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myTax 2018 Other foreign income

How to report attributed personal services income when you lodge your return using myTax.

Last updated 27 June 2018

Other foreign income includes:

For more information, see You need to know or use the left hand side table of contents.

MyTax will ask you to indicate the type of other foreign income. When you indicate the type is:

  • Foreign rental income, myTax will use this amount to calculate any Net rental property loss in the Income tests section.
  • Other foreign income from a financial investment, myTax will use this amount to calculate any Net financial investment loss in the Income tests section.

Do not show at this section

Do not show at this section a capital gain or capital loss from a foreign source; Capital gains or losses deals with these amounts (the amount of any foreign income tax offset may include amounts of foreign tax paid in respect of a capital gain from a foreign source).

Depreciation and capital allowances tool

You can use the Depreciation and capital allowances tool to work out any deductible decline in value or any balancing adjustments associated with other foreign income. To access the tool, select the 'Work it out' link in the Deductions section on the Prepare return screen.

Completing this section

You will need distribution advices from companies, partnerships and trusts and details of expenses you incurred in earning your foreign income.

All foreign income, deductions and foreign tax paid must be converted to Australian dollars before you complete this section. You can use the Foreign income conversion calculatorThis link opens in a new window.

  1. For each other foreign income source, select Add.
  2. Indicate the other foreign income Type and enter information into the corresponding fields.
    1. At Gross income: include any assessable foreign income (including foreign tax on that income) that you have not already shown on your tax return. Foreign tax includes any New Zealand non-resident withholding tax.
    2. At Deductible expenses: include any deductible expenses that you incurred in earning your other foreign income, excluding any debt deductions such as interest and borrowing costs. For more information, see debt deductions.
      Note: If you used the Depreciation and capital allowances tool, fields containing information from the tool cannot be directly adjusted in myTax. To make any adjustments to this information, or to add new assets to the tool, select Work it out.
  3. Select Save.
  4. If you haven't already done so, answer the question During the year did you have an interest - direct or indirect - in overseas assets worth AUD$50,000 or more?
  5. Select Save and continue.

At any time during 2017–18, did you own or have an interest in assets located outside Australia that had a total value of AUS$50,000 or more?

Assets include real estate, shares in companies and other entities, interests in partnerships or trusts, businesses, debentures, bonds, money and funds held in accounts or by other parties, loans to other parties and deposits. They also include intangible property such as trademarks, copyrights, patents, debtors or 'equitable choses in action'.

Your assets include any interest, whether legal or beneficial, and whether held directly or indirectly through one or more interposed entities.

If all the assets you held overseas are covered under Foreign entities your answer to this question is No. Otherwise read on.

Determine the value of all your overseas assets, whether tangible or intangible, and whether or not you received any income from those assets during 2017–18. Use:

  • the historical cost or market value, whichever is greater
  • the exchange rate at 30 June 2018 to convert the value of the assets to Australian dollars or, if you disposed of the assets during the year, the exchange rate at the time of disposal.

Answer Yes if the value of your overseas assets was AUD$50,000 or more.

You need to know

Australian resident

If you received income from overseas, you must show your assessable foreign income here, even if tax was taken out of the income in the foreign country.

You can 'receive income' even if it is held overseas for you.

Foreign income that is exempt from Australian tax may still be taken into account to work out the amount of tax you have to pay on your other income.

If you received a lump sum payment from a foreign superannuation fund, phone 13 10 20. Some of these payments are taxable and some are exempt from Australian tax.

You must show the following amounts at this section:

  • an assessable dividend (or non-share dividend) from a New Zealand franking company and any attached Australian franking credits
  • a supplementary dividend from a New Zealand franking company
  • an assessable distribution from a trust or partnership (or share of a partnership loss) that includes Australian franking credits attached to a dividend (or non-share dividend) from a New Zealand franking company.

A dividend from a New Zealand franking company may also carry New Zealand imputation credits. An Australian resident cannot claim any New Zealand imputation credits on an Australian tax return.

Foreign rental income

Make sure when calculating your rental income to add back any foreign tax that was taken out.

When you enter the deductible expenses that you incurred in earning your foreign rental income, exclude any debt deductions.

Debt deductions, such as interest and borrowing costs, are not deductible for the purposes of this calculation unless they are related to income earned through a permanent establishment in an overseas country. If you incurred debt deductions in earning your foreign rental income and the deductions are not attributable to an overseas permanent establishment, see Other deductions.

