Contents
Chapter 1—Introduction 1
Part 1‑1—Preliminary 1
Division 1—Preliminary 1
1‑1......... Short title [see Note 1]........................................................................ 1
1‑2......... Commencement................................................................................... 1
1‑3......... Commonwealth‑State financial relations............................................. 1
1‑4......... States and Territories are bound by the GST law................................ 1
Part 1‑2—Using this Act 2
Division 2—Overview of the GST legislation 2
2‑1......... What this Act is about......................................................................... 2
2‑5......... The basic rules (Chapter 2)................................................................. 2
2‑10....... The exemptions (Chapter 3)................................................................ 2
2‑15....... The special rules (Chapter 4)............................................................... 3
2‑20....... Miscellaneous (Chapter 5).................................................................. 3
2‑25....... Interpretative provisions (Chapter 6)................................................... 3
2‑30....... Administration, collection and recovery provisions in the Taxation Administration Act 1953 3
Division 3—Defined terms 4
3‑1......... When defined terms are identified....................................................... 4
3‑5......... When terms are not identified.............................................................. 4
3‑10....... Identifying the defined term in a definition.......................................... 5
Division 4—Status of Guides and other non‑operative material 6
4‑1......... Non‑operative material........................................................................ 6
4‑5......... Explanatory sections........................................................................... 6
4‑10....... Other material...................................................................................... 6
Chapter 2—The basic rules 7
Division 5—Introduction 7
5‑1......... What this Chapter is about.................................................................. 7
5‑5......... The structure of this Chapter............................................................... 7
Part 2‑1—The central provisions 9
Division 7—The central provisions 9
7‑1......... GST and input tax credits.................................................................... 9
7‑5......... Net amounts........................................................................................ 9
7‑10....... Tax periods......................................................................................... 9
7‑15....... Payments and refunds......................................................................... 9
Part 2‑2—Supplies and acquisitions 10
Division 9—Taxable supplies 10
9‑1......... What this Division is about............................................................... 10
Subdivision 9‑A—What are taxable supplies? 10
9‑5......... Taxable supplies................................................................................ 10
9‑10....... Meaning of supply............................................................................ 10
9‑15....... Consideration.................................................................................... 11
9‑17....... Certain payments and other things not consideration........................ 12
9‑20....... Enterprises........................................................................................ 13
9‑25....... Supplies connected with Australia.................................................... 15
9‑30....... Supplies that are GST‑free or input taxed......................................... 16
9‑39....... Special rules relating to taxable supplies........................................... 17
Subdivision 9‑B—Who is liable for GST on taxable supplies? 18
9‑40....... Liability for GST on taxable supplies................................................ 18
9‑69....... Special rules relating to liability for GST on taxable supplies........... 18
Subdivision 9‑C—How much GST is payable on taxable supplies? 19
9‑70....... The amount of GST on taxable supplies........................................... 19
9‑75....... The value of taxable supplies............................................................ 19
9‑80....... The value of taxable supplies that are partly GST‑free or input taxed 21
9‑85....... Value of taxable supplies to be expressed in Australian currency..... 21
9‑90....... Rounding of amounts of GST........................................................... 22
9‑99....... Special rules relating to the amount of GST on taxable supplies....... 24
Division 11—Creditable acquisitions 25
11‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 25
11‑5....... What is a creditable acquisition?........................................................ 25
11‑10..... Meaning of acquisition..................................................................... 25
11‑15..... Meaning of creditable purpose......................................................... 26
11‑20..... Who is entitled to input tax credits for creditable acquisitions?......... 27
11‑25..... How much are the input tax credits for creditable acquisitions?........ 27
11‑30..... Acquisitions that are partly creditable................................................ 27
11‑99..... Special rules relating to acquisitions.................................................. 28
Part 2‑3—Importations 30
Division 13—Taxable importations 30
13‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 30
13‑5....... What are taxable importations?.......................................................... 30
13‑10..... Meaning of non‑taxable importation................................................ 30
13‑15..... Who is liable for GST on taxable importations?................................ 31
13‑20..... How much GST is payable on taxable importations?........................ 31
13‑25..... The value of taxable importations that are partly non‑taxable importations 32
13‑99..... Special rules relating to taxable importations..................................... 32
Division 15—Creditable importations 34
15‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 34
15‑5....... What are creditable importations?...................................................... 34
15‑10..... Meaning of creditable purpose......................................................... 34
15‑15..... Who is entitled to input tax credits for creditable importations?........ 35
15‑20..... How much are the input tax credits for creditable importations?....... 35
15‑25..... Importations that are partly creditable................................................ 35
15‑99..... Special rules relating to creditable importations................................. 36
Part 2‑4—Net amounts and adjustments 37
Division 17—Net amounts and adjustments 37
17‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 37
17‑5....... Net amounts...................................................................................... 37
17‑10..... Adjustments...................................................................................... 38
17‑15..... Working out net amounts using approved forms.............................. 38
17‑20..... Determinations relating to how to work out net amounts.................. 38
17‑99..... Special rules relating to net amounts or adjustments......................... 39
Division 19—Adjustment events 41
19‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 41
19‑5....... Explanation of the effect of adjustment events.................................. 41
Subdivision 19‑A—Adjustment events 42
19‑10..... Adjustment events............................................................................. 42
Subdivision 19‑B—Adjustments for supplies 43
19‑40..... Where adjustments for supplies arise................................................ 43
19‑45..... Previously attributed GST amounts.................................................. 44
19‑50..... Increasing adjustments for supplies.................................................. 44
19‑55..... Decreasing adjustments for supplies................................................. 44
Subdivision 19‑C—Adjustments for acquisitions 44
19‑70..... Where adjustments for acquisitions arise.......................................... 44
19‑75..... Previously attributed input tax credit amounts................................... 45
19‑80..... Increasing adjustments for acquisitions............................................. 45
19‑85..... Decreasing adjustments for acquisitions........................................... 46
19‑99..... Special rules relating to adjustment events........................................ 46
Division 21—Bad debts 47
21‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 47
21‑5....... Writing off bad debts (taxable supplies)............................................ 47
21‑10..... Recovering amounts previously written off (taxable supplies).......... 47
21‑15..... Bad debts written off (creditable acquisitions).................................. 48
21‑20..... Recovering amounts previously written off (creditable acquisitions) 48
21‑99..... Special rules relating to adjustments for bad debts............................ 49
Part 2‑5—Registration 50
Division 23—Who is required to be registered and who may be registered 50
23‑1....... Explanation of Division.................................................................... 50
23‑5....... Who is required to be registered........................................................ 50
23‑10..... Who may be registered...................................................................... 51
23‑15..... The registration turnover threshold................................................... 51
23‑99..... Special rules relating to who is required to be registered or who may be registered 51
Division 25—How you become registered, and how your registration can be cancelled 52
Subdivision 25‑A—How you become registered 52
25‑1....... When you must apply for registration............................................... 52
25‑5....... When the Commissioner must register you....................................... 52
25‑10..... The date of effect of your registration............................................... 53
25‑15..... Effect of backdating your registration............................................... 53
25‑49..... Special rules relating to registration................................................... 54
Subdivision 25‑B—How your registration can be cancelled 54
25‑50..... When you must apply for cancellation of registration....................... 54
25‑55..... When the Commissioner must cancel registration............................. 55
25‑57..... When the Commissioner may cancel your registration...................... 55
25‑60..... The date of effect of your cancellation............................................... 56
25‑65..... Effect of backdating your cancellation of registration........................ 56
25‑99..... Special rules relating to cancellation of registration........................... 57
Part 2‑6—Tax periods 58
Division 27—How to work out the tax periods that apply to you 58
27‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 58
27‑5....... General rule—3 month tax periods................................................... 58
27‑10..... Election of one month tax periods..................................................... 58
27‑15..... Determination of one month tax periods........................................... 58
27‑20..... Withdrawing elections of one month tax periods.............................. 59
27‑22..... Revoking elections of one month tax periods.................................... 60
27‑25..... Revoking determinations of one month tax periods.......................... 60
27‑30..... Tax periods determined by the Commissioner to take account of changes in tax periods 61
27‑35..... Changing the days on which your tax periods end............................ 61
27‑37..... Special determination of tax periods on request................................ 62
27‑38..... Revoking special determination of tax periods.................................. 62
27‑39..... Tax periods of incapacitated entities.................................................. 63
27‑40..... An entity’s concluding tax period..................................................... 63
27‑99..... Special rules relating to tax periods................................................... 64
Division 29—What is attributable to tax periods 65
29‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 65
Subdivision 29‑A—The attribution rules 65
29‑5....... Attributing the GST on your taxable supplies................................... 65
29‑10..... Attributing the input tax credits for your creditable acquisitions....... 66
29‑15..... Attributing the input tax credits for your creditable importations...... 67
29‑20..... Attributing your adjustments............................................................. 67
29‑25..... Commissioner may determine particular attribution rules.................. 68
29‑39..... Special rules relating to attribution rules............................................ 69
Subdivision 29‑B—Accounting on a cash basis 70
29‑40..... Choosing to account on a cash basis................................................. 70
29‑45..... Permission to account on a cash basis............................................... 71
29‑50..... Ceasing to account on a cash basis.................................................... 71
29‑69..... Special rules relating to accounting on a cash basis........................... 72
Subdivision 29‑C—Tax invoices and adjustment notes 73
29‑70..... Tax invoices...................................................................................... 73
29‑75..... Adjustment notes.............................................................................. 74
29‑80..... Tax invoices and adjustment notes not required for low value transactions 75
29‑99..... Special rules relating to tax invoices and adjustment notes................ 76
Part 2‑7—Returns, payments and refunds 77
Division 31—GST returns 77
31‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 77
31‑5....... Who must give GST returns............................................................. 77
31‑8....... When GST returns must be given—quarterly tax periods................. 77
31‑10..... When GST returns must be given—other tax periods....................... 78
31‑15..... The form and contents of GST returns.............................................. 78
31‑20..... Additional GST returns..................................................................... 79
31‑25..... Electronic lodgment of GST returns.................................................. 79
31‑99..... Special rules relating to GST returns................................................. 80
Division 33—Payments of GST 81
33‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 81
33‑3....... When payments of net amounts must be made—quarterly tax periods 81
33‑5....... When payments of net amounts must be made—other tax periods... 82
33‑10..... How payments of net amounts are made........................................... 82
33‑15..... Payments of amounts of GST on importations................................. 82
33‑99..... Special rules relating to payments of GST........................................ 83
Division 35—Refunds 84
35‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 84
35‑5....... Entitlement to refund......................................................................... 84
35‑10..... When entitlement arises..................................................................... 84
35‑99..... Special rules relating to refunds........................................................ 85
Part 2‑8—Checklist of special rules 86
Division 37—Checklist of special rules 86
37‑1....... Checklist of special rules................................................................... 86
Chapter 3—The exemptions 89
Part 3‑1—Supplies that are not taxable supplies 89
Division 38—GST‑free supplies 89
38‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................... 90
Subdivision 38‑A—Food 90
38‑2....... Food.................................................................................................. 90
38‑3....... Food that is not GST‑free................................................................. 90
38‑4....... Meaning of food................................................................................ 91
38‑5....... Premises used in supplying food...................................................... 91
38‑6....... Packaging of food............................................................................. 92
Subdivision 38‑B—Health 92
38‑7....... Medical services................................................................................ 92
38‑10..... Other health services......................................................................... 92
38‑15..... Other government funded health services......................................... 94
38‑20..... Hospital treatment............................................................................. 94
38‑25..... Residential care etc............................................................................ 95
38‑30..... Community care etc........................................................................... 97
38‑35..... Flexible care...................................................................................... 98
38‑40..... Specialist disability services.............................................................. 98
38‑45..... Medical aids and appliances.............................................................. 98
38‑47..... Other GST‑free health goods............................................................ 99
38‑50..... Drugs and medicinal preparations etc................................................ 99
38‑55..... Private health insurance etc............................................................. 100
38‑60..... Third party procured GST‑free health supplies............................... 101
Subdivision 38‑C—Education 102
38‑85..... Education courses........................................................................... 102
38‑90..... Excursions or field trips.................................................................. 102
38‑95..... Course materials.............................................................................. 103
38‑97..... Lease etc. of curriculum related goods............................................ 103
38‑100... Supplies that are not GST‑free........................................................ 103
38‑105... Accommodation at boarding schools etc......................................... 104
38‑110... Recognition of prior learning etc..................................................... 104
Subdivision 38‑D—Child care 105
38‑140... Child care—registered carers under the family assistance law........ 105
38‑145... Child care—approved child care services under the family assistance law 105
38‑150... Other child care............................................................................... 105
38‑155... Supplies directly related to child care that is GST‑free.................... 106
Subdivision 38‑E—Exports and other supplies for consumption outside Australia 106
38‑185... Exports of goods............................................................................. 106
38‑187... Lease etc. of goods for use outside Australia.................................. 112
38‑188... Tooling used by non‑residents to manufacture goods for export.... 112
38‑190... Supplies of things, other than goods or real property, for consumption outside Australia 112
Subdivision 38‑F—Religious services 115
38‑220... Religious services........................................................................... 115
Subdivision 38‑G—Activities of charitable institutions etc. 115
38‑250... Nominal consideration etc............................................................... 115
38‑255... Second‑hand goods......................................................................... 116
38‑260... Supplies of retirement village accommodation etc........................... 117
38‑270... Raffles and bingo conducted by charitable institutions etc.............. 118
Subdivision 38‑I—Water, sewerage and drainage 119
38‑285... Water............................................................................................... 119
38‑290... Sewerage and sewerage‑like services.............................................. 119
38‑295... Emptying of septic tanks................................................................. 119
38‑300... Drainage.......................................................................................... 119
Subdivision 38‑J—Supplies of going concerns 120
38‑325... Supply of a going concern.............................................................. 120
Subdivision 38‑K—Transport and related matters 120
38‑355... Supplies of transport and related matters......................................... 120
38‑360... Travel agents arranging overseas supplies...................................... 123
Subdivision 38‑L—Precious metals 123
38‑385... Supplies of precious metals............................................................. 123
Subdivision 38‑M—Supplies through inwards duty free shops 123
38‑415... Supplies through inwards duty free shops...................................... 123
Subdivision 38‑N—Grants of land by governments 123
38‑445... Grants of freehold and similar interests by governments................ 123
38‑450... Leases preceding grants of freehold and similar interests by governments 124
Subdivision 38‑O—Farm land 125
38‑475... Subdivided farm land...................................................................... 125
38‑480... Farm land supplied for farming....................................................... 125
Subdivision 38‑P—Cars for use by disabled people 126
38‑505... Disabled veterans............................................................................ 126
38‑510... Other disabled people...................................................................... 126
Subdivision 38‑Q—International mail 127
38‑540... International mail............................................................................. 127
Subdivision 38‑R—Telecommunication supplies made under arrangements for global roaming in Australia 128
38‑570... Telecommunication supplies made under arrangements for global roaming in Australia 128
Subdivision 38‑S—Eligible emissions units 129
38‑590... Eligible emissions units................................................................... 129
Division 40—Input taxed supplies 130
40‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 130
Subdivision 40‑A—Financial supplies 130
40‑5....... Financial supplies............................................................................ 130
Subdivision 40‑B—Residential rent 131
40‑35..... Residential rent................................................................................ 131
Subdivision 40‑C—Residential premises 132
40‑65..... Sales of residential premises........................................................... 132
40‑70..... Supplies of residential premises by way of long‑term lease............ 132
40‑75..... Meaning of new residential premises............................................. 132
