ATO’s notice of government payments data-matching program
The ATO will acquire government payments data from government entities which administer government programs for the 2024 to 2026 income years, matching data on government payments made to service providers against ATO records, including service provider identification details and payment transaction details.
The ATO estimates that records relating to approximately 60,000 service providers will be obtained each financial year, including approximately 9,000 individuals, with the remainder consisting of companies, partnerships, trusts and government entities.
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FBT on plug-in hybrid electric vehicles
From 1 April 2025, a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle (‘PHEV’) will not be considered a zero or low emissions vehicle under fringe benefits tax (‘FBT’) law and will not be eligible for the electric car FBT exemption. However, an employer can continue to apply the electric car exemption if:
use of the PHEV was exempt from FBT before 1 April 2025; and they have a financially binding commitment to continue providing private use of the vehicle to an employee or their associate on and after 1 April 2025 (note that any optional extension of the agreement is not considered binding).
If there is a change to a pre-existing commitment on or after 1 April 2025, the FBT exemption for the PHEV will no longer apply from the date of that new commitment.
An employer is not entitled to an exemption from FBT after 1 April 2025 if there was no binding financial commitment to provide the car to a particular employee in place before then.
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Eligibility for compassionate release of superannuation
The ATO has been responsible for the administration of the early release of superannuation on compassionate grounds since 1 July 2018.
It will only approve a release of superannuation on compassionate grounds if the applicant meets all the conditions set out in the regulations, including that the applicant has no other means to pay the expenses.
The five main grounds of eligibility are:
- medical treatment or transport (i.e., to treat a life-threatening illness or injury, or alleviate acute or chronic pain or mental illness) for the applicant or their dependant;
- accommodating a disability for the applicant or their dependant;
- palliative care for a terminal illness for the applicant or their dependant;
- funeral expenses for a dependant of the applicant; or
- preventing foreclosure or forced sale of the applicant’s home.
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AAT rejects taxpayer’s claims for work-related expenses
In a recent decision, a taxpayer’s claims for various work-related expenses were rejected by the AAT.
The taxpayer was employed as a traffic controller in the 2020 income year. In his income tax return for that year he claimed $9,800 in work-related deductions, including for car expenses (using the cents per km method), travel expenses, clothing expenses and self-education expenses, as well as supplemental deductions.
The ATO disallowed all of the deductions, and the taxpayer then appealed to the AAT.
The AAT agreed that all of the taxpayer’s claims for work-related expenses should be disallowed, largely because the taxpayer failed to substantiate these expenses, whether by way of receipts/bank statements or any other form of evidence.
Also, in relation to the claim for car expenses, the AAT noted that the taxpayer had been using company vehicles at least some of the time.
The AAT also noted that there had generally been “no attempt to apportion work use against private use. . . Even if I could satisfy myself of some apportionment, the amount would likely be so insignificant that it would not result in any real deduction in taxable income.”