Schedule 1—Collection and recovery of income tax and other liabilities
Note: See section 3AA.
Chapter 2—Collection, recovery and administration of income tax
Part 2‑1—Introduction to the Pay as you go (PAYG) system
Division 6—Guide
to Parts 2‑5 and 2‑10
6‑1 What Parts 2‑5 and 2‑10 are
about
To help taxpayers
meet their annual income tax liability, they are required to pay amounts of
their income at regular intervals as it is earned during the year. The system
for collecting these amounts is called “Pay as you go”.
Amounts collected
under this system also go towards meeting liability for Medicare levy,
liability to repay contributions under the Higher Education Contribution Scheme
(HECS), liability to repay debts under the Higher Education Loan Program (HELP),
liability to repay debts in relation to trade support loan and liability to
repay financial supplement debts under the Student Financial Supplement Scheme
(SFSS).
Table of sections
6‑5 The Pay as you go
(PAYG) system
6‑10 How the amounts
collected are dealt with
6‑5 The Pay as you go (PAYG) system
(1) Parts 2‑5 and 2‑10
establish the PAYG system, which has 2 components:
• PAYG withholding
(Part 2‑5)
• PAYG instalments
(Part 2‑10).
PAYG withholding
(2) Under PAYG withholding,
amounts are collected in respect of particular kinds of payments or
transactions. Usually, someone who makes a payment to you is required to withhold
an amount from the payment, and then to pay the amount to the Commissioner.
For a list of the payments and other
transactions to which
PAYG withholding applies, see Division 10
PAYG instalments
(3) You pay PAYG instalments
directly to the Commissioner. These are usually based on your GDP‑adjusted
notional tax or your ordinary income for a past period, but excluding:
• income subject
to PAYG withholding (with certain exceptions)
• exempt income,
or income that is otherwise not assessable.
An instalment is usually paid after a
quarter, but some taxpayers are eligible to pay an annual instalment after the
end of the income year.
6‑10 How the amounts collected are
dealt with
You are entitled to
credits for the amounts of your income that are collected under the PAYG
system. The credits are applied under Division 3 of Part IIB against
your tax debts, and any excess is refunded to you.
Part 2‑5—Pay as you go (PAYG) withholding
Division 10—Guide to Part 2‑5
10‑1 What this Part is about
Under PAYG
withholding, amounts are collected in respect of particular kinds of payments
or transactions. Usually, someone who makes a payment to you is required to withhold
an amount from the payment, and then to pay the amount to the Commissioner. If
the payment is personal services income that is included in the assessable
income of someone else under Division 86 of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997, the payer must pay such an amount to the Commissioner at a later
date.
If a non‑cash benefit
is provided instead of a payment, the provider must first pay to the
Commissioner the amount that would have been withheld from the payment.
This Part also
contains provisions about the obligations and rights of payers and recipients.
10‑5 Summary of withholding payments
(1) The payments and other
transactions covered by PAYG withholding are called withholding payments. They
are summarised in the table.
Note: The obligation to pay an
amount to the Commissioner is imposed on the entity making the withholding
payment (except for items 17, 19 and 22, and 26 (to the extent that it
covers subsection 12‑390(4))).
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Summary of withholding payments
|
|
Item
|
Withholding payment
|
Section
|
|
1
|
A payment of salary etc. to an employee
|
12‑35
|
|
2
|
A payment of remuneration to the director
of a company
|
12‑40
|
|
3
|
A payment of salary etc. to an office
holder (e.g. a member of the Defence Force)
|
12‑45
|
|
3A
|
a payment to a *religious practitioner
|
12‑47
|
|
4
|
A return to work payment to an individual
|
12‑50
|
|
5
|
A payment that is covered by a voluntary
agreement
|
12‑55
|
|
6
|
A payment under a labour hire arrangement
or a payment specified by regulations
|
12‑60
|
|
7
|
A *superannuation income stream or an annuity
|
12‑80
|
|
8
|
A *superannuation lump sum or a payment for termination of employment
|
12‑85
|
|
9
|
An unused leave payment
|
12‑90
|
|
10
|
A social security or similar payment
(e.g. old age pension)
|
12‑110
|
|
11
|
A Commonwealth education or training
payment
|
12‑115
|
|
12
|
A compensation, sickness or accident
payment
|
12‑120
|
|
13
|
A payment arising from an investment
where the recipient does not quote its tax file number, or in some cases, its
ABN
|
12‑140
|
|
14
|
Investor becoming presently entitled to
income of a unit trust
|
12‑145
|
|
14A
|
A trustee of a closely held trust
distributing an amount from the trust income to a beneficiary, where the
beneficiary does not quote its tax file number
|
12‑175
|
|
14B
|
A beneficiary of a closely held trust
becoming presently entitled to income of the trust, where the beneficiary
does not quote its tax file number
|
12‑180
|
|
15
|
A payment for a supply where the
recipient of the payment does not quote its ABN
|
12‑190
|
|
16
|
A dividend payment to an overseas person
|
12‑210
|
|
17
|
A dividend payment received for a foreign
resident
|
12‑215
|
|
18
|
An interest payment to an overseas person
|
12‑245
|
|
19
|
An interest payment received for a
foreign resident
|
12‑250
|
|
20
|
An interest payment derived by a lender
in carrying on business through overseas permanent establishment
|
12‑255
|
|
21
|
A royalty payment to an overseas person
|
12‑280
|
|
22
|
A royalty payment received for a foreign
resident
|
12‑285
|
|
22A
|
A
departing Australia superannuation payment
|
12‑305
|
|
22AA
|
An *excess untaxed roll‑over amount
|
12‑312
|
|
22B
|
A payment (of a kind set out in the
regulations) to a foreign resident
|
12‑315
|
|
22C
|
A payment (of a kind set out in the
regulations) received for a foreign resident
|
12‑317
|
|
22D
|
A payment of salary, wages etc. to an
employee under the Seasonal Labour Mobility Program
|
12‑319A
|
|
23
|
A mining payment
|
12‑320
|
|
24
|
A natural resource payment
|
12‑325
|
|
25
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A payment by a managed investment trust
|
12‑385
|
|
26
|
A payment by a *custodian or other entity
|
12‑390
|
(2) These can also be
treated as withholding payments:
(a) alienated
personal services payments (see Division 13);
(b) non‑cash
benefits (see Division 14).
Note: The obligation to pay an
amount to the Commissioner is imposed on the entity receiving the alienated
personal services payment or providing the non‑cash benefit.
Division 11—Preliminary matters
Table of sections
11‑1 Object of this Part
11‑5 Constructive payment
11‑1 Object of this Part
The object of this Part
is to ensure the efficient collection of:
(a) income tax; and
(b) *Medicare levy; and
(ca) amounts of
liabilities to the Commonwealth under Chapter 4 of the Higher Education
Support Act 2003; and
(cd) amounts of
liabilities to the Commonwealth under Chapter 3 of the Trade Support
Loans Act 2014; and
(da) amounts of
liabilities to the Commonwealth under Part 2B.3 of the Social Security
Act 1991; and
(db) amounts of
liabilities to the Commonwealth under Division 6 of Part 4A of the Student
Assistance Act 1973; and
(d) *withholding tax; and
(e) *mining withholding tax; and
(f) *TFN withholding tax; and
(h) *petroleum resource rent tax.
11‑5 Constructive payment
(1) In working out whether an
entity has paid an amount to another entity, and when the payment is made, the
amount is taken to have been paid to the other entity when the first entity
applies or deals with the amount in any way on the other’s behalf or as the
other directs.
(2) An amount is taken to be
payable by an entity to another entity if the first entity is required to apply
or deal with it in any way on the other’s behalf or as the other directs.
Division 12—Payments from which amounts must be
withheld
Table of Subdivisions
12‑A General rules
12‑B Payments for work and
services
12‑C Payments for retirement or
because of termination of employment
12‑D Benefit and compensation
payments
12‑E Payments where TFN or ABN
not quoted
12‑F Dividend, interest and
royalty payments
12‑FA Departing Australia
superannuation payments
12‑FAA Excess untaxed roll‑over amount
12‑FB Payments to foreign residents
etc.
12‑FC Seasonal Labour Mobility
Program
12‑G Payments in respect of mining
on Aboriginal land, and natural resources
12‑H Distributions of managed
investment trust income
Subdivision 12‑A—General rules
Table of sections
12‑1 General exceptions
12‑5 What to do if more than
one provision requires a withholding
12‑7 Division does not apply
to alienated personal services payments
12‑10 Division does not apply
to non‑cash benefits
12‑20 Application of Division
and regulations to non‑share dividends
12‑1 General exceptions
Exempt income of recipient
(1) An entity need not
withhold an amount under section 12‑35, 12‑40, 12‑45, 12‑47, 12‑50, 12‑55,
12‑60, 12‑80, 12‑85, 12‑90, 12‑120 or 12‑190 from a payment if the whole of the
payment is *exempt income of the entity receiving the
payment.
Non‑assessable non‑exempt income of
recipient
(1A) An entity need not
withhold an amount under Subdivision 12‑B, Subdivision 12‑C or
section 12‑120 or 12‑190 from a payment if the whole of the payment is not
assessable income and is not *exempt income of the
entity receiving the payment.
Living‑away‑from‑home allowance
benefit
(2) In working out how much
to withhold under section 12‑35, 12‑40, 12‑45, 12‑47, 12‑115, 12‑120, 12‑315
or 12‑317 from a payment, disregard so much of the payment as is a living‑away‑from‑home
allowance benefit as defined by section 136 of the Fringe Benefits Tax
Assessment Act 1986.
Expense payment benefit
(3) In working out how much
to withhold under section 12‑35, 12‑40, 12‑45, 12‑47, 12‑115, 12‑120, 12‑315
or 12‑317 from a payment, disregard so much of the payment as:
(a) is an expense
payment benefit as defined by section 136 of the Fringe Benefits Tax
Assessment Act 1986; and
(b) is not any of the
following:
(i) an
exempt benefit under section 22 of that Act (about reimbursement of car
expenses on the basis of distance travelled);
(ii) an
expense payment benefit in relation to a contribution to an *FHSA.
12‑5 What to do if more than one
provision requires a withholding
(1) If more than one
provision in this Division covers a payment, only one amount is to be withheld
from the payment.
(2) The provision to apply
is the one that is most specific to the circumstances of the payment. However,
this general rule is subject to the specific rules in the table, and the
specific rule in subsection (3).
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Specific
rules for determining priority among withholding provisions
|
|
Item
|
Apply:
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Which
is about:
|
In
priority to:
|
|
1AA
|
section 12‑385 or 12‑390
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distributions to foreign residents from *managed investment trusts
|
each other withholding provision
|
|
1
|
section 12‑35, 12‑40, 12‑45, 12‑47
or 12‑50
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a payment for work or services
|
section 12‑60 (payment under a
labour hire arrangement or specified by regulations); or
section 12‑190 (payment for a supply
where recipient does not quote its ABN)
|
|
1A
|
section 12‑35 or 12‑45
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a payment for work or services
|
section 12‑47 (a payment to a *religious practitioner)
|
|
2
|
section 12‑80, 12‑85 or 12‑90
|
a *superannuation benefit, an annuity, a payment for termination of
employment or an unused leave payment
|
section 12‑60 (payment under a
labour hire arrangement or specified by regulations); or
section 12‑190 (payment for a supply
where recipient does not quote its ABN)
|
|
3
|
section 12‑110, 12‑115 or 12‑120
|
a payment of benefit or compensation
|
section 12‑60 (payment under a
labour hire arrangement or specified by regulations); or
section 12‑190 (payment for a supply
where recipient does not quote its ABN)
|
|
4
|
section 12‑60
|
a payment under a labour hire arrangement
or specified by regulations
|
section 12‑190 (payment for a supply
where recipient does not quote its ABN)
|
|
5
|
section 12‑140
or 12‑145
|
a payment
arising from investment where the recipient does not quote tax file number
|
section 12‑175
or 12‑180 (Payment of income of closely held trust where TFN not quoted) or section 12‑210,
12‑215, 12‑245, 12‑250 or 12‑255 (payment of a dividend or interest)
|
|
6
|
section 12‑280 or 12‑285
|
a payment of royalty
|
section 12‑325 (natural resource
payment)
|
(3) Apply a provision in
this Division (apart from a provision in Subdivision 12‑FB) that covers a
payment in priority to a provision in Subdivision 12‑FB that also covers
the payment.
Note: Some provisions of this
Division clearly do not cover a payment covered by some other provisions. For
example:
·
Section 12‑55 (about voluntary agreements)
covers a payment only if no other provision requires the payer to withhold an
amount from the payment.
12‑7 Division does not apply to
alienated personal services payments
(1) This Division (other
than the provisions mentioned in subsection (2)) does not apply to a
payment in so far as the payment:
(a) is an *alienated personal services payment; or
(b) was
received, by the entity making the payment, as an *alienated
personal services payment.
Note: An entity that receives an
alienated personal services payment may be obliged to pay an amount to the
Commissioner: see Division 13.
(2) The provisions are:
(a) Subdivision 12‑FB;
and
(b) any other
provisions in this Division to the extent that they apply in relation to that
Subdivision.
12‑10 Division does not apply to non‑cash
benefits
This Division does not
apply to a payment in so far as it consists of providing a *non‑cash benefit.
Note: If a non‑cash benefit is
provided in circumstances where a payment would give rise to a withholding
obligation, the provider must pay an amount to the Commissioner: see Division 14.
12‑20 Application of Division and
regulations to non‑share dividends
This Division and the
regulations made for the purposes of this Division:
(a) apply to a non‑share
equity interest in the same way as it applies to a share; and
(b) apply to an
equity holder in the same way as it applies to a shareholder; and
(c) apply to a non‑share
dividend in the same way as it applies to a dividend.
Subdivision 12‑B—Payments for work and services
Table
of sections
12‑35 Payment
to employee
12‑40 Payment to company
director
12‑45 Payment to office holder
12‑47 Payment to religious
practitioners
12‑50 Return to work payment
12‑55 Voluntary agreement to
withhold
12‑60 Payment under labour
hire arrangement, or specified by regulations
12‑35 Payment to employee
An entity must withhold
an amount from salary, wages, commission, bonuses or allowances it pays to an
individual as an employee (whether of that or another entity).
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
12‑40 Payment to company director
A company must withhold
an amount from a payment of remuneration it makes to an individual:
(a) if the company is
incorporated—as a director of the company, or as a person who performs the
duties of a director of the company; or
(b) if the company is
not incorporated—as a member of the committee of management of the company, or
as a person who performs the duties of such a member.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
12‑45 Payment to office holder
(1) An entity must withhold
an amount from salary, wages, commission, bonuses or allowances it pays to an
individual as:
(a) a member of an *Australian legislature; or
(b) a person who
holds, or performs the duties of, an appointment, office or position under the
Constitution or an *Australian law; or
(c) a member of the
Defence Force, or of a police force of the Commonwealth, a State or a
Territory; or
(d) a person who is
otherwise in the service of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or
(e) a member of a *local governing body where there is in effect, in accordance with
section 446‑5, a unanimous resolution by the body that the remuneration of
members of the body be subject to withholding under this Part.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
(2) This section does not
require an amount to be withheld from a payment to an individual as a member of
a *local governing body unless it is one to which paragraph (1)(e)
applies.
12‑47 Payment to religious
practitioners
An entity must withhold
an amount from a payment it makes to a *religious
practitioner for an activity, or a series of activities, if:
(a) the activity, or
series of activities, is done by the religious practitioner in pursuit of his
or her vocation as a religious practitioner; and
(b) the activity, or
series of activities, is done by the religious practitioner as a member of a
religious institution; and
(c) the payment is
made by the entity in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise
that the entity *carries on.
12‑50 Return to work payment
An entity must withhold
an amount from a payment it makes to an individual if the payment is included
in the individual’s assessable income under section 15‑3 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 (return to work payments).
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
12‑55 Voluntary agreement to
withhold
(1) An entity must withhold
an amount from a payment it makes to an individual if:
(a) the payment is
made under an *arrangement the performance of which, in
whole or in part, involves the performance of work or services (whether or not
by the individual); and
(b) no other
provision of this Division requires the entity to withhold an amount from the
payment; and
(c) the entity and
the individual are parties to an agreement (the voluntary agreement)
that is in the *approved form and states that this section
covers payments under the arrangement mentioned in paragraph (a), or under
a series of such arrangements that includes that arrangement; and
(d) the individual
has an *ABN that is in force and is *quoted in that agreement.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
(2) Each party must keep a
copy of the voluntary agreement from when it is made until 5 years after the
making of the last payment covered by the agreement.
Penalty: 30 penalty units.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
(2A) An offence under subsection (2)
is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability,
see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
(3) A party to the voluntary
agreement may terminate it at any time by notifying the other party in writing.
12‑60 Payment under labour hire
arrangement, or specified by regulations
(1) An entity that *carries on an *enterprise must withhold
an amount from a payment that it makes to an individual in the course or
furtherance of the enterprise if:
(a) the enterprise is
a *business of arranging for persons to perform work or services
directly for clients of the entity, or the enterprise includes a business of
that kind that is not merely incidental to the main activities of the
enterprise; and
(b) the payment is
made under an *arrangement the performance of which, in
whole or in part, involves the performance of work or services by the
individual directly for a client of the entity, or directly for a client of
another entity.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
Example 1: Staffprovider Ltd keeps a
database of skilled persons who are willing for their services to be provided
to third parties. Staffprovider arranges with Corporate Pty Ltd to provide to
it the services of a computer programmer in return for payment. Staffprovider
arranges with Jane for her to do computer programming for Corporate.
Staffprovider must withhold amounts under this section from payments it makes
to Jane under the arrangement with her.
Example 2: Ian is a solicitor who regularly
briefs barristers to represent his clients. Briefing barristers is merely
incidental to Ian’s main activities as a solicitor, so he does not have to
withhold amounts under this section from payments he makes to barristers.
(2) An entity that carries
on an *enterprise must withhold an amount from a
payment that it makes to an individual in the course or furtherance of the
enterprise if the payment is, in whole or in part, for work or services and is
of a kind prescribed by the regulations.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
Subdivision 12‑C—Payments for retirement or because of termination of
employment
12‑80 Superannuation income streams
and annuities
An entity must withhold
an amount from any of the following payments it makes to an individual:
(a) a *superannuation income stream;
(b) an *annuity.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
12‑85 Superannuation lump sums and
payments for termination of employment
An entity must withhold
an amount from any of the following payments it makes to an individual:
(a) a *superannuation lump sum;
(b) a payment that is
an *employment termination payment or would be one except that it is
received more than 12 months after termination of employment.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
12‑90 Unused leave payments
An entity must withhold
an amount from any of the following payments it makes to an individual:
(a) an *unused annual leave payment;
(b) an *unused long service leave payment, to the extent that the payment is
included in the individual’s assessable income.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
Subdivision 12‑D—Benefit and compensation payments
Table of sections
12‑110 Social Security or other
benefit payment
12‑115 Commonwealth education or
training payment
12‑120 Compensation, sickness or
accident payment
12‑110 Social Security or other
benefit payment
(1) An entity must withhold
an amount from a payment it makes to an individual if the payment is:
(a) specified in an
item of the table in section 52‑10 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997 (Social Security payments); or
(b) specified in an
item of the table in section 52‑65 of that Act (Veterans’ Affairs
payments); or
(ba) specified in an
item of the table in section 52‑114 of that Act (Military Rehabilitation
and Compensation Act payments); or
(c) specified in
section 52‑105, 53‑10, 55‑5 or 55‑10 of that Act; or
Note: Payments specified in those
provisions of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 are made under various
Commonwealth laws.
