity bill have been kept by Rosemary.
Using the fixed-rate method, Rosemary calculates her working from home expenses as follows:

Hours worked × rate per hour = 1,236 hours × 67 cents per hour = $828

Rosemary can't claim a decline in value deduction for her computer because it has been provided by her employer. No deduction for the decline in value of Rosemary's desk and chair can be claimed either because Rosemary has owned them for longer than their effective life and they have completely declined in value. However, Rosemary can claim a deduction for the decline in value of her mobile phone which she calculates using the prime cost method as:

$1,349 × (366 days ÷ 365 days) × (100% ÷ 3 years) = $450 × 60% work-related use = $270

Rosemary's total deduction for working from expenses = $1,098 ($828 + $270).
As Rosemary has used the fixed rate method to claim her working from home expenses, she can't claim a separate deduction for the cost of using her mobile phone for work purposes when she is not working from home.

For more information, see:

Practical Compliance Guideline PCG 2023/1 Claiming a deduction for additional running expenses incurred while working from home – ATO compliance approach
Phones, other telecommunication devices and phone usage
Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions

Actual expenses

You can claim additional running expenses incurred as a result of working from home. If you don't have a dedicated work area, such as a home office, you will generally only incur minimal additional running expenses.

To calculate the cost of lighting and heating or cooling you need to use the following formula:

A × B × C

Where:

A is the cost per unit of power used
B is the average units used per hour
C is the total annual hours the area is used for work-related purposes.

Invoices for cleaning and the purchase of depreciating assets used for work purposes will also be required to claim the actual cost. Only the actual cost of cleaning the dedicated work area can be claimed. If you are claiming a deduction for the decline in value of the depreciating assets, you need to apportion the expenses if you use these assets for work and private purposes.

Occupancy expenses

Generally, you can't claim a deduction for occupancy expenses because they are private and domestic in nature. Occupancy expenses are expenses you pay to own, rent or use your home. They include:

mortgage interest
rent
council and water rates
land taxes
house insurance premiums.

You can only claim a portion of your occupancy expenses if your employer did not provide you with a place of work and all of the following apply:

it is a requirement inherent in the nature of your income-earning activities that you need a place of business
there is no alternative place of business and it is necessary for you to work from home
the area of your home that you use for work is exclusively or almost exclusively used for work purposes.

A place of business is not merely a place where work is done. Whether part of your home is a place of business is determined by considering whether the area is:

clearly identifiable as a place of business
not readily suitable or adaptable for use for private or domestic purposes in association with your home generally
used exclusively or almost exclusively for carrying on a business
used regularly for visits of clients and customers.

None of these characteristics of a place of business is conclusive on its own.

Not being provided a place of work by your employer doesn't always mean that part of your home is a place of business.

If you are entitled to claim occupancy expenses, the amount you can claim as a deduction depends on your individual circumstances. In most cases, the most appropriate method for apportioning your total occupancy expenses is on a floor area basis. If you only meet the criteria above for part of the year, you must also apportion your total occupancy expenses on a time basis.

The calculation is:

Total occupancy expenses × floor area percentage × time used for work purposes

If your mortgage interest expenses are deductible, there will be capital gains tax implications when you sell your home. In particular, you won't be entitled to claim the full main residence exemption for your home. This will be the case regardless of whether you claim a deduction for your mortgage interest expenses in your tax return. This means that if you are entitled to claim interest expenses, but you don't, you still won't be able to claim the full main residence exemption.

Example – deduction for a portion of occupancy expenses

Abdul works for a company who decides to permanently close all their offices. The company still requires Abdul to provide services to their clients, which includes meeting with clients face-to-face and keeping their files secure. When they close his office, Abdul sets aside a room in his house as an office to use when he is working and meeting with clients. His employer provides him with the equipment necessary to fulfil his work functions and they pay for a workplace health and safety check to be done on the room he uses for working at home. Abdul's home address is listed on the employer's website as an address for his employer's company. Abdul doesn't use his office for private purposes and keeps it locked when he is not working. Abdul can claim a deduction for a portion of his occupancy expenses. If Abdul starts working at home part way though the income year, he will have to apportion his expenses on a time basis as well.