Subdivision 40‑D—Precious metals 135
40‑100... Precious metals............................................................................... 135
Subdivision 40‑E—School tuckshops and canteens 135
40‑130... School tuckshops and canteens....................................................... 135
Subdivision 40‑F—Fund‑raising events conducted by charitable institutions etc. 136
40‑160... Fund‑raising events conducted by charitable institutions etc........... 136
40‑165... Meaning of fund‑raising event........................................................ 137
Part 3‑2—Non‑taxable importations 138
Division 42—Non‑taxable importations 138
42‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 138
42‑5....... Non‑taxable importations—Schedule 4 to the Customs Tariff Act 1995 138
42‑10..... Goods returned to Australia in an unaltered condition.................... 139
Chapter 4—The special rules 140
Division 45—Introduction 140
45‑1....... What this Chapter is about.............................................................. 140
45‑5....... The effect of special rules................................................................ 140
Part 4‑1—Special rules mainly about particular ways entities are organised 141
Division 48—GST groups 141
48‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 141
Subdivision 48‑A—Formation and membership of GST groups 141
48‑5....... Formation of GST groups............................................................... 141
48‑7....... Membership of GST groups........................................................... 142
48‑10..... Membership requirements of a GST group..................................... 143
48‑15..... Relationship of companies and non‑companies in a GST group..... 144
Subdivision 48‑B—Consequences of GST groups 146
48‑40..... Who is liable for GST..................................................................... 146
48‑45..... Who is entitled to input tax credits.................................................. 147
48‑50..... Adjustments.................................................................................... 148
48‑51..... Consequences of being a member of a GST group for part of a tax period 148
48‑52..... Consequences for a representative member of membership change during a tax period 149
48‑53..... Consequences of changing a representative member during a tax period 149
48‑55..... GST groups treated as single entities for certain purposes.............. 150
48‑57..... Tax invoices that are required to identify recipients......................... 151
48‑60..... GST returns.................................................................................... 152
Subdivision 48‑C—Administrative matters 152
48‑70..... Changing the membership etc. of GST groups............................... 152
48‑71..... Approval of early day of effect of forming, changing etc. GST groups 154
48‑73..... Tax periods of GST groups with incapacitated members................ 154
48‑75..... Effect of representative member becoming an incapacitated entity.. 155
Subdivision 48‑D—Ceasing to be a member of a GST group 156
48‑110... Adjustments after you cease to be a member of a GST group......... 156
48‑115... Changes in extent of creditable purpose after you cease to be a member of a GST group 156
Division 49—GST religious groups 158
49‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 158
Subdivision 49‑A—Approval of GST religious groups 158
49‑5....... Approval of GST religious groups................................................. 158
49‑10..... Membership requirements of a GST religious group...................... 159
Subdivision 49‑B—Consequences of approval of GST religious groups 159
49‑30..... Supplies between members of GST religious groups..................... 159
49‑35..... Acquisitions between members of GST religious groups............... 159
49‑40..... Adjustment events........................................................................... 159
49‑45..... Changes in the extent of creditable purpose.................................... 160
49‑50..... GST religious groups treated as single entities for certain purposes 160
Subdivision 49‑C—Administrative matters 161
49‑70..... Changing the membership etc. of GST religious groups................. 161
49‑75..... Revoking the approval of GST religious groups............................. 161
49‑80..... Notification by principal members.................................................. 162
49‑85..... Date of effect of approvals and revocations.................................... 162
49‑90..... Notification by the Commissioner................................................... 163
Division 50—GST treatment of religious practitioners 164
Guide to Division 50 164
50‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 164
50‑5....... GST treatment of religious practitioners.......................................... 164
Division 51—GST joint ventures 165
51‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 165
Subdivision 51‑A—Formation of and participation in GST joint ventures 165
51‑5....... Formation of GST joint ventures.................................................... 165
51‑7....... Participants in GST joint ventures................................................... 166
51‑10..... Participation requirements of a GST joint venture........................... 167
Subdivision 51‑B—Consequences of GST joint ventures 167
51‑30..... Who is liable for GST..................................................................... 167
51‑35..... Who is entitled to input tax credits.................................................. 168
51‑40..... Adjustments.................................................................................... 168
51‑45..... Additional net amounts relating to GST joint ventures.................... 169
51‑50..... GST returns relating to GST joint ventures..................................... 170
51‑52..... Consolidation of GST returns relating to GST joint ventures......... 170
51‑55..... Payments of GST relating to GST joint ventures............................ 171
51‑60..... Refunds relating to GST joint ventures........................................... 171
Subdivision 51‑C—Administrative matters 172
51‑70..... Changing the participants etc. of GST joint ventures...................... 172
51‑75..... Approval of early day of effect of forming, changing etc. GST joint ventures 173
Subdivision 51‑D—Ceasing to be a participant in, or an operator of, a GST joint venture 174
51‑110... Adjustments after you cease to be a participant in a GST joint venture 174
51‑115... Changes in extent of creditable purpose after you cease to be a member of a GST joint venture 174
Division 54—GST branches 176
54‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 176
Subdivision 54‑A—Registration of GST branches 176
54‑5....... Registration of GST branches......................................................... 176
54‑10..... The date of effect of registration of a GST branch.......................... 177
54‑15..... GST branch registration number..................................................... 177
Subdivision 54‑B—Consequences of registration of GST branches 177
54‑40..... Additional net amounts relating to GST branches........................... 177
54‑45..... Net amounts of parent entities......................................................... 178
54‑50..... Tax invoices and adjustment notes.................................................. 179
54‑55..... GST returns relating to GST branches............................................ 179
54‑60..... Payments of GST relating to GST branches................................... 180
54‑65..... Refunds relating to GST branches.................................................. 180
Subdivision 54‑C—Cancellation of registration of GST branches 181
54‑70..... When an entity must apply for cancellation of registration of a GST branch 181
54‑75..... When the Commissioner must cancel registration of a GST branch 181
54‑80..... The date of effect of cancellation of registration of a GST branch... 182
54‑85..... Application of Subdivision 25‑B.................................................... 182
54‑90..... Effect on GST branches of cancelling the entity’s registration........ 182
Division 57—Resident agents acting for non‑residents 183
57‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 183
57‑5....... Who is liable for GST..................................................................... 183
57‑10..... Who is entitled to input tax credits.................................................. 183
57‑15..... Adjustments.................................................................................... 183
57‑20..... Resident agents are required to be registered................................... 184
57‑25..... Cancellation of registration of a resident agent................................ 184
57‑30..... Notice of cessation of agency.......................................................... 184
57‑35..... Tax periods of resident agents......................................................... 184
57‑40..... GST returns for non‑residents........................................................ 185
57‑45..... Resident agents giving GST returns................................................ 185
57‑50..... Non‑residents that belong to GST groups....................................... 186
Division 58—Representatives of incapacitated entities 187
58‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 187
58‑5....... General principle for the relationship between incapacitated entities and their representatives 187
58‑10..... Circumstances in which representatives have GST‑related liabilities and entitlements 188
58‑15..... Adjustments for bad debts.............................................................. 190
58‑20..... Representatives are required to be registered................................... 191
58‑25..... Cancellation of registration of a representative................................ 191
58‑30..... Notice of cessation of representation............................................... 191
58‑35..... Tax periods of representatives......................................................... 191
58‑40..... Effect on attribution rules of not accounting on a cash basis........... 192
58‑45..... GST returns for representatives of incapacitated entities................. 192
58‑50..... Representatives to give GST returns for incapacitated entities........ 192
58‑55..... Incapacitated entities not required to give GST returns in some cases 194
58‑60..... Representative to notify Commissioner of certain liabilities etc....... 194
58‑65..... Money available to meet representative’s liabilities......................... 195
58‑70..... Protection for actions of representative........................................... 195
Division 60—Pre‑establishment costs 196
60‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 196
60‑5....... Input tax credit for acquisitions and importations before establishment 196
60‑10..... Registration etc. not needed for input tax credits............................. 196
60‑15..... Pre‑establishment acquisitions and importations............................. 197
60‑20..... Creditable purpose.......................................................................... 197
60‑25..... Attributing the input tax credit for pre‑establishment acquisitions... 198
60‑30..... Attributing the input tax credit for pre‑establishment importations.. 199
60‑35..... Application of Division 129............................................................ 199
Division 63—Non‑profit sub‑entities 200
63‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 200
63‑5....... Entities that may choose to apply this Division............................... 200
63‑10..... Period for which a choice has effect................................................ 201
63‑15..... Consequences of choosing to apply this Division........................... 201
63‑20..... Non‑profit sub‑entities may register................................................ 202
63‑25..... Registration turnover threshold for non‑profit sub‑entities............. 202
63‑27..... Application of particular provisions relating to charitable institutions etc. 202
63‑30..... When non‑profit sub‑entities must apply for cancellation of registration 203
63‑35..... When the Commissioner must cancel registration of non‑profit sub‑entities 204
63‑40..... Effect on adjustments of becoming a non‑profit sub‑entity............. 204
63‑45..... Effect on adjustments of ceasing to be a non‑profit sub‑entity........ 205
63‑50..... Membership requirements of GST groups...................................... 205
Part 4‑2—Special rules mainly about supplies and acquisitions 206
Division 66—Second‑hand goods 206
66‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 206
Subdivision 66‑A—Input tax credits for acquiring second‑hand goods 206
66‑5....... Creditable acquisitions of second‑hand goods................................ 206
66‑10..... Amounts of input tax credits for creditable acquisitions of second‑hand goods 207
66‑15..... Attributing input tax credits for creditable acquisitions of second‑hand goods 207
66‑17..... Records of creditable acquisitions of second‑hand goods............... 208
Subdivision 66‑B—Acquisitions of second‑hand goods that are divided for re‑supply 209
66‑40..... Acquisitions of second‑hand goods that can be used to offset GST on future re‑supplies 209
66‑45..... Future re‑supplies that are not taxable supplies............................... 210
66‑50..... Future re‑supplies on which GST is reduced.................................. 211
66‑55..... Records of acquisitions of second‑hand goods to which this Subdivision applied 211
66‑60..... Input tax credits for acquiring second‑hand goods the supply of which is not fully taxable 212
66‑65..... Total Subdivision 66‑B credit amounts and Subdivision 66‑B GST amounts 212
66‑70..... Commissioner may determine rules for applying this Subdivision. 213
Division 69—Non‑deductible expenses 214
69‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 214
Subdivision 69‑A—Non‑deductible expenses generally 214
69‑5....... Non‑deductible expenses do not give rise to creditable acquisitions or creditable importations 214
69‑10..... Amounts of input tax credits for creditable acquisitions or creditable importations of certain cars 215
Subdivision 69‑B—Elections for GST purposes relating to meal entertainment and entertainment facilities 216
69‑15..... What this Subdivision is about........................................................ 216
69‑20..... Effect of elections on net amounts................................................... 217
69‑25..... Election to use the 50/50 split method for meal entertainment......... 217
69‑30..... Election to use the 12 week register method for meal entertainment 217
69‑35..... Election to use the 50/50 split method for entertainment facilities... 218
69‑40..... When elections take effect............................................................... 218
69‑45..... When elections cease to have effect................................................. 218
69‑50..... Adjustment events relating to elections........................................... 219
69‑55..... Adjustment notes not required........................................................ 221
Division 70—Financial supplies (reduced credit acquisitions) 222
70‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 222
70‑5....... Acquisitions that attract the reduced credit...................................... 222
70‑10..... Extended meaning of creditable purpose........................................ 222
70‑15..... How much are the reduced input tax credits?.................................. 223
70‑20..... Extent of creditable purpose............................................................ 223
70‑25..... Sale of reduced credit acquisitions (Division 132).......................... 224
Division 71—Fringe benefits provided by input taxed suppliers 226
71‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 226
71‑5....... Acquisitions by input taxed suppliers to provide fringe benefits..... 226
71‑10..... Importations by input taxed suppliers to provide fringe benefits..... 227
Division 72—Associates 228
72‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 228
Subdivision 72‑A—Supplies without consideration 228
72‑5....... Taxable supplies without consideration........................................... 228
72‑10..... The value of taxable supplies without consideration....................... 229
72‑15..... Attributing the GST to tax periods.................................................. 229
72‑20..... Supplies and acquisitions that would otherwise be sales etc........... 229
72‑25..... Supplies that would otherwise be GST‑free, input taxed or financial supplies 229
Subdivision 72‑B—Acquisitions without consideration 230
72‑40..... Creditable acquisitions without consideration................................. 230
72‑45..... The amount of the input tax credit................................................... 230
72‑50..... Attributing the input tax credit to tax periods.................................. 231
Subdivision 72‑C—Supplies for inadequate consideration 231
72‑70..... The value of taxable supplies for inadequate consideration............. 231
Subdivision 72‑D—Application of this Division to certain sub‑entities 232
72‑90..... GST branches................................................................................. 232
72‑92..... Non‑profit sub‑entities.................................................................... 232
72‑95..... Commonwealth government entities............................................... 232
72‑100... State or Territory government entities............................................. 233
Division 75—Sale of freehold interests etc. 234
75‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 234
75‑5....... Applying the margin scheme........................................................... 234
75‑10..... The amount of GST on taxable supplies......................................... 236
75‑11..... Margins for supplies of real property in particular circumstances... 239
75‑12..... Working out margins to take into account failure to pay full consideration 245
75‑13..... Working out margins to take into account supplies to associates.... 245
75‑14..... Consideration for acquisition of real property not to include cost of improvements etc. 246
75‑15..... Subdivided land.............................................................................. 246
75‑16..... Margins for supplies of real property acquired through several acquisitions 246
75‑20..... Supplies under a margin scheme do not give rise to creditable acquisitions 247
75‑22..... Increasing adjustment relating to input tax credit entitlement........... 247
75‑25..... Adjustments relating to bad debts................................................... 249
75‑27..... Decreasing adjustment for later payment of consideration.............. 249
75‑30..... Tax invoices not required for supplies of real property under the margin scheme 250
75‑35..... Approved valuations....................................................................... 250
Division 78—Insurance 251
78‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 251
Subdivision 78‑A—Insurers 251
78‑5....... GST on insurance premiums is exclusive of stamp duty................. 251
78‑10..... Decreasing adjustments for settlements of insurance claims........... 252
78‑15..... How to work out the decreasing adjustments.................................. 252
78‑18..... Increasing adjustments for payments of excess under insurance policies 254
78‑20..... Settlements of insurance claims do not give rise to creditable acquisitions 255
78‑25..... Supplies in settlement of claims are not taxable supplies................. 255
78‑30..... Acquisitions by insurers in the course of settling claims under non‑taxable policies 255
78‑35..... Taxable supplies relating to rights of subrogation........................... 256
78‑40..... Adjustment events relating to decreasing adjustments under this Division 256
78‑42..... Adjustment events relating to increasing adjustments under section 78‑18 257
Subdivision 78‑B—Insured entities etc. 257
78‑45..... Settlements of insurance claims do not give rise to taxable supplies 257
78‑50..... Settlements of insurance claims give rise to taxable supplies if entitlement to input tax credits is not disclosed 258
78‑55..... Payments of excess under insurance policies are not consideration for supplies 259
78‑60..... Supplies of goods to insurers in the course of settling claims......... 259
Subdivision 78‑C—Third parties 259
78‑65..... Payments etc. to third parties by insurers........................................ 259
78‑70..... Payments etc. to third parties by insured entities............................. 260
78‑75..... Creditable acquisitions relating to rights of subrogation.................. 261
Subdivision 78‑D—Insured entities that are not registered etc. 261
78‑80..... Net amounts.................................................................................... 261
78‑85..... GST returns.................................................................................... 261
78‑90..... Payments of GST............................................................................ 262
Subdivision 78‑E—Statutory compensation schemes 262
78‑95..... GST on premiums etc. under statutory compensation schemes is exclusive of stamp duty 262
78‑100... Settlements of claims for compensation under statutory compensation schemes 262
78‑105... Meaning of statutory compensation scheme................................... 263
Subdivision 78‑F—Miscellaneous 264
78‑110... Effect of judgments and court orders.............................................. 264
78‑115... Exclusion of certain Commonwealth, State or Territory insurance schemes 264
78‑118... Portfolio transfers........................................................................... 265
78‑120... HIH rescue package........................................................................ 265
Division 79—Compulsory third party schemes 267
79‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 267
Subdivision 79‑A—Modified application of Division 78 to certain compulsory third party scheme payments and supplies under insurance policies 268
79‑5....... Application of sections 78‑10 and 78‑15 (about decreasing adjustments) where premium selection test is satisfied........................................................................................................ 268
79‑10..... Adjustment where operator becomes aware that correct input tax credit situation differs from basis on which premium selection test was satisfied............................................................... 269
79‑15..... Application of sections 78‑10 and 78‑15 (about decreasing adjustments) where sole operator election to use average input tax credit entitlement............................................................... 270
79‑20..... Extension of various references in Division 78 to rights of subrogation to cover other rights of recovery 272
Subdivision 79‑B—Extension of Division 78 to cover certain compulsory third party scheme payments and supplies connected with, but not under, insurance policies 273
79‑25..... Meaning of CTP hybrid payment or supply.................................... 273
79‑30..... Application of Division 78.............................................................. 274