(ca) *parental leave pay; or
(cb) *dad and partner pay; or
(d) made under Part 3.15A
of the Social Security Act 1991.
(2) In working out the
amount to be withheld, disregard so much of the payment as is *exempt income of the individual.
12‑115 Commonwealth education or training payment
(1) An entity must withhold
an amount from a *Commonwealth education or training payment
it makes to an individual.
For exceptions, see subsection (2)
and section 12‑1.
(2) In working out the
amount to be withheld, disregard so much of the payment as is *exempt income of the individual.
12‑120 Compensation, sickness or
accident payment
An entity must withhold
an amount from a payment of compensation, or of sickness or accident pay, it
makes to an individual if the payment:
(a) is made because
of that or another individual’s incapacity for work; and
(b) is calculated at
a periodical rate; and
(c) is not a payment
made under an insurance policy to the policy owner.
For exceptions, see section 12‑1.
Subdivision 12‑E—Payments where TFN or ABN not quoted
Table
of sections
Payment in respect of investment
12‑140 Recipient does not quote
tax file number
12‑145 Investor becoming
presently entitled to income of a unit trust
12‑150 Limited application of
section 12‑140 to payment under financial arrangement
12‑155 When investor may quote
ABN as alternative
12‑160 Investment body unaware
that exemption from quoting TFN has stopped applying
12‑165 Exception for fully
franked dividend
12‑170 Exception for payments
below thresholds set by regulations
Payment of income of closely
held trust where TFN not quoted
12‑175 Trustee distributes
income of closely held trust
12‑180 Beneficiary becomes
presently entitled to income of closely held trust
12‑185 Exception
for payments below thresholds set by regulations
Payment for a supply
12‑190 Recipient does not quote
ABN
Payment in respect of investment
12‑140 Recipient does not quote tax
file number
(1) An *investment body must withhold an amount from a payment it makes to
another entity in respect of a *Part VA investment
if:
(a) all or some of
the payment is *ordinary income or *statutory income of the other entity; and
(b) if the investment
is non‑transferable—the other entity did not *quote
its *tax file number in connection with the
investment before the time when the payment became payable; and
(c) if the investment
is transferable—the other entity did not quote its tax file number in
connection with the investment before the time when the other entity had to be
registered with the investment body as the *investor
to be entitled to the payment.
Payment in respect of units in a trust
or investment‑related betting chance
(2) If
a *Part VA investment consists of:
(a) units in a unit
trust (as defined in section 202A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936);
or
(b) an investment‑related
betting chance;
an entity (including the *investment body) must withhold an amount from a payment it makes to
another entity in respect of the investment if the conditions in subsection (1)
of this section are met.
For exceptions to the rules in this
section, see sections 12‑150 to 12‑170.
12‑145 Investor becoming presently
entitled to income of a unit trust
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a *Part VA investment consists of units in a unit trust (as
defined in section 202A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936); and
(b) the *investor becomes presently entitled, for the purposes of Division 6
of Part III of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, to a share of
income of the trust at a time (the entitlement time) before any
of that share is paid to the investor.
(2) The entity (including
the *investment body) that would have to pay
that share to the *investor if the share were due and payable
at the entitlement time must withhold from the share, at that time, the amount
(if any) that subsection 12‑140(2) would have required it to withhold if
it had paid the share to the investor at that time.
For exceptions to the rules in this
section, see sections 12‑155 to 12‑170.
(3) This Part (except
section 12‑140 and this section) applies as if that entity had paid that
share to the *investor at the entitlement time.
(4) If that entity withholds
an amount from that share as required by subsection (2), subsection 12‑140(2)
does not require an amount to be withheld from a payment of all or part of that
share to the *investor.
12‑150 Limited application of
section 12‑140 to payment under financial arrangement
(1) This section limits the
extent to which section 12‑140 applies to a payment in respect of a *Part VA investment if the investment is a qualifying security
(within the meaning of Division 16E of Part III of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936 (about gains accruing on securities)) and:
(a) is of a kind
mentioned in item 1 or 2 of the table in subsection 202D(1) of that
Act; or
(b) is of a kind
mentioned in item 3 of that table and is non‑transferable.
Note: Section 202D of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 lists the investments in connection with which tax
file numbers are to be quoted.
(2) Section 12‑140
applies to the payment only to the extent that is covered by one or both of
these paragraphs:
(a) so much of the
payment as consists of periodic interest (within the meaning of Division 16E
of Part III of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936);
(b) if the payment
became payable at the end of the term (within the meaning of that Division) of
the investment—so much of the payment as does not exceed what section 159GQ
of that Act would include in the *investor’s assessable
income for the income year in which that term ended.
Note: This limitation ensures that
an amount is not withheld from payment of an amount in respect of which TFN
withholding tax is payable. See Subdivision 14‑B.
(3) The adoption (under
section 18 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936) of an accounting
period ending on a day other than 30 June is disregarded for the purposes
of:
(a) paragraph (2)(b)
of this section; and
(b) the application
of Division 16E of Part III of that Act for the purposes of that
paragraph.
12‑155 When investor may quote ABN
as alternative
Section 12‑140 or
12‑145 does not require an amount to be withheld if:
(a) the other entity
made the investment in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise
*carried on by it; and
(b) the other entity
has an *ABN, and has *quoted
it to the investment body, by the time referred to in paragraph 12‑140(1)(b)
or (c).
12‑160 Investment body unaware that
exemption from quoting TFN has stopped applying
Section 12‑140 or
12‑145 does not require an amount to be withheld if:
(a) a provision of
Division 5 of Part VA of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
has applied to the other entity in relation to the investment, but no longer
applies when the payment is made; and
(b) when the payment
is made, the *investment body has not been informed of
anything that resulted in the provision no longer applying.
Note: Division 5 of Part VA
of that Act provides, in certain cases, that even though an entity has not
quoted its tax file number it is taken to have done so.
12‑165 Exception for fully franked
dividend
Section 12‑140
does not require an amount to be withheld if:
(a) the investment
consists of *shares in a public company (as defined in
section 202A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936); and
(b) the payment is a *distribution that has been franked in accordance with section 202‑5
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; and
(c) the *franking percentage for the distribution is 100%.
12‑170 Exception for payments below
thresholds set by regulations
(1) Section 12‑140 or
12‑145 does not require an amount to be withheld if the payment is less than
the amount worked out under the regulations.
(2) Regulations made for the
purposes of this section may deal differently with different payments.
Payment of income of closely held trust where TFN not quoted
12‑175 Trustee distributes income of
closely held trust
Scope
(1) This section applies if:
(a) the trustee of a
trust makes a distribution to a beneficiary of the trust at a time (the distribution
time) during an income year of the trust; and
(b) some or all of
the distribution is from the *ordinary income or *statutory income of the trust; and
(c) the trust is:
(i) a
resident trust estate (within the meaning of subsection 95(2) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936) in relation to the income year; and
(ii) a
closely held trust (within the meaning of section 102UC of that Act,
disregarding paragraphs (c), (d) and (e) of the definition of excluded
trust in subsection (4) of that section); and
(iii) not
prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this subparagraph; and
(d) the beneficiary
is:
(i) an
Australian resident; and
(ii) not
an *exempt entity; and
(iii) not
under a legal disability for the purposes of section 98 of that Act.
Trustee must withhold
(2) The trustee must
withhold an amount from the distribution, if:
(a) the beneficiary
did not *quote the beneficiary’s *tax file number to the trustee before the distribution time; and
(b) the trustee is
not liable to pay tax under section 98 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1936 in connection with the distribution; and
(c) the trustee is
not required to make a correct TB statement under Division 6D of
Part III of that Act (about trustee beneficiary non‑disclosure tax) in
connection with the distribution; and
(d) family trust
distribution tax is not payable under Schedule 2F to that Act in
connection with the distribution.
Note 1: If the trust is a unit trust,
the trustee may be required to withhold under section 12‑140 in priority
to this section: see section 12‑5.
Note 2: The trustee commits an offence
if the trustee fails to withhold an amount as required by this section: see
section 16‑25.
Application of rest of Part
(3) If the distribution is
not a payment, this Part applies as if the trustee paid the amount of the
distribution to the beneficiary at the distribution time.
Trust income of earlier income years
(4) Subsections (2) and
(3) do not apply to the distribution, to the extent that:
(a) the beneficiary
is presently entitled, for the purposes of Division 6 of Part III of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, to a share of the income of the
trust of an earlier income year; and
(b) the distribution
is a distribution of some or all of that share.
Note: The trustee may have been
required to withhold from that share under section 12‑180.
12‑180 Beneficiary becomes presently
entitled to income of closely held trust
Scope
(1) This section applies if:
(a) at the end of an
income year of a trust, a beneficiary of the trust is presently entitled, for
the purposes of Division 6 of Part III of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936, to a share of the income of the trust of that year;
and
(b) paragraph 12‑175(1)(c)
in this Schedule applies to the trustee of the trust; and
(c) paragraph 12‑175(1)(d)
applies to the beneficiary.
Trustee must withhold
(2) The trustee must
withhold an amount from that share of the *net
income of the trust, if:
(a) the beneficiary
did not *quote the beneficiary’s *tax file number to the trustee before the end of the year; and
(b) the trustee is
not liable to pay tax in respect of that share under section 98 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936; and
(c) the trustee is
not required to make a correct TB statement about that share under Division 6D
of Part III of that Act (about trustee beneficiary non‑disclosure tax);
and
(d) family trust
distribution tax is not payable on that share of the income of the trust under
Schedule 2F to that Act.
Note 1: If the trust is a unit trust,
the trustee may be required to withhold under section 12‑145 in priority
to this section: see section 12‑5.
Note 2: The trustee commits an offence
if the trustee fails to withhold an amount as required by this section: see
section 16‑25.
Application of rest of Part
(3) This Part (other than
section 12‑175) applies as if the trustee had paid that share of the *net income of the trust to the beneficiary at the end of the income
year.
Entitlements already paid
(4) Subsections (2) and
(3) do not apply to that share of the *net income of the
trust to the extent that the trustee distributed any of that share to the
beneficiary during the income year.
Note: The trustee may have been
required to withhold from that distribution under section 12‑175.
Trusts that end during the year
(5) This section applies as
if each reference to the end of an income year were a reference to the time
occurring just before the trust ends, if the trust ends during the income year.
12‑185 Exception for payments below
thresholds set by regulations
(1) Section 12‑175 or
12‑180 does not require an amount to be withheld if the payment (including the
payment mentioned in subsection 12‑180(3)) is less than the amount worked
out under the regulations.
(2) Regulations made for the
purposes of this section may deal differently with different payments.
Payment for a supply
12‑190 Recipient does not quote ABN
(1) An entity (the payer)
must withhold an amount from a payment it makes to another entity if:
(a) the payment is
for a *supply that the other entity has made, or
proposes to make, to the payer in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise *carried on in Australia by the other entity; and
(b) none of the
exceptions in this section applies.
ABN correctly quoted
(2) The payer need not
withhold an amount under this section if, when the payment is made:
(a) the other entity
has given the payer an *invoice that relates to
the *supply and *quotes
the other entity’s *ABN; or
(b) the payer has
some other document relating to the supply on which the other entity’s ABN is *quoted.
(2A) The payer need not
withhold an amount under this section if the other entity has made the *supply, or proposes to make the supply, through an agent and, when
the payment is made:
(a) the agent has
given the payer an *invoice that relates to the
supply and *quotes the agent’s *ABN; or
(b) the payer has
some other document relating to the supply on which the agent’s ABN is *quoted.
Payer has no reason to believe that
ABN has been incorrectly quoted
(3) The payer need not
withhold an amount under this section if, when the payment is made:
(a) the other entity
has given the payer an *invoice that relates to
the *supply and purports to *quote the other entity’s *ABN, or the payer
has some other document that relates to the supply and purports to *quote the other entity’s ABN; and
(b) the other entity
does not have an ABN, or the invoice or other document does not in fact quote
the other entity’s ABN; and
(c) the payer has no
reasonable grounds to believe that the other entity does not have an ABN, or
that the invoice or other document does not quote the other entity’s ABN.
(3A) The payer need not
withhold an amount under this section if the other entity has made the *supply, or proposes to make the supply, through an agent and, when
the payment is made:
(a) the agent has
given the payer an *invoice that relates to the
supply and purports to *quote the agent’s *ABN, or the payer has some other document that relates to the supply
and purports to *quote the agent’s ABN; and
(b) the agent does
not have an ABN, or the invoice or other document does not in fact quote the
agent’s ABN; and
(c) the payer has no
reasonable grounds to believe that the agent does not have an ABN, or that the
invoice or other document does not quote the agent’s ABN.
No need to quote ABN
(4) The payer need not
withhold an amount under this section if:
(a) the payment is
made otherwise than in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise
*carried on in Australia by the payer; or
(b) the payment
(disregarding so much of it as relates to *GST
payable on the *supply) or, if the payer has also made, or
proposes to make, one or more other payments to the other entity for the
supply, the total of all the payments (disregarding so much of them as relates
to *GST payable on the supply) does not exceed $50 or such higher amount
as is specified in regulations in force for the purposes of subsection 29‑80(1)
of the *GST Act; or
(c) the supply is
made in the course or furtherance of an activity, or series of activities, done
as a member of a local governing body established by or under a *State law or *Territory law; or
(d) the supply is
wholly *input taxed.
(5) The payer need not
withhold an amount under this section if the payment:
(a) is covered by
section 12‑140 or 12‑145 (about not quoting *tax
file number in respect of an investment in respect of which the payment is
made); or
(b) would be covered
by section 12‑140 or 12‑145 if the other entity had not quoted as
mentioned in subsection 12‑140(1) or section 12‑155; or
(c) would be covered by
section 12‑140 or 12‑145 apart from section 12‑160, 12‑165 or 12‑170
(which are exceptions to sections 12‑140 and 12‑145); or
(d) is covered by
section 12‑175 or 12‑180 (Payment of income of closely held trust where
TFN not quoted); or
(e) would be covered
by section 12‑175 or 12‑180 if the other entity had not quoted as
mentioned in paragraph 12‑175(2)(a) or 12‑180(2)(a); or
(f) would be covered
by section 12‑175 or 12‑180 apart from section 12‑185 (which is an
exception to sections 12‑175 and 12‑180).
(6) The payer need not
withhold an amount under this section if, when the payment is made:
(a) the other entity
is an individual and has given the payer a written statement to the effect
that:
(i) the *supply is made in the course or furtherance of an activity, or
series of activities, done as a private recreational pursuit or hobby; or
(ii) the
supply is, for the other entity, wholly of a private or domestic nature; and
(b) the payer has no
reasonable grounds to believe that the statement is false or misleading in a
material particular.
(7) In working out, for the
purposes of this section, whether an enterprise is *carried
on in Australia, ignore any part of Australia that is not in the indirect tax
zone (within the meaning of the *GST Act).
Note: The effect of this subsection
is to treat an enterprise as carried on in Australia only where it would be
treated as carried on in the indirect tax zone under the A New Tax System
(Australian Business Number) Act 1999.
Subdivision 12‑F—Dividend, interest and royalty payments
Table
of sections
Dividends
12‑210 Dividend payment to
overseas person
12‑215 Dividend payment received
for foreign resident
12‑220 Application to part of a
dividend
12‑225 Application to
distribution by a liquidator or other person
Interest
12‑245 Interest payment to
overseas person
12‑250 Interest payment received
for foreign resident
12‑255 Interest payment derived
by lender in carrying on business through overseas permanent establishment
12‑255 Interest payment derived
by lender in carrying on business through overseas permanent establishment
12‑260 Lender to notify borrower
if interest derived through overseas permanent establishment
Royalties
12‑280 Royalty payment to
overseas person
12‑285 Royalty payment received
for foreign resident
General
12‑300 Limits on amount withheld
under this Subdivision
Dividends
12‑210 Dividend payment to overseas
person
A company that is an
Australian resident must withhold an amount from a *dividend
it pays if:
(a) according to the
register of the company’s members, the entity, or any of the entities, holding
the *shares on which the dividend is paid has
an address outside Australia; or
(b) that
entity, or any of those entities, has authorised or directed the company to pay
the dividend to an entity or entities at a place outside Australia.
For limits on the amount to be withheld,
see section 12‑300.
12‑215 Dividend payment received for
foreign resident
(1) An entity that receives
a payment of a *dividend of a company that is an
Australian resident must withhold an amount from the dividend if:
(a) the entity is a
person in Australia or an *Australian government
agency; and
(b) a foreign
resident is or becomes entitled:
(i) to
receive the dividend or part of it from the entity, or to receive the amount of
the dividend or of part of it from the entity; or
(ii) to
have the entity credit to the foreign resident, or otherwise deal with on the
foreign resident’s behalf or as the foreign resident directs, the dividend or
part of it, or the amount of the dividend or of part of it.
For limits on the amount to be withheld,
see section 12‑300.
(2) The entity must withhold
the amount:
(a) if the foreign
resident is so entitled when the entity receives the payment—immediately after
the entity receives the payment; or
(b) if the foreign
resident becomes so entitled after the entity receives the payment—immediately
after the foreign resident becomes so entitled.
12‑220 Application to part of a
dividend
This Part applies to a
part of a *dividend in the same way as to a dividend.
12‑225 Application to distribution
by a liquidator or other person
This Part applies to a
distribution that section 47 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
treats as a *dividend paid by a company, in the same
way as this Part applies to a dividend paid by the company, and as if the
liquidator or other person making the distribution were the company.
Interest
12‑245 Interest payment to overseas
person
An entity must withhold
an amount from interest (within the meaning of Division 11A of Part III
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936) it pays to an entity, or to
entities jointly, if:
(a) the recipient or
any of the recipients has an address outside Australia according to any record
that is in the payer’s possession, or is kept or maintained on the payer’s
behalf, about the transaction to which the interest relates; or
(b) the payer is
authorised to pay the interest at a place outside Australia (whether to the
recipient or any of the recipients or to anyone else).
For limits on the amount to be withheld,
see section 12‑300.
12‑250 Interest payment received for
foreign resident
(1) An entity that receives
a payment of interest (within the meaning of Division 11A of Part III
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936) must withhold an amount from the
payment if:
(a) the entity is a
person in Australia or an *Australian government
agency; and
(b) a foreign
resident is or becomes entitled:
(i) to
receive the interest or part of it from the entity, or to receive the amount of
the interest or of part of it from the entity; or
(ii) to
have the entity credit to the foreign resident, or otherwise deal with on the
foreign resident’s behalf or as the foreign resident directs, the interest or
part of it, or the amount of the interest or of part of it.
For limits on the amount to be withheld,
see section 12‑300.
(2) The
entity must withhold the amount:
(a) if the foreign
resident is so entitled when the entity receives the payment—immediately after
the entity receives the payment; or
(b) if the foreign
resident becomes so entitled after the entity receives the payment—immediately
after the foreign resident becomes so entitled.
12‑255 Interest payment derived by
lender in carrying on business through overseas permanent establishment
An entity must withhold
an amount from interest (within the meaning of Division 11A of Part III
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936) it pays if it has been notified
under section 12‑260 of this Act that this section applies to the
interest.
Note: For limits on the amount to
be withheld, see section 12‑300.
