Excise duty rates for tobacco

Rate Indexation

Excise duty rates on tobacco goods increase in March and September each year under the law, based on average weekly ordinary time earnings (AWOTE). The AWOTE indexation factor for rates on and from 1 September 2024 is 1.018.

In addition to ordinary indexation, tobacco excise and excise-equivalent customs duty will increase by an additional 5% per year for three years starting 1 September 2023.

There will also be an alignment of the tax treatment of tobacco products subject to the per kilogram excise and excise-equivalent customs duty (such as roll-your-own tobacco) with the manufactured per-stick rate, by progressively lowering the ‘equivalisation weight’ from 0.7 to 0.6 grams.

These progressive decreases will occur on 1 September each year from 2023, with the new weight coming fully into effect from 1 September 2026. This will raise the per kilogram duty accordingly.

Manufactured in Australia

Currently, there is no legal tobacco manufacturing occurring in Australia. If there were, the following tobacco excise rates would apply.

Imported into Australia

When manufactured tobacco goods are imported into Australia, they are subject to customs duty. This duty is:

  • Paid at the time the products arrive at the Australian border.
  • Equivalent to the following tobacco excise rates.

Tobacco Excise Rates

The following are the current rates for:

  • Tobacco manufacture occurring in Australia.
  • Manufactured tobacco goods imported into Australia.

Tobacco Rates – Tobacco, Cigars, Cigarettes, and Snuff

Tariff ItemDescriptionUnitFrom 1 March 2024 to 31 August 2024From 1 September 2024
5.1In stick form not exceeding in weight 0.8 grams per stick actual tobacco content$ per stick1.278161.36623
5.5Either:
Not in stick form

In stick form exceeding in weight 0.8 grams per stick actual tobacco content
$ per kg of tobacco content1893.572101.89
5.8Blended tobacco goodsN/AThe amount of duty worked out under section 6AACThe amount of duty worked out under section 6AAC
Source: Australian Taxation Office (ATO)

Please note: Many of the comments in this publication are general in nature and anyone intending to apply the information to practical circumstances should seek professional advice to independently verify their interpretation and the information’s applicability to their particular circumstances.

Lily Zhang is the founder and principal accountant of Wiselink Accountants, a CPA-qualified accounting and tax agency based in Melbourne (Camberwell) and Brisbane (Eight Mile Plains). With more than 10 years of experience in Australian taxation and business advisory, Lily has helped over 500 small businesses, sole traders and individual taxpayers across both cities. She is a member of CPA Australia and the National Tax & Accountants' Association (NTAA), and Wiselink is a registered tax agent and ASIC-registered agent, as well as a Xero, MYOB and QuickBooks Partner. Lily works in both English and Mandarin, and writes regularly on Australian tax, EOFY planning, payroll, superannuation, SMSF and small-business strategy.

Related Posts

墨尔本与布里斯班郊区现代住宅外观,象征澳洲投资房 EOFY 报税与省税

29

May
All Topics, Business Solutions, Chinese Post, English Post, Finance Services

澳洲投资房 EOFY 2026 报税省税完全攻略:墨尔本与布里斯班华人房东必看(折旧、利息、维修、新负扣税衔接)

EOFY 2026 投资房报税实操指南:今年能抵什么、6/30 前还能做的 4 个动作、维修 vs 改造的关键边界、Division 40/43 折旧、新负扣税规则下房东的功课,以及华人房东常踩的 5 个坑。Lily Zhang CPA 撰。