Subdivision 79‑C—Other payments and supplies under compulsory third party schemes 274
79‑35..... Meaning of CTP compensation or ancillary payment or supply etc. 274
79‑40..... GST on CTP premiums is exclusive of stamp duty........................ 275
79‑45..... Exclusion of certain compulsory third party schemes..................... 275
79‑50..... Decreasing adjustments for CTP compensation or ancillary payments or supplies 276
79‑55..... Increasing adjustments for payments of excess etc. under compulsory third party schemes 276
79‑60..... Effect of settlements and payments under compulsory third party schemes 277
79‑65..... Taxable supplies relating to recovery by operators of compulsory third party schemes 278
79‑70..... Adjustment events relating to decreasing adjustments for operators of compulsory third party schemes 278
79‑75..... Adjustment events relating to increasing adjustments under section 79‑55 279
79‑80..... Payments of excess under compulsory third party schemes are not consideration for supplies 279
79‑85..... Supplies of goods to operators in the course of settling claims....... 280
79‑90..... Effect of judgments and court orders.............................................. 280
Subdivision 79‑D—Compulsory third party scheme decreasing adjustments worked out using applicable average input tax credit fraction 281
79‑95..... How to work out decreasing adjustments using the applicable average input tax credit fraction 281
79‑100... Meaning of average input tax credit fraction.................................. 283
Division 80—Settlement sharing arrangements 286
80‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 286
Subdivision 80‑A—Insurance policy settlement sharing arrangements 286
80‑5....... Meaning of insurance policy settlement sharing arrangement etc.. 286
80‑10..... Effect of becoming parties to industry deeds or entering into settlement sharing arrangements 287
80‑15..... Effect of contributing operator’s payment....................................... 287
80‑20..... Managing operator’s payments or supplies..................................... 288
80‑25..... Contributing operator’s payment..................................................... 288
80‑30..... Managing operator’s increasing adjustment where contributing operator’s payment 289
80‑35..... Adjustment events relating to managing operator’s payment or supply 290
Subdivision 80‑B—Nominal defendant settlement sharing arrangements 291
80‑40..... Meaning of nominal defendant settlement sharing arrangement etc. 291
80‑45..... Nominal defendant settlement sharing arrangements to which this Subdivision applies 292
80‑50..... Effect of becoming parties to industry deeds or entering into nominal defendant settlement sharing arrangements 292
80‑55..... Effect of contributing operator’s payment....................................... 292
80‑60..... Managing operator’s payment or supply......................................... 292
80‑65..... Contributing operator’s payment..................................................... 293
80‑70..... Managing operator’s increasing adjustment where contributing operator’s payment 293
80‑75..... Adjustment events relating to managing operator’s payment or supply 294
Subdivision 80‑C—Hybrid settlement sharing arrangements 294
80‑80..... Meaning of hybrid settlement sharing arrangement etc................. 294
80‑85..... Subdivision 80‑A to apply to hybrid settlement sharing arrangement, subject to exceptions 295
80‑90..... Subdivision 80‑B to apply to payments or supplies by managing operator of hybrid settlement sharing arrangement who is also managing operator of nominal defendant settlement sharing arrangement 295
80‑95..... Subdivision 80‑B to apply to payments or supplies by contributing operator of hybrid settlement sharing arrangement who is also managing operator of nominal defendant settlement sharing arrangement 296
Division 81—Payments of taxes, fees and charges 297
81‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 297
81‑5....... Effect of payment of tax.................................................................. 297
81‑10..... Effect of payment of certain fees and charges................................. 297
81‑15..... Other fees and charges that do not constitute consideration............ 298
81‑20..... Division has effect despite sections 9‑15 and 9‑17......................... 299
81‑25..... Date of effect of regulations............................................................ 299
Division 82—Supplies in return for rights to develop land 300
82‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 300
82‑5....... Supplies of rights to develop land do not constitute consideration in certain cases 300
82‑10..... Supplies by Australian government agencies of rights to develop land are not for consideration 300
Division 83—Non‑residents making supplies connected with Australia 302
83‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 302
83‑5....... “Reverse charge” on supplies made by non‑residents..................... 302
83‑10..... Recipients who are members of GST groups.................................. 303
83‑15..... Recipients who are participants in GST joint ventures.................... 303
83‑20..... The amount of GST on “reverse charged” supplies made by non‑residents 303
83‑25..... When non‑residents must apply for registration.............................. 303
83‑30..... When the Commissioner must register non‑residents..................... 304
83‑35..... Tax invoices not required for “reverse charged” supplies made by non‑residents 304
Division 84—Offshore supplies other than goods or real property 305
84‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 305
84‑5....... Intangible supplies from offshore that are taxable supplies under this Division 305
84‑10..... “Reverse charge” on offshore intangible supplies........................... 306
84‑12..... The amount of GST on offshore intangible supplies....................... 306
84‑13..... The amount of input tax credits relating to offshore intangible supplies 306
84‑14..... Supplies relating to employee share ownership schemes................ 307
84‑15..... Transfers etc. between branches of the same entity......................... 308
Division 85—Telecommunication supplies 309
85‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 309
85‑5....... When telecommunication supplies are connected with Australia..... 309
85‑10..... Meaning of telecommunication supply............................................ 309
Division 87—Long‑term accommodation in commercial residential premises 310
87‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 310
87‑5....... Commercial residential premises that are predominantly for long‑term accommodation 310
87‑10..... Commercial residential premises that are not predominantly for long‑term accommodation 310
87‑15..... Meaning of commercial accommodation........................................ 311
87‑20..... Meaning of long‑term accommodation etc..................................... 311
87‑25..... Suppliers may choose not to apply this Division............................ 312
Division 90—Company amalgamations 313
90‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 313
90‑5....... Supplies not taxable—amalgamated company registered or required to be registered 313
90‑10..... Value of taxable supplies—amalgamated company not registered or required to be registered 313
90‑15..... Acquisitions not creditable—amalgamated company registered or required to be registered 313
90‑20..... Liability after amalgamation for GST on amalgamating company’s supplies 314
90‑25..... Entitlement after amalgamation to input tax credits for amalgamating company’s acquisitions 314
90‑30..... Adjustments.................................................................................... 314
90‑35..... Amalgamating companies accounting on a cash basis..................... 315
Division 93—Time limit on entitlements to input tax credits 317
93‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 317
93‑5....... Time limit on entitlements to input tax credits................................. 317
93‑10..... Exceptions to time limit on entitlements to input tax credits............ 317
93‑15..... GST ceasing to be payable on the related supply............................ 319
Division 96—Supplies partly connected with Australia 320
96‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 320
96‑5....... Supplies that are only partly connected with Australia.................... 320
96‑10..... The value of the taxable components of supplies that are only partly connected with Australia 321
Division 99—Deposits as security 322
99‑1....... What this Division is about............................................................. 322
99‑5....... Giving a deposit as security does not constitute consideration........ 322
99‑10..... Attributing the GST relating to deposits that are forfeited etc.......... 322
Division 100—Vouchers 323
100‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 323
100‑5..... Supplies of vouchers with a stated monetary value......................... 323
100‑10... Redemption of vouchers................................................................. 324
100‑12... Consideration on redemption of vouchers....................................... 324
100‑15... Increasing adjustments for unredeemed vouchers........................... 325
100‑18... Arrangement for supply of voucher................................................ 325
100‑20... Vouchers supplied to non‑residents and redeemed by others in Australia 325
100‑25... Meaning of voucher etc................................................................... 326
Division 102—Cancelled lay‑by sales 327
102‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 327
102‑5..... Cancelled lay‑by sales..................................................................... 327
102‑10... Attributing GST and input tax credits............................................. 327
Division 105—Supplies in satisfaction of debts 328
105‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 328
105‑5..... Supplies by creditors in satisfaction of debts may be taxable supplies 328
105‑10... Net amounts.................................................................................... 329
105‑15... GST returns.................................................................................... 329
105‑20... Payments of GST............................................................................ 329
Division 108—Valuation of taxable supplies of goods in bond 331
108‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 331
108‑5..... Taxable supplies of goods in bond etc............................................ 331
Division 110—Tax‑related transactions 332
110‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 332
Subdivision 110‑A—Income tax‑related transactions 332
110‑5..... Transfers of tax losses and net capital losses.................................. 332
110‑15... Supplies under operation of consolidated group regime.................. 332
110‑20... Tax sharing agreements—entering into agreement etc..................... 333
110‑25... Tax sharing agreements—leaving group clear of group liability..... 333
110‑30... Tax funding agreements.................................................................. 333
Subdivision 110‑B—Other tax‑related transactions 334
110‑60... Indirect tax sharing agreements—entering into agreement etc......... 334
110‑65... Indirect tax sharing agreements—leaving GST group or GST joint venture clear of liability 335
Division 111—Reimbursement of employees etc. 337
111‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 337
111‑5..... Creditable acquisitions relating to reimbursements.......................... 337
111‑10... Amounts of input tax credits relating to reimbursements................ 338
111‑15... Tax invoices relating to reimbursements......................................... 339
111‑18... Application of Division to volunteers working for charitable institutions etc. 339
111‑20... Application of Division to recipients of certain withholding payments 340
111‑25... Employers paying expenses of employees etc................................. 341
111‑30... Reimbursements etc. of former or future employees etc.................. 341
Division 113—PAYG voluntary agreements 343
113‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 343
113‑5..... Supply of work or services not a taxable supply............................. 343
Part 4‑3—Special rules mainly about importations 345
Division 114—Importations without entry for home consumption 345
114‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 345
114‑5..... Importations without entry for home consumption......................... 345
114‑10... Goods that have already been entered for home consumption etc... 347
114‑15... Payments of amounts of GST where security for payment of customs duty is forfeited 348
114‑20... Payments of amounts of GST where delivery into home consumption is authorised under section 71 of the Customs Act........................................................................................................ 348
114‑25... Warehoused goods entered for home consumption by an entity other than the importer 348
Division 117—Valuation of re‑imported goods 350
117‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 350
117‑5..... Valuation of taxable importations of goods that were exported for repair or renovation 350
117‑10... Valuation of taxable importations of live animals that were exported 351
117‑15... Refunds of GST on certain re‑importations of live animals............ 352
Part 4‑4—Special rules mainly about net amounts and adjustments 353
Division 123—Simplified accounting methods for retailers and small enterprise entities 353
123‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 353
123‑5..... Commissioner may determine simplified accounting methods........ 353
123‑7..... Meaning of small enterprise entity.................................................. 354
123‑10... Choosing to apply a simplified accounting method......................... 354
123‑15... Net amounts.................................................................................... 355
Division 126—Gambling 356
126‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 356
126‑5..... Global accounting system for gambling supplies............................ 356
126‑10... Global GST amounts...................................................................... 357
126‑15... Losses carried forward.................................................................... 358
126‑20... Bad debts........................................................................................ 358
126‑25... Application of Subdivision 9‑C...................................................... 358
126‑30... Gambling supplies do not give rise to creditable acquisitions......... 358
126‑32... Repayments of gambling losses are not consideration.................... 359
126‑33... Tax invoices not required for gambling supplies............................. 359
126‑35... Meaning of gambling supply and gambling event........................... 359
Division 129—Changes in the extent of creditable purpose 360
129‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 360
Subdivision 129‑A—General 360
129‑5..... Adjustments arising under this Division......................................... 360
129‑10... Adjustments do not arise under this Division for acquisitions and importations below a certain value 361
129‑15... Adjustments do not arise under this Division where there are adjustments under Division 130 361
Subdivision 129‑B—Adjustment periods 361
129‑20... Adjustment periods......................................................................... 361
129‑25... Effect on adjustment periods of things being disposed of etc.......... 363
Subdivision 129‑C—When adjustments for acquisitions and importations arise 364
129‑40... Working out whether you have an adjustment................................ 364
129‑45... Gifts to gift‑deductible entities........................................................ 365
129‑50... Creditable purpose.......................................................................... 366
129‑55... Meaning of apply............................................................................ 366
Subdivision 129‑D—Amounts of adjustments for acquisitions and importations 367
129‑70... The amount of an increasing adjustment......................................... 367
129‑75... The amount of a decreasing adjustment........................................... 367
129‑80... Effect of adjustment under certain Divisions................................... 368
Subdivision 129‑E—Attributing adjustments under this Division 368
129‑90... Attributing your adjustments for changes in extent of creditable purpose 368
Division 130—Goods applied solely to private or domestic use 369
130‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 369
130‑5..... Goods applied solely to private or domestic use............................. 369
Division 131—Annual apportionment of creditable purpose 370
131‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 370
Subdivision 131‑A—Electing to have annual apportionment 370
131‑5..... Eligibility to make an annual apportionment election....................... 370
131‑10... Making an annual apportionment election....................................... 371
131‑15... Annual apportionment elections by representative members of GST groups 371
131‑20... Duration of an annual apportionment election................................. 371
Subdivision 131‑B—Consequences of electing to have annual apportionment 373
131‑40... Input tax credits for acquisitions that are partly creditable............... 373
131‑45... Input tax credits for importations that are partly creditable.............. 374
131‑50... Amounts of input tax credits for creditable acquisitions or creditable importations of certain cars 375
131‑55... Increasing adjustments relating to annually apportioned acquisitions and importations 376
131‑60... Attributing adjustments under section 131‑55................................. 377
Division 132—Supplies of things acquired etc. without full input tax credits 379
132‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 379
132‑5..... Decreasing adjustments for supplies of things acquired, imported or applied for a purpose that is not fully creditable........................................................................................................ 379
132‑10... Attribution of adjustments under this Division............................... 380
Division 133—Providing additional consideration under gross‑up clauses 382
133‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 382
133‑5..... Decreasing adjustments for additional consideration provided under gross‑up clauses 382
133‑10... Availability of adjustments under Division 19 for acquisitions....... 383
Division 134—Third party payments 384
134‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 384
134‑5..... Decreasing adjustments for payments made to third parties............ 384
134‑10... Increasing adjustments for payments received by third parties........ 386
134‑15... Attribution of decreasing adjustments............................................. 388
134‑20... Third party adjustment notes........................................................... 388
134‑25... Adjustment events do not arise....................................................... 389
134‑30... Application of sections 48‑55 and 49‑50........................................ 390
Division 135—Supplies of going concerns 391
135‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 391
135‑5..... Initial adjustments for supplies of going concerns.......................... 391
135‑10... Later adjustments for supplies of going concerns........................... 391
Division 136—Bad debts relating to transactions that are not taxable or creditable to the fullest extent 393
136‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 393
Subdivision 136‑A—Bad debts relating to partly taxable or creditable transactions 393
136‑5..... Adjustments relating to partly taxable supplies............................... 393
136‑10... Adjustments in relation to partly creditable acquisitions.................. 394
Subdivision 136‑B—Bad debts relating to transactions that are taxable or creditable at less than 1/11 of the price 395
136‑30... Writing off bad debts (taxable supplies).......................................... 395
136‑35... Recovering amounts previously written off (taxable supplies)........ 396
136‑40... Bad debts written off (creditable acquisitions)................................ 397
136‑45... Recovering amounts previously written off (creditable acquisitions) 399
136‑50... Meanings of taxable at less than 1/11 of the price and creditable at less than 1/11 of the consideration 400
Division 137—Stock on hand on becoming registered etc. 401
137‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 401
137‑5..... Adjustments for stock on hand on becoming registered etc............ 401
Division 138—Cessation of registration 402
138‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 402
138‑5..... Adjustments for cessation of registration........................................ 402
138‑10... Attributing adjustments for cessation of registration....................... 403
138‑15... Ceasing to be registered—amounts not previously attributed.......... 403
138‑17... Situations to which this Division does not apply............................ 404
138‑20... Application of Division 129............................................................ 405
Division 139—Distributions from deceased estates 406
139‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 406
139‑5..... Adjustments for distributions from deceased estates....................... 406
139‑10... Attributing adjustments for distributions from deceased estates...... 407
139‑15... Application of Division 129............................................................ 407
Division 141—Tradex scheme goods 408
141‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 408
141‑5..... Adjustments for applying goods contrary to the Tradex Scheme.... 408
141‑10... Meaning of tradex scheme goods etc.............................................. 409
141‑15... Attribution of adjustments under this Division............................... 409
141‑20... Application of Division 129............................................................ 409
Part 4‑5—Special rules mainly about registration 410
Division 144—Taxis 410
144‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 410
144‑5..... Requirement to register................................................................... 410
Division 149—Government entities 411
149‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 411
149‑5..... Government entities may register.................................................... 411
149‑10... Government entities are not required to be registered...................... 411
149‑15... GST law applies to registered government entities.......................... 412
149‑20... Government entities not required to cancel their registration........... 412
149‑25... Membership requirements of a government GST group................. 412
Part 4‑6—Special rules mainly about tax periods 413
Division 151—Annual tax periods 413
151‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 413
Subdivision 151‑A—Electing to have annual tax periods 413
151‑5..... Eligibility to make an annual tax period election.............................. 413