12‑260 Lender to notify borrower if
interest derived through overseas permanent establishment
(1) If:
(a) interest (within
the meaning of Division 11A of Part III of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936) is payable to:
(i) an
entity that is, or entities at least one of whom is, an Australian resident; or
(ii) an *Australian government agency; and
(b) the entity liable
to pay the interest is authorised to pay it at a place in Australia (whether to any of those entities or the agency, or to anyone else); and
(c) the interest is
or will be *derived by any of those entities or the
agency in carrying on business in a country outside Australia at or through a *permanent establishment it has in that country;
those entities, or the agency, must
notify the entity liable to pay the interest that section 12‑255 applies
to the interest.
(2) The notice must be given
in writing, before the entities, or the agency, enter into the transaction in
relation to which the interest is payable, or within one month afterwards.
(3) Immediately after giving
the notice, those entities, or the agency, must notify the Commissioner of:
(a) the particulars
of the transaction (including the dates on which interest is payable under it);
and
(b) the day when the
notice was given to the entity liable to pay the interest.
Failure to comply with this section may
contravene section 8C of this Act.
Royalties
12‑280 Royalty payment to overseas
person
An entity must withhold
an amount from a *royalty it pays to an entity, or to
entities jointly, if:
(a) the recipient or
any of the recipients has an address outside Australia according to any record
that is in the payer’s possession, or is kept or maintained on the payer’s
behalf, about the transaction to which the royalty relates; or
(b) the payer is
authorised to pay the royalty at a place outside Australia (whether to the
recipient or any of the recipients or to anyone else).
For limits on the amount to be withheld,
see section 12‑300.
12‑285 Royalty payment received for
foreign resident
(1) An entity that receives
a payment of a *royalty must withhold an amount from the
payment if:
(a) the entity is a
person in Australia or an *Australian government
agency; and
(b) a foreign
resident is or becomes entitled:
(i) to
receive the royalty or part of it from the entity, or to receive the amount of
the royalty or of part of it from the entity; or
(ii) to
have the entity credit to the foreign resident, or otherwise deal with on the
foreign resident’s behalf or as the foreign resident directs, the royalty or
part of it, or the amount of the royalty or of part of it.
For limits on the amount to be withheld,
see section 12‑300.
(2) The entity must withhold
the amount:
(a) if the foreign
resident is so entitled when the entity receives the payment—immediately after
the entity receives the payment; or
(b) if the foreign
resident becomes so entitled after the entity receives the payment—immediately
after the foreign resident becomes so entitled.
General
12‑300 Limits on amount withheld
under this Subdivision
This Subdivision does
not require an entity:
(a) to withhold an
amount from a *dividend, from interest (within the
meaning of Division 11A of Part III of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1936) or from a *royalty if no *withholding tax is payable in respect of the dividend, interest or
royalty; or
(b) to withhold from
a dividend, from interest (within the meaning of that Division) or from a
royalty more than the withholding tax payable in respect of the dividend,
interest or royalty (reduced by each amount already withheld from it under this
Subdivision).
Note: Section 128B of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 deals with withholding tax liability.
Subdivision 12‑FA—Departing Australia
superannuation payments
Table of sections
12‑305 Departing Australia
superannuation payment
12‑310 Limits on amount withheld
under this Subdivision
12‑305 Departing Australia superannuation payment
An entity must withhold
an amount from a *departing Australia superannuation payment
it pays to an entity.
12‑310 Limits on amount withheld
under this Subdivision
This Subdivision does
not require an entity:
(a) to withhold an
amount from a *departing Australia superannuation payment
if no *withholding tax is payable in respect of
the payment; or
(b) to withhold from
a departing Australia superannuation payment more than the withholding tax
payable in respect of the payment (reduced by each amount already withheld from
it under this Subdivision).
Note: Section 301‑175 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 deals with the withholding tax liability.
Subdivision 12‑FAA—Excess untaxed roll‑over amount
Table
of sections
12‑312 Untaxed roll‑over
superannuation benefits
12‑313 Limits on amount withheld
under this Subdivision
12‑312 Untaxed roll‑over
superannuation benefits
An entity must withhold
an amount from an *excess untaxed roll‑over amount it pays to
an entity.
Note: An excess untaxed roll‑over
amount is an amount that may form part of a roll‑over superannuation benefit
that includes an element untaxed in the fund: see section 306‑15 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997.
12‑313 Limits on amount withheld
under this Subdivision
This Subdivision does
not require an entity:
(a) to withhold an amount
from an *excess untaxed roll‑over amount if no *withholding tax is payable on the amount; or
(b) to withhold from
an excess untaxed roll‑over amount more than the withholding tax payable on the
amount (reduced by each amount already withheld from the excess untaxed roll‑over
amount under this Subdivision).
Note: Section 306‑15 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 deals with liability to this form of withholding
tax.
Subdivision 12‑FB—Payments to foreign residents etc.
Table of sections
12‑315 Payment to foreign
resident etc.
12‑317 Payment received for
foreign resident etc.
12‑319 Exemptions from
withholding obligations under this Subdivision
12‑315 Payment to foreign resident
etc.
(1) An entity (the payer)
that *carries on an *enterprise
must withhold an amount from a payment it makes to another entity, or to other
entities jointly, in the course or furtherance of the enterprise if:
(a) the entity
receiving the payment, or any of the entities receiving the payment, is an
entity covered by subsection (2); and
(b) the payment is of
a kind set out in the regulations; and
(c) the payment is
not:
(i) a *dividend of a company; or
(ii) interest
(within the meaning of Division 11A of Part III of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936); or
(iii) a *royalty; or
(iv) a *departing Australia superannuation payment; or
(v) a
payment worked out wholly or partly by reference to the value or quantity of *natural resources produced or recovered in Australia; or
(vi) a *mining payment; or
(vii) an
amount represented by or reasonably attributable to a *fund
payment; and
(d) the entity
receiving the payment is not covered by an exemption in force under subsection 12‑319(1),
or at least one of the entities receiving the payment is not covered by an
exemption in force under that subsection.
(2) An entity is covered by
this subsection if any of the following conditions is satisfied:
(a) the entity is a
foreign resident;
(b) the payer
believes, or has reasonable grounds to believe, that the entity is a foreign
resident;
(c) the payer has no
reasonable grounds to believe that the entity is an Australian resident, and
either:
(i) the
entity has an address outside Australia (according to any record that is in the
payer’s possession, or is kept or maintained on the payer’s behalf, about the
transaction to which the payment relates); or
(ii) the
payer is authorised to make the payment at a place outside Australia (whether to the entity or to anyone else);
(d) the entity has a
connection outside Australia of a kind set out in the regulations.
(3) Before the Governor‑General
makes a regulation for the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), the Minister must
be satisfied that each payment set out in the regulation is a payment of a kind
that could reasonably be related to assessable income of foreign residents.
12‑317 Payment received for foreign
resident etc.
(1) An entity (the intermediary)
that receives a payment meeting the requirements set out in paragraphs 12‑315(1)(b) and (c) must withhold an amount from the payment if:
(a) the intermediary
is a person in Australia or an *Australian government
agency; and
(b) another entity
(the likely foreign recipient) is or becomes entitled:
(i) to
receive the payment or part of it from the intermediary, or to receive the
amount of the payment or of part of it from the intermediary; or
(ii) to
have the intermediary credit to the likely foreign recipient, or otherwise deal
with on the likely foreign recipient’s behalf or as the likely foreign
recipient directs, the payment or part of it, or the amount of the payment or
of part of it; and
(c) the likely
foreign recipient is covered by subsection (3); and
(d) the likely
foreign recipient is not covered by an exemption in force under subsection 12‑319(1).
(2) The
intermediary must withhold the amount:
(a) if the likely
foreign recipient is so entitled when the intermediary receives the
payment—just after the intermediary receives the payment; or
(b) if the likely
foreign recipient becomes so entitled after the intermediary receives the
payment—just after the likely foreign recipient becomes so entitled.
(3) The likely foreign
recipient is covered by this subsection if any of the following conditions is
satisfied:
(a) the likely
foreign recipient is a foreign resident;
(b) the intermediary
believes, or has reasonable grounds to believe, that the likely foreign
recipient is a foreign resident;
(c) the intermediary
has no reasonable grounds to believe that the likely foreign recipient is an
Australian resident, and either:
(i) the
likely foreign recipient has an address outside Australia (according to any
record that is in the intermediary’s possession, or is kept or maintained on
the intermediary’s behalf); or
(ii) the
intermediary is authorised to forward the payment to a place outside Australia (whether to the likely foreign recipient or to anyone else);
(d) the likely
foreign recipient has a connection outside Australia of a kind set out in the
regulations.
12‑319 Exemptions from withholding
obligations under this Subdivision
(1) The Commissioner may
grant an entity an exemption in writing for the purposes of paragraphs 12‑315(1)(d) and 12‑317(1)(d) if the Commissioner is satisfied that:
(a) the entity has an
established history of compliance with its obligations under *taxation laws; and
(b) the entity is
likely to continue to comply with those obligations in the future.
(2) The exemption is in
force during the period:
(a) beginning when
the Commissioner grants the exemption; and
(b) ending at the
time specified in the exemption.
(3) Without limiting the
matters to which the Commissioner may have regard in deciding whether to grant
an entity an exemption, the Commissioner may have regard to the following:
(a) whether the
entity is or was liable to pay an instalment under Division 45 at
any time in:
(i) the
income year in which the exemption is proposed to be granted; and
(ii) the
previous 2 income years;
(b) the amount (if
any) of the entity’s *tax‑related liabilities that are
currently due and payable;
(c) the extent to
which the entity and its *associates (if any) have
complied with their obligations under *taxation laws
during:
(i) the
income year in which the exemption is proposed to be granted; and
(ii) the
previous 2 income years.
(4) The Commissioner must
give a copy of the exemption to the entity to which it relates.
(5) A failure to comply with
subsection (4) does not affect the validity of the exemption.
Subdivision 12‑FC—Seasonal Labour Mobility Program
Table of sections
12‑319A Payment to employee
12‑319A Payment to employee
An entity must withhold
an amount from salary, wages, commission, bonuses or allowances it pays to an
individual:
(a) as an employee of
an Approved Employer (whether the entity or another entity) under the Seasonal
Labour Mobility Program; and
(b) at a time when:
(i) the
employee is a foreign resident; and
(ii) the
employee holds a Special Program Visa (subclass 416).
Subdivision 12‑G—Payments in respect of mining on Aboriginal land, and
natural resources
Table
of sections
Mining on Aboriginal land
12‑320 Mining payment
Natural
resources
12‑325 Natural resource payment
12‑330 Payer must ask
Commissioner how much to withhold
12‑335 Commissioner may exempt
from section 12‑330, subject to conditions
Mining on Aboriginal land
12‑320 Mining payment
(1) An entity must withhold
an amount from a *mining payment that:
(a) it makes to
another entity; or
(b) it applies for
the benefit of another entity.
(2) Subsection (1) does
not require the entity to withhold more than the *mining
withholding tax payable in respect of the *mining
payment.
Note: Section 128V of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 deals with mining withholding tax liability.
Natural resources
12‑325 Natural resource payment
(1) An entity must withhold
an amount from a payment it makes to a foreign resident, or to 2 or more
entities at least one of which is a foreign resident, if the payment is worked
out wholly or partly by reference to the value or quantity of *natural resources produced or recovered in Australia.
(2) The amount to be
withheld is:
(a) the amount
notified by the Commissioner under section 12‑330; or
(b) the amount worked
out under a certificate in force under section 12‑335 that covers the
payment;
as appropriate.
Exception
(3) Subsection (1) does
not apply if:
(a) the Commissioner
has notified the entity under section 12‑330 that the entity does not need
to withhold an amount from the payment; or
(b) a certificate in
force under section 12‑335 covers the payment and does not require the
entity to withhold an amount from it.
12‑330 Payer must ask Commissioner
how much to withhold
(1) An entity must not
intentionally make a payment from which section 12‑325 requires it to withhold
an amount, unless:
(a) the entity has
notified the Commissioner in writing of the amount of the proposed payment; and
(b) the Commissioner
has later notified the entity in writing of the amount (if any) that the entity
must withhold from the payment in respect of tax or *petroleum
resource rent tax that is or may become payable by a foreign resident to whom
the payment is made;
or the payment is covered by a
certificate in force under section 12‑335.
Penalty: 20 penalty units.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Failure to notify not an offence
against section 8C
(2) An entity that fails to
notify the Commissioner as required by subsection (1) does not commit an
offence against section 8C.
12‑335 Commissioner may exempt from
section 12‑330, subject to conditions
(1) The
Commissioner may give an entity a written certificate exempting the entity from
complying with section 12‑330 for specified payments.
(2) A certificate is subject
to:
(a) a condition that
the entity must withhold from a payment covered by the certificate the amount
(if any) worked out in accordance with the certificate in respect of tax or *petroleum resource rent tax that is or may become payable by a
foreign resident to whom the payment is made; and
(b) such other
conditions as the certificate specifies.
However, the entity does not contravene
subsection 12‑330(1) because it contravenes a condition.
(3) The
Commissioner may, by written notice given to the entity:
(a) revoke a
certificate, whether or not a condition of it has been contravened; or
(b) vary a
certificate by revoking, changing or adding to its conditions.
Note: A person who is dissatisfied
with a decision under this section may object against the decision in the manner
set out in Part IVC.
Subdivision 12‑H—Distributions of managed investment trust income
Guide to Subdivision 12‑H
12‑375 What this Subdivision is
about
A managed investment
trust may be required to withhold an amount from a payment of its Australian
sourced net income (other than dividends, interest and royalties) if the
payment is made to an entity whose address, or place for payment, is outside
Australia. If the payment is made to another entity, the managed investment
trust is required to make information available to the recipient outlining
certain details in relation to the payment.
If a custodian receives
a payment that is covered by that information, it is required to withhold an
amount from any related later payment to an entity whose address, or place for
payment, is outside Australia. If the later payment is made to another entity,
the custodian is required to make information available in relation to that
later payment.
If
an entity that is not a custodian receives a payment that is covered by that
information, it is required to withhold an amount from that payment if a
foreign resident becomes entitled to that payment. If a resident becomes entitled
to the payment, the entity must make information available in relation to that
payment.
Where there is an
obligation to withhold, the applicable withholding rate is determined by the
nature of the country or territory in which the recipient’s address, place for
payment or residency is located and whether the trust is a clean building
managed investment trust.
A managed investment
trust is a clean building managed investment trust if it is a managed
investment trust that holds one or more clean buildings and does not derive
assessable income from any other taxable Australian property (other than
certain assets that are reasonably incidental to a clean building).
Table
of sections
Operative provisions
12‑385 Withholding by managed
investment trusts
12‑390 Withholding by custodians
and other entities
12‑395 Requirement to give
notice or make information available
12‑400 Meaning of managed
investment trust
12‑401 Trusts with wholesale
membership
12‑402 Widely‑held
requirements—ordinary case
12‑402A Widely‑held requirements
for registered MIT—special case for entities covered by subsection 12‑402(3)
12‑402B Closely‑held restrictions
12‑403 Licensing requirements
for unregistered MIS
12‑404 MIT participation
interest
12‑405 Meaning of fund
payment
12‑410 Entity to whom payment is
made
12‑415 Failure to give notice or
make information available: administrative penalty
12‑420 Agency rules
12‑425 Meaning of clean
building managed investment trust
12‑430 Meaning of clean
building
Operative provisions
12‑385 Withholding by managed
investment trusts
(1) A trustee of a trust
that is a *managed investment trust in relation to an
income year that makes a *fund payment in relation
to that income year to an entity covered by section 12‑410 must withhold
an amount from the payment.
Note 1: An entity may be covered by
section 12‑410 if the entity has an address outside Australia or payment is authorised to be made to a place outside Australia.
Note 2: If the payment is made to a
recipient not covered by section 12‑410, the trustee is required to give a
notice to the recipient or publish information on a website setting out certain
details about the payment: see section 12‑395.
(2) The amount the trustee
must withhold is:

(3) The rate is:
(a) if the address or
place for payment of the recipient is in an *information
exchange country:
(i) 22.5%
for *fund payments (except to the extent that
they are, or are attributable to, fund payments from a *clean
building managed investment trust) in relation to the first income year
starting on or after the first 1 July after the day on which the Tax
Laws Amendment (Election Commitments No. 1) Act 2008 receives the
Royal Assent; or
(ii) 15%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
the following income year; or
(iii) 7.5%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
later income years starting before 1 July 2012; or
(iv) 15%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
later income years starting on or after 1 July 2012; or
(v) 10%
for fund payments to the extent that they are, or are attributable to, fund
payments from a clean building managed investment trust in relation to the
income years starting on or after 1 July 2012; or
(b) otherwise—30%.
(4) An information
exchange country is a foreign country or foreign territory specified in
the regulations for the purposes of this section.
(5) This section does not
apply to an amount paid by a *managed investment trust
to the extent that no *managed investment trust
withholding tax is payable in respect of the payment or an amount reasonably
attributable to the payment.
12‑390 Withholding by custodians and
other entities
Withholding by custodians
(1) A *custodian must withhold an amount from a payment (the later
payment) it makes if:
(a) all or some of
the later payment (the covered part) is reasonably attributable
to the part of an earlier payment received by the custodian that was covered by
a notice or information under section 12‑395; and
(b) the later payment
is made to an entity covered by section 12‑410.
Note 1: The covered part referred to
in paragraph (1)(a) is attributable to a fund payment made by a managed
investment trust, or 2 or more fund payments made by one or more managed
investment trusts.
Note 2: An entity may be covered by
section 12‑410 if the entity has an address outside Australia or payment is authorised to be made to a place outside Australia.
Note 3: If the payment is made to a recipient
not covered by section 12‑410, the custodian is required to give a notice
to the recipient or publish information on a website setting out certain
details about the payment: see section 12‑395.
(2) The
amount the *custodian must withhold is:

(3) The rate is:
(a) if the address or
place for payment of the recipient is in an *information
exchange country:
(i) 22.5%
for *fund payments (except to the extent that
they are, or are attributable to, fund payments from a *clean
building managed investment trust) in relation to the first income year
starting on or after the first 1 July after the day on which the Tax
Laws Amendment (Election Commitments No. 1) Act 2008 receives the
Royal Assent; or
(ii) 15%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
the following income year; or
(iii) 7.5%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
later income years starting before 1 July 2012; or
(iv) 15%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
later income years starting on or after 1 July 2012; or
(v) 10%
for fund payments to the extent that they are, or are attributable to, fund
payments from a clean building managed investment trust in relation to the
income years starting on or after 1 July 2012; or
(b) otherwise—30%.
Withholding by other entities
(4) An entity that is not a *managed investment trust or a *custodian
must withhold an amount from a payment it receives if:
(a) the payment or
part of it (the covered part) was covered by a notice or
information under section 12‑395; and
(b) a
foreign resident (the recipient) is or becomes entitled:
(i) to
receive from the entity; or
(ii) to
have the entity credit to the recipient, or otherwise deal with on the
recipient’s behalf or as the recipient directs;
an amount (the attributable
amount) reasonably attributable to the covered part.
Note: If the recipient not a
foreign resident, the entity is required to give a notice to the recipient or
publish information on a website setting out certain details about the payment:
see section 12‑395.