For more information, see:

Phones, other telecommunication devices and phone usage
Internet expenses
Decline in value under the capital allowance provisions
Apportioning work-related expenses
Taxation Ruling TR 93/30 Income tax: deductions for home office expenses
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2001/6 Verification approaches for electronic device usage expenses

Amendment history

 

August 2024
Part Comment
Throughout Minor wording changes to improve clarity.
Throughout Updated for accessibility.
Working from home expenses Content updated to incorporate changes made to PCG 2023/1 Claiming a deduction for additional running expenses incurred while working from home – ATO compliance approach.

Content added to running expenses and to occupancy expenses to improve clarity.

Self-education expenses Content updated to incorporate the new name for Trade Support Loans – now Australian Apprenticeship Support Loans.
Phone, other telecommunication devices and phone usage Heading updated to include phone usage as it isn't covered elsewhere. Content updated to include information on work-related phone usage and the inability to claim a separate deduction for phone expenses if working from home expense have been claimed using the fixed-rate method.
Internet expenses Content updated to include information regarding inability to claim a separate deduction for internet expenses if working from home expenses have been claimed using the fixed-rate method.
Conferences, seminars and training courses

Self-education expenses

See more content updated to incorporate TR 2024/3 Income tax: deductibility of self-education expenses incurred by an individual.
Clothing expenses Content updated to correct the name of the Register non-compulsory uniforms are required to be registered on and to clarify when a single item can be registered.
Car expenses Content included under logbook method to incorporate the electric vehicle home charging rate outlined in PCG 2024 /2 Electric vehicle home charging rate – calculating electricity costs when a vehicle is charged at an employee's or individual's home.

 

September 2023
Part Comment
Throughout Minor wording changes to improve clarity
Self-education Information about reducing allowable expenses by $250 removed due to repeal of section 82A of the ITAA 1936.
Working from home Content updated to incorporate the revised fixed-rate method outlined in PCG 2023/1 Claiming a deduction for additional running expenses incurred while working from home – ATO compliance approach.

 

June 2022
Part Comment
Throughout Minor wording changes to improve clarity.
Accommodation Content updated to incorporate ATO view outlined in TR 2021/4 Income tax: employees: accommodation and food and drink expenses travel allowances, and living-away-from-home allowances.
Car expenses – What is a car? Content updated to include an electric car in the definition of a car.
COVID-19 tests Content included on when an employee can claim a deduction for the cost of a COVID-19 test.
Home office expenses Heading changed to 'Working from home expenses' and moved, along with the content, into alphabetical order.
Overnight travel expenses Content updated to incorporate ATO view outlined in TR 2021/4 Income tax: employees: accommodation and food and drink expenses travel allowances, and living-away-from-home allowances.
Protective items – COVID-19 Content updated to clarify when employees can claim a deduction for items purchased and used to protect themselves from COVID-19 while carrying out their employment duties.
Working from home expenses Content included on the limited circumstances when an employee can claim occupancy expenses.

 

February 2021
Part Comment
Gym fees and fitness-related expenses Content amended to clearly set out the ATO view, which is outlined in Taxation Determination TD 93/114 Income tax: is a police officer, who is required to maintain an adequate level of physical fitness in order to undertake police duties, entitled to claim a deduction for fitness related expenditure?, regarding gym clothes and other items of conventional clothing and footwear used in the course of keeping fit.

 

August 2020
Part Comment
Introduction Reference added to TR 2020/1.
Home office expenses Detail of shortcut method available to calculate running expenses for a defined period of time relating to COVID-19 added.

Additional example showing operation of the shortcut method included.

Protective items Detail relevant to potential items purchased as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic added.
Sunscreen Updated to include detail in relation to the ARTG ID.
Throughout Minor wording changes to improve clarity.

References

Employees guide for work expenses
  Date: Version:
  1 July 2018 Updated document
  6 August 2020 Updated document
  23 February 2021 Updated document
  29 June 2022 Updated document
  6 September 2023 Updated document
You are here 21 August 2024 Current document

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