151‑10... Making an annual tax period election.............................................. 414
151‑15... Annual tax period elections by representative members of GST groups 414
151‑20... When you must make your annual tax period election.................... 414
151‑25... Duration of an annual tax period election........................................ 415
Subdivision 151‑B—Consequences of electing to have annual tax periods 416
151‑40... Annual tax periods.......................................................................... 416
151‑45... When GST returns for annual tax periods must be given................ 417
151‑50... When payments of net amounts for annual tax periods must be made 417
151‑55... An entity’s concluding annual tax period........................................ 418
151‑60... The effect of incapacitation or cessation.......................................... 418
Division 153—Agents etc. and insurance brokers 419
153‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 419
Subdivision 153‑A—General 419
153‑5..... Attributing the input tax credits for your creditable acquisitions..... 419
153‑10... Attributing your adjustments........................................................... 420
153‑15... Tax invoices.................................................................................... 420
153‑20... Adjustment notes............................................................................ 421
153‑25... Insurance supplied through insurance brokers................................ 421
Subdivision 153‑B—Principals and intermediaries as separate suppliers or acquirers 422
153‑50... Arrangements under which intermediaries are treated as suppliers or acquirers 422
153‑55... The effect of these arrangements on supplies.................................. 423
153‑60... The effect of these arrangements on acquisitions............................ 424
153‑65... Determinations that supplies or acquisitions are taken to be under these arrangements 425
Division 156—Supplies and acquisitions made on a progressive or periodic basis 426
156‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 426
156‑5..... Attributing the GST on progressive or periodic supplies................ 426
156‑10... Attributing the input tax credits on progressive or periodic acquisitions 426
156‑15... Progressive or periodic supplies partly connected with Australia... 427
156‑17... Application of Division 58 to progressive or periodic supplies and acquisitions 427
156‑20... Application of Division 129 to progressive or periodic acquisitions 428
156‑22... Leases etc. treated as being on a progressive or periodic basis........ 428
156‑25... Accounting on a cash basis............................................................. 428
Division 157—Accounting basis of charitable institutions etc. 429
157‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 429
157‑5..... Charitable institutions etc. choosing to account on a cash basis...... 429
157‑10... Charitable institutions etc. ceasing to account on a cash basis......... 430
Division 159—Changing your accounting basis 431
159‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 431
159‑5..... Ceasing to account on a cash basis—amounts not previously attributed 431
159‑10... Ceasing to account on a cash basis—amounts partly attributed....... 432
159‑15... Ceasing to account on a cash basis—bad debts............................... 433
159‑20... Starting to account on a cash basis.................................................. 434
159‑25... Starting to account on a cash basis—bad debts............................... 434
159‑30... Entities ceasing to exist or coming into existence............................ 434
Part 4‑7—Special rules mainly about returns, payments and refunds 435
Division 162—Payment of GST by instalments 435
162‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 435
Subdivision 162‑A—Electing to pay GST by instalments 435
162‑5..... Eligibility to elect to pay GST by instalments.................................. 435
162‑10... Your current GST lodgment record................................................ 437
162‑15... Electing to pay GST by instalments................................................ 437
162‑20... Elections by representative members of GST groups...................... 438
162‑25... When you must make your election................................................ 438
162‑30... Duration of your election................................................................ 439
Subdivision 162‑B—Consequences of electing to pay GST by instalments 441
162‑50... GST instalment payers.................................................................... 441
162‑55... Tax periods for GST instalment payers........................................... 441
162‑60... When GST returns for GST instalment payers must be given........ 441
162‑65... The form and contents of GST returns for GST instalment payers. 442
162‑70... Payment of GST instalments........................................................... 442
162‑75... Giving notices relating to GST instalments..................................... 444
162‑80... Certain entities pay only 2 GST instalments for each year.............. 444
162‑85... A GST instalment payer’s concluding tax period............................ 445
162‑90... The effect of incapacitation or cessation.......................................... 445
162‑95... The effect of changing the membership of GST groups.................. 446
162‑100. General interest charge on late payment.......................................... 446
162‑105. Net amounts for GST instalment payers......................................... 447
162‑110. When payments of net amounts must be made—GST instalment payers 447
Subdivision 162‑C—GST instalments 447
162‑130. What are your GST instalments...................................................... 447
162‑135. Notified instalment amounts............................................................ 448
162‑140. Varied instalment amounts.............................................................. 449
162‑145. Your annual GST liability............................................................... 450
Subdivision 162‑D—Penalty payable in certain cases if varied instalment amounts are too low 450
162‑170. What this Subdivision is about........................................................ 450
162‑175. GST payments are less than 85% of annual GST liability............... 451
162‑180. Estimated annual GST amount is less than 85% of annual GST liability 453
162‑185. Shortfall in GST instalments worked out on the basis of estimated annual GST amount 455
162‑190. Periods for which penalty is payable............................................... 456
162‑195. Reduction in penalties if notified instalment amount is less than 25% of annual GST liability 456
162‑200. Reduction in penalties if GST instalment shortfall is made up in a later instalment 457
162‑205. This Subdivision does not create a liability for general interest charge 458
Division 165—Anti‑avoidance 459
165‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 459
Subdivision 165‑A—Application of this Division 460
165‑5..... When does this Division operate?................................................... 460
165‑10... When does an entity get a GST benefit from a scheme?.................. 461
165‑15... Matters to be considered in determining purpose or effect.............. 462
Subdivision 165‑B—Commissioner may negate effects of schemes for GST benefits 463
165‑40... Commissioner may negate avoider’s GST benefits......................... 463
165‑45... Commissioner may reduce an entity’s net amount or GST to compensate 464
165‑50... GST or refund payable in accordance with declaration................... 465
165‑55... Commissioner may disregard scheme in making declarations......... 465
165‑60... One declaration may cover several tax periods and importations.... 466
165‑65... Commissioner must give copy of declaration to entity affected....... 466
Division 168—Tourist refund scheme 467
168‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 467
168‑5..... Tourist refund scheme..................................................................... 467
168‑10... Supplies later found to be GST‑free supplies.................................. 468
Division 171—Customs security etc. given on taxable importations 470
171‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 470
171‑5..... Security or undertaking given under section 162 or 162A of the Customs Act 470
Chapter 5—Miscellaneous 472
Part 5‑1—Miscellaneous 472
Division 176—Endorsement of charitable institutions etc. 472
176‑1..... Endorsement by Commissioner as charitable institution................. 472
176‑5..... Endorsement by Commissioner as trustee of a charitable fund....... 472
Division 177—Miscellaneous 473
177‑1..... Commonwealth etc. not liable to pay GST...................................... 473
177‑3..... Acquisitions from State or Territory bodies where GST liability is notional 474
177‑5..... Cancellation of exemptions from GST............................................ 474
177‑10... Ministerial determinations............................................................... 474
177‑11... Delegation by Aged Care Secretary................................................ 475
177‑12... GST implications of references to price, value etc. in other Acts.... 476
177‑15... Regulations..................................................................................... 476
Chapter 6—Interpreting this Act 477
Part 6‑1—Rules for interpreting this Act 477
Division 182—Rules for interpreting this Act 477
182‑1..... What forms part of this Act............................................................. 477
182‑5..... What does not form part of this Act................................................ 477
182‑10... Explanatory sections, and their role in interpreting this Act............ 478
182‑15... Schedules 1, 2 and 3....................................................................... 478
Part 6‑2—Meaning of some important concepts 479
Division 184—Meaning of entity 479
184‑1..... Entities............................................................................................ 479
184‑5..... Supplies etc. by partnerships and other unincorporated bodies....... 480
Division 188—Meaning of GST turnover 481
188‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 481
188‑5..... Explanation of the turnover thresholds............................................ 481
188‑10... Whether your GST turnover meets, or does not exceed, a turnover threshold 482
188‑15... Current GST turnover..................................................................... 483
188‑20... Projected GST turnover.................................................................. 484
188‑22... Settlements of insurance claims to be disregarded........................... 485
188‑23... Supplies “reverse charged” under Division 83 not to be included in a recipient’s GST turnover 485
188‑24... Supplies to which Subdivision 153‑B applies................................. 485
188‑25... Transfer of capital assets, and termination etc. of enterprise, to be disregarded 486
188‑30... The value of non‑taxable supplies................................................... 486
188‑32... The value of gambling supplies....................................................... 486
188‑35... The value of loans........................................................................... 487
188‑40... Supplies of employee services by overseas entities to be disregarded for the registration turnover threshold 487
Division 189—Exceeding the financial acquisitions threshold 488
189‑1..... What this Division is about............................................................. 488
189‑5..... Exceeding the financial acquisitions threshold—current acquisitions 488
189‑10... Exceeding the financial acquisitions threshold—future acquisitions 489
189‑15... Meaning of financial acquisition..................................................... 490
Division 190—90% owned groups of companies 491
190‑1..... 90% owned groups......................................................................... 491
190‑5..... When a company has at least a 90% stake in another company....... 491
Part 6‑3—Dictionary 492
Division 195—Dictionary 492
195‑1..... Dictionary....................................................................................... 492
Schedule 1—Food that is not GST‑free 533
1............ Food that is not GST‑free............................................................... 533
2............ Prepared food, bakery products and biscuit goods.......................... 535
3............ Prepared meals................................................................................ 535
4............ Candied peel.................................................................................... 535
5............ Goods that are not biscuit goods..................................................... 535
Schedule 2—Beverages that are GST‑free 536
1............ Beverages that are GST‑free........................................................... 536
2............ Tea, coffee etc................................................................................. 537
3............ Fruit and vegetable juices................................................................ 537
Schedule 3—Medical aids and appliances 538
Notes 545
An Act about a goods and services tax to implement A New Tax System, and for related purposes
Chapter 1—Introduction
Part 1‑1—Preliminary
Division 1—Preliminary
1‑1 Short title [see Note 1]
This Act may be cited as the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999.
1‑2 Commencement
(1) This Act commences on 1 July 2000.
1‑3 Commonwealth‑State financial relations
The Parliament acknowledges that the Commonwealth:
(a) will introduce legislation to provide that the revenue from the GST will be granted to the States, the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory; and
(b) will maintain the rate and base of the GST in accordance with the Agreement on Principles for the Reform of Commonwealth‑State Financial Relations endorsed at the Special Premiers’ Conference in Canberra on 13 November 1998.
1‑4 States and Territories are bound by the GST law
The *GST law binds the Crown in right of each of the States, of the Australian Capital Territory and of the Northern Territory. However, it does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.
Part 1‑2—Using this Act
Division 2—Overview of the GST legislation
2‑1 What this Act is about
This Act is about the GST.
It begins (in Chapter 2) with the basic rules about the GST, and then sets out in Chapter 3 the exemptions from the GST and in Chapter 4 the special rules that can apply in particular cases.
It concludes with definitions and other interpretative material.
Note: The GST is imposed by 6 Acts, the most important of which are:
(a) the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Imposition—General) Act 1999; and
(b) the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Imposition—Customs) Act 1999; and
(c) the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Imposition—Excise) Act 1999.
2‑5 The basic rules (Chapter 2)
Chapter 2 has the basic rules for the GST, including:
when and how the GST arises, and who is liable to pay it;
when and how input tax credits arise, and who is entitled to them;
how to work out payments and refunds of GST;
when and how the payments and refunds are to be made.
2‑10 The exemptions (Chapter 3)
Chapter 3 sets out the supplies and importations that are GST‑free or input taxed.
2‑15 The special rules (Chapter 4)
Chapter 4 has special rules which, in particular cases, have the effect of modifying the basic rules in Chapter 2.
Note: There is a checklist of special rules at the end of Chapter 2 (in Part 2‑8).
2‑20 Miscellaneous (Chapter 5)
Chapter 5 deals with miscellaneous matters.
2‑25 Interpretative provisions (Chapter 6)
Chapter 6 contains the Dictionary, which sets out a list of all the terms that are defined in this Act. It also sets out the meanings of some important concepts and rules on how to interpret this Act.
2‑30 Administration, collection and recovery provisions in the Taxation Administration Act 1953
Parts 3‑10, 4‑15 and 5‑5 in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 contain provisions relating to the administration of the GST, and to collection and recovery of amounts of GST.
Division 3—Defined terms
3‑1 When defined terms are identified
(1) Many of the terms used in the law relating to the GST are defined.
(2) Most defined terms in this Act are identified by an asterisk appearing at the start of the term: as in “*enterprise”. The footnote that goes with the asterisk contains a signpost to the Dictionary definitions starting at section 195‑1.
3‑5 When terms are not identified
(1) Once a defined term has been identified by an asterisk, later occurrences of the term in the same subsection are not usually asterisked.
(2) Terms are not asterisked in the non‑operative material contained in this Act.
Note: The non‑operative material is described in Division 4.
(3) The following basic terms used throughout the Act are not identified with an asterisk.
Common definitions that are not asterisked |
Item | This term: |
1 | acquisition |
2 | amount |
3 | Australia |
4 | Commissioner |
5 | entity |
6 | goods |
7 | GST |
8 | import |
8A | individual |
9 | input tax credit |
10 | tax period |
11 | thing |
12 | supply |
13 | you |
3‑10 Identifying the defined term in a definition
Within a definition, the defined term is identified by bold italics.
Division 4—Status of Guides and other non‑operative material
4‑1 Non‑operative material
In addition to the operative provisions themselves, this Act contains other material to help you identify accurately and quickly the provisions that are relevant to you and to help you understand them.
This other material falls into 2 main categories.
4‑5 Explanatory sections
One category is the explanatory section in many Divisions. Under the section heading “What this Division is about”, a short explanation of the Division appears in boxed text.
Explanatory sections form part of this Act but are not operative provisions. In interpreting an operative provision, explanatory sections may only be considered for limited purposes. They are set out in section 182‑10.
4‑10 Other material
The other category consists of material such as notes and examples. These also form part of the Act. They are distinguished by type size from the operative provisions (except for formulas), but are not kept separate from them.
Chapter 2—The basic rules
Division 5—Introduction
5‑1 What this Chapter is about
This Chapter sets out the basic rules for the GST. In particular, these rules will tell you:
• where liability for GST arises;
• where entitlements to input tax credits arise;
• how the amounts of GST and input tax credits are combined to work out the amount payable by you or to you;
• when and how that amount is to be paid.
5‑5 The structure of this Chapter
The diagram on the next page shows how the basic rules in this Chapter relate to each other. It also shows their relationship with:
• the exemptions (Chapter 3)—these provisions exempt from the GST what would otherwise be taxable; and
• the special rules (Chapter 4)—these provisions modify the basic rules in particular situations, often in quite limited ways.

Part 2‑1—The central provisions
Division 7—The central provisions
7‑1 GST and input tax credits
(1) GST is payable on *taxable supplies and *taxable importations.
(2) Entitlements to input tax credits arise on *creditable acquisitions and *creditable importations.
For taxable supplies and creditable acquisitions, see Part 2‑2.
For taxable importations and creditable importations, see Part 2‑3.
7‑5 Net amounts
Amounts of GST and amounts of input tax credits are set off against each other to produce a *net amount for a tax period (which may be altered to take account of *adjustments).
For net amounts (including adjustments to net amounts), see Part 2‑4.
7‑10 Tax periods
Every entity that is *registered, or *required to be registered, has tax periods applying to it.
For registration, see Part 2‑5.
For tax periods, see Part 2‑6.
7‑15 Payments and refunds
The *net amount for a tax period is the amount that the entity must pay to the Commonwealth, or the Commonwealth must refund to the entity, in respect of the period.
For payments and refunds (and GST returns), see Part 2‑7.
Note: Refunds may be set off against your other liabilities (if any) under laws administered by the Commissioner.
Part 2‑2—Supplies and acquisitions
Division 9—Taxable supplies
Table of Subdivisions
9‑A What are taxable supplies?
9‑B Who is liable for GST on taxable supplies?
9‑C How much GST is payable on taxable supplies?
9‑1 What this Division is about
GST is payable on taxable supplies. This Division defines taxable supplies, states who is liable for the GST, and describes how to work out the GST on supplies.
Subdivision 9‑A—What are taxable supplies?
9‑5 Taxable supplies
You make a taxable supply if:
(a) you make the supply for *consideration; and
(b) the supply is made in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise that you *carry on; and
(c) the supply is *connected with Australia; and
(d) you are *registered, or *required to be registered.
However, the supply is not a *taxable supply to the extent that it is *GST‑free or *input taxed.
9‑10 Meaning of supply
(1) A supply is any form of supply whatsoever.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), supply includes any of these:
(a) a supply of goods;
(b) a supply of services;
(c) a provision of advice or information;
(d) a grant, assignment or surrender of *real property;
(e) a creation, grant, transfer, assignment or surrender of any right;
(f) a *financial supply;
(g) an entry into, or release from, an obligation:
(i) to do anything; or
(ii) to refrain from an act; or
(iii) to tolerate an act or situation;
(h) any combination of any 2 or more of the matters referred to in paragraphs (a) to (g).
(3) It does not matter whether it is lawful to do, to refrain from doing or to tolerate the act or situation constituting the supply.
(3A) For the avoidance of doubt, the delivery of:
(a) livestock for slaughtering or processing into *food; or
(b) game for processing into *food;
under an arrangement under which the entity making the delivery only relinquishes title after food has been produced, is the supply of the livestock or game (regardless of when the entity relinquishes title). The supply does not take place on or after the subsequent relinquishment of title.
(4) However, a supply does not include a supply of *money unless the money is provided as *consideration for a supply that is a supply of money.
9‑15 Consideration
(1) Consideration includes:
(a) any payment, or any act or forbearance, in connection with a supply of anything; and
(b) any payment, or any act or forbearance, in response to or for the inducement of a supply of anything.
(2) It does not matter whether the payment, act or forbearance was voluntary, or whether it was by the *recipient of the supply.
(2A) It does not matter:
(a) whether the payment, act or forbearance was in compliance with an order of a court, or of a tribunal or other body that has the power to make orders; or
(b) whether the payment, act or forbearance was in compliance with a settlement relating to proceedings before a court, or before a tribunal or other body that has the power to make orders.