(5) The amount the entity
must withhold is:

(6) The
rate is:
(a) if the recipient
is a resident of an *information exchange country:
(i) 22.5%
for *fund payments (except to the extent that
they are, or are attributable to, fund payments from a clean building managed
investment trust) in relation to the first income year starting on or after the
first 1 July after the day on which the Tax Laws Amendment (Election
Commitments No. 1) Act 2008 receives the Royal Assent; or
(ii) 15%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
the following income year; or
(iii) 7.5%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
later income years starting before 1 July 2012; or
(iv) 15%
for fund payments (except to the extent that they are, or are attributable to,
fund payments from a clean building managed investment trust) in relation to
later income years starting on or after 1 July 2012; or
(v) 10%
for fund payments to the extent that they are, or are attributable to, fund
payments from a clean building managed investment trust in relation to the
income years starting on or after 1 July 2012; or
(b) otherwise—30%.
(7) An entity is a resident
of an *information exchange country if:
(a) the entity is a
resident of that country for the purposes of the taxation laws of that country;
or
(b) if there are no
taxation laws of that country applicable to the entity or the entity’s
residency status cannot be determined under those laws:
(i) for
an individual—the individual is ordinarily resident in that country; or
(ii) for
another entity—the entity is incorporated or formed in that country and is
carrying on a business in that country.
(8) An amount required to be
withheld under subsection (4) must be withheld:
(a) if the recipient
is so entitled when the entity receives the payment—immediately after receipt;
or
(b) if the recipient
becomes so entitled at a later time—immediately after the later time.
Meaning of custodian
(9) An entity is a custodian
if the entity is *carrying on a *business
that consists predominantly of providing a custodial or depository service (as
defined by section 766E of the Corporations Act 2001) pursuant to
an *Australian financial services licence.
Exceptions
(10) This section does not
apply:
(a) to a company
unless the company would, apart from section 12‑420, be acting in the
capacity as *agent for the recipient; or
(b) to an amount paid
or received by an entity to the extent that no *managed
investment trust withholding tax is payable in respect of the amount or an
amount reasonably attributable to the amount.
12‑395 Requirement to give notice or
make information available
Managed investment trusts and
custodians
(1) An entity that is a *managed investment trust or a *custodian
must comply with subsection (2) if:
(a) the entity makes
a payment to another entity (the recipient) from which an amount
would have been required to be withheld under section 12‑385 or subsection 12‑390(1)
if the payment had been made to an entity covered by section 12‑410; and
(b) an amount is not
required to be withheld from the payment because the recipient is not an entity
covered by section 12‑410.
Note: An entity may be covered by
section 12‑410 if the entity has an address outside Australia or payment is authorised to be made to a place outside Australia.
(2) The entity must:
(a) give to the
recipient a written notice containing the details specified in subsection (3);
or
(b) make those
details available on a website in a way that the details are readily accessible
to the recipient for not less than 5 continuous years.
(3) The notice must be
given, or the details must be made available on a website, before or at the
time when the payment is made and:
(a) must specify the
part of the payment from which an amount would have been so required to have
been withheld; and
(aa) must specify the
extent (if any) to which the payment is, or is attributable to, a *fund payment from a *clean building managed
investment trust; and
(b) must specify the
income year of the *managed investment trust to which
that part relates.
Note: Failure to give the notice or
make the details available as required by this section incurs an administrative
penalty: see section 12‑415.
Other entities
(4) An entity that is not a *managed investment trust or a *custodian
must comply with subsection (5) if:
(a) the entity
receives a payment; and
(b) another entity
(also the recipient) is or becomes entitled:
(i) to
receive from the entity; or
(ii) to
have the entity credit to the recipient, or otherwise deal with on the
recipient’s behalf or as the recipient directs;
an amount
attributable to the payment; and
(c) the entity would
have been required to withhold an amount from the payment under subsection 12‑390(4)
if the recipient had been a foreign resident; and
(d) an amount is not
required to be withheld from the payment because the recipient is not a foreign
resident.
(5) The entity must:
(a) give to the
recipient a written notice containing the details specified in subsection (6);
or
(b) make those
details available on a website in a way that the details are readily accessible
to the recipient for not less than 5 continuous years.
(6) The notice must be
given, or the details must be made available on a website, before or at the
time when the amount is paid or credited to the recipient, or is dealt with on
the recipient’s behalf or as the recipient directs, and:
(a) must specify the
part of the payment referred to in paragraph (4)(a) from which an amount
would have been so required to have been withheld; and
(aa) must specify the
extent (if any) to which the payment is, or is attributable to, a *fund payment from a *clean building managed
investment trust; and
(b) must specify the
income year of the *managed investment trust to which
that part relates.
Note: Failure to give the notice or
make the details available as required by this section incurs an administrative
penalty: see section 12‑415.
12‑400 Meaning of managed
investment trust
(1) A
trust is a managed investment trust in relation to an income year
if:
(a) at
the time the trustee of the trust makes the first *fund
payment in relation to the income year, or at an earlier time in the income
year:
(i) the
trustee of the trust was an Australian resident; or
(ii) the
central management and control of the trust was in Australia; and
(b) the trust is not
a trust covered by subsection (2) (trading trust etc.) in relation to the
income year; and
(c) a substantial
proportion of the investment management activities carried out in relation to
the trust in respect of all of the following assets of the trust are carried
out in Australia throughout the income year:
(i) assets
that are situated in Australia at any time in the income year;
(ii) assets
that are *taxable Australian property at any time in
the income year;
(iii) assets
that are *shares, units or interests listed for
quotation in the official list of an *approved stock
exchange in Australia at any time in the income year; and
(d) at the time the
payment is made, the trust is a managed investment scheme (within the meaning
of section 9 of the Corporations Act 2001); and
(e) at the time the
payment is made:
(i) the
trust is covered by section 12‑401 (trusts with wholesale membership); or
(ii) if
the trust is not covered by section 12‑401—the trust is registered
under section 601EB of the Corporations Act 2001; and
(f) the trust
satisfies, in relation to the income year:
(i) if,
at the time the payment is made, the trust is registered under section 601EB
of the Corporations Act 2001 and is covered by section 12‑401—either
or both of the widely‑held requirements in subsections 12‑402(1) and 12‑402A(1);
or
(ii) if,
at the time the payment is made, the trust is so registered and is not covered
by section 12‑401—either or both of the widely‑held requirements in
subsections 12‑402(1A) and 12‑402A(1); or
(iii) if,
at the time the payment is made, the trust is not so registered and
is covered by section 12‑401—the widely‑held requirements in subsection 12‑402(1);
and
(g) the trust
satisfies the closely‑held restrictions in subsection 12‑402B(1) in
relation to the income year; and
(h) if the trust is
covered by section 12‑401 at the time the payment is made—it satisfies the
licensing requirements in section 12‑403 in relation to the income year.
Trading unit trust or other trust
carrying on trading business etc. cannot be managed investment trust
(2) A trust is covered by
this subsection in relation to an income year if:
(a) in the case of a
unit trust—the trust is a trading trust for the purposes of Division 6C in
Part III of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 in relation to the
income year; or
(b) in any other
case—the trust at any time in the income year:
(i) carried
on a trading business (within the meaning of that Division); or
(ii) controlled,
or was able to control, directly or indirectly, the affairs or operations of
another person in respect of the carrying on by that other person of a trading
business (within the meaning of that Division).
Crown entities, etc.
(3) For the purposes of paragraphs (1)(e)
and (f), treat an entity as registered under section 601EB of the Corporations
Act 2001 at the time the payment is made if at that time the trust
is operated by:
(a) an entity that
would, but for subsection 5A(4) of that Act (about the Crown not being
bound by Chapter 6CA or 7 of that Act), be required under that Act to be a
financial services licensee (within the meaning of section 761A of that
Act) whose licence would cover operating such a managed investment scheme; or
(b) an entity that:
(i) is a *wholly‑owned subsidiary of an entity of a kind mentioned in paragraph (a);
and
(ii) would,
but for any instrument issued by ASIC under that Act that has effect in
relation to the entity and operation of the scheme mentioned in paragraph 12‑400(1)(d),
be required under that Act to be a financial services licensee (within the
meaning of section 761A of that Act) whose licence would cover operating
such a managed investment scheme.
Start‑up and wind‑down phases
(4) Treat the requirements
in paragraphs (1)(f) and (g) as being satisfied if:
(a) the trust is
created during the period:
(i) starting
6 months before the start of the income year; and
(ii) ending
at the end of the income year; or
(b) the trust ceases
to exist during the income year, and was a *managed
investment trust (disregarding paragraph (a)) in relation to the previous
income year.
12‑401 Trusts with wholesale
membership
A trust is covered by
this section at a time if, at that time:
(a) the trust is not
required to be registered in accordance with section 601ED of the Corporations
Act 2001 (whether or not it is actually so registered) because of
subsection 601ED(2) of that Act (no product disclosure statement required)
or because it is operated or managed by an entity covered by subsection 12‑403(2)
(Crown entities); and
(b) the total number
of entities that had become a *member of the trust
because a financial product or a financial service was provided to, or acquired
by, the entity as a retail client (within the meaning of sections 761G and
761GA of the Corporations Act 2001) is no more than 20; and
(c) the entities
mentioned in paragraph (b) have a total *MIT
participation interest in the trust of no more than 10%.
12‑402 Widely‑held
requirements—ordinary case
(1) The trust satisfies the
requirements in this subsection in relation to the income year if, at the time
the payment mentioned in paragraph 12‑400(1)(a) is made, the trust has at
least 25 *members.
(1A) The trust satisfies the
requirements in this subsection in relation to the income year if, at the time
the payment mentioned in paragraph 12‑400(1)(a) is made:
(a) units in the
trust are listed for quotation in the official list of an *approved stock exchange in Australia; or
(b) the trust has at
least 50 *members (ignoring objects of a trust).
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1)
and paragraph (1A)(b), determine the number of *members
of the trust as follows:
(a) first, by
applying the rules in subsection (4), identify:
(i) the
members of the trust that are not entities covered by subsection (3); and
(ii) the
members of the trust that are entities covered by subsection (3);
(b) next, work out
the number of members mentioned in subparagraph (a)(i);
(c) next:
(i) work
out the *MIT participation interest in the trust of
each entity mentioned in subparagraph (a)(ii); and
(ii) for
each of those entities, multiply the total of its MIT participation interest in
the trust by 50 and round the result upwards to the nearest whole number; and
(iii) work
out the total of the results of subparagraph (ii) for all of those
entities;
(d) next, work out
the total of the results of paragraphs (b) and (c).
(3) This subsection covers
the following kinds of entity:
(a) a *life insurance company;
(b) a *complying superannuation fund, a *complying
approved deposit fund or a *foreign superannuation
fund, being a fund that has at least 50 *members;
(c) a *pooled superannuation trust that has at least one member that is a complying
superannuation fund that has at least 50 members;
(d) a *managed investment trust in relation to the income year;
(e) an entity:
(i) that
is recognised under a *foreign law as being
used for collective investment by pooling the contributions of its members as
consideration to acquire rights to benefits produced by the entity; and
(ii) that
has at least 50 members; and
(iii) the
contributing members of which do not have day‑to‑day control over the entity’s
operation;
(f) an entity, the
principal purpose of which is to fund pensions (including disability and
similar benefits) for the citizens or other contributors of a foreign country,
if:
(i) the
entity is a fund established by an *exempt foreign
government agency; or
(ii) the
entity is established under a foreign law for an exempt foreign government
agency; or
(iii) the
entity is a *wholly‑owned subsidiary of an entity
mentioned in subparagraph (i) or (ii);
(g) an investment
entity that satisfies all of these requirements:
(i) the
entity is wholly‑owned by one or more *foreign government
agencies, or is a wholly‑owned subsidiary of one or more foreign government
agencies;
(ii) the
entity is established using only the public money or public property of the
foreign government concerned;
(iii) all
economic benefits obtained by the entity have passed, or are expected to pass,
to the foreign government concerned;
(h) an entity
established and wholly‑owned by an *Australian
government agency, if the capital of the entity, and returns from the investment
of that capital, are used for the primary purpose of meeting statutory
government liabilities or obligations (such as superannuation liabilities and
liabilities arising from compensation or workcover claims);
(i) an entity of a
kind similar to an entity mentioned in the preceding paragraphs of this
subsection as specified in the regulations.
(4) The rules are as
follows:
(a) if an entity that
is not a trust holds interests in the trust indirectly, through a *chain of trusts:
(i) treat
the entity as a member of the trust; and
(ii) do
not treat a trust in the chain of trusts as a member of the trust;
(b) do not treat an
object of the trust as a member of the trust;
(ba) if the trust is
mentioned in subparagraph 12‑400(1)(e)(i) (trusts with wholesale
membership)—do not treat an individual as a member of the trust (other than an
individual who became a member of the trust because a financial product or a
financial service was provided to, or acquired by, the individual as a
wholesale client (within the meaning of section 761G of the Corporations
Act 2001));
(c) the rules in subsection (6).
(5) For the purposes of paragraph (4)(a),
treat an entity covered by subsection (3) as an entity that is not a
trust.
(6) The rules are as
follows:
(a) treat the
following entities as together being one entity:
(i) an
individual;
(ii) each
of his or her relatives;
(iii) each
entity acting in the capacity of nominee of an individual mentioned in subparagraph (i)
or (ii);
(b) treat the
following entities as together being one entity (the notional entity):
(i) an
entity that is not an individual;
(ii) each
entity acting in the capacity of nominee of the entity mentioned in subparagraph (i).
(7) For the purposes of subsection (4),
if the entity mentioned in subparagraph (6)(b)(i) is an entity covered by subsection (3),
treat the notional entity as an entity covered by subsection (3).
12‑402A Widely‑held requirements for
registered MIT—special case for entities covered by subsection 12‑402(3)
(1) The trust satisfies the
requirements in this subsection in relation to the income year if:
(a) one or more
entities covered by subsection 12‑402(3) have a total *MIT participation interest in the trust of more than 25% at the time
the payment mentioned in paragraph 12‑400(1)(a) is made; and
(b) at no time in the
income year does an entity (other than an entity covered by subsection 12‑402(3))
have a MIT participation interest in the trust of more than 60%.
(2) For the purposes of paragraphs (1)(a)
and (b):
(a) if:
(i) an
entity covered by subsection 12‑402(3) has a *MIT
participation interest (the first interest) in the trust; and
(ii) another
entity covered by subsection 12‑402(3) also has a MIT participation
interest (the second interest) in the trust;
disregard the
second interest to the extent that it arises through the existence of the first
interest; and
(b) if an entity that
is not a trust has a MIT participation interest in the trust because it holds
interests in the trust indirectly, through a *chain
of trusts—do not treat a trust in the chain of trusts as having a MIT
participation interest in the trust.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (2)(b),
treat an entity covered by subsection 12‑402(3) as an entity that is not a
trust.
(4) For the purposes of paragraphs (1)(a)
and (b), apply the rules in subsection 12‑402(6).
12‑402B Closely‑held restrictions
(1) The trust satisfies the
requirements in this subsection in relation to the income year unless, at any
time in the income year, any of the following situations exist:
(a) for a trust
mentioned in subparagraph 12‑400(1)(e)(i) (trusts with wholesale
membership)—10 or fewer persons have a total *MIT
participation interest in the trust of 75% or more;
(b) if paragraph (a)
does not apply—20 or fewer persons have a total MIT participation interest in
the trust of 75% or more;
(c) a foreign
resident individual has a MIT participation interest in the trust of 10% or
more.
(2) For the purposes of paragraphs (1)(a)
and (b):
(a) if an entity
covered by subsection 12‑402(3) has a *MIT
participation interest in the trust—treat that entity as not having a
MIT participation interest in the trust; and
(b) if an entity that
is not a trust has a MIT participation interest in the trust because it holds
interests in the trust indirectly, through a *chain
of trusts:
(i) if
the entity is covered by subsection 12‑402(3)—do not treat it as having a
MIT participation interest in the trust; and
(ii) do
not treat a trust in the chain of trusts as having a MIT participation interest
in the trust.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (2)(b),
treat an entity covered by subsection 12‑402(3) as an entity that is not a
trust.
(4) For the purposes of paragraphs (1)(a)
and (b), apply the rules in subsection 12‑402(6).
12‑403 Licensing requirements for
unregistered MIS
(1) The trust satisfies the
requirements in this section in relation to the income year if, at the time the
payment mentioned in paragraph 12‑400(1)(a) is made (the time of the first
fund payment for the income year):
(a) the trust is
operated or managed by:
(i) a
financial services licensee (within the meaning of section 761A of the Corporations
Act 2001) holding an Australian financial services licence whose licence
covers it providing financial services (within the meaning of section 766A
of that Act) to wholesale clients (within the meaning of section 761G of
that Act); or
(ii) an
authorised representative (within the meaning of section 761A of that Act)
of such a financial services licensee; or
(b) the trust is
operated or managed by an entity covered by subsection (2); or
(c) the trust is
operated or managed by an entity that:
(i) is a *wholly‑owned subsidiary of an entity covered by subsection (2);
and
(ii) is an
entity covered by subsection (3).
(2) An entity is covered by
this subsection if it would, but for subsection 5A(4) of that Act (about
the Crown not being bound by Chapter 6CA or 7 of that Act), be required
under the Corporations Act 2001 to be a financial services licensee
(within the meaning of section 761A of that Act).
(3) An entity is covered by
this subsection if it would, but for any instrument issued by ASIC under that
Act that has effect in relation to the entity and the operation of the scheme
mentioned in paragraph 12‑400(1)(d), be required under the Corporations
Act 2001 to be a financial services licensee (within the meaning of section 761A
of that Act).
12‑404 MIT participation interest
(1) An entity has a MIT
participation interest in a trust if the entity, directly or
indirectly:
(a) holds, or has the
right to *acquire, interests representing a
percentage of the value of the interests in the trust; or
(b) has the control
of, or the ability to control, a percentage of the rights attaching to *membership interests in the trust; or
(c) has the right to
receive a percentage of any distribution of income that the trust may make.
(2) The MIT
participation interest of the entity in the trust is the greatest of
the percentages mentioned in paragraphs (1)(a), (b) and (c).
12‑405 Meaning of fund payment
(1) The object of this
section is to ensure that the total of the *fund
payments that the trustee of a trust makes in relation to an income year
equals, as nearly as practicable, the net income of the trust for the income
year, disregarding these amounts (excluded amounts):
(a) a dividend (as
defined in Division 11A of Part III of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1936) that is subject to, or exempted from, a requirement to withhold
under Subdivision 12‑F;
(b) interest (as so
defined) that is subject to, or exempted from, such a requirement;
(c) a *royalty that is subject to, or exempted from, such a requirement;
(d) a *capital gain or *capital loss from a *CGT event that happens in relation to a *CGT
asset that is not *taxable Australian property;
(e) amounts that are
not from an *Australian source;
and disregarding deductions relating to
excluded amounts.
(2) Work out as follows how
much of a payment (the actual payment) made by the trustee of a
trust in relation to an income year is a fund payment in relation
to that year:
Method
statement
Step 1. Reduce
the actual payment by so much of it that is attributable to excluded amounts.
Step 2. Work
out what it is reasonable to expect will be the *net
income of the trust for the income year:
(a) disregarding
excluded amounts, expected excluded amounts and deductions relating to those
amounts; and
(b) on
the basis that a *capital gain from *taxable
Australian property of the trust that was or would be reduced under step 3 of
the method statement in subsection 102‑5(1) of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 were double the amount it actually is.
Step 3. The fund
payment is so much of the step 2 amount as is reasonable having regard
to:
(a) the
object of this section; and
(b) the
step 1 amount; and
(c) the
amounts of any earlier fund payments made by the trustee in relation to the
income year; and
(d) the
expected amounts of any later fund payments the trustee expects to make in
relation to the income year.
(3) The expected *net income of the trust and the expected amounts of future *fund payments are to be worked out on the basis of the trustee’s
knowledge when the actual payment is made.