Foreign superannuation lump sums

This relates to you if you:

  • received a lump sum payment from a foreign superannuation fund, or
  • transferred a lump sum from a foreign superannuation fund to an Australian superannuation fund.

This does not apply to transfers of lump sums from one foreign superannuation fund to another foreign superannuation fund.

A lump sum payment from a foreign superannuation fund may be tax-free if you receive it within six months:

  • after you become an Australian resident, or
  • after you terminate your foreign employment.

To determine whether the lump sum payment you received is tax-free, see Super lump sums from a foreign super fund.

If your lump sum payment is tax-free, do not show it anywhere on your tax return.

If your lump sum payment is not tax-free, then you need to show on your tax return the amount of the lump sum that relates to your applicable fund earnings. In general terms, applicable fund earnings are the earnings on your foreign super interest which have accrued while you were an Australian resident.

However, you do not need to show your applicable fund earnings on your tax return if:

  • all of your lump sum is paid into an Australian complying superannuation fund
  • after the lump sum is paid, you no longer have an interest in the foreign superannuation fund, and
  • you make a choice to have all of your applicable fund earnings included in the assessable income of your Australian superannuation fund. Your choice must be in writing and provided to your superannuation fund.

If you make a choice to have only part of your applicable fund earnings included in the assessable income of your Australian superannuation fund, you need to include the remainder on your tax return.

For more information on the tax treatment of foreign fund transfers, see:

For more information, phone 13 10 20.

Other foreign source income

This relates to you if you received any other foreign source income, including:

  • interest, royalties or dividends
  • income from carrying on a business wholly or partly overseas
  • any other foreign income.

Include at this section dividends you received from a New Zealand franking company (including non-share dividends).

Include at this section any supplementary dividends you received from a New Zealand franking company. Also include any dividend (or non-share dividend) income from a New Zealand franking company that you received or became entitled to during 2017–18 through a partnership or a trust.

If you have any Australian franking credits from a New Zealand franking company that you received directly or indirectly through a trust or partnership, see Working out your Australian franking credits from a New Zealand franking company.

If you have paid foreign tax on an attribution account payment (usually a dividend distribution) you received that was paid out of previously attributed income and that payment is non-assessable non-exempt income (tax-free income), you do not include this income anywhere on your tax return.

If you received a payment from a foreign source on termination of your foreign employment, and it is not an employment termination payment or a foreign termination payment, and the payment was not shown on a PAYG payment summary - individual non-business or PAYG payment summary - foreign employment, include the payment at this section.

If any part of your amount at this section relates to a business activity that has made a loss, and the activity was not also carried on in Australia, see Loss details. If the business activity was carried on partly overseas and partly in Australia, phone 13 28 66 for assistance.

Debt deductions

Debt deductions, such as interest and borrowing costs, are not deductible for the purposes of this calculation unless they are related to income earned through a permanent establishment in an overseas country. If you incurred debt deductions in earning your foreign income and the deductions are not attributable to an overseas permanent establishment, see Other deductions.

Working out your Australian franking credits from a New Zealand franking company

Include amounts of Australian franking credits from a New Zealand franking company that you are entitled to, whether:

  • directly by way of franked dividends or franked non-share dividends paid to you by the company, or
  • indirectly through a trust or partnership.

Do not include:

  • New Zealand imputation credits
  • Australian franking credits you received from an Australian company. Show these amounts at either Dividends, Partnerships or Trusts.
  • Australian franking credits that you are not entitled to (for example, because the dividend, non-share dividend, or income from the trust or partnership is exempt, or because you fail the holding period rule or trigger the related payments rule).

See also

The amount of Australian franking credits you would otherwise be entitled to is reduced if:

  • you received a dividend (or non-share dividend) from a New Zealand franking company with Australian franking credits attached
  • you received a supplementary dividend from the New Zealand franking company (either directly, or indirectly through a partnership or trust) that was paid in connection with the franked dividend, and
  • you are entitled to a foreign income tax offset because of the inclusion of the franked dividend in your assessable income.

The amount of the reduction is the amount of the supplementary dividend (or your share of the supplementary dividend if you received it indirectly through a trust or partnership).

Small business income tax offset

If any amount included is net income from a small business entity, you may be entitled to the small business income tax offset. For more information, see Small business income tax offset.

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