(2B) For the avoidance of doubt, the fact that the supplier is an entity of which the *recipient of the supply is a member, or that the supplier is an entity that only makes supplies to its members, does not prevent the payment, act or forbearance from being consideration.
9‑17 Certain payments and other things not consideration
(1) If a right or option to acquire a thing is granted, then:
(a) the consideration for the supply of the thing on the exercise of the right or option is limited to any additional consideration provided either for the supply or in connection with the exercise of the right or option; or
(b) if there is no such additional consideration—there is no consideration for the supply.
(2) Making a gift to a non‑profit body is not the provision of consideration.
(3) A payment is not the provision of consideration if:
(a) the payment is made by a *government related entity to another government related entity for making a supply; and
(b) the payment is:
(i) covered by an appropriation under an *Australian law; or
(ii) made under the National Health Reform Agreement agreed to by the Council of Australian Governments on 2 August 2011, as amended from time to time; or
(iii) made under another agreement entered into to implement the National Health Reform Agreement; and
(c) the payment is calculated on the basis that the sum of:
(i) the payment (including the amounts of any other such payments) relating to the supply; and
(ii) anything (including any payment for any act or forbearance) that the other government related entity receives from another entity in connection with, or in response to, or for the inducement of, the supply, or for any other related supply;
does not exceed the supplier’s anticipated or actual costs of making those supplies.
(4) A payment is not the provision of consideration if the payment is made by a *government related entity to another government related entity and the payment is of a kind specified in regulations made for the purposes of this subsection.
(5) This section applies despite section 9‑15.
9‑20 Enterprises
(1) An enterprise is an activity, or series of activities, done:
(a) in the form of a *business; or
(b) in the form of an adventure or concern in the nature of trade; or
(c) on a regular or continuous basis, in the form of a lease, licence or other grant of an interest in property; or
(d) by the trustee of a fund that is covered by, or by an authority or institution that is covered by, Subdivision 30‑B of the *ITAA 1997 and to which deductible gifts can be made; or
(da) by a trustee of a *complying superannuation fund or, if there is no trustee of the fund, by a person who manages the fund; or
(e) by a charitable institution or by a trustee of a charitable fund; or
(f) by a religious institution; or
(g) by the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, or by a body corporate, or corporation sole, established for a public purpose by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or
(h) by a trustee of a fund covered by item 2 of the table in section 30‑15 of the ITAA 1997 or of a fund that would be covered by that item if it had an ABN.
(2) However, enterprise does not include an activity, or series of activities, done:
(a) by a person as an employee or in connection with earning *withholding payments covered by subsection (4) (unless the activity or series is done in supplying services as the holder of an office that the person has accepted in the course of or in connection with an activity or series of activities of a kind mentioned in subsection (1)); or
Note: Acts done as mentioned in paragraph (a) will still form part of the activities of the enterprise to which the person provides work or services.
(b) as a private recreational pursuit or hobby; or
(c) by an individual (other than a trustee of a charitable fund, or of a fund covered by item 2 of the table in section 30‑15 of the ITAA 1997 or of a fund that would be covered by that item if it had an ABN), or a *partnership (all or most of the members of which are individuals), without a reasonable expectation of profit or gain; or
(d) as a member of a local governing body established by or under a *State law or *Territory law (except a local governing body to which paragraph 12‑45(1)(e) in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 applies).
(3) For the avoidance of doubt, the fact that activities of an entity are limited to making supplies to members of the entity does not prevent those activities:
(a) being in the form of a *business within the meaning of paragraph (1)(a); or
(b) being in the form of an adventure or concern in the nature of trade within the meaning of paragraph (1)(b).
(4) This subsection covers a *withholding payment covered by any of the provisions in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 listed in the table.
Withholding payments covered |
Item | Provision | Subject matter |
1 | Section 12‑35 | Payment to employee |
2 | Section 12‑40 | Payment to company director |
3 | Section 12‑45 | Payment to office holder |
4 | Section 12‑60 | Payment under labour hire arrangement, or specified by regulations |
9‑25 Supplies connected with Australia
Supplies of goods wholly within Australia
(1) A supply of goods is connected with Australia if the goods are delivered, or made available, in Australia to the *recipient of the supply.
Supplies of goods from Australia
(2) A supply of goods that involves the goods being removed from Australia is connected with Australia.
Supplies of goods to Australia
(3) A supply of goods that involves the goods being brought to Australia is connected with Australia if the supplier either:
(a) imports the goods into Australia; or
(b) installs or assembles the goods in Australia.
Supplies of real property
(4) A supply of *real property is connected with Australia if the real property, or the land to which the real property relates, is in Australia.
Supplies of anything else
(5) A supply of anything other than goods or *real property is connected with Australia if:
(a) the thing is done in Australia; or
(b) the supplier makes the supply through an *enterprise that the supplier *carries on in Australia; or
(c) all of the following apply:
(i) neither paragraph (a) nor (b) applies in respect of the thing;
(ii) the thing is a right or option to acquire another thing;
(iii) the supply of the other thing would be connected with Australia.
Example: A holiday package for Australia that is supplied overseas might be connected with Australia under paragraph (5)(c).
When enterprises are carried on in Australia
(6) An *enterprise is carried on in Australia if the enterprise is carried on through:
(a) a permanent establishment (as defined in subsection 6(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936); or
(b) a place that would be such a permanent establishment if paragraph (e), (f) or (g) of that definition did not apply.
9‑30 Supplies that are GST‑free or input taxed
GST‑free
(1) A supply is GST‑free if:
(a) it is GST‑free under Division 38 or under a provision of another Act; or
(b) it is a supply of a right to receive a supply that would be GST‑free under paragraph (a).
Input taxed
(2) A supply is input taxed if:
(a) it is input taxed under Division 40 or under a provision of another Act; or
(b) it is a supply of a right to receive a supply that would be input taxed under paragraph (a).
Note: If a supply is input taxed, there is no entitlement to an input tax credit for the things that are acquired or imported to make the supply (see sections 11‑15 and 15‑10).
Supplies that would be both GST‑free and input taxed
(3) To the extent that a supply would, apart from this subsection, be both *GST‑free and *input taxed:
(a) the supply is GST‑free and not input taxed, unless the provision under which it is input taxed requires the supplier to have chosen for its supplies of that kind to be input taxed; or
(b) the supply is input taxed and not GST‑free, if that provision requires the supplier to have so chosen.
Note: Subdivisions 40‑E (School tuckshops and canteens) and 40‑F (Fund‑raising events conducted by charitable institutions etc.) require such a choice.)
Supply of things used solely in connection with making supplies that are input taxed but not financial supplies
(4) A supply is taken to be a supply that is *input taxed if it is a supply of anything (other than *new residential premises) that you have used solely in connection with your supplies that are input taxed but are not *financial supplies.
9‑39 Special rules relating to taxable supplies
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to taxable supplies, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1A | Agents and insurance brokers | Division 153 |
1 | Associates | Division 72 |
2 | Cancelled lay‑by sales | Division 102 |
3 | Company amalgamations | Division 90 |
3A | Compulsory third party schemes | Division 79 |
4 | Deposits as security | Division 99 |
5 | Gambling | Division 126 |
5A | GST religious groups | Division 49 |
6 | Insurance | Division 78 |
7 | Offshore supplies other than goods or real property | Division 84 |
8 | Payments of taxes, fees and charges | Division 81 |
8A | Second‑hand goods | Division 66 |
8B | Settlement sharing arrangements | Division 80 |
9 | Supplies and acquisitions made on a progressive or periodic basis | Division 156 |
9A | Supplies in return for rights to develop land | Division 82 |
10 | Supplies in satisfaction of debts | Division 105 |
11 | Supplies partly connected with Australia | Division 96 |
12 | Supply under arrangement covered by PAYG voluntary agreement | Division 113 |
12A | Tax‑related transactions | Division 110 |
13 | Telecommunication supplies | Division 85 |
14 | Vouchers | Division 100 |
Subdivision 9‑B—Who is liable for GST on taxable supplies?
9‑40 Liability for GST on taxable supplies
You must pay the GST payable on any *taxable supply that you make.
9‑69 Special rules relating to liability for GST on taxable supplies
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to liability for GST on taxable supplies, as follows:
Checklist of special rules | |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1 | Company amalgamations | Division 90 |
2 | GST groups | Division 48 |
3 | GST joint ventures | Division 51 |
4 | Offshore supplies other than goods or real property | Division 84 |
4A | Non‑residents making supplies connected with Australia | Division 83 |
4B | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
5 | Resident agents acting for non‑residents | Division 57 |
Subdivision 9‑C—How much GST is payable on taxable supplies?
9‑70 The amount of GST on taxable supplies
The amount of GST on a *taxable supply is 10% of the *value of the taxable supply.
9‑75 The value of taxable supplies
(1) The value of a *taxable supply is as follows:

where:
price is the sum of:
(a) so far as the *consideration for the supply is consideration expressed as an amount of *money—the amount (without any discount for the amount of GST (if any) payable on the supply); and
(b) so far as the consideration is not consideration expressed as an amount of money—the *GST inclusive market value of that consideration.
Example: You make a taxable supply by selling a car for $22,000 in the course of carrying on an enterprise.
The value of the supply is:

The GST on the supply is therefore $2,000 (i.e. 10% of $20,000).
(2) However, if the taxable supply is of a *luxury car, the value of the taxable supply is as follows:

where:
luxury car tax value has the meaning given by section 5‑20 of the A New Tax System (Luxury Car Tax) Act 1999.
(3) In working out under subsection (1) the value of a *taxable supply made in a *tax period, being a supply that is a *fringe benefit, the price is taken to be the sum of:
(a) to the extent that, apart from this subsection, paragraph (a) of the definition of price in subsection (1) would be applicable:
(i) if the fringe benefit is a car fringe benefit—so much of the amount that would be worked out under that paragraph as represented the *recipient’s payment made in that period; or
(ii) if the fringe benefit is a benefit other than a car fringe benefit—so much of the amount that would be worked out under that paragraph as represented the *recipients contribution made in that period; and
(b) to the extent that, apart from this subsection, paragraph (b) of the definition of price in subsection (1) would be applicable:
(i) if the fringe benefit is a car fringe benefit—so much of the amount that would be worked out under that paragraph as represented the recipient’s payment made in that period; or
(ii) if the fringe benefit is a benefit other than a car fringe benefit—so much of the amount that would be worked out under that paragraph as represented the recipients contribution made in that period.
9‑80 The value of taxable supplies that are partly GST‑free or input taxed
(1) If a supply (the actual supply) is:
(a) partly a *taxable supply; and
(b) partly a supply that is *GST‑free or *input taxed;
the value of the part of the actual supply that is a taxable supply is the proportion of the value of the actual supply that the taxable supply represents.
(2) The value of the actual supply, for the purposes of subsection (1), is as follows:

where:
taxable proportion is the proportion of the value of the actual supply that represents the value of the *taxable supply (expressed as a number between 0 and 1).
9‑85 Value of taxable supplies to be expressed in Australian currency
(1) For the purposes of this Act, the *value of a *taxable supply is to be expressed in Australian currency.
(2) In working out the *value of a *taxable supply, any amount of the *consideration for the supply that is expressed in a currency other than Australian currency is to be treated as if it were an amount of Australian currency worked out in the manner determined by the Commissioner.
9‑90 Rounding of amounts of GST
One taxable supply recorded on an invoice
(1) If the amount of GST on a *taxable supply that is the only taxable supply recorded on a particular *invoice would, apart from this section, be an amount that includes a fraction of a cent, the amount of GST is rounded to the nearest cent (rounding 0.5 cents upwards).
Several taxable supplies recorded on an invoice
(2) If 2 or more *taxable supplies are recorded on the same *invoice, the total amount of GST on the supplies is:
(a) what would be the amount of GST if it were worked out by:
(i) working out the GST on each of the supplies (without rounding the amounts to the nearest cent); and
(ii) adding the amounts together and, if the total is an amount that includes a fraction of a cent, rounding it to the nearest cent (rounding 0.5 cents upwards); or
(b) the amount worked out using the following method statement:
Method statement
Step 1. Work out, for each *taxable supply, what would, apart from this section, be the amount of GST on the supply.
Step 2. If the amount for the supply has more decimal places than the number of decimal places allowed by the accounting system used to work out the amount, round the amount (up or down as appropriate) to that number of decimal places.
Note: Subsection (4) gives further details of this rounding.
Step 3. Work out the sum of the amounts worked out under step 1 and (if applicable) step 2 for each supply.
Step 4. If the sum under step 3 includes a fraction of a cent, round the sum to the nearest cent (rounding 0.5 cents upwards).
(3) Whether to use paragraph (2)(a) or paragraph (2)(b) to work out the total amount of GST on the supplies is a matter of choice for:
(a) the supplier if the amount is being worked out to ascertain the supplier’s liability for GST; or
(b) the *recipient of the supplies if the amount is being worked out to ascertain the recipient’s entitlement to input tax credits.
(4) In applying step 2 of the method statement in subsection (2), if:
(a) the number of decimal places in the amount for the supply exceeds by one decimal place the number of decimal places allowed by the accounting system used to work out the amount; and
(b) the last digit of the amount (before rounding) is 5;
the amount is rounded upwards to that number of decimal places.
Taxable supplies divided into items
(5) If one or more *taxable supplies recorded on the same *invoice are divided into 2 or more items:
(a) subsection (1) does not apply; and
(b) subsection (2) applies as if each such item represented a separate taxable supply.
Taxable supplies recorded on documents other than invoices
(6) If one or more *taxable supplies, none of which are recorded on an *invoice, are recorded on a document that is not an invoice, this section applies as if the document were an invoice.
9‑99 Special rules relating to the amount of GST on taxable supplies
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to the amount of GST on taxable supplies, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1A | Agents and insurance brokers | Division 153 |
1 | Associates | Division 72 |
2 | Company amalgamations | Division 90 |
2A | Compulsory third party schemes | Division 79 |
3 | Gambling | Division 126 |
4 | Long‑term accommodation in commercial residential premises | Division 87 |
4AA | Non‑residents making supplies connected with Australia | Division 83 |
4A | Offshore supplies other than goods or real property | Division 84 |
5 | Sale of freehold interests etc. | Division 75 |
7 | Supplies partly connected with Australia | Division 96 |
8 | Transactions relating to insurance policies | Division 78 |
9 | Valuation of taxable supplies of goods in bond | Division 108 |
Note: There are other laws that may affect the amount of GST on taxable supplies. For example, see subsection 357‑60(3) in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (about the effect of rulings made under Part 5‑5 in that Schedule).
Division 11—Creditable acquisitions
11‑1 What this Division is about
You are entitled to input tax credits for your creditable acquisitions. This Division defines creditable acquisitions, states who is entitled to the input tax credits and describes how to work out the input tax credits on acquisitions.
11‑5 What is a creditable acquisition?
You make a creditable acquisition if:
(a) you acquire anything solely or partly for a *creditable purpose; and
(b) the supply of the thing to you is a *taxable supply; and
(c) you provide, or are liable to provide, *consideration for the supply; and
(d) you are *registered, or *required to be registered.
11‑10 Meaning of acquisition
(1) An acquisition is any form of acquisition whatsoever.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), acquisition includes any of these:
(a) an acquisition of goods;
(b) an acquisition of services;
(c) a receipt of advice or information;
(d) an acceptance of a grant, assignment or surrender of *real property;
(e) an acceptance of a grant, transfer, assignment or surrender of any right;
(f) an acquisition of something the supply of which is a *financial supply;
(g) an acquisition of a right to require another person:
(i) to do anything; or
(ii) to refrain from an act; or
(iii) to tolerate an act or situation;
(h) any combination of any 2 or more of the matters referred to in paragraphs (a) to (g).
(3) However, an acquisition does not include an acquisition of *money unless the money is provided as *consideration for a supply that is a supply of money.
11‑15 Meaning of creditable purpose
(1) You acquire a thing for a creditable purpose to the extent that you acquire it in *carrying on your *enterprise.
(2) However, you do not acquire the thing for a creditable purpose to the extent that:
(a) the acquisition relates to making supplies that would be *input taxed; or
(b) the acquisition is of a private or domestic nature.
(3) An acquisition is not treated, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a), as relating to making supplies that would be *input taxed to the extent that the supply is made through an *enterprise, or a part of an enterprise, that you *carry on outside Australia.
(4) An acquisition is not treated, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a), as relating to making supplies that would be *input taxed if:
(a) the only reason it would (apart from this subsection) be so treated is because it relates to making *financial supplies; and
(b) you do not *exceed the financial acquisitions threshold.
(5) An acquisition is not treated, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a), as relating to making supplies that would be *input taxed to the extent that:
(a) the acquisition relates to making a *financial supply consisting of a borrowing; and
(b) the borrowing relates to you making supplies that are not input taxed.
11‑20 Who is entitled to input tax credits for creditable acquisitions?
You are entitled to the input tax credit for any *creditable acquisition that you make.
11‑25 How much are the input tax credits for creditable acquisitions?