(4) However, an amount is
not a fund payment in relation to the income year unless it is
paid:
(a) during the income
year; or
(b) within 3 months
after the end of the income year; or
(c) within a longer
period (starting at the end of the period referred to in paragraph (b) and
not exceeding 3 months) allowed by the Commissioner.
(5) The Commissioner may
allow a longer period as mentioned in paragraph (4)(c) only if the
Commissioner is of the opinion that the trustee was unable to make the payment during
the income year, or within 3 months after the end of the income year, because
of circumstances beyond the influence or control of the trustee.
12‑410 Entity to whom payment is
made
(1) An
entity (the recipient) is covered by this section for a payment
made to it by another entity (the payer) if:
(a) according
to any record that is in the payer’s possession, or is kept or maintained on
the payer’s behalf, the recipient has an address outside Australia; or
(b) the
payer is authorised to make the payment to a place outside Australia.
(2) However, a recipient is
not covered by this section for a payment if, at the time the payment was made,
a *business the recipient carries on is carried on at or through an *Australian permanent establishment and the payment is attributable
to that establishment.
12‑415 Failure to give notice or
make information available: administrative penalty
An entity that:
(a) is required to
give a notice, or make details available on a website, under section 12‑395
in relation to:
(i) a
payment made to another entity; or
(ii) an
amount paid or credited to, or dealt with on behalf of or as directed by,
another entity; and
(b) fails to comply
with that section;
is liable to pay to the Commissioner a
penalty equal to the amount that would have been required to be withheld under
this Subdivision (disregarding subsection 12‑385(5) and paragraph 12‑390(10)(b))
in relation to amounts attributable to the payment or amount if the notice had
been given or the details had been made available.
Note: Division 298 in this
Schedule contains machinery provisions for administrative penalties.
12‑420 Agency rules
(1) This section applies to:
(a) a payment (the first
payment) made to an entity (the first entity) in the
capacity as *agent for another entity; and
(b) another payment
made by the first entity to the extent that it is reasonably attributable to
the first payment.
(2) This Subdivision has
effect as if the first entity were not an *agent
in relation to the payments.
Note: As a result of subsection (2),
an agent may be required to withhold amounts under this Subdivision.
12‑425 Meaning of clean building
managed investment trust
(1) A trust is a clean
building managed investment trust in relation to an income year if
during the income year:
(a) it is a *managed investment trust in relation to the income year; and
(b) it holds one or
more *clean buildings (including the land on
which the buildings are situated); and
(c) it does not
derive assessable income from any *taxable Australian
property (other than from the clean buildings or assets that are reasonably
incidental to those buildings).
5% safe harbour for certain income
reasonably incidental to a clean building
(2) A trust is not a *clean building managed investment trust in relation to an income
year if the assessable income of the trust that is derived from assets that are
reasonably incidental to *clean buildings is
greater than 5% of the assessable income of the trust that is derived from
clean buildings.
(3) The regulations may
specify kinds of assets that are, or are not, reasonably incidental to *clean buildings for the purposes of this section.
12‑430 Meaning of clean building
(1) A building is a clean
building if:
(a) the construction
of the building commenced on or after 1 July 2012; and
(b) it satisfies the
requirements in subsections (3) and (4).
(2) For the purpose of subsection (1):
(a) the construction
of the building is taken to have commenced at the time the works on the lowest
level (including any basement level) of the building commence; and
(b) the construction
of the building is not taken to have commenced merely because works preparing
the site for construction, or works undertaken below the lowest level of the
building (including any basement level), have commenced.
(3) A building satisfies the
requirements in this subsection if:
(a) the building is a
commercial building that is any of the following (or is a combination of any of
the following):
(i) an
office building;
(ii) a
hotel for use wholly or mainly to provide short‑term accommodation for
travellers;
(iii) a
shopping centre; or
(b) the building
satisfies the requirements prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of
this paragraph.
(4) A building satisfies the
requirements in this subsection if:
(a) the building:
(i) has,
and continues to maintain at all times during the income year, at least a 5
Star Green Star rating as certified by the Green Building Council of Australia;
or
(ii) has,
and continues to maintain at all times during the income year, at least a 5.5
star energy rating as accredited by the National Australian Built Environment
Rating System (NABERS); or
(b) the building
satisfies the requirements prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of
this paragraph.
(5) For the purposes of subsection (4),
if:
(a) a building has
previously satisfied the requirements in that subsection; and
(b) the building then
fails to satisfy the requirements for a period (the non‑compliance period);
and
(c) within 180 days
after the first day of that failure, the building again satisfies the
requirements;
treat the building as having satisfied
the requirements during the non‑compliance period.
Division 13—Alienated personal services payments
Table of sections
13‑1 Object of this Division
13‑5 Payment to the
Commissioner in respect of alienated personal services payments
13‑10 Alienated personal
services payments
13‑15 Personal services
payment remitters
13‑20 Time for payments to
Commissioner for alienated personal services payments made during 2000‑01
13‑1 Object of this Division
The object of this
Division is to ensure the efficient collection of income tax (and other
liabilities) on any *personal services income included
in an individual’s assessable income under Division 86 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 by:
(a) putting *personal services entities receiving *alienated
personal services payments in a position similar to their position if amounts
were withheld from the payments under Division 12; but
(b) doing so in a way
that enables them to comply with their obligations without having to withhold
amounts separately from each payment.
Note: Under Division 86 of the
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about alienation of personal services
income), an individual’s personal services income that is gained or produced by
another entity is in some cases included in the individual’s assessable income.
Payments of this income by the entity might not be caught by Division 12.
13‑5 Payment to the Commissioner in
respect of alienated personal services payments
Obligation to pay amounts
(1) A *personal services entity must pay an amount of tax to the Commissioner if:
(a) it receives an *alienated personal services payment that relates to an individual’s
personal services income; and
(b) it receives the
payment during a *PAYG payment period for which it is a *personal services payment remitter.
Working out the amounts
(2) Use this method
statement to work out the amount:
Method
statement
Step 1. Identify the payments that the *personal services
entity makes to the individual during the period mentioned in paragraph (1)(b)
that are *withholding payments covered by section 12‑35.
Step 2. Identify the amounts that:
(a) are included in the individual’s assessable income
under section 86‑15 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997; and
(b) relate
to *alienated personal services payments the entity receives during that period.
Step 3. Work
out the sum of all the amounts that Division 12 would require the entity to withhold in
respect of that period if both of these were taken into account:
(a) the payments identified in step 1; and
(b) the amounts identified in step 2, as if they were
payments of salary covered by section 12‑35.
Step 4. Work out the sum of all the amounts withheld under section 12‑35
from the payments identified in step 1.
Step 5. Subtract the sum under step 4 from the sum under step 3.
Example: For the PAYG payment period of 1 April
2001 to 30 June 2001, NewIT Pty. Ltd. received amounts totalling $18,000
that were Ron’s personal services income. NewIT does not conduct a personal
services business.
During the period, NewIT
paid Ron $3,000 in salary. This is a withholding payment covered by section 12‑35
(step 1).
$15,000
of the amount NewIT received is included in Ron’s assessable income
under section 86‑15 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997
(step 2).
If
NewIT had paid the $15,000 in salary to Ron within
14 days after the end of the PAYG payment period, the amount that NewIT would
have had to withhold under Division 12 on the total amount of $18,000 would have been $4,000
(step 3).
NewIT withheld $500 from the salary payment of $3,000, as required
by section 12‑35 (step
4).
On the basis of these
facts, the amount NewIT must pay to the Commissioner (step 5) is:

(3) Subject to subsections (4)
and (5), the *personal services entity must pay the
amount to the Commissioner by the end of the 21st day after the end of the *PAYG payment period.
Note: A different rule applies for
alienated personal services payments that large withholders and medium
withholders make during the 2000‑01 income year. See section 13‑20.
(4) If:
(a) the *personal services entity is a *deferred
BAS payer on the 21st day after the end of the *PAYG
payment period; and
(b) the personal
services entity’s PAYG payment period is a *quarter;
the entity must pay that amount to the
Commissioner as shown in the table:
|
Payments by *deferred BAS payers
|
|
Item
|
If paragraph (4)(a) applies to
the *quarter ending on:
|
the amount for this quarter must be
paid by the end of:
|
|
1
|
30 September
|
the following 28 October
|
|
2
|
31 December
|
the following 28 February
|
|
3
|
31 March
|
the following 28 April
|
|
4
|
30 June
|
the following 28 July
|
(5) If:
(a) the *personal services entity is a *deferred
BAS payer on the 21st day after the end of the *PAYG
payment period; and
(b) the personal
services entity’s PAYG payment period is a month;
the entity must pay that amount to the
Commissioner:
(c) by the end of the
28th day of the month following that period unless the PAYG payment period is a
December; or
(d) by the end of the
28th day of the next February if the PAYG payment period is a December.
13‑10 Alienated personal services
payments
An alienated
personal services payment is a payment (including a payment in the form
of a *non‑cash benefit) that a *personal services entity receives and that relates to an amount
that:
(a) is included in an
individual’s assessable income under Division 86 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997; or
(b) would be so
included but for the fact that the entity received the income in the course of
conducting a *personal services business.
For valuation of non‑cash benefits, see
sections 21 and 21A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.
13‑15 Personal services payment
remitters
General
(1) A *personal services entity is a personal services payment
remitter for a *PAYG payment period if,
in the income year preceding that period:
(a) the entity’s *ordinary income or *statutory income
included a person’s *personal services income; and
(b) the entity was
not conducting a *personal services business.
Businesses not previously receiving
personal services income
(2) A
*personal services entity is a personal services payment
remitter for a *PAYG payment period if:
(a) the entity’s *ordinary income or *statutory income did not
include an individual’s *personal services income
in any income year preceding that period; and
(b) it is reasonable
to expect that, in the income year during which the period occurs, the entity’s
income will include a person’s *personal services income
that the entity will not have received in the course of conducting a *personal services business.
(3) It is not reasonable to
expect that the *personal services entity will receive a
person’s *personal services income in the course of
conducting a *personal services business if it is
reasonable to expect that:
(a) the entity will
receive at least 80% of
that income from the same entity (or one entity and its
*associates);
and
(b) the entity will
not meet the results test under section 87‑18 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997.
Personal services business
determinations taking effect
(4) However, a *personal services entity is not a personal services
payment remitter for a *PAYG payment period if,
during that period or an earlier PAYG payment period in the same income year, a
*personal services business determination relating to the entity
takes effect.
13‑20 Time for payments to
Commissioner for alienated personal services payments made during 2000‑01
(1) Subject to subsection (2),
if:
(a) a *personal services entity must, under section 13‑5, pay an amount for *alienated
personal services payments it received during a particular *PAYG payment period; and
(b) the period ends
in a *quarter in the *financial
year starting on 1 July 2000;
the payment must be paid to the Commissioner by the end of the 21st day after the end of the quarter.
(2) If:
(a) the *personal services entity is a *deferred
BAS payer on the 21st day after the end of the *quarter;
and
(b) the quarter ends
on 31st March or 30th June of 2001;
the payment must be paid to the
Commissioner by the end of the 28th day after the end of that quarter.
Division 14—Non‑cash benefits, and accruing gains, for
which amounts must be paid to the Commissioner
Table of sections
14‑1 Object of this
Subdivision
14‑5 Provider of non‑cash
benefit must pay amount to the Commissioner if payment would be subject to
withholding
14‑10 Dividend, interest or royalty
received, for a foreign resident, in the form of a non‑cash benefit
14‑15 Payer can recover amount
paid to the Commissioner
14‑50 Object of this
Subdivision
14‑55 Liability for TFN
withholding tax
14‑60 Investment body may
recover TFN withholding tax from investor
14‑65 Application of rules in
Division 18
14‑75 Overpayment of TFN
withholding tax
14‑85 Other laws do not exempt
from TFN withholding tax
Subdivision 14‑A—Non‑cash benefits
14‑1 Object of this Subdivision
The object of this
Subdivision is:
(a) to put entities
that provide *non‑cash benefits, and entities that
receive them, in a position similar to their position under Division 12 if
payments of money had been made instead of the non‑cash benefits being
provided; and
(b) in that way, to
prevent entities from avoiding their obligations under Division 12 by
providing non‑cash benefits.
14‑5 Provider of non‑cash benefit
must pay amount to the Commissioner if payment would be subject to withholding
(1) An entity (the payer)
must pay an amount to the Commissioner before providing a *non‑cash benefit to another entity (the recipient) if
Division 12 would require the payer to withhold an amount (the notionally
withheld amount) if, instead of providing the benefit to the recipient,
the payer made a payment to the recipient in money equal to the *market value of the benefit when the benefit is provided.
(2) The amount to be paid to
the Commissioner is equal to the notionally withheld amount.
Example: Nick is a building contractor
who has entered into a voluntary agreement with Mike for the purposes of
section 12‑55. Nick proposes to give Mike his old utility van (whose
market value is $1,000) as payment for work Mike has done for him over a
fortnight.
If Nick were instead to
pay Mike $1,000, Nick would have had to withhold $203 under Division 12
(in accordance with withholding rates current at the time).
This section requires
Nick to pay $203 to the Commissioner before giving the van to Mike.
(3) This section does not
apply to providing:
(a) a *fringe benefit; or
(b) a benefit that is
an exempt benefit under the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986; or
(c) a benefit that
would be an exempt benefit under that Act if paragraphs (d) and (e) of the
definition of employer in subsection 136(1) of that Act were
omitted; or
(d) a benefit
constituted by the acquisition of an *ESS interest *under an employee share scheme to which Subdivision 83A‑B or
83A‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 applies.
14‑10 Dividend, interest or royalty
received, for a foreign resident, in the form of a non‑cash benefit
If:
(a) an
entity (the payer) receives in the form of a *non‑cash benefit:
(i) a *dividend of a company; or
(ii) interest
(within the meaning of Division 11A of Part III of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936); or
(iii) a *royalty; and
(b) section 12‑215,
12‑250 or 12‑285 would have required the payer to withhold an amount if the
dividend, interest or royalty had been a payment in money;
the payer must pay that amount to the
Commissioner before providing the benefit (or part of it) to another entity.
14‑15 Payer can recover amount paid
to the Commissioner
(1) The payer may recover
from the recipient as a debt an amount that the payer has paid to the Commissioner
under section 14‑5.
(2) If the payer has paid an
amount to the Commissioner under section 14‑10, the payer may:
(a) if the payer has
provided all of the benefit to another entity— recover the amount from that
other entity as a debt; or
(b) if the payer has
provided a part of the benefit to another entity—recover from that other entity
as a debt the corresponding proportion of the amount paid to the Commissioner.
(3) If the payer can recover
an amount from another entity under this section, the payer is entitled to set
the amount off against debts due by the payer to the other entity.
Subdivision 14‑B—Accruing gains
14‑50 Object of this Subdivision
The object of this
Subdivision is to put the parties to a *Part VA
investment with an accruing gain in a position similar to what would have been
their position under Subdivision 12‑E (Payments where TFN or ABN not
quoted) if the *investment body had paid the gain in money
to the *investor at the end of the income year.
14‑55 Liability for TFN withholding
tax
(1) *TFN
withholding tax is payable if:
(a) in relation to a *Part VA investment, an amount (the accrued gain)
is included in the *investor’s assessable income for
an income year under section 159GQ of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1936 (about gains accruing on securities); and
(b) the investment:
(i) is of
a kind mentioned in item 1 or 2 of the table in subsection 202D(1) of
that Act; or
(ii) is of
a kind mentioned in item 3 of that table and is non‑transferable; and
(c) the
term of the investment does not end during the income year; and
(d) section 12‑140
would have required the *investment body to
withhold an amount (the TFN withholding amount) from a payment of
the accrued gain to the investor, if the investment body had made the payment
at the end of the income year and section 12‑150 had not been enacted.
Note: Section 202D of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 lists the investments in connection with which tax
file numbers are to be quoted.
(2) The amount of *TFN withholding tax is equal to the TFN withholding amount.
(3) The *TFN withholding tax is payable jointly and severally by the *investor and the *investment body.
(4) However, if the *investment body is the Commonwealth or an *untaxable
Commonwealth entity:
(a) the *TFN withholding tax is payable by the *investor;
and
(b) the investor is
taken to have authorised the investment body to pay the TFN withholding tax on
the investor’s behalf.
(5) The *TFN withholding tax is due and payable at the end of 21 days after
the end of the income year referred to in paragraph (1)(a).
Note 1: When it is due and payable,
the TFN withholding tax is payable to the Commissioner: see paragraph 255‑5(1)(b).
Note 2: An entity by whom it is
payable must pay it to the Commissioner in accordance with Subdivision 16‑B:
see subsection 16‑70(3). If any of it remains unpaid, the entity is liable
to pay general interest charge: see section 16‑80.
Note 3: The Commissioner may defer the
time at which TFN withholding tax becomes due and payable: see section 255‑10.
(6) The adoption (under
section 18 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936) of an accounting
period ending on a day other than 30 June is disregarded for the purposes
of:
(a) this section; and
(b) the application
of Division 16E of Part III of that Act for the purposes of this
section.
14‑60 Investment body may recover
TFN withholding tax from investor
(1) The
*investment body may recover from the *investor
as a debt any of the *TFN withholding tax that it pays.
(2) The *investment body is entitled to set off an amount that it can recover
from the *investor under this section against:
(a) a debt due by it
to the investor; or
(b) an amount that is
accruing to the investor, or stands to the investor’s credit, in respect of the
*Part VA investment, even if the amount is not yet due.
14‑65 Application of rules in
Division 18
These provisions:
(a) subsection 18‑15(1)
and sections 18‑20 and 18‑25 (about credits for amounts withheld from
withholding payments); and
(b) section 18‑80
(about refunds when exemption declaration not given);
apply as if any of the *TFN withholding tax that has been paid were an amount withheld under
subsection 12‑140(1) from a *withholding payment
covered by that subsection and made to the *investor
during:
(c) unless the *investor has adopted (under section 18 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936) an accounting period ending on a day other than 30 June—the
income year referred to in paragraph 14‑55(1)(a); or
(d) if the investor
has adopted such an accounting period—the income year in which the TFN
withholding tax is paid.
Note: Unless the investor has
adopted such an accounting period, the credit under section 18‑15, 18‑20
or 18‑25 will be in respect of the income year before the one in which the TFN
withholding tax is paid.
14‑75 Overpayment of TFN withholding
tax
If *TFN withholding tax has been overpaid:
(a) the Commissioner
must refund the amount overpaid; and
(b) the *investor is not entitled to a credit under section 18‑15, 18‑20
or 18‑25 in respect of the amount overpaid.
14‑85 Other laws do not exempt from
TFN withholding tax
(1) A provision of a law
passed before the commencement of this section that purports to exempt an
entity from liability to pay *TFN withholding tax, or
to pay taxes that include TFN withholding tax, does not exempt that entity from
liability to pay TFN withholding tax.
(2) A provision of a law
passed at or after the commencement of this section that purports to exempt an
entity from liability to pay taxes under the laws of the Commonwealth, or to
pay certain taxes under those laws that include *TFN
withholding tax, is not to be interpreted as exempting the entity from
liability to pay TFN withholding tax, unless it specifically mentions TFN
withholding tax.
