Draft guidelines for community charities operating as DGRs

Treasury recently released draft guidelines setting out the proposed rules which community charities must follow to receive and maintain deductible gift recipient (‘DGR’) endorsement.

The draft guidelines state that a community charity must be established, maintained and wound up in accordance with each of the following principles:

  • it is a community charity;
  • it is philanthropic in character;
  • it is a vehicle for philanthropy; and
  • it seeks to comply with all relevant laws and obligations, and it is open, transparent and accountable to the public (through the ATO and, as a registered charity, to the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (‘ACNC’)).

Community charities are also required to follow various other requirements in the draft guidelines. Among other things, a community charity’s governing rules must include objects that clearly set out the purposes of the charity, and require that, on the charity winding up or ceasing to be a community charity, all of its net assets must be provided to a DGR in accordance with the purposes of the charity.

The guidelines are to take effect the day after they have been finalized and registered.

Ref: Taxation Administration (Community Charity) Guidelines 2024

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Can staff celebrations attract FBT?

With the holiday season coming up, employers may be planning to celebrate with their employees (including not-for-profit organizations with paid employees).

Before they hire a restaurant or book an event, employers should make sure to work out if the benefits they provide their employees are considered entertainment-related, and therefore subject to fringe benefits tax (‘FBT’). This will depend on:

  • the amount they spend on each employee;
  • when and where the celebration is held;
  • who attends — is it just employees, or are partners, clients or suppliers also invited?; and
  • the value and type of gifts they provide.

Employers who do provide entertainment-related fringe benefits should keep records detailing all of this information so they can calculate their taxable value for FBT purposes.

The ATO is recommending that employers “get on top of how FBT works before you provide perks and extras. Otherwise, you may end up with an unexpected FBT liability.”

Taxpayers can refer to ‘FBT and entertainment for not-for-profit organisations’ on the ATO’s website for further information in this regard.

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Beware of scams regarding the new ‘myID’

The Australian Government’s Digital ID app ‘myGovID’ is now called ‘myID’. The updated app is now being rolled out in app stores.

ATO Assistant Commissioner Rob Thomson said while the myID name is new and may look different, users will use it the same way to securely access more than 150 participating government online services.

The ATO reminds the community to watch out for scammers seeking to take advantage of the name change. The ATO is seeing various impersonation scams designed to steal personal information, including myGov sign in credentials.

To protect themselves, taxpayers should note the following:

They should not click on suspicious links, open attachments or download any files from suspicious emails or SMSs. The ATO will never send an unsolicited SMS that contains a hyperlink.

As the ATO transitions from myGovID to myID, taxpayers do not need to set up a new myID or reconfirm their details. If they have been prompted to go to a website to do so, this is a scam.

Taxpayers should only download the myID app from the official app stores (Google Play and the App Store) and ensure they turn on notifications, so they are notified when accessing online services.

Taxpayers should never share, or enter their login code, for anyone.

Taxpayers who suspect any suspicious activity on their myID should report it immediately to the myID support line on 1300 287 539 or visit the myID website.

Ref: ATO media release, ‘myGovID is now called myID’, 13 November 2024

Related Posts

06

Jun
Chinese Post, Practice  Update

企业与个人纳税人须知的最新ATO合规动态

随着本财年接近尾声,澳大利亚税务局(ATO)发布了多项重要更新与提醒,内容涉及个人纳税人、小型企业主及网约车服务提供者。本期要点涵盖了工作相关支出的扣除规定、合规义务、即时资产扣除政策,以及关于退休金提取年龄的澄清。以下为重点内容摘要: ATO驳回“离谱”工作支出扣除申报 ATO指出,近期部分纳税人试图将日常私人消费错误申报为工作相关支出,具体案例包括: 以上申报均被拒绝,因其本质属于私人用途。ATO重申,任何扣除申报必须与收入获取直接相关,并具备相应的记录支持 2024/25年度 2万澳元即时资产扣除政策 年营业额不超过1,000万澳元并采用简化折旧规则的小型企业,可立即扣除每项低于2万澳元的合资格资产的全额成本。关键要点如下: 该政策旨在提升小型企业现金流,简化资本支出报告流程。企业需保留采购凭证,并仅就商业用途部分进行申报。 网约车与交通服务提供者的GST义务 ATO提醒所有提供出租车、豪华车及网约车(如Uber、DiDi)服务的经营者:无论营业额高低,均需强制注册商品及服务税(GST)。相关义务包括: 未按规定注册或申报的,将面临罚款与利息等处罚。 创业人士需关注的七项重点事项 ATO为新企业主发布了“七项重点提醒”,包括: 关于退休金提取年龄的澄清说明 鉴于近期网络上出现大量关于退休金政策的虚假信息,ATO已明确表示:退休金的最早提取年龄未发生变更。对于1964年7月1日及之后出生的个人,其最早可提取养老金的年龄仍为60岁。 ATO提醒公众,应通过权威官方渠道核实相关政策变更,必要时寻求合资格专业人士的指导。 因严重经济困难获部分减免税务债务的案例 在一项由行政复审法庭(ART)作出的最新裁决中,一名累计税务欠款超过52.8万澳元的纳税人,因严重经济困难获准减免部分债务。该债务主要源自其因工受伤后连续多年领取的应税收入保障保险金。 尽管该纳税人存在不良合规记录,ART仍考虑到其经济状况、健康问题及还款能力,决定将应缴税款减至25万澳元。 该案例说明,面对复杂的税务压力,及早寻求专业支持至关重要。 参考: 澳大利亚税务局网站 如果您需要更多信息, 请联系信元会计师事务所

06

Jun
English Post, Practice  Update

ATO Compliance Updates for Business and Individuals

As the end of financial year approaches, the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) has released several important updates and reminders relevant to individuals, small business owners, and ride-sourcing service providers. This month’s key developments include clarification on deduction rules, compliance obligations, asset write-off measures, and superannuation preservation age. Below is a summary of the most critical points. ATO Denies “Wild” Work-Related Deduction Claims The ATO has highlighted a number of unreasonable tax deduction claims submitted by individuals attempting to categorise personal purchases as work-related expenses. Examples include: All of these claims were rejected, as they relate to personal use rather than genuine work-related expenses. The ATO reiterates that taxpayers must ensure any claim is directly tied to income generation, and must[…]