The amount of the input tax credit for a *creditable acquisition is an amount equal to the GST payable on the supply of the thing acquired. However, the amount of the input tax credit is reduced if the acquisition is only *partly creditable.
Note: The basic rule for working out the GST payable on the supply is in Subdivision 9‑C. However, the GST payable may be affected by other provisions in:
(a) this Act (for a list of provisions, see section 9‑99); and
(b) other GST laws (for example, see subsection 357‑60(3) in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (about the effect of rulings made under Part 5‑5 in that Schedule)).
11‑30 Acquisitions that are partly creditable
(1) An acquisition that you make is partly creditable if it is a *creditable acquisition to which one or both of the following apply:
(a) you make the acquisition only partly for a *creditable purpose;
(b) you provide, or are liable to provide, only part of the *consideration for the acquisition.
(3) The amount of the input tax credit on an acquisition that you make that is *partly creditable is as follows:

where:
extent of consideration is the extent to which you provide, or are liable to provide, the *consideration for the acquisition, expressed as a percentage of the total consideration for the acquisition.
extent of creditable purpose is the extent to which the *creditable acquisition is for a *creditable purpose, expressed as a percentage of the total purpose of the acquisition.
full input tax credit is what would have been the amount of the input tax credit for the acquisition if it had been made solely for a creditable purpose and you had provided, or had been liable to provide, all of the consideration for the acquisition.
(4) For the purpose of working out the extent of the *consideration, so far as the consideration is not expressed as an amount of *money, take into account the *GST inclusive market value of the consideration.
(5) The Commissioner may determine, in writing, one or more ways in which to work out, for the purpose of subsection (3), the extent to which a *creditable acquisition is for a *creditable purpose.
11‑99 Special rules relating to acquisitions
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to acquisitions, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1A | Agents and insurance brokers | Division 153 |
1B | Annual apportionment of creditable purpose | Division 131 |
1 | Associates | Division 72 |
2 | Company amalgamations | Division 90 |
2A | Compulsory third party schemes | Division 79 |
3 | Financial supplies (reduced credit acquisitions) | Division 70 |
3A | Fringe benefits provided by input taxed suppliers | Division 71 |
4 | Gambling | Division 126 |
5 | GST groups | Division 48 |
6 | GST joint ventures | Division 51 |
6A | GST religious groups | Division 49 |
7 | Insurance | Division 78 |
8 | Non‑deductible expenses | Division 69 |
8A | Offshore supplies other than goods or real property | Division 84 |
9 | Pre‑establishment costs | Division 60 |
10 | Reimbursement of employees etc. | Division 111 |
10A | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
11 | Resident agents acting for non‑residents | Division 57 |
13 | Sale of freehold interests etc. | Division 75 |
14 | Second‑hand goods | Division 66 |
15 | Settlement sharing arrangements | Division 80 |
16 | Time limit on entitlements to input tax credits | Division 93 |
Part 2‑3—Importations
Division 13—Taxable importations
13‑1 What this Division is about
GST is payable on taxable importations. This Division defines taxable importations, states who is liable for the GST and describes how to work out the GST on importations.
Note 1: This Division applies whether or not you are registered.
Note 2: Things other than goods that are supplied overseas for use in Australia (and are therefore in that sense “imported”) are not taxable importations, but they can attract GST under Division 84.
13‑5 What are taxable importations?
(1) You make a taxable importation if:
(a) goods are imported; and
(b) you enter the goods for home consumption (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901).
However, the importation is not a taxable importation to the extent that it is a *non‑taxable importation.
Note: There is no registration requirement for taxable importations, and the importer need not be carrying on an enterprise.
(3) However, an importation of *money is not an importation of goods into Australia.
13‑10 Meaning of non‑taxable importation
An importation is a non‑taxable importation if:
(a) it is a non‑taxable importation under Part 3‑2; or
(b) it would have been a supply that was *GST‑free or *input taxed if it had been a supply.
13‑15 Who is liable for GST on taxable importations?
You must pay the GST payable on any *taxable importation that you make.
13‑20 How much GST is payable on taxable importations?
(1) The amount of GST on the *taxable importation is 10% of the *value of the taxable importation.
(2) The value of a *taxable importation is the sum of:
(a) the *customs value of the goods imported; and
(b) the amount paid or payable:
(i) for the *international transport of the goods to their *place of consignment in Australia; and
(ii) to insure the goods for that transport;
to the extent that the amount is not already included under paragraph (a); and
(ba) the amount paid or payable for a supply to which item 5A in the table in subsection 38‑355(1) applies, to the extent that the amount:
(i) is not an amount, the payment of which (or the discharging of a liability to make a payment of which), because of Division 81 or regulations made under that Division, is not the provision of *consideration; and
Note: Division 81 excludes certain taxes, fees and charges from the provision of consideration.
(ii) is not already included under paragraph (a) or (b); and
(c) any *customs duty payable in respect of the importation of the goods; and
(d) any *wine tax payable in respect of the *local entry of the goods.
(2A) If an amount to be taken into account under paragraph (2)(b) or (ba) is not an amount in Australian currency, the amount so taken into account is the equivalent in Australian currency of that amount, ascertained in the way provided in section 161J of the Customs Act 1901.
(3) The Commissioner may, in writing:
(a) determine the way in which the amount paid or payable for a specified kind of transport or insurance is to be worked out for the purposes of paragraph (2)(b); and
(b) determine the way in which the amount paid or payable for a specified kind of supply referred to in paragraph (2)(ba) is to be worked out for the purposes of that paragraph; and
(c) in relation to importations of a specified kind or importations to which specified circumstances apply—determine that:
(i) the amount paid or payable for a specified kind of transport or insurance is taken, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(b), to be zero; or
(ii) the amount paid or payable for a specified kind of supply referred to in paragraph (2)(ba) is taken, for the purposes of that paragraph, to be zero.
13‑25 The value of taxable importations that are partly non‑taxable importations
If an importation (the actual importation) is:
(a) partly a *taxable importation; and
(b) partly a *non‑taxable importation;
the value of the part of the actual importation that is a taxable importation is the proportion of the value of the actual importation (worked out as if it were solely a taxable importation) that the taxable importation represents.
13‑99 Special rules relating to taxable importations
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to taxable importations, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1 | GST groups | Division 48 |
2 | GST joint ventures | Division 51 |
3 | Importations without entry for home consumption | Division 114 |
4 | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
5 | Resident agents acting for non‑residents | Division 57 |
6 | Valuation of re‑imported goods | Division 117 |
Note: There are other laws that may affect the amount of GST on taxable importations. For example, see subsection 357‑60(3) in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (about the effect of rulings made under Part 5‑5 in that Schedule).
Division 15—Creditable importations
15‑1 What this Division is about
You are entitled to input tax credits for your creditable importations. This Division defines creditable importations, states who is entitled to the input tax credits and describes how to work out the input tax credits on importations.
15‑5 What are creditable importations?
You make a creditable importation if:
(a) you import goods solely or partly for a *creditable purpose; and
(b) the importation is a *taxable importation; and
(c) you are *registered, or *required to be registered.
15‑10 Meaning of creditable purpose
(1) You import goods for a creditable purpose to the extent that you import the goods in *carrying on your *enterprise.
(2) However, you do not import the goods for a creditable purpose to the extent that:
(a) the importation relates to making supplies that would be *input taxed; or
(b) the importation is of a private or domestic nature.
(3) An importation is not treated, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a), as relating to making supplies that would be *input taxed to the extent that the supply is made through an *enterprise, or a part of an enterprise, that you *carry on outside Australia.
(4) An importation is not treated, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a), as relating to making supplies that would be *input taxed if:
(a) the only reason it would (apart from this subsection) be so treated is because it relates to making *financial supplies; and
(b) you do not *exceed the financial acquisitions threshold.
(5) An importation is not treated, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a), as relating to making supplies that would be *input taxed to the extent that:
(a) the importation relates to making a *financial supply consisting of a borrowing; and
(b) the borrowing relates to you making supplies that are not input taxed.
15‑15 Who is entitled to input tax credits for creditable importations?
You are entitled to the input tax credit for any *creditable importation that you make.
15‑20 How much are the input tax credits for creditable importations?
The amount of input tax credit for a *creditable importation is an amount equal to the GST payable on the importation. However, the amount of the input tax credit is reduced if the importation is only *partly creditable.
Note: The basic rule for working out the GST payable on the importation is in section 13‑20. However, the GST payable may be affected by other provisions in:
(a) this Act (for a list of provisions, see section 13‑99); and
(b) other GST laws (for example, see subsection 357‑60(3) in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (about the effect of rulings made under Part 5‑5 in that Schedule)).
15‑25 Importations that are partly creditable
(1) An importation that you make is partly creditable if it is a *creditable importation that you make only partly for a *creditable purpose.
(3) The amount of the input tax credit on an importation that you make that is *partly creditable is as follows:

where:
extent of creditable purpose is the extent to which the importation is for a *creditable purpose, expressed as a percentage of the total purpose of the importation.
full input tax credit is what would have been the amount of the input tax credit for the importation if it had been made solely for a creditable purpose.
(4) The Commissioner may determine, in writing, one or more ways in which to work out, for the purpose of subsection (3), the extent to which an importation is for a *creditable purpose.
15‑99 Special rules relating to creditable importations
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to creditable importations, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1AA | Annual apportionment of creditable purpose | Division 131 |
1A | Fringe benefits provided by input taxed suppliers | Division 71 |
1 | GST groups | Division 48 |
2 | GST joint ventures | Division 51 |
2AA | Importations without entry for home consumption | Division 114 |
2A | Non‑deductible expenses | Division 69 |
3 | Pre‑establishment costs | Division 60 |
3A | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
4 | Resident agents acting for non‑residents | Division 57 |
Part 2‑4—Net amounts and adjustments
Division 17—Net amounts and adjustments
17‑1 What this Division is about
A net amount is worked out for each tax period that applies to you. This is the amount payable by you to the Commonwealth, or payable to you by the Commonwealth, for the tax period.
Adjustments can be made to the net amount. Increasing adjustments increase your net amount, and decreasing adjustments decrease your net amount.
Note 1: GST on taxable importations is not included in the net amount. It is dealt with separately under section 33‑15.
Note 2: Net amounts payable to the Commonwealth are to be paid to the Commissioner on the Commonwealth’s behalf (see Division 33).
17‑5 Net amounts
(1) The net amount for a tax period applying to you is worked out using the following formula:

where:
GST is the sum of all of the GST for which you are liable on the *taxable supplies that are attributable to the tax period.
input tax credits is the sum of all of the input tax credits to which you are entitled for the *creditable acquisitions and *creditable importations that are attributable to the tax period.
For the basic rules on what is attributable to a particular period, see Division 29.
(2) However, the *net amount for the tax period may be increased or decreased if you have any *adjustments for the tax period.
17‑10 Adjustments
If you have any *adjustments that are attributable to a tax period applying to you, alter your *net amount for the period as follows:
(a) add to the amount worked out under subsection 17‑5(1) for the period the sum of all the *increasing adjustments (if any) that are attributable to the period;
(b) subtract from that amount the sum of all the *decreasing adjustments (if any) that are attributable to the period.
For the basic rules on what adjustments are attributable to a particular period, see Division 29.
17‑15 Working out net amounts using approved forms
(1) You may choose to work out your *net amount for a tax period in the way specified in an *approved form if you use the form to notify the Commissioner of that net amount. The amount so worked out is treated as your net amount for the tax period.
Note: Choosing to use section 17‑5 to work out your net amount does not mean your GST return is not in the approved form: see subsection 31‑15(3).
(2) This section has effect despite section 17‑5.
17‑20 Determinations relating to how to work out net amounts
(1) The Commissioner may make a determination that, in the circumstances specified in the determination, a *net amount for a tax period may be worked out to take account of other matters in the way specified in the determination.
(2) The matters must relate to correction of errors made in working out *net amounts for the immediately preceding tax period.
(3) If those circumstances apply in relation to a tax period applying to you, you may work out your *net amount for the tax period in that way.
17‑99 Special rules relating to net amounts or adjustments
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to net amounts or adjustments, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1A | Annual apportionment of creditable purpose | Division 131 |
1 | Anti‑avoidance | Division 165 |
2 | Cessation of registration | Division 138 |
3 | Changes in the extent of creditable purpose | Division 129 |
4 | Company amalgamations | Division 90 |
4AA | Compulsory third party schemes | Division 79 |
4A | Distributions from deceased estates | Division 139 |
5 | Gambling | Division 126 |
5A | Goods applied solely to private or domestic use | Division 130 |
6 | GST branches | Division 54 |
7 | GST groups | Division 48 |
8 | GST joint ventures | Division 51 |
8A | GST religious groups | Division 49 |
9 | Insurance | Division 78 |
9AA | Non‑deductible expenses | Division 69 |
9A | Non‑profit sub‑entities | Division 63 |
9B | Payment of GST by instalments | Division 162 |
9C | Providing additional consideration under gross‑up clauses | Division 133 |
10 | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
11 | Resident agents acting for non‑residents | Division 57 |
11A | Sale of freehold interests etc. | Division 75 |
12 | Second‑hand goods | Division 66 |
12AA | Settlement sharing arrangements | Division 80 |
12A | Simplified accounting methods for retailers and small enterprise entities | Division 123 |
12B | Stock on hand on becoming registered etc. | Division 137 |
13 | Supplies in satisfaction of debts | Division 105 |
14 | Supplies of going concerns | Division 135 |
15 | Supplies of things acquired etc. without full input tax credits | Division 132 |
15A | Third party payments | Division 134 |
16 | Tradex scheme goods | Division 141 |
17 | Vouchers | Division 100 |
Division 19—Adjustment events
Table of Subdivisions
19‑A Adjustment events
19‑B Adjustments for supplies
19‑C Adjustments for acquisitions
19‑1 What this Division is about
Adjustments can arise because of adjustment events. They are events such as a cancellation of a supply or acquisition, or a change in the consideration for a supply or acquisition (for example, because of a volume discount).
Note: Importations do not give rise to adjustment events.
19‑5 Explanation of the effect of adjustment events
The following diagram shows how an *adjustment event for a supply or acquisition can give rise to an *increasing adjustment or a *decreasing adjustment.

Note: This section is an explanatory section.
Subdivision 19‑A—Adjustment events
19‑10 Adjustment events
(1) An adjustment event is any event which has the effect of:
(a) cancelling a supply or acquisition; or
(b) changing the *consideration for a supply or acquisition; or
(c) causing a supply or acquisition to become, or stop being, a *taxable supply or *creditable acquisition.
Example: If goods that are supplied for export are not exported within the time provided in section 38‑185, the supply is likely to become a taxable supply after originally being a supply that was GST‑free.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), these are *adjustment events:
(a) the return to a supplier of a thing, or part of a thing, supplied (whether or not the return involves a change of ownership of the thing);
(b) a change to the previously agreed *consideration for a supply or acquisition, whether due to the offer of a discount or otherwise;
(c) a change in the extent to which an entity that makes an acquisition provides, or is liable to provide, consideration for the acquisition (unless the entity *accounts on a cash basis).
(3) An *adjustment event:
(a) can arise in relation to a supply even if it is not a *taxable supply; and
(b) can arise in relation to an acquisition even if it is not a *creditable acquisition.
(4) However, the return of a thing supplied, or part of a thing supplied, to its supplier is not an *adjustment event if the return is for the purpose of repair or maintenance.
Subdivision 19‑B—Adjustments for supplies
19‑40 Where adjustments for supplies arise
You have an adjustment for a supply for which you are liable to pay GST (or would be liable to pay GST if it were a *taxable supply) if:
(a) in relation to the supply, one or more *adjustment events occur during a tax period; and
(b) GST on the supply was attributable to an earlier tax period (or, if the supply was not a taxable supply, would have been attributable to an earlier tax period had the supply been a taxable supply); and
(c) as a result of those adjustment events, the *previously attributed GST amount for the supply (if any) no longer correctly reflects the amount of GST (if any) on the supply (the corrected GST amount), taking into account any change of circumstances that has given rise to an adjustment for the supply under this Subdivision or Division 21 or 134.
19‑45 Previously attributed GST amounts
The previously attributed GST amount for a supply is:
(a) the amount of any GST that was attributable to a tax period in respect of the supply; plus
(b) the sum of any *increasing adjustments, under this Subdivision or Division 21, that were previously attributable to a tax period in respect of the supply; minus
(c) the sum of any *decreasing adjustments, under this Subdivision or Division 21 or 134, that were previously attributable to a tax period in respect of the supply.
19‑50 Increasing adjustments for supplies
If the *corrected GST amount is greater than the *previously attributed GST amount, you have an increasing adjustment equal to the difference between the corrected GST amount and the previously attributed GST amount.
19‑55 Decreasing adjustments for supplies
If the *corrected GST amount is less than the *previously attributed GST amount, you have a decreasing adjustment equal to the difference between the previously attributed GST amount and the corrected GST amount.