Subdivision 14‑C—Shares and rights under employee share schemes
Table
of sections
14‑155 Liability for TFN
withholding tax (ESS)
14‑160 Employer may give
individual tax file numbers to provider
14‑165 Provider may recover TFN
withholding tax (ESS) from individual
14‑170 Application of rules in
Division 18
14‑175 Overpayment of TFN
withholding tax (ESS)
14‑180 Application of certain
provisions of Division 83A of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997
14‑155 Liability for TFN withholding
tax (ESS)
(1) Tax
(TFN withholding tax (ESS)) imposed by the Income Tax (TFN
Withholding Tax (ESS)) Act 2009 is payable if:
(a) a
company (the provider) provides one or more *ESS interests to an individual under an *employee
share scheme; and
(b) as a result, an
amount is included in the individual’s assessable income under Division 83A
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 for an income year (taking into
account subsection (2) of this section); and
(c) the individual
has quoted neither of the following to the provider before the end of the
income year:
(i) if
the individual acquired the interests in relation to any services provided to
the provider, or to a *subsidiary of the
provider, in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise
*carried on by the individual—the individual’s *ABN;
(ii) in
any case—the individual’s *tax file number.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b),
disregard section 83A‑35 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about
reducing the amount included in the individual’s assessable income).
Note: Disregard the 30 day rule in
subsections 83A‑115(3) and 83A‑120(3) of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997 for the purposes of this Subdivision: see subsection 392‑5(6) in
this Schedule.
(3) The *TFN withholding tax (ESS) is payable by the provider.
(4) The *TFN withholding tax (ESS) is due and payable at the end of 21 days
after the end of the income year referred to in paragraph (1)(b).
Note 1: When it is due and payable,
the TFN withholding tax (ESS) is payable to the Commissioner: see paragraph 255‑5(1)(b).
Note 2: The provider must pay the TFN
withholding tax (ESS) to the Commissioner in accordance with Subdivision 16‑B:
see subsection 16‑70(4). If any of it remains unpaid, the provider is
liable to pay general interest charge: see section 16‑80.
Note 3: The Commissioner may defer the
time at which TFN withholding tax (ESS) becomes due and payable: see section 255‑10.
14‑160 Employer may give individual
tax file numbers to provider
(1) The
individual is taken to have authorised a *subsidiary
(the employer) of the provider to inform the provider of the
individual’s *tax file number if:
(a) the individual
has made a *TFN declaration in relation to the employer;
and
(b) some or all of
the *ESS interests mentioned in paragraph 14‑155(1)(a)
were provided to the individual in relation to the individual’s employment by
the employer.
(2) If the employer does so,
the individual is taken, for the purposes of this Subdivision and Division 392
(Employee share scheme reporting), to have quoted his or her *tax file number to the provider.
14‑165 Provider may recover TFN
withholding tax (ESS) from individual
(1) The
provider may recover from the individual as a debt any of the *TFN withholding tax (ESS) the provider pays.
(2) The provider is entitled
to set off an amount that the provider can recover from the individual under
this section against a debt due by the provider to the individual.
14‑170 Application of rules in
Division 18
These provisions:
(a) subsection 18‑15(1)
(about credits for amounts withheld from withholding payments); and
(b) sections 18‑65
and 18‑70 (about refunds of amounts withheld in error);
apply as if any of the *TFN withholding tax (ESS) that has been paid were an amount withheld
under section 12‑35 from a *withholding payment made
to the individual and covered by that section.
14‑175 Overpayment of TFN
withholding tax (ESS)
If *TFN withholding tax (ESS) has been overpaid:
(a) the Commissioner
must refund the amount overpaid; and
(b) the individual is
not entitled to a credit under section 18‑15 in respect of the amount
overpaid.
14‑180 Application of certain
provisions of Division 83A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
The following
provisions of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 have effect for the
purposes of this Subdivision in the same way as they have for the purposes of
Division 83A of that Act:
(a) section 83A‑130
(about takeovers and restructures);
(b) section 83A‑305
(about associates);
(c) section 83A‑320
(about trusts);
(d) section 83A‑325
(about relationships similar to employment);
(e) section 83A‑335
(about stapled securities);
(f) section 83A‑340
(about indeterminate rights).
Division 15—Working out the amount to withhold
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 15
15‑A Working
out how much to withhold
15‑B Withholding schedules and
regulations
15‑C Declarations
Guide to Division 15
15‑1 What this Division is about
This Division is
mainly about how to work out how much an entity must withhold under Division 12.
In most cases, the
entity will need to use either the Commissioner’s withholding schedules or the
regulations.
The entity will also
need to take into account a TFN declaration or declaration under section 15‑50
it has been given because, under the schedules and regulations, the declaration
may affect how to calculate the amount to withhold.
This Division also
deals with when an individual can make such a declaration (other than a TFN
declaration) so as to change the amount that must be withheld from payments to
the individual.
Subdivision 15‑A—Working out how much to withhold
Table of sections
15‑10 How
much to withhold
15‑15 Variation of amounts
required to be withheld
15‑10 How much to withhold
(1) The amount that
Subdivision 12‑B, 12‑C or 12‑D requires to be withheld from a payment is
to be worked out under the withholding schedules made under section 15‑25.
However, if the regulations prescribe how the amount is to be worked out, then
it is to be worked out under the regulations.
Note 1: A TFN declaration, declaration
under section 15‑50 or voluntary agreement may affect how much is required
to be withheld under the withholding schedules or regulations.
Note 2: The Commissioner may vary an amount
required to be withheld. See section 15‑15.
(2) The amount that
Subdivision 12‑E, 12‑F, 12‑FA, 12‑FAA, 12‑FB, 12‑FC or 12‑G (except one
covered by section 12‑325) requires to be withheld from a payment is to be
worked out under the regulations.
Note 1: The amount that section 12‑325
requires to be withheld is worked out under that section.
Note 2: The Commissioner may vary an
amount required to be withheld. See section 15‑15.
(3) The amount that
Subdivision 12‑H requires to be withheld from a payment or receipt is
worked out under subsection 12‑385(2), 12‑390(2) or 12‑390(5).
15‑15 Variation of amounts required
to be withheld
(1) The Commissioner may,
for the purposes of meeting the special circumstances of a particular case or
class of cases, vary the *amount required to be
withheld by an entity from a *withholding payment
(except a withholding payment covered by section 12‑140, 12‑145, 12‑175 or
12‑180 or Subdivision 12‑FC or 12‑H). If the Commissioner does so, the
amount is varied accordingly.
Note 1: Section 12‑140 is about a
payment arising from an investment where the recipient does not quote its tax
file number (or, in some cases, its ABN).
Note 2: Sections 12‑175 and 12‑180
are about a payment of the income of a closely held trust to a beneficiary,
where the beneficiary does not quote the beneficiary’s tax file number.
Note 3: Section 12‑145 is about
an investor becoming presently entitled to income of a unit trust.
Note 3A: Subdivision 12‑FC is about
the Seasonal Labour Mobility Program.
Note 4: Subdivision 12‑H is about
distributions of managed investment trust income.
(2) The Commissioner’s power
to vary an amount includes the power to reduce the amount to nil.
(3) A variation must be made
by a written notice:
(a) if it applies to
a particular entity—that is given to that entity; or
(b) if it applies to
a class of entities—that is given to each of the entities, or a copy of which
is published in the Gazette.
Subdivision 15‑B—Withholding schedules and regulations
Table of sections
15‑25 Commissioner’s power to
make withholding schedules
15‑30 Matters to be considered
when making withholding schedules
15‑35 Regulations about
withholding
15‑25 Commissioner’s power to make
withholding schedules
(1) For the purposes of
collecting income tax and the other liabilities referred to in paragraphs 11‑1(b), (ca), (cd), (da) and (db), the Commissioner may make one or more withholding
schedules specifying the amounts, formulas and procedures to be used for
working out the *amount required to be withheld by an
entity:
(a) from a *withholding payment covered by Subdivision 12‑B, 12‑C or 12‑D;
or
(b) an *alienated personal services payment to which Division 13
applies.
(2) A withholding schedule
may deal differently with:
(a) different
payments; and
(b) different
circumstances of the recipients of those payments; and
(c) different periods
in respect of which those payments are made.
This subsection does not limit subsection 33(3A)
of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
(3) The Commissioner may withdraw
a withholding schedule.
(4) A withholding schedule,
or the withdrawal of a withholding schedule:
(a) only applies if a
notice of it is published in the Gazette; and
(b) only applies in
relation to payments made after the day the notice is published, or after such
later day as is specified by the Commissioner in the notice.
(5) The Commissioner must
make each withholding schedule publicly available.
15‑30 Matters to be considered when
making withholding schedules
The Commissioner must
have regard to the following matters when making a withholding
schedule:
(a) the rates of
income tax as specified in the Income Tax Rates Act 1986;
(b) the rates of *Medicare levy as specified in the Medicare Levy Act 1986;
(ca) the percentages
specified in section 154‑20 (about repayments of accumulated HELP debt) of
the Higher Education Support Act 2003 for any financial year starting on
or after 1 July 2005;
(cd) the percentage
referred to in the definition of applicable percentage of repayment
income in subsection 46(1) (about repayments of accumulated TSL
debt) of the Trade Support Loans Act 2014 for any financial year
starting on or after 1 July 2014;
(da) the
percentages specified in section 1061ZZFD (about repayments of accumulated
FS debts) of the Social Security Act 1991 for any financial year
starting on or after 1 July 2006;
(db) the percentages
specified in section 12ZLC (about repayments of accumulated FS debts) of
the Student Assistance Act 1973 for any financial year starting on or
after 1 July 2006;
(d) any *tax offsets;
(e) the family tax
benefit (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Family Assistance) Act
1999);
(f) the periods in
respect of which *withholding payments are made;
(g) any other
prescribed matter.
15‑35 Regulations about withholding
(1) For the purposes of
collecting income tax and the other liabilities referred to in section 11‑1,
the regulations may specify the amounts, formulas and procedures to be used for
working out the *amount required to be withheld by an
entity from a *withholding payment covered by Division 12
(except one covered by section 12‑325).
(2) The regulations may deal
differently with:
(a) different
payments; and
(b) different
circumstances of the recipients of those payments; and
(c) different periods
in respect of which those payments are made.
This subsection does not limit subsection 33(3A)
of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
Subdivision 15‑C—Declarations
Table
of sections
15‑50 Declarations
15‑50 Declarations
Declarations about matters
(1) An individual who:
(a) expects to
receive a *withholding payment covered by Subdivision 12‑B,
12‑C or 12‑D, or an *alienated personal services
payment to which Division 13 applies, from an entity; and
(b) wishes to have a
matter relating to the individual’s income tax or other liability referred to
in paragraph 11‑1(b), (ca), (cd), (da) or (db) taken into account by the
entity in working out the *amount required to be
withheld from the payment;
may give the entity a declaration about
the matter in the *approved form.
When declarations under subsection (1)
can’t be given
(2) The
individual cannot give a declaration under subsection (1) unless:
(a) a *TFN declaration is in effect between the individual and the entity,
or a *voluntary agreement covers the payment;
and
(b) if the individual
has given another entity a declaration on any matter—that declaration is not in
effect.
Declarations changing information
given in TFN declaration
(3) If:
(a) an individual has
given a *TFN declaration to an entity; and
(b) the individual
made a statement about a matter in the TFN declaration; and
(c) the
individual’s circumstances change in relation to the matter;
the individual may give the entity a
declaration about the matter in the *approved form.
Regulations
(4) The regulations may
prescribe:
(b) when a
declaration under subsection (1) or (3) starts or ceases to be in effect;
and
(c) when a
declaration under subsection (1) or (3) is taken to have been given.
(5) If:
(a) an individual
gives an entity a declaration under subsection (1) or (3) about a matter;
and
(b) the individual’s
circumstances change in relation to the matter;
the regulations may also prescribe when
the individual must give the entity a new declaration about the matter.
Division 16—Payer’s obligations and rights
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 16
16‑A To withhold
16‑B To pay withheld amounts to
the Commissioner
16‑BA To be registered
16‑C To provide information
16‑D Additional rights and
obligations of entity that makes a payment
Guide to Division 16
16‑1 What this Division is about
This Division sets
out the obligations and rights of an entity required to withhold an amount
under Division 12, or to pay an amount to the Commissioner under Division 13
or 14.
Note: The
entity may also have obligations under other legislation. See, for example, the
obligation to keep records under section 262A of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936.
Subdivision 16‑A—To withhold
Table of sections
When to withhold
16‑5 When to withhold an
amount
16‑20 Payer discharged from
liability to recipient for amount withheld
Penalties for not withholding
16‑25 Failure to withhold:
offence
16‑30 Failure to withhold:
administrative penalty for entity other than exempt Australian government
agency
16‑35 Failure
to withhold: administrative penalty for exempt Australian government agency in
relation to payment other than dividend, interest or royalty
16‑40 Failure to withhold:
administrative penalty for exempt Australian government agency in relation to
dividend, interest or royalty payment
16‑43 Failure to withhold:
administrative penalty for exempt Australian government agency in relation to
payment to foreign resident etc.
When to withhold
16‑5 When to withhold an amount
If Division 12
requires an entity to withhold an amount from a payment, the entity must do so
when making the payment.
Note 1: An entity is required to
withhold an amount under section 12‑145 when an investor becomes presently
entitled to income of a unit trust.
Note 1A: A trustee of a closely held
trust is required to withhold an amount under section 12‑180 when a
beneficiary is presently entitled to unpaid income of the trust.
Note 2: If section 12‑215, 12‑250
or 12‑285, or subsection 12‑390(4), requires an entity to withhold an amount
from a payment received by the entity, the entity must do so at the time
required by that provision.
16‑20 Payer discharged from
liability to recipient for amount withheld
An entity that:
(a) withholds an
amount as required by Division 12; or
(b) pays to the
Commissioner an amount as required by Division 13 or 14;
is discharged from all liability to pay
or account for that amount to any entity except the Commissioner.
Note: The entity may be required to
refund the amount in some circumstances. See Subdivision 18‑B.
Penalties for not withholding
16‑25 Failure to withhold: offence
(1) An entity must not fail
to withhold an amount as required by Division 12.
Penalty: 10 penalty units.
Note 1: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 2: See sections 16‑30, 16‑35,
16‑40 and 16‑43 for an alternative administrative penalty.
(2) An entity must not fail
to pay to the Commissioner an amount as required by Division 13 or 14.
Penalty: 10 penalty units.
Note 1: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 2: See sections 16‑30, 16‑35,
16‑40 and 16‑43 for an alternative administrative penalty.
(3) An offence against subsection (1)
or (2) is a strict liability offence.
Note: For strict liability,
see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
(4) If a person is convicted
of an offence in relation to:
(a) a failure by that
person or someone else to withhold an amount as required by Division 12;
or
(b) a failure by that
person or someone else to pay to the Commissioner an amount as required by
Division 13 or 14;
the court may order the convicted person
to pay to the Commissioner an amount up to the *amount
required to be withheld. The court may so order in addition to imposing a
penalty on the convicted person.
16‑30 Failure to withhold:
administrative penalty for entity other than exempt Australian government
agency
An entity (except an *exempt Australian government agency) that:
(a) fails to withhold
an amount as required by Division 12; or
(b) fails to pay an
amount to the Commissioner as required by Division 13 or 14;
is liable to pay to the Commissioner a
penalty equal to that amount.
Note 1: An entity may become liable
under this section in respect of a payment it made or received that is taken to
have been subject to withholding tax as a result of a Commissioner’s
determination under subsection 177F(2A) of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1936 (see also subsection 177F(2F) of that Act).
Note 2: Division 298 in this
Schedule contains machinery provisions for administrative penalties.
16‑35 Failure to withhold:
administrative penalty for exempt Australian government agency in relation to
payment other than dividend, interest or royalty
(1) An *exempt Australian government agency that:
(a) fails to withhold
an amount as required by Division 12; or
(b) fails to pay to
the Commissioner an amount as required by Division 14;
is liable to pay to the Commissioner a
penalty of 20 penalty units.
Note 1: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 2: Division 298 in this
Schedule contains machinery provisions for administrative and civil penalties.
Exception
(4) This section does not
apply in relation to an *amount required to be withheld
from a *withholding payment covered by Subdivision 12‑F
(about dividend, interest or royalty payment) or by Subdivision 12‑FB
(about payments to foreign residents).
16‑40 Failure to withhold:
administrative penalty for exempt Australian government agency in relation to
dividend, interest or royalty payment
An *exempt Australian government agency that:
(a) fails to withhold
an amount as required by Division 12 from a *withholding
payment covered by Subdivision 12‑F (about dividend, interest or royalty
payment); or
(b) fails to pay to
the Commissioner an amount as required by Division 14 in respect of a
withholding payment covered by that Subdivision;
is liable to pay to the Commissioner a
penalty equal to that amount.
Note 1: An exempt Australian
government agency may become liable under this section in respect of a payment
it made or received that is taken to have been subject to withholding tax as a
result of a Commissioner’s determination under subsection 177F(2A) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 (see also subsection 177F(2F) of that Act).
Note 2: Division 298 in this
Schedule contains machinery provisions for administrative penalties.
16‑43 Failure to withhold:
administrative penalty for exempt Australian government agency in relation to
payment to foreign resident etc.
An *exempt Australian government agency that:
(a) fails to withhold
an amount as required by Division 12 from a *withholding
payment covered by Subdivision 12‑FB (about payments to foreign
residents); or
(b) fails to pay to
the Commissioner an amount as required by Division 14 in respect of a
withholding payment covered by that Subdivision;
is liable to pay to the Commissioner a
penalty equal to that amount.
Note: Division 298 in this
Schedule contains machinery provisions for administrative penalties.
Subdivision 16‑B—To pay withheld amounts to the Commissioner
Table
of sections
When
and how to pay amounts to the Commissioner
16‑70 Entity
to pay amounts to Commissioner
16‑75 When
amounts must be paid to Commissioner
16‑80 Penalty for failure to
pay within time
16‑85 How amounts are to be
paid
Who
is a large, medium or small withholder
16‑95 Meaning of large
withholder
16‑100 Meaning of medium
withholder
16‑105 Meaning of small
withholder
16‑110 Commissioner may vary
withholder’s status downwards
16‑115 Commissioner may vary
withholder’s status upwards
When and how to pay amounts to the Commissioner
16‑70 Entity to pay amounts to
Commissioner
(1) An entity that withholds
an amount under Division 12 must pay the amount to the Commissioner in
accordance with this Subdivision.
(2) An entity that must pay
an amount to the Commissioner under Division 13 or Subdivision 14‑A
must do so in accordance with section 16‑85.
(3) An entity that must pay
an amount to the Commissioner under Subdivision 14‑B must do so in
accordance with sections 16‑80 and 16‑85.
(4) An entity that must pay
an amount to the Commissioner under Subdivision 14‑C must do so in
accordance with sections 16‑80 and 16‑85.
Note: For provisions about
collection and recovery of amounts payable to the Commissioner under this Part,
see Part 4‑15.
16‑75 When amounts must be paid to
Commissioner
Large withholder
(1) A *large withholder must pay to the Commissioner as shown in the table
an amount it withholds under Division 12 (other than section 12‑175
or 12‑180) during a month.
|
Payments
by large withholders
|
|
Item
|
If the amount is withheld on this day
of week:
|
It must be paid to the Commissioner
on or before:
|
|
1
|
Saturday or Sunday
|
The second Monday after that day
|
|
2
|
Monday or Tuesday
|
The first Monday after that day
|
|
3
|
Wednesday
|
The second Thursday after that day
|
|
4
|
Thursday or Friday
|
The first Thursday after that day
|
Medium withholders
(2) Subject to subsection (2A),
a *medium withholder must pay to the Commissioner an amount that it
withholds during a month under Division 12 (other than section 12‑175
or 12‑180) by the end of the 21st day of the next month.
(2A) If a *medium withholder:
(a) withholds an
amount during a month under Division 12 (other than section 12‑175 or
12‑180); and
(b) is a *deferred BAS payer on the 21st day of the month (the next
month) following that month;
the medium withholder must pay that
amount to the Commissioner by the end of the 28th day of:
(c) the next month
unless the amount is withheld during December; or
(d) the next February
if the amount is withheld during December.
Small withholders
(3) Subject to subsection (4),
if a *small withholder withholds an amount under
Division 12 (other than section 12‑175 or 12‑180) during a month in a
*quarter, it must pay the amount to the Commissioner by the end of
the 21st day of the month after the end of that quarter.
(4) If a *small withholder:
(a) withholds an
amount under Division 12 (other than section 12‑175 or 12‑180) during
a month in a *quarter; and
(b) is a *deferred BAS payer on the 21st day of the month after the end of
that quarter;
the small withholder must pay that amount
to the Commissioner as shown in the table:
|
Payments by *deferred BAS payers
|
|
Item
|
If the amount is withheld during the *quarter ending on:
|
the amount must be paid to the
Commissioner by the end of:
|
|
1
|
30 September
|
the following 28 October
|
|
2
|
31 December
|
the following 28 February
|
|
3
|
31 March
|
the following 28 April
|
|
4
|
30 June
|
the following 28 July
|
Payment of income of closely held
trust
(5) A trustee must pay to
the Commissioner an amount the trustee withholds under section 12‑175 or
12‑180 from a payment made during an income year. The trustee must do so:
(a) by the end of the
28th day of the next month following the day by which the trustee was required
to give to the Commissioner a report under subsection 16‑152(1) for the income
year; or
(b) within a longer
period allowed by the Commissioner.
16‑80 Penalty
for failure to pay within time
If an amount that an
entity must pay to the Commissioner under subsection 16‑70(1), (3) or (4)
remains unpaid after the time by which it is due to be paid, the entity is
liable to pay *general interest charge on the unpaid
amount for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the unpaid amount was due to be paid; and
(b) finishes
at the end of the last day, at the end of which, any of the following remains
unpaid:
(i) the
unpaid amount;
(ii) general
interest charge on any of the unpaid amount.
16‑85 How amounts are to be paid
Large withholder
(1) A *large withholder must pay to the Commissioner by a means of *electronic payment:
(a) an amount that it
withholds under Division 12; and
(b) an amount that it
pays to the Commissioner under Division 13 or 14.
Note 1: A different rule applies for
some large withholders for July and August 2000. See section 16‑130.
Note 2: A penalty applies if a large
withholder fails to pay electronically as required—see section 288‑20.
Note 3: A large withholder must also
pay other tax debts electronically—see section 8AAZMA.
Medium or small withholder
(2) A *medium withholder or *small withholder must
pay to the Commissioner:
(a) any amount that
it withholds under Division 12; and
(b) any amount that
it pays to the Commissioner under Division 13 or 14;
by a means of *electronic
payment, or any other means approved in writing by the Commissioner.
Commissioner may vary payment method
(3) The Commissioner may,
with an entity’s agreement, vary the means by which the withholder pays amounts
to the Commissioner under this Subdivision. The variation must be by written
notice given to the entity.
Who is a large, medium or small withholder
16‑95 Meaning of large withholder
(1) An entity is a large
withholder for a particular month (the current month) in
a *financial year starting on or after 1 July 2001 if:
(a) it was a *large withholder for June 2001; or
(b) the *amounts withheld by the entity during a financial year ending at
least 2 months before the current month exceeded $1 million; or
(c) both of the
following apply:
(i) at
the end of a financial year (the threshold year) ending at least
2 months before the current month, the entity was one of a number of companies
that were at that time all members of the same *wholly‑owned
group;
(ii) the
amounts withheld by those companies during the threshold year exceeded $1
million; or
(d) the Commissioner
determines under section 16‑115 that the entity is a large withholder for
the current month.
Note: Different rules apply for
working out who is a large withholder for a month in 2000‑01. See section 16‑125.
Exception
(2) However, the entity is
not a *large withholder if the Commissioner
determines under section 16‑110 that it is a *medium
withholder or a *small withholder for the current month.
16‑100 Meaning of medium
withholder
(1) An entity is a medium
withholder for a particular month (the current month) in
a *financial year starting on or after 1 July 2001 if it is not a *large withholder for that month and:
(a) it was a *medium withholder for June 2001; or
(b) the *amounts withheld by the entity during a financial year ending before
the current month exceeded $25,000; or
(c) the Commissioner
determines under section 16‑110 or 16‑115 that the entity is a medium
withholder for the current month.
Note: Different rules apply for
working out who is a large withholder for a month in 2000‑01. See section 16‑125.
(2) However, the entity is
not a *medium withholder if the Commissioner
determines under section 16‑110 or 16‑115 that the entity is a *large withholder or a *small withholder for the
current month.
16‑105 Meaning of small
withholder
An entity is a small
withholder for a particular month if:
(a) there is at least
one *amount withheld by the entity during that
month; and
(b) the entity is
neither a *large withholder nor a *medium withholder for that month.
16‑110 Commissioner may vary
withholder’s status downwards
(1) The Commissioner may, by
giving written notice to a *withholder:
(a) make the
following determinations:
(i) a
determination that a *large withholder is a *medium withholder or a *small withholder;
(ii) a
determination that a medium withholder is a small withholder; or
(b) revoke or vary
any such determination.
(2) The notice must state
that the determination applies:
(a) for specified
months; or
(b) for all months
from and including a specified month.
(3) The determination has no
effect for a particular month unless the notice is given before that month.
(4) An entity that would
otherwise be a *large withholder or a *medium withholder for a particular month may apply in writing to the
Commissioner for a determination under this section.
Note: A person who is dissatisfied
with a decision under this section may object against the decision in the
manner set out in Part IVC.
16‑115 Commissioner may vary
withholder’s status upwards
(1) The Commissioner may, by
giving written notice to a *withholder:
(a) make the
following determinations:
(i) a
determination that a *small withholder is a *medium withholder or a *large withholder;
(ii) a
determination that a medium withholder is a large withholder; or
(b) revoke or vary
any such determination.
(2) The notice must state
that the determination applies:
(a) for specified
months; or
(b) for all months
from and including a specified month.
(3) A determination that a *small withholder is a *medium withholder has no
effect for a particular month unless the notice is given before that month.
(4) Any other determination
under this section has no effect for a month that is earlier than the second
month after the month in which the notice is given.
(5) The Commissioner may, in
making a determination under this section, have regard to the following:
(a) the sum of the
amounts that the Commissioner considers to be likely to be the *amounts required to be withheld by the entity in the following 12
months;
(b) the extent (if
any) to which the entity makes or receives *withholding
payments that were previously made or received by another entity;
(c) any failure by
the entity to comply with its obligations under this Part;
(d) any *arrangement that was entered into or carried out for the purpose of
lengthening the intervals at which the entity is required to pay to the
Commissioner amounts withheld from withholding payments;
(e) such other
matters as the Commissioner considers relevant.
Note: A person who is dissatisfied
with a decision under this section may object against the decision in the
manner set out in Part IVC.
Subdivision 16‑BA—To be registered
Table
of sections
Registration of withholders
16‑140 Withholders must be
registered
16‑141 Registration and
cancellation
Branch registration
16‑142 Branches may be
registered
16‑143 Separate amounts for
entities and branches
16‑144 Cancellation of branch
registration
16‑145 Effect on branches of
cancelling the entity’s registration
Registration of withholders
16‑140 Withholders must be
registered
(1) An entity that must pay
an amount to the Commissioner under:
(a) subsection 16‑70(1)
(about amounts withheld under Division 12); or
(aa) Division 13
(about payments in respect of alienated personal services payments); or
(b) Division 14
(about payments in respect of non‑cash benefits);
must apply to register with the
Commissioner.
(2) The entity must apply in
the *approved form by the day on which the
entity is first required:
(a) to withhold an
amount under Division 12; or
(b) to pay an amount
to the Commissioner under Division 13 or 14.
However, the Commissioner may allow a
longer period for applying.
(3) An entity that
contravenes this section is liable to an administrative penalty of 5 penalty
units.
Note 1: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 2: Division 298 contains
machinery provisions for administrative and civil penalties.
16‑141 Registration and cancellation
The Commissioner may
register an entity or cancel the registration of an entity at any time.
Branch registration
16‑142 Branches may be registered
(1) The Commissioner may
register a branch of a registered entity if:
(a) the entity
applies, in the *approved form, for registration of the
branch; and
(b) the entity has an
*ABN or has applied for one; and
(c) the Commissioner
is satisfied that the branch maintains an independent system of accounting, and
can be separately identified by reference to:
(i) the nature
of the activities carried on through the branch; or
(ii) the
location of the branch; and
(d) the Commissioner
is satisfied that the entity is *carrying on an
enterprise through the branch, or intends to carry on an enterprise through the
branch, from a particular date specified in the application.
A branch that is so registered is a PAYG
withholding branch.
Note: A branch may be both a PAYG
withholding branch under this Subdivision and a GST branch under the GST Act.
(2) The
Commissioner may register a branch of a *government
entity or a *non‑profit sub‑entity if:
(a) the branch or sub‑entity
applies, in the *approved form, for registration; and
(b) the branch or sub‑entity
has an *ABN or has applied for one.
A branch or sub‑entity that is so registered
is also a PAYG withholding branch.
16‑143 Separate amounts for entities
and branches
(1) If an entity has a *PAYG withholding branch, this Part applies to the entity as if the
amounts that it must pay to the Commissioner under this Part were separated
into the following classes:
(a) for each such
branch of the entity, a class of amounts that relate to the branch; and
(b) a class of
amounts that do not relate to any of the entity’s branches.
Note: This section does not impose
any legal obligations on the branches. The entity remains legally responsible
under this Part for all amounts that relate to its branches.
(2) Those amounts are worked
out as if the branch were a separate entity and as if:
(a) all payments made
through the branch, from which amounts are required to be withheld under
Division 12, were made by that separate entity; and
(aa) all *alienated personal services payments received through the branch, in
respect of which Division 13 requires an amount to be paid to the
Commissioner, were received by that separate entity; and
(b) all non‑cash
benefits provided through the branch, in respect of which Division 14
requires an amount to be paid to the Commissioner, were provided by that
separate entity.
16‑144 Cancellation of branch registration
The Commissioner must
cancel the registration of a *PAYG withholding branch
of an entity if the Commissioner is satisfied that the branch does not satisfy
paragraph 16‑142(c) or (d).
16‑145 Effect on branches of
cancelling the entity’s registration
If
an entity’s registration is cancelled, the registration of any *PAYG withholding branches of the entity ceases to have effect.
Subdivision 16‑C—To provide information
Table of sections
To the Commissioner
16‑150 Commissioner must be
notified of amounts
16‑152 Annual
reports—Withholding payments covered by section 12‑175
16‑153 Annual reports—other
payments
To recipients of withholding
payments
16‑155 Annual payment summary
16‑156 Annual payment summary
for sections 12‑175 and 12‑180
16‑157 Payment summary for
Subdivision 12‑H
16‑160 Part‑year payment summary
16‑165 Payment summaries for
superannuation lump sums and payments for termination of employment
16‑166 Payment summary for a
departing Australia superannuation payment
16‑167 Payment
summary for payment to recipient who does not quote ABN
16‑170 Form and content of
payment summary
16‑175 Penalty for not providing
payment summary
16‑180 Commissioner may exempt
entity from giving payment summary
16‑182 Definition of reportable
employer superannuation contribution
To the Commissioner
16‑150 Commissioner must be notified
of amounts
An entity that must pay
an amount (even if it is a nil amount) to the Commissioner under:
(a) subsection 16‑70(1)
(about amounts withheld under Division 12); or
(aa) Division 13
(about payments in respect of alienated personal services payments); or
(b) Division 14
(about payments in respect of non‑cash benefits);
must notify the Commissioner of the
amount on or before the day on which the amount is due to be paid (regardless
of whether it is paid). The notification must be in the *approved form and lodged with the Commissioner.
16‑152 Annual reports—Withholding payments
covered by section 12‑175
Reports about withholding payments
(1) A trustee must give a
report to the Commissioner in the *approved form if
the trustee made any *withholding payments covered by
section 12‑175 or 12‑180 (about payments from the income of certain
closely held trusts) during an income year.
(2) The trustee must give
the report under subsection (1) to the Commissioner:
(a) not later than 3
months after the end of the income year; or
(b) within such
further period (if any) as the Commissioner allows.
Reports about trust distributions
(3) A trustee must give a
report to the Commissioner in the *approved form if
the trustee would be taken to have made any *withholding
payments covered by section 12‑175 or 12‑180 during an income year if the
relevant beneficiary had not *quoted the beneficiary’s
*tax file number as mentioned in paragraph 12‑175(2)(a) or 12‑180(2)(a).
Note: The effect of subsection (3)
is that the trustee must report amounts distributed to beneficiaries even if
the trustee was not required to withhold from those distributions.
(4) The trustee must give
the report under subsection (3) to the Commissioner:
(a) by the end of the
day on which the trustee lodges the trust’s *income
tax return for the income year; or
(b) within such
further period (if any) as the Commissioner allows.
Miscellaneous
(5) Subsections 16‑153(5),
(6) and (7) apply to this section in the same way as they apply to section 16‑153.
16‑153 Annual reports—other payments
(1) An entity must give a
report to the Commissioner in the *approved form, not
later than 31 October after the end of a *financial
year, if during the financial year:
(a) the entity made
any payment from which an amount was required to be withheld under section 12‑190,
Subdivision 12‑F (other than section 12‑215, 12‑250 or 12‑285),
Subdivision 12‑FA, section 12‑315 or Subdivision 12‑FC or 12‑G;
or
(b) the entity
provided any *non‑cash benefit in respect of which an
amount was required to be paid to the Commissioner under Division 14
because of the application of that Division in relation to section 12‑190,
Subdivision 12‑F (other than section 12‑215, 12‑250 or 12‑285),
Subdivision 12‑FA, section 12‑315 or Subdivision 12‑G; or
(c) the entity
received any payment from which an amount was required to be withheld under
section 12‑215, 12‑250, 12‑285 or 12‑317; or
(d) the entity
received any non‑cash benefit in respect of which an amount was required to be
paid to the Commissioner under Division 14 because of the application of
that Division in relation to section 12‑215, 12‑250, 12‑285 or 12‑317.
(2) An entity must give a
report to the Commissioner in the form required by subsection (3), not
later than 14 August after the end of a *financial
year, if during the financial year:
(a) the entity made
any payment from which an amount was required to be withheld under Subdivision 12‑B,
12‑C or 12‑D; or
(aa) the entity
received any *alienated personal services payment in
respect of which an amount was required to be paid to the Commissioner under
Division 13; or
(b) the entity
provided any *non‑cash benefit in respect of which an
amount was required to be paid to the Commissioner under Division 14
because of the application of that Division in relation to Subdivision 12‑B,
12‑C or 12‑D; or
(c) any person has a *reportable fringe benefits amount for the income year ending at the
end of the financial year in respect of the person’s employment by the entity;
or
(d) the entity made *reportable employer superannuation contributions in respect of a
person’s employment.
(3) The report under subsection (2)
must be either:
(a) a report in the *approved form; or
(b) a report
consisting of:
(i) copies
of all the summaries that the entity gave in relation to the *financial year under section 16‑155 in respect of payments, *non‑cash benefits, *alienated personal
services payments, *reportable fringe‑benefit amounts
and *reportable employer superannuation
contributions covered by subsection (2) of this section; and
(ii) an
accompanying statement in the approved form.
(4) An entity must give a
report to the Commissioner in the *approved form if
the entity is required to withhold amounts under Subdivision 12‑H in
relation to *fund payments made by a particular *managed investment trust (the paying trust) in
relation to an income year of that trust.
Note: The entity may be the managed
investment trust itself or a custodian or other entity.
(4A) The report under subsection (4)
must be given:
(a) not later than 14
days after the end of 6 months after the end of the income year of the *managed investment trust in relation to which the relevant *fund payments were made; or
(b) within a longer
period allowed by the Commissioner.
(5) In applying this
section:
(a) a requirement to
pay a nil amount to the Commissioner is to be treated as a requirement to pay
an amount to the Commissioner; and
(b) a requirement to
withhold a nil amount is to be treated as a requirement to withhold an amount.
(6) The Commissioner may, to
meet the special circumstances of a particular case or class of cases, vary the
requirements of this section.
(7) A variation must be made
by a written notice:
(a) if it applies to
a particular entity— that is given to that entity; or
(b) if it applies to
a class of entities—that is given to each of the entities, or a copy of which
is published in the Gazette.
To recipients of withholding payments
16‑155 Annual payment summary
(1) Within 14 days after the
end of a *financial year, an entity (the payer)
must give a *payment summary (and a copy of it) to
another entity (the recipient) if:
(a) during the year
the payer made one or more *withholding payments
(other than withholding payments covered by section 12‑85, 12‑175, 12‑180,
12‑190, 12‑215, 12‑250, 12‑285, 12‑317, 12‑385 or 12‑390) to the recipient; or
(b) during the year
the payer received one or more withholding payments covered by section 12‑215,
12‑250 or 12‑285 and, in relation to each of them, the recipient is the foreign
resident mentioned in the section; or
(baa) during the year
the payer received one or more withholding payments covered by section 12‑317
and, in relation to each of them, the recipient is the likely
foreign recipient mentioned in the section; or
(ba) during the year
the payer received one or more withholding payments covered by Division 13
and, in relation to each of them, an amount is included in the recipient’s
assessable income under Division 86 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997; or
(bb) because of section 86‑40
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997, the payer is taken to have paid
salary to the recipient on the last day of the year; or
(c) the
recipient is an individual and has a *reportable fringe
benefits amount, for the income year ending at the end of that financial year,
in respect of his or her employment (within the meaning of the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986) by the payer; or
(d) the recipient is
an individual and *reportable employer superannuation
contributions have been made by the payer, in respect of the individual’s
employment, during the year.
(2) The *payment summary must cover:
(a) if paragraph (1)(a),
(b) or (ba) applies—each of the *withholding payments
mentioned in that paragraph, except one covered by a previous payment summary
(and a copy of it) given by the payer to the recipient under section 16‑160;
and
(aa) if paragraph (1)(bb)
applies—each of the withholding payments constituted by the salary mentioned in
that paragraph, except one covered by a previous payment summary (and a copy of
it) given by the payer to the recipient under section 16‑160; and
(b) if paragraph (1)(c)
applies—the *reportable fringe benefits amount, except
so much of it as is covered by a previous payment summary (and a copy of it) given
by the payer to the recipient under this section; and
(c) if paragraph (1)(d)
applies—the total of the *reportable employer
superannuation contributions, except so much of those contributions as are
covered by a previous payment summary given by the payer to the recipient under
section 16‑160.
Parental leave pay or dad and partner
pay paid in error
(3) Despite subsection (2),
the *payment summary must not cover a *withholding payment if:
(a) the withholding
payment is a payment of an amount purported to have been paid by way of *parental leave pay or *dad and partner pay; and
(b) the amount was
not lawfully so payable.
(4) The payer must, within
28 days of becoming aware that the *payment summary
covers a *withholding payment to which subsection (3)
applies:
(a) give the
recipient an amended payment summary that does not cover the withholding
payment; or
(b) give the
recipient notice in the *approved form; or
(c) give the
Secretary (within the meaning of the Paid Parental Leave Act 2010)
notice in writing that the payer does not intend to give the recipient an
amended payment summary or notice under this subsection.