Subdivision 19‑C—Adjustments for acquisitions
19‑70 Where adjustments for acquisitions arise
(1) You have an adjustment for an acquisition for which you are entitled to an input tax credit (or would be entitled to an input tax credit if the acquisition were a *creditable acquisition) if:
(a) in relation to the acquisition, one or more *adjustment events occur during a tax period; and
(b) an input tax credit on the acquisition was attributable to an earlier tax period (or, if the acquisition was not a creditable acquisition, would have been attributable to an earlier tax period had the acquisition been a creditable acquisition); and
(c) as a result of those adjustment events, the *previously attributed input tax credit amount for the acquisition (if any) no longer correctly reflects the amount of the input tax credit (if any) on the acquisition (the corrected input tax credit amount).
(2) In working out the *corrected input tax credit amount for the acquisition:
(a) take into account any change of circumstances that has given rise to an adjustment for the acquisition under this Subdivision or Division 21, 129, 133 or 134; and
(b) if an adjustment relating to the acquisition under Division 131 was attributable to an earlier tax period:
(i) do not take into account that adjustment; and
(ii) treat the acquisition as one in relation to which Division 131 had not applied.
19‑75 Previously attributed input tax credit amounts
The previously attributed input tax credit amount for an acquisition is:
(a) the amount of any input tax credit that was attributable to a tax period in respect of the acquisition; minus
(b) the sum of any *increasing adjustments, under this Subdivision or Division 21, 129, 131 or 134, that were previously attributable to a tax period in respect of the acquisition; plus
(c) the sum of any *decreasing adjustments, under this Subdivision or Division 21, 129 or 133, that were previously attributable to a tax period in respect of the acquisition.
19‑80 Increasing adjustments for acquisitions
If the *previously attributed input tax credit amount is greater than the *corrected input tax credit amount, you have an increasing adjustment equal to the difference between the previously attributed input tax credit amount and the corrected input tax credit amount.
19‑85 Decreasing adjustments for acquisitions
If the *previously attributed input tax credit amount is less than the *corrected input tax credit amount, you have a decreasing adjustment equal to the difference between the corrected input tax credit amount and the previously attributed input tax credit amount.
19‑99 Special rules relating to adjustment events
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to *adjustment events in particular cases, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1AA | Compulsory third party schemes | Division 79 |
1A | GST religious groups | Division 49 |
1 | Insurance | Division 78 |
2 | Non‑deductible expenses | Division 69 |
2A | Providing additional consideration under gross‑up clauses | Division 133 |
3 | Settlement sharing arrangements | Division 80 |
4 | Third party payments | Division 134 |
Division 21—Bad debts
21‑1 What this Division is about
If debts are written off as bad or are outstanding after 12 months, adjustments (for the purpose of working out net amounts) are made. They can arise both for amounts written off or outstanding and for recovery of amounts previously written off or outstanding.
Note: This Division does not apply to supplies and acquisitions that you account for on a cash basis (except in the limited circumstances referred to in Division 159).
21‑5 Writing off bad debts (taxable supplies)
(1) You have a decreasing adjustment if:
(a) you made a *taxable supply; and
(b) the whole or part of the *consideration for the supply has not been received; and
(c) you write off as bad the whole or a part of the debt, or the whole or a part of the debt has been *overdue for 12 months or more.
The amount of the decreasing adjustment is 1/11 of the amount written off, or 1/11 of the amount that has been overdue for 12 months or more, as the case requires.
(2) However, you cannot have an *adjustment under this section if you *account on a cash basis.
21‑10 Recovering amounts previously written off (taxable supplies)
You have an increasing adjustment if:
(a) you made a *taxable supply in relation to which you had a *decreasing adjustment under section 21‑5 for a debt; and
(b) you recover the whole or a part of the amount written off, or the whole or a part of the amount that has been *overdue for 12 months or more, as the case requires.
The amount of the increasing adjustment is 1/11 of the amount recovered.
21‑15 Bad debts written off (creditable acquisitions)
(1) You have an increasing adjustment if:
(a) you made a *creditable acquisition for *consideration; and
(b) the whole or part of the consideration is *overdue, but you have not provided the consideration overdue; and
(c) the supplier of the thing you acquired writes off as bad the whole or a part of the debt, or the whole or a part of the debt has been overdue for 12 months or more.
The amount of the increasing adjustment is 1/11 of the amount written off, or 1/11 of the amount that has been overdue for 12 months or more, as the case requires.
(2) However, you cannot have an *adjustment under this section if you *account on a cash basis.
21‑20 Recovering amounts previously written off (creditable acquisitions)
You have a decreasing adjustment if:
(a) you made a *creditable acquisition in relation to which you had an *increasing adjustment under section 21‑15 for a debt; and
(b) you pay to the supplier of the thing you acquired the whole or a part of the amount written off, or the whole or a part of the amount that has been *overdue for 12 months or more, as the case requires.
The amount of the decreasing adjustment is 1/11 of the amount recovered.
21‑99 Special rules relating to adjustments for bad debts
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to adjustments for bad debts, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1A | Bad debts relating to transactions that are not taxable or creditable to the fullest extent | Division 136 |
1 | Changing your accounting basis | Division 159 |
2 | Gambling | Division 126 |
2A | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
3 | Sale of freehold interests etc. | Division 75 |
Part 2‑5—Registration
Division 23—Who is required to be registered and who may be registered
23‑1 Explanation of Division
This diagram shows when you are required to be, and when you may, be registered.

Note: This section is an explanatory section.
23‑5 Who is required to be registered
You are required to be registered under this Act if:
(a) you are *carrying on an *enterprise; and
(b) your *GST turnover meets the *registration turnover threshold.
Note: It is the entity that carries on the enterprise that is required to be registered (and not the enterprise).
23‑10 Who may be registered
(1) You may be *registered under this Act if you are carrying on an *enterprise (whether or not your *GST turnover is at, above or below the *registration turnover threshold).
(2) You may be *registered under this Act if you intend to carry on an *enterprise from a particular date.
23‑15 The registration turnover threshold
(1) Your registration turnover threshold (unless you are a non‑profit body) is:
(a) $50,000; or
(b) such higher amount as the regulations specify.
(2) Your registration turnover threshold if you are a non‑profit body is:
(a) $100,000; or
(b) such higher amount as the regulations specify.
23‑99 Special rules relating to who is required to be registered or who may be registered
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to who is *required to be registered, or who may be *registered, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1A | Government entities | Division 149 |
1B | Non‑profit sub‑entities | Division 63 |
1 | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
2 | Resident agents acting for non‑residents | Division 57 |
3 | Taxis | Division 144 |
Division 25—How you become registered, and how your registration can be cancelled
Table of Subdivisions
25‑A How you become registered
25‑B How your registration can be cancelled
Subdivision 25‑A—How you become registered
25‑1 When you must apply for registration
You must apply, in the *approved form, to be *registered under this Act if:
(a) you are not registered under this Act; and
(b) you are *required to be registered.
You must make your application within 21 days after becoming required to be registered.
25‑5 When the Commissioner must register you
(1) The Commissioner must *register you if:
(a) you have applied for registration in an *approved form; and
(b) the Commissioner is satisfied that you are *carrying on an *enterprise, or you intend to carry on an enterprise from a particular date specified in your application.
Note: Refusing to register you under this subsection is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The Commissioner must *register you (even if you have not applied for registration) if the Commissioner is satisfied that you are *required to be registered.
Note: Registering you under this subsection is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(3) The Commissioner must notify you in writing of any decision he or she makes in relation to you under this section. If the Commissioner decides to register you, the notice must specify the following:
(a) the date of effect of your registration;
(b) your registration number;
(c) the tax periods that apply to you.
25‑10 The date of effect of your registration
(1) The Commissioner must decide the date from which your *registration takes effect, or took effect. However:
(a) if you did not apply for registration and the Commissioner is satisfied that you are *required to be registered—the date of effect must not be a day before the day on which you became required to be registered; or
(b) if you applied for registration—the date of effect must not be a day before:
(i) the day specified in your application; or
(ii) if the Commissioner is satisfied that you became required to be registered on an earlier day—the day that the Commissioner is satisfied is that earlier day; or
(c) if you are being registered only because you intend to *carry on an *enterprise—the date of effect must not be a day before the day specified, in your application for registration, as the day from which you intend to carry on the enterprise.
Note: Deciding the date of effect of your registration is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The *Australian Business Registrar must enter in the *Australian Business Register the date on which your *registration takes or took effect.
25‑15 Effect of backdating your registration
If the Commissioner decides under section 25‑10, as the date of effect of your *registration (your registration day), a day before the day of the decision, then you are taken:
(a) for the purpose of determining whether a supply you made on or after your registration day was a *taxable supply; and
(b) for the purpose of determining whether an acquisition you made on or after that day was a *creditable acquisition; and
(c) for the purpose of determining whether an importation you made on or after that day was a *creditable importation;
to have been registered from and including your registration day.
Note: This section ensures that backdating your registration enables your supplies and acquisitions made on or after the date of effect to be picked up by the GST system. Section 25‑10 limits the extent to which your registration can be backdated.
25‑49 Special rules relating to registration
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to *registration in particular cases, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1A | Government entities | Division 149 |
1 | GST branches | Division 54 |
2 | Non‑profit sub‑entities | Division 63 |
3 | Non‑residents making supplies connected with Australia | Division 83 |
Subdivision 25‑B—How your registration can be cancelled
25‑50 When you must apply for cancellation of registration
If you are *registered and you are not *carrying on any *enterprise, you must apply to the Commissioner in the *approved form for cancellation of your *registration. You must lodge your application within 21 days after the day on which you ceased to be carrying on any *enterprise.
25‑55 When the Commissioner must cancel registration
(1) The Commissioner must cancel your *registration if:
(a) you have applied for cancellation of registration in the *approved form; and
(b) at the time you applied for cancellation of registration, you had been registered for at least 12 months; and
(c) the Commissioner is satisfied that you are not *required to be registered.
Note: Refusing to cancel your registration under this subsection is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The Commissioner must cancel your *registration (even if you have not applied for cancellation of your registration) if:
(a) the Commissioner is satisfied that you are not *carrying on an *enterprise; and
(b) the Commissioner believes on reasonable grounds that you are not likely to carry on an enterprise for at least 12 months.
Note: Cancelling your registration under this subsection is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(3) The Commissioner must notify you of any decision he or she makes in relation to you under this section. If the Commissioner decides to cancel your registration, the notice must specify the date of effect of the cancellation.
25‑57 When the Commissioner may cancel your registration
(1) The Commissioner may cancel your *registration if:
(a) less than 12 months after being registered, you apply for cancellation of registration in the *approved form; and
(b) the Commissioner is satisfied that you are not *required to be registered.
Note: Refusing to cancel your registration under this subsection is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) In considering your application, the Commissioner may have regard to:
(a) how long you have been *registered; and
(b) whether you have previously been registered; and
(c) any other relevant matters.
(3) The Commissioner must notify you of any decision he or she makes in relation to you under this section. If the Commissioner decides to cancel your registration, the notice must specify the date of effect of the cancellation.
25‑60 The date of effect of your cancellation
(1) The Commissioner must decide the date on which the cancellation of your *registration under subsection 25‑55(1) or (2) or section 25‑57 takes effect. That date may be any day occurring before, on or after the day on which the Commissioner makes the decision.
Note: Deciding the date of effect of the cancellation of your registration is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The *Australian Business Registrar must enter in the *Australian Business Register the date on which the cancellation of your *registration takes effect.
25‑65 Effect of backdating your cancellation of registration
If the Commissioner decides under section 25‑60, as the date of effect of the cancellation of your *registration (your cancellation day), a day before the day of the decision, your registration is taken:
(a) for the purpose of determining whether a supply you made on or after your cancellation day was a *taxable supply; and
(b) for the purpose of determining whether an acquisition you made on or after that day was a *creditable acquisition; and
(c) for the purpose of determining whether an importation you made on or after that date was a *creditable importation;
to have been cancelled from and including your cancellation day.
25‑99 Special rules relating to cancellation of registration
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to cancellation of *registration in particular cases, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1A | Government entities | Division 149 |
1 | GST branches | Division 54 |
1B | Non‑profit sub‑entities | Division 63 |
2 | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
3 | Resident agents acting for non‑residents | Division 57 |
Part 2‑6—Tax periods
Division 27—How to work out the tax periods that apply to you
27‑1 What this Division is about
This Division tells you the tax periods that apply to you. You need to know this because your net amounts (the amounts payable by you or to you) are worked out in respect of these tax periods.
27‑5 General rule—3 month tax periods
The tax periods that apply to you are each period of 3 months ending on 31 March, 30 June, 30 September or 31 December in any year, except to the extent that:
(a) an election is in force under section 27‑10; or
(b) the Commissioner determines otherwise under this Division.
Note: Several provisions in Chapter 4 provide for different tax periods. In particular, Division 151 provides for annual tax periods.
27‑10 Election of one month tax periods
(1) The tax periods that apply to you are each individual month if, by notifying the Commissioner in the *approved form, you elect to have as the tax periods that apply to you each individual month.
(2) The election takes effect on the day specified in the notice. However, the day specified must be 1 January, 1 April, 1 July or 1 October.
27‑15 Determination of one month tax periods
(1) The Commissioner must determine that the tax periods that apply to you are each individual month if:
(a) the Commissioner is satisfied that your *GST turnover meets the *tax period turnover threshold; or
(b) the Commissioner is satisfied that the period for which you will be *carrying on an *enterprise in Australia is less than 3 months; or
(c) the Commissioner is satisfied that you have a history of failing to comply with your obligations under a *taxation law.
Note: Determining under this section the tax periods applying to you is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The determination takes effect on the day specified in the determination. However, the day specified must be 1 January, 1 April, 1 July or 1 October.
Note: Deciding the date of effect of the determination is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(3) The tax period turnover threshold is:
(a) $20 million; or
(b) such other amount as the regulations specify.
However, if the regulations change the tax period turnover threshold, the change does not apply to you until the start of the next tax period that starts after the regulation in question comes into operation.
27‑20 Withdrawing elections of one month tax periods
(1) You may, by notifying the Commissioner in the *approved form, withdraw an election under section 27‑10, unless your *GST turnover meets the *tax period turnover threshold.
(2) The withdrawal takes effect on the day specified in the notice. However, the day specified:
(a) must be 1 January, 1 April, 1 July or 1 October, or any day occurring before the election takes effect; and
(b) must not be a day occurring earlier than 12 months after the election took effect.
27‑22 Revoking elections of one month tax periods
(1) The Commissioner may, if you so request in the *approved form, revoke your election under section 27‑10, with effect from a day occurring earlier than 12 months after the election took effect, unless the Commissioner is satisfied that your *GST turnover meets the *tax period turnover threshold.
Note: Refusing to revoke your election under this subsection is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) In considering your request, the Commissioner may have regard to:
(a) for how long the tax periods applying to you have been each individual month; and
(b) whether you have previously been *registered, and whether such tax periods had applied to you; and
(c) any other relevant matters.
(3) The revocation:
(a) takes effect on the day specified in the instrument of revocation; or
(b) is taken to have had effect from a past day specified in the instrument of revocation.
However, the day specified must be 1 January, 1 April, 1 July or 1 October.
Note: Deciding the date of effect of the revocation is a reviewable decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
27‑25 Revoking determinations of one month tax periods
(1) The Commissioner must revoke a determination under section 27‑15 relating to you if you so request, unless the Commissioner is satisfied that any of the grounds for making a determination under that section apply to you.
Note: Refusing to revoke a determination under this section is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The revocation takes effect on the day specified in the instrument of revocation. However, the day specified:
(a) must be 1 January, 1 April, 1 July or 1 October; and
(b) must not be a day occurring earlier than 12 months after the determination took effect.
Note: Deciding the date of effect of the revocation is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
27‑30 Tax periods determined by the Commissioner to take account of changes in tax periods
(1) For the purpose of ensuring the effective operation of this Division where:
(a) you become *registered or *required to be registered; or
(b) the tax periods applying to you have changed;
the Commissioner may, by written notice given to you, determine that a period specified in the notice is a tax period that applies to you.
Note: Determining under this section a tax period applying to you is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The period specified in the notice may start earlier than the day on which the notice is given to you.
(3) However, the period specified in the notice:
(a) must be less than 3 months; and
(b) must not overlap with any part of any other tax period for which you have already given a *GST return to the Commissioner.
For the giving of GST returns to the Commissioner, see Division 31.
27‑35 Changing the days on which your tax periods end
(1) You may change the day in each year on which a tax period would otherwise end. However:
(a) the day must be no more than 7 days earlier or 7 days later than a day on which one of the tax periods that applies to you would otherwise end if the days were not changed; and
(b) the change must be consistent with the commercial accounting periods that apply to you.
(2) If the day on which a tax period ends is changed, the next tax period starts on the day after that day.
27‑37 Special determination of tax periods on request
(1) The Commissioner may, in accordance with a request you make in the *approved form, determine the tax periods applying to you to be the tax periods specified in the request if the Commissioner is satisfied that:
(a) your *GST turnover meets the *tax period turnover threshold; and
(b) the tax periods specified in the request are consistent with the commercial accounting periods that apply to you; and
(c) the tax periods specified in the request would, if determined under this section, result in 12 complete tax periods in each year; and
(d) any other requirements specified in the regulations are complied with.
Note: Refusing a request for a determination under this section is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) A determination under this section overrides any determination under section 27‑15 or 27‑30 relating to tax periods applying to you.
27‑38 Revoking special determination of tax periods
(1) The Commissioner must revoke a determination under section 27‑37 if the Commissioner is satisfied that any of the requirements of paragraphs 27‑37(1)(a), (b), (c) and (d) are not complied with.
Note: Revoking a determination under this section is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The revocation takes effect on the day specified in the instrument of revocation. However, the day specified must be 1 January, 1 April, 1 July or 1 October.
Note: Deciding the date of effect of the revocation is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(3) A revocation under this section revives any election under section 27‑10, or any determination under section 27‑15 or 27‑30, relating to tax periods applying to you.
27‑39 Tax periods of incapacitated entities
(1) If an entity becomes an *incapacitated entity, the entity’s tax period at the time is taken to have ended at the end of the day before the entity became incapacitated.
(2) If a tax period (the first tax period) ends on a particular day because of subsection (1), the next tax period starts on the day after that day and ends when the first tax period would have ended but for that subsection.
27‑40 An entity’s concluding tax period
(1) If:
(a) an individual dies; or
(b) another entity for any reason ceases to exist;
the individual’s or entity’s tax period at the time is taken to have ceased at the end of the day before the death or cessation.
(1A) If an entity ceases to *carry on any *enterprise, the entity’s tax period at the time is taken to have ceased at the end of the day on which the cessation occurred.
(2) If an entity’s *registration is cancelled, the entity’s tax period at the date of effect of the cancellation (the cancellation day) ceases at the end of the cancellation day.
27‑99 Special rules relating to tax periods
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to tax periods, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1AAA | Annual tax periods | Division 151 |
1 | Changes in the extent of creditable purpose | Division 129 |
1AA | GST groups | Division 48 |
1AB | Payment of GST by instalments | Division 162 |
1A | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
2 | Resident agents acting for non‑residents | Division 57 |
Division 29—What is attributable to tax periods
Table of Subdivisions
29‑A The attribution rules
29‑B Accounting on a cash basis
29‑C Tax invoices and adjustment notes
29‑1 What this Division is about
This Division tells you the tax periods to which your taxable supplies, creditable acquisitions, creditable importations and adjustments are attributable. You need to know this to work out your net amounts under Part 2‑4.
Note: This Division does not deal with your taxable importations, because they are not attributed to tax periods. See section 33‑15 for payment of GST on taxable importations.
Subdivision 29‑A—The attribution rules
29‑5 Attributing the GST on your taxable supplies
(1) The GST payable by you on a *taxable supply is attributable to:
(a) the tax period in which any of the *consideration is received for the supply; or
(b) if, before any of the consideration is received, an *invoice is issued relating to the supply—the tax period in which the invoice is issued.
(2) However, if you *account on a cash basis, then:
(a) if, in a tax period, all of the *consideration is received for a *taxable supply—GST on the supply is attributable to that tax period; or
(b) if, in a tax period, part of the consideration is received—GST on the supply is attributable to that tax period, but only to the extent that the consideration is received in that tax period; or
(c) if, in a tax period, none of the consideration is received—none of the GST on the supply is attributable to that tax period.
29‑10 Attributing the input tax credits for your creditable acquisitions
(1) The input tax credit to which you are entitled for a *creditable acquisition is attributable to:
(a) the tax period in which you provide any of the *consideration for the acquisition; or
(b) if, before you provide any of the consideration, an *invoice is issued relating to the acquisition—the tax period in which the invoice is issued.
(2) However, if you *account on a cash basis, then:
(a) if, in a tax period, you provide all of the *consideration for a *creditable acquisition—the input tax credit for the acquisition is attributable to that tax period; or
(b) if, in a tax period, you provide part of the consideration—the input tax credit for the acquisition is attributable to that tax period, but only to the extent that you provided the consideration in that tax period; or
(c) if, in a tax period, none of the consideration is provided—none of the input tax credit for the acquisition is attributable to that tax period.
(3) If you do not hold a *tax invoice for a *creditable acquisition when you give to the Commissioner a *GST return for the tax period to which the input tax credit (or any part of the input tax credit) on the acquisition would otherwise be attributable:
(a) the input tax credit (including any part of the input tax credit) is not attributable to that tax period; and
(b) the input tax credit (or part) is attributable to the first tax period for which you give to the Commissioner a GST return at a time when you hold that tax invoice.
However, this subsection does not apply in circumstances of a kind determined in writing by the Commissioner to be circumstances in which the requirement for a tax invoice does not apply.
For the giving of GST returns to the Commissioner, see Division 31.
(4) If the *GST return for a tax period states a *net amount that does not take into account an input tax credit attributable to that tax period:
(a) the input tax credit is not attributable to that tax period; and
(b) the input tax credit is attributable to the first tax period for which you give the Commissioner a GST return that does take it into account.
Note: Section 93‑5 may provide a time limit on your entitlement to an input tax credit.
29‑15 Attributing the input tax credits for your creditable importations
(1) The input tax credit to which you are entitled for a *creditable importation is attributable to the tax period in which you pay the GST on the importation.
(2) However, if paragraph 33‑15(1)(b) applies to payment of the GST on the importation, the input tax credit is attributable to the tax period in which the liability for the GST arose.
29‑20 Attributing your adjustments
(1) An *adjustment that you have is attributable to the tax period in which you become aware of the adjustment.
(2) However, if you *account on a cash basis, and the *adjustment arises from an *adjustment event as a result of which you are liable to provide *consideration, then:
(a) if, in a tax period, all of the consideration is provided—the *adjustment is attributable to that tax period; or
(b) if, in a tax period, part of the consideration is provided—the adjustment is attributable to that tax period, but only to the extent that the consideration is provided in that tax period; or
(c) if, in a tax period, none of the consideration is provided—none of the adjustment is attributable to that tax period.
(3) If:
(a) you have a *decreasing adjustment arising from an *adjustment event; and
(b) you do not hold an *adjustment note for the adjustment when you give to the Commissioner a *GST return for the tax period to which the adjustment (or any part of the adjustment) would otherwise be attributable;
then:
(c) the adjustment (including any part of the adjustment) is not attributable to that tax period; and
(d) the adjustment (or part) is attributable to the first tax period for which you give to the Commissioner a GST return at a time when you hold that adjustment note.
However, this subsection does not apply in circumstances of a kind determined in writing by the Commissioner to be circumstances in which the requirement for an adjustment note does not apply.
For the giving of GST returns to the Commissioner, see Division 31.
29‑25 Commissioner may determine particular attribution rules
(1) The Commissioner may, in writing, determine the tax periods to which:
(a) GST on *taxable supplies of a specified kind; or
(b) input tax credits for *creditable acquisitions of a specified kind; or
(c) input tax credits for *creditable importations of a specified kind; or
(d) *adjustments of a specified kind;
are attributable.
(2) However, the Commissioner must not make a determination under this section unless satisfied that it is necessary to prevent the provisions of this Division and Chapter 4 applying in a way that is inappropriate in circumstances involving:
(a) a supply or acquisition in which possession of goods passes, but title in the goods will, or may, pass at some time in the future; or
(b) a supply or acquisition for which payment is made or an *invoice is issued, but use, enjoyment or passing of title will, or may, occur at some time in the future; or
(c) a supply or acquisition occurring, but still being subject to a statutory cooling off period under an *Australian law; or
(d) a supply or acquisition occurring before the supplier or *recipient knows it has occurred; or
(e) a supply or acquisition occurring before the supplier or recipient knows the total *consideration; or
(f) a supply or acquisition made under a contract that is subject to preconditions; or
(g) a supply or acquisition made under a contract that provides for retention of some or all of the consideration until certain conditions are met; or
(h) a supply or acquisition for which the GST treatment will be unknown until a later supply is made.
(3) Determinations under subsection (1) override the provisions of this Division (except this section) and Chapter 4, but only to the extent of any inconsistency.
29‑39 Special rules relating to attribution rules
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to attribution rules, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1 | Agents and insurance brokers | Division 153 |
2 | Associates | Division 72 |
3 | Cancelled lay‑by sales | Division 102 |
4 | Cessation of registration | Division 138 |
5 | Changes in the extent of creditable purpose | Division 129 |
6 | Changing your accounting basis | Division 159 |
7 | Company amalgamations | Division 90 |
8 | Deposits as security | Division 99 |
8A | Distributions from deceased estates | Division 139 |
8B | Non‑deductible expenses | Division 69 |
9 | Pre‑establishment costs | Division 60 |
10 | Reimbursement of employees etc. | Division 111 |
11 | Representatives of incapacitated entities | Division 58 |
11A | Second‑hand goods | Division 66 |
12 | Supplies and acquisitions made on a progressive or periodic basis | Division 156 |
13 | Supplies of things acquired etc. without full input tax credits | Division 132 |
13A | Third party payments | Division 134 |
14 | Tradex scheme goods | Division 141 |
Subdivision 29‑B—Accounting on a cash basis
29‑40 Choosing to account on a cash basis
(1) You may choose to *account on a cash basis, with effect from the first day of the tax period that you choose, if:
(a) you are a *small business entity (other than because of subsection 328‑110(4) of the *ITAA 1997) for the *income year in which you make your choice; or
(ab) you do not carry on a *business and your *GST turnover does not exceed the *cash accounting turnover threshold; or
(b) for income tax purposes, you account for your income using the receipts method; or
(c) each of the *enterprises that you *carry on is an enterprise of a kind that the Commissioner determines, in writing, to be a kind of enterprise in respect of which a choice to *account on a cash basis may be made under this section.
(3) The cash accounting turnover threshold is:
(a) $2 million; or
(b) such higher amount as the regulations specify.
29‑45 Permission to account on a cash basis
(1) The Commissioner may permit you to *account on a cash basis if:
(a) you apply to the Commissioner in the *approved form for permission to account on a cash basis; and
(b) the Commissioner is satisfied that, having regard to:
(i) the nature and size of the *enterprise that you *carry on; and
(ii) the nature of the accounting system that you use;
it is appropriate to permit you to account on a cash basis.
Note: Refusing to permit you to account on a cash basis is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(2) The Commissioner must notify you in writing of any decision he or she makes in relation to you under this section. If the Commissioner decides to permit you to *account on a cash basis, the notice must specify the date of effect of your permission.
Note: Deciding the date of effect of your permission to account on a cash basis is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
29‑50 Ceasing to account on a cash basis
(1) You cease to *account on a cash basis if:
(a) in a case to which paragraph 29‑40(1)(a) applied—you are not a *small business entity of the kind referred to in that paragraph for an *income year and you do not have permission to *account on a cash basis; or
(ab) in a case to which paragraph 29‑40(1)(ab) applied—you do not satisfy the requirements of that paragraph and you do not have permission to account on a cash basis; or
(b) you notify the Commissioner, in the *approved form, that you are ceasing to *account on a cash basis.
(2) The date of effect of your cessation is the first day of the next tax period to commence after:
(a) if paragraph (1)(a) applies—the start of the *income year referred to in that paragraph; or
(b) if paragraph (1)(ab) applies—you do not satisfy the requirements of paragraph 29‑40(1)(ab); or
(c) if paragraph (1)(b) applies—you notify the Commissioner.
(3) The Commissioner must revoke any permission for you to *account on a cash basis if the Commissioner is satisfied that:
(a) either:
(i) you carry on a *business but you are not a *small business entity (other than because of subsection 328‑110(4) of the *ITAA 1997) for an *income year; or
(ii) you do not carry on a business and your *GST turnover meets the *cash accounting turnover threshold; and
(b) it is not appropriate to permit you to account on a cash basis.
Note: Revoking your permission to account on a cash basis is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
(4) The Commissioner must notify you in writing of his or her decision under subsection (3). The notice must specify the date of effect of the revocation, which can be the first day of any tax period starting before, on or after the day on which the Commissioner makes the decision.
Note: Deciding the date of effect of the revocation of your permission to account on a cash basis is a reviewable GST decision (see Subdivision 110‑F in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953).
29‑69 Special rules relating to accounting on a cash basis
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to accounting on a cash basis, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1 | Accounting basis of charitable institutions etc. | Division 157 |
Subdivision 29‑C—Tax invoices and adjustment notes
29‑70 Tax invoices
(1) A tax invoice is a document that complies with the following requirements:
(a) it is issued by the supplier of the supply or supplies to which the document relates, unless it is a *recipient created tax invoice (in which case it is issued by the *recipient);
(b) it is in the *approved form;
(c) it contains enough information to enable the following to be clearly ascertained:
(i) the supplier’s identity and the supplier’s *ABN;
(ii) if the total *price of the supply or supplies is at least $1,000 or such higher amount as the regulations specify, or if the document was issued by the recipient—the recipient’s identity or the recipient’s ABN;
(iii) what is supplied, including the quantity (if applicable) and the price of what is supplied;
(iv) the extent to which each supply to which the document relates is a *taxable supply;
(v) the date the document is issued;
(vi) the amount of GST (if any) payable in relation to each supply to which the document relates;
(vii) if the document was issued by the recipient and GST is payable in relation to any supply—that the GST is payable by the supplier;
(viii) such other matters as the regulations specify;
(d) it can be clearly ascertained from the document that the document was intended to be a tax invoice or, if it was issued by the recipient, a recipient created tax invoice.
Note: If the recipient is a member of a GST group, section 48‑57 may relax the requirements relating to the recipient’s identity or the recipient’s ABN.
(1A) A document issued by an entity to another entity may be treated by the other entity as a *tax invoice for the purposes of this Act if:
(a) it would comply with the requirements for a tax invoice but for the fact that it does not contain certain information; and
(b) all of that information can be clearly ascertained from other documents given by the entity to the other entity.
Note: The requirements for a tax invoices are primarily contained in subsection (1), but can be affected by sections 48‑57 and 54‑50.
(1B) However, the Commissioner may treat as a *tax invoice a particular document that would not, apart from this subsection, be a tax invoice.
Note: A request to the Commissioner, to which the Commissioner agrees, to treat a document as a tax invoice is taken to be a notification of your entitlement to the relevant input tax credit: see subsection 105‑55(2A) in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953.
(2) The supplier of a *taxable supply must, within 28 days after the *recipient of the supply requests it, give to the recipient a *tax invoice for the supply, unless it is a *recipient created tax invoice.
(3) A recipient created tax invoice is a *tax invoice belonging to a class of tax invoices that the Commissioner has determined in writing may be issued by the *recipient of a *taxable supply.
29‑75 Adjustment notes
(1) An adjustment note for an *adjustment that arises from an *adjustment event relating to a *taxable supply:
(a) must be issued by the supplier of the *taxable supply in the circumstances set out in subsection (2); and
(b) must set out the *ABN of the entity that issues it; and
(c) must contain such other information as the Commissioner determines in writing; and
(d) must be in the *approved form.
However, the Commissioner may treat as an adjustment note a particular document that is not an adjustment note.
(2) The supplier of the *taxable supply must:
(a) within 28 days after the *recipient of the supply requests the supplier to give an *adjustment note for the *adjustment relating to the supply; or
(b) if the supplier has issued a *tax invoice in relation to the supply (or the recipient has requested one) and the supplier becomes aware of the adjustment before an adjustment note is requested—within 28 days after becoming aware of that fact;
give to the recipient an *adjustment note for the *adjustment, unless any *tax invoice relating to the supply would have been a *recipient created tax invoice (in which case it must be issued by the recipient).
(3) However, in circumstances that the Commissioner determines in writing, paragraph (2)(b) has effect as if the number of days referred to in that paragraph is the number of days specified in the determination in relation to those circumstances.
(4) Those circumstances may, for example, include the kind of the *taxable supply.
29‑80 Tax invoices and adjustment notes not required for low value transactions
(1) Subsections 29‑10(3) and 29‑70(2) do not apply to a *creditable acquisition that relates to a *taxable supply the *value of which does not exceed $50, or such higher amount as the regulations specify.
(2) Subsections 29‑20(3) and 29‑75(2) do not apply to a *decreasing adjustment of an amount that does not exceed $50, or such higher amount as the regulations specify.
29‑99 Special rules relating to tax invoices and adjustment notes
Chapter 4 contains special rules relating to tax invoices and adjustment notes, as follows:
Checklist of special rules |
Item | For this case ... | See: |
1 | Agents and insurance brokers | Division 153 |
1A | Annual apportionment of creditable purpose | Division 131 |
2 | Gambling | Division 126 |
3 | GST branches | Division 54 |
3A | GST groups | Division 48 |
4 | Non‑residents making supplies connected with Australia | Division 83 |
5 | Sale of freehold interests etc | Division 75 |
Part