16‑156 Annual payment summary for
sections 12‑175 and 12‑180
(1) A trustee must give a *payment summary to a beneficiary of the trust, if the trustee made
any *withholding payments covered by section 12‑175
or 12‑180 to the beneficiary during the income year.
(2) The *payment summary:
(a) must cover each
of the *withholding payments mentioned in subsection (1);
and
(b) may be in electronic
form; and
(c) must be given:
(i) not
later than 14 days after the day by which the trustee was required to give the
Commissioner a report under subsection 16‑152(1) for the income year; or
(ii) within
a longer period allowed by the Commissioner.
16‑157 Payment summary for
Subdivision 12‑H
(1) An entity (the payer)
must give a *payment summary to another entity (the recipient)
if the payer made *withholding payments covered by section 12‑385
or 12‑390 to the recipient in relation to *fund
payments made by a particular *managed investment trust
(the paying trust) in relation to an income year of that trust.
Note: The entity may be the managed
investment trust itself or a custodian or other entity.
(2) The *payment summary:
(a) must cover each
of the *withholding payments mentioned in subsection (1);
and
(b) may be in
electronic form; and
(c) must be given:
(i) not
later than 14 days after the end of 6 months after the end of the income year
of the *managed investment trust in relation to
which the relevant *fund payments were made; or
(ii) within
a longer period allowed by the Commissioner.
16‑160 Part‑year payment summary
(1) An entity (the
payer) must give a *payment summary (and a
copy of it) to another entity (the recipient) if, not later than
21 days before the end of a *financial year, the
recipient asks in writing for a payment summary covering:
(a) one or more *withholding payments (other than withholding payments covered by
section 12‑85, 12‑190, 12‑215, 12‑250, 12‑285, 12‑317, 12‑385 or 12‑390)
that the payer made to the recipient during the year; or
(b) one or more
withholding payments covered by section 12‑215, 12‑250 or 12‑285, or a
part of each such payment, that the payer received during the year for the recipient,
if the recipient is the foreign resident mentioned in the section; or
(ba) one or more
withholding payments covered by section 12‑317, or a part of each such
payment, that the payer received during the year for the recipient, if the
recipient is the likely foreign recipient mentioned in
that section; or
(c) one or more
withholding payments covered by Division 13 that the payer received during
the year and that are included in the recipient’s assessable income for the
income year under section 86‑15 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997;
or
(d) *reportable employer superannuation contributions made by the payer,
in respect of the recipient’s employment, during the financial year;
other than a payment covered by a
previous payment summary (and a copy of it) given under this section.
(2) The payer must comply
with the request within 14 days after receiving it, unless the recipient is an
individual and has a *reportable fringe benefits
amount, for the income year ending at the end of that *financial
year, in respect of his or her employment (within the meaning of the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986) by the payer.
(3) Despite subsection (1),
the *payment summary must not cover a *withholding payment if:
(a) the withholding
payment is a payment of an amount purported to have been paid by way of *parental leave pay or *dad and partner pay; and
(b) at the time the
recipient asks for the payment summary, the payer is aware that the amount was
not lawfully so payable.
16‑165 Payment summaries for
superannuation lump sums and payments for termination of employment
(1) Within 14 days after an
entity (the payer) makes a payment covered under subsection (2)
to a person (the recipient), the entity must:
(a) give a *payment summary to the recipient that covers the payment (and no
other payments); and
(b) give a copy of
the summary to the Commissioner.
(2) The following payments
are covered under this subsection if they are *withholding
payments:
(a) a *superannuation lump sum;
(b) a payment that is
an *employment termination payment or would be one except that it is
received more than 12 months after termination of employment, other than a
directed termination payment within the meaning of section 82‑10F of the Income
Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997.
16‑166 Payment summary for a
departing Australia
superannuation payment
Within 14 days after an
entity (the payer) makes a *departing
Australia superannuation payment, the payer must:
(a) give a *payment summary that covers the payment to the recipient of the
payment; and
(b) give a copy of
the summary to the Commissioner.
16‑167 Payment summary for payment
to recipient who does not quote ABN
(1) An entity (the
payer) that makes a *withholding payment
covered by section 12‑190 (about payments to recipients who do not quote
their ABN) to another entity (the recipient) must give the
recipient a *payment summary (and a copy of it) that
covers that payment, unless the *amount required to be
withheld from the payment is nil.
(2) The summary must cover
only that payment.
(3) The payer must give the
summary to the recipient when making the payment, or as soon as practicable
afterwards.
16‑170 Form and content of payment
summary
(1) A payment summary
(except one relating to section 12‑175 or 12‑180 or Subdivision 12‑H)
is a written statement that:
(a) names the payer
and the recipient; and
(b) if the recipient
has given the recipient’s *tax file number or *ABN to the payer—states the tax file number or ABN; and
(c) states the total
of the *withholding payments (if any) that it
covers, and the total of the *amounts withheld by the
payer from those withholding payments; and
(d) specifies the *financial year in which the withholding payments were made; and
(e) specifies the *reportable fringe benefits amount (if any) that it covers and the
income year to which that amount relates; and
(f) specifies the *reportable employer superannuation contributions (if any) that it
covers and the income year to which those contributions relate; and
(g) is in the *approved form.
(1AAA) A payment summary
relating to section 12‑175 or 12‑180 is a statement that:
(a) names the trustee
and the beneficiary; and
(b) states the total
of the *withholding payments (if any) that it
covers, and the total of the *amounts withheld by the
trustee from those withholding payments; and
(c) specifies the
income year of the trust to which it relates; and
(d) is in the *approved form.
(1AA) A payment summary
relating to Subdivision 12‑H is a statement that:
(a) names the payer
and the recipient; and
(b) if the recipient
has given the recipient’s *tax file number or *ABN to the payer—states the tax file number or ABN; and
(c) states the total
of the *withholding payments (if any) that it
covers, and the total of the *amounts withheld by the
payer from those withholding payments; and
(d) specifies the
income year of the relevant *managed investment trust
to which it relates.
(1A) For any of the *withholding payments to which paragraph 16‑155(2)(aa) applies, paragraph (1)(d)
is taken to refer to the *financial year preceding
the financial year in which the withholding payments were received.
(2) The Commissioner may, in
writing, require particular information to be included in a *payment summary or a class of payment summaries.
(3) A *payment summary may consist of 2 or more statements that each
complies with subsection (1) and together cover what section 16‑155, 16‑156,
16‑160, 16‑165, 16‑166 or 16‑167 (as appropriate) requires the payment summary
to cover.
(4) The Commissioner may
vary any requirements under subsection (1), (1AAA), (2) or (3) by written
notice given to an entity. The Commissioner may do so in such instances and to
such extent as the Commissioner thinks fit.
16‑175 Penalty for not providing
payment summary
(1) An
entity must not fail to comply with any requirements under section 16‑155,
16‑156, 16‑157, 16‑160, 16‑165, 16‑166 or 16‑167, or subsection 16‑170(1),
(1AAA), (1AA), (2) or (3) (including any requirements varied by the
Commissioner under subsection 16‑170(4)).
Penalty: 20
penalty units.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
(2) An offence under subsection (1)
is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability,
see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
16‑180 Commissioner may exempt
entity from giving payment summary
(1) The Commissioner may,
having regard to the circumstances of a particular case or class of cases,
exempt an entity from specified requirements of any of sections 16‑155 to
16‑167. If the Commissioner does so, the exemption has effect accordingly.
(2) An exemption must be
made by a written notice:
(a) if it applies to
a particular entity—that is given to that entity; or
(b) if it applies to
a class of entities—that is given to each of the entities, or a copy of which
is published in the Gazette.
16‑182 Definition of reportable
employer superannuation contribution
(1) A
reportable employer superannuation contribution, for an
individual for an income year, is an amount that has been, is, or will be
contributed in respect of the income year:
(a) by an employer of
the individual, or an *associate of the
employer, for the individual’s benefit; and
(b) to a *superannuation fund or an *RSA;
to the extent that either or both of the
following paragraphs apply:
(c) the individual
has or has had, or might reasonably be expected to have or have had, the
capacity to influence the size of the amount;
(d) the individual
has or has had, or might reasonably be expected to have or have had, the
capacity to influence the way the amount was, is or will be contributed so that
his or her assessable income is reduced.
(2) However, an amount is
not a reportable employer superannuation contribution to the
extent that it is included in the individual’s assessable income for the income
year.
(3) For the purposes of this
section, employer has the expanded meaning given by section 12
of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 (assuming that
subsection 12(11) of that Act had not been enacted).
(4) For the purposes of this
section, disregard whether any *superannuation benefits
arising from a contribution are payable to a *SIS
dependant of the individual if the individual dies before or after becoming
entitled to receive the benefits.
(5) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(c),
treat the individual as neither having, nor being able reasonably to be
expected to have, the capacity to influence the size of the amount if:
(a) the employer or *associate is required to contribute the amount by:
(i) an *industrial instrument; or
(ii) the
rules of a *superannuation fund; and
(b) the individual
does not and did not have, and is not able reasonably to be expected to have or
have had, the capacity to influence the content of that instrument or those
rules, to the extent that the instrument or rules relate to:
(i) the
requirement to contribute the amount; or
(ii) the
size of the amount.
Subdivision 16‑D—Additional rights and obligations of entity that makes a
payment
Table of sections
16‑195 Payer’s
right to recover amounts of penalty: certain withholding taxes
16‑195 Payer’s right to recover
amounts of penalty: certain withholding taxes
(1) An entity that has paid
an amount of penalty under section 16‑30, 16‑35 or 16‑40 for a *withholding payment covered by:
(a) Subdivision 12‑F
(about a dividend, interest or royalty payment); or
(aa) section 12‑305
(about a departing Australia superannuation payment); or
(ab) Subdivision 12‑FC
(Seasonal Labour Mobility Program); or
(b) section 12‑320
(about a mining payment); or
(c) Subdivision 12‑H
(about distributions of managed investment trust income);
may recover an amount equal to the amount
of penalty from the person liable to pay the *withholding
tax, or *mining withholding tax, for the
withholding payment.
Note Sections 16‑30, 16‑35
and 16‑40 provide for an administrative penalty for failing to comply with
Division 12 or 14.
(2) Subsection (3)
applies if an entity has paid an amount of penalty under section 12‑415 to
the Commissioner for a failure to give a notice, or to make details available
on a website, as required by section 12‑395 in relation to an amount (the relevant
amount).
(3) The entity may recover
from another entity that is liable to pay *managed
investment trust withholding tax in relation to an amount attributable to the
relevant amount the lesser of:
(a) an amount equal
to the amount of that tax that the other entity is liable to pay; and
(b) the amount of the
penalty.
Division 18—Recipient’s entitlements and obligations
Table of Subdivisions
18‑A Crediting withheld amounts
18‑B Refund of certain withheld
amounts
18‑C Recipient’s obligations
18‑D Directors etc. of non‑complying
companies
Subdivision 18‑A—Crediting withheld amounts
Guide to Subdivision 18‑A
18‑1 What this Subdivision is about
In general, an
entity:
• that
receives a withholding payment (except one covered by section 12‑215, 12‑250
or 12‑285, Subdivision 12‑FC, or subsection 12‑390(4)); or
• that is the
foreign resident for which a withholding payment covered by section 12‑215,
12‑250 or 12‑285, Subdivision 12‑FC, or subsection 12‑390(4), (or a
part of it) is received;
is entitled to a credit
for the amount withheld from the withholding payment.
However, if that entity
is a partnership or trust, a partner, beneficiary or trustee may be entitled to
the credit.
This Subdivision tells
you:
• who is
entitled to a credit; and
• how to work
out the amount of the credit.
How a credit is applied
is set out in Division 3 of Part IIB.
Table
of sections
General exception
18‑5 No credit for refunded
amount
Entitlement to credits: income
tax liability
18‑10 Application of sections 18‑15,
18‑20 and 18‑25
18‑15 Tax credit for recipient
of withholding payments
18‑20 Tax credit where
recipient is a partnership
18‑25 Tax credit where
recipient is a trust
18‑27 Tax
credit for alienated personal services payments
Entitlement to credits:
dividend, interest or royalty, amount attributable to fund payment or Seasonal
Labour Mobility Program
18‑30 Credit: dividend,
interest or royalty
18‑32 Credit: amount
attributable to fund payment
18‑33 Credit:
Seasonal Labour Mobility Program
18‑35 Credit:
penalty under section 12‑415, 16‑30, 16‑35 or 16‑40 or related general
interest charge
18‑40 Credit: liability under
Part 4‑25
Entitlement to credit: departing
Australia superannuation payment
18‑42 Credit—departing Australia superannuation payment
Entitlement to credit: mining
payment
18‑45 Credit—mining payment
Entitlement to credit: Petroleum resource rent tax
18‑55 Credit—Natural resource
payments
General exception
18‑5 No credit for refunded amount
An entity is not
entitled to a credit under this Subdivision for an *amount
withheld from a *withholding payment to the extent that the
amount must be refunded under Subdivision 18‑B.
Note: See
also Subdivision 18‑D (PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax, which can
reverse the economic benefit of a credit of a director, or an associate of a director,
of a company that does not comply with its obligations under subsection 16‑70(1)).
Entitlement to credits: income tax liability
18‑10 Application of sections 18‑15,
18‑20 and 18‑25
(1) The rules set out in
sections 18‑15, 18‑20 and 18‑25 do not apply to an *amount withheld from a *withholding
payment that is covered by Subdivision 12‑F (about dividend, interest or
royalties), Subdivision 12‑FA (about departing Australia superannuation
payments), Subdivision 12‑FC (Seasonal Labour Mobility Program), section 12‑320
(about mining payments), Subdivision 12‑H (about distributions of managed
investment trust income) or Division 13 (about alienated personal services
payments).
(2) If an entity withholds
an amount from a *withholding payment as required by section 12‑317,
apply sections 18‑15, 18‑20 and 18‑25 in relation to the payment as if the
payment had been made to the likely foreign recipient mentioned in section 12‑317
(instead of to the intermediary mentioned in that section).
(3) If an entity withholds
an amount from a *withholding payment as required by section 12‑325
(natural resource payments), apply sections 18‑15, 18‑20 and 18‑25 to the
payment as if the entity had withheld only so much of that amount as was
withheld in respect of tax.
Note: Section 18‑55 provides a
credit for amounts withheld in respect of petroleum resource rent tax.
18‑15 Tax credit for recipient of
withholding payments
(1) An entity is entitled to
a credit equal to the total of the *amounts withheld
from *withholding payments made to the entity
during an income year if an assessment has been made of the income tax payable,
or an assessment has been made that no income tax is payable, by the entity for
the income year.
(2) To the extent that the
entitlement to a credit is in respect of an *amount
withheld from a *withholding payment to which paragraph 16‑155(2)(aa)
applies, the entitlement is treated as arising for the income year preceding
the income year in which the withholding payment is made.
18‑20 Tax credit where recipient is
a partnership
(1) An entity is entitled to
a credit in respect of *amounts withheld from *withholding payments made to a partnership during an income year if:
(a) the entity has an
individual interest in the net income or partnership loss of the partnership
for that income year that is wholly or partly attributable to those withholding
payments; and
(b) the *income tax return of the partnership for the income year has been lodged
with the Commissioner; and
(c) an assessment has
been made of the income tax payable, or an assessment has been made that no
income tax is payable, by the entity for the income year.
(2) The amount of the credit
is worked out using the formula:

where:
amounts withheld means the sum of the *amounts withheld from
the *withholding payments.
individual interest means so much of the individual interest of the partner as is
attributable to the *withholding payments.
net income/partnership loss means so much of the net income or partnership loss for that income
year as is attributable to the *withholding payments.
18‑25 Tax credit where recipient is
a trust
(1) An
entity is entitled under subsection (2), (4), (6) or (8) to a credit in
respect of *amounts withheld (the amounts
withheld) from *withholding payments
made to the trustee of a trust during an income year.
Trust—section 97
(2) A beneficiary of the
trust is entitled to a credit if:
(a) an amount is
included in the assessable income of the beneficiary under section 97 of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 in respect of a share of the net
income of the trust; and
(b) the share is
wholly or partly attributable to the *withholding
payments; and
(c) an assessment has
been made of the income tax payable, or an assessment has been made that no
income tax is payable, by the beneficiary for the income year.
(3) The amount of the credit
is worked out using the formula:

where:
net income means so much of the net income as is attributable to the *withholding payments.
share of net income means so much of that share of the net income as is attributable to
the *withholding payments.
Trust—section 98
(4) The trustee of the trust
is entitled to a credit if:
(a) under section 98
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 the trustee is liable to be
assessed, and to pay income tax, on an amount in respect of a share of the net
income of the trust to which a beneficiary is presently entitled; and
(b) the share is
wholly or partly attributable to the *withholding
payments; and
(c) an assessment has
been made of that income tax or an assessment has been made that no income tax
is payable.
(5) The amount of the credit
is worked out using the formula:

where:
net income means so much of the net income as is attributable to the *withholding payments.
share of net income means so much of that share of the net income as is attributable to
the *withholding payments.
Trust—section 99 or 99A
(6) The trustee of the trust
is entitled to a credit under this subsection if:
(a) under section 99
or 99A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, the trustee is liable to
be assessed, and to pay income tax, on the net income of the trust, or on part
of it; and
(b) the net income or
that part of it is wholly or partly attributable to the *withholding payments; and
(c) an assessment has
been made of that income tax or an assessment has been made that no income tax
is payable.
(7) The amount of the credit
is worked out using the formula:

where:
net income means so much of the net income as is attributable to the *withholding payments.
part of net income means so much of the net income, or of that part of it, as is
attributable to the *withholding payments.
Trust—no net income
(8) If there is no net
income of the trust for the income year, the trustee is entitled to a credit
equal to the sum of the *amounts withheld from
the *withholding payments.
18‑27 Tax credit for alienated
personal services payments
An entity is entitled
to a credit equal to the total of the amounts paid under Division 13 in
respect of amounts included in the entity’s assessable income for an income
year under section 86‑15 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 if
an assessment has been made of the income tax payable, or an assessment has
been made that no income tax is payable, by the entity for the income year.
Entitlement to credits: dividend, interest or royalty, amount
attributable to fund payment or Seasonal Labour Mobility Program
18‑30 Credit: dividend, interest or
royalty
(1) An entity is entitled to
a credit if:
(a) the entity’s *ordinary income or *statutory income
includes a *dividend (or a part of it), interest
(within the meaning of Division 11A of Part III of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936) or a *royalty; and
(b) the entity has
borne all or part of an *amount withheld from the
dividend, interest or royalty.
(2) The amount of the credit
is that amount or part.
Note: A taxpayer may also be entitled
to a credit in relation to payment of interest under, or in relation to the
transfer of, a qualifying security. See section 128NBA of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936.
18‑32 Credit: amount attributable to
fund payment
(1) An entity is entitled to
a credit if:
(a) the entity’s *ordinary income or *statutory income
includes an amount that is represented by or reasonably attributable to a *fund payment; and
(b) the entity has
borne all or part of an *amount withheld from the
payment under Subdivision 12‑H.
(2) The amount of the credit
is that amount or part.
(3) Subsection (4)
applies if:
(a) all or part of an
amount (the fund payment part) is represented by a payment that
is a *fund payment; and
(b) under subsection 840‑805(4A)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997, a *foreign
pension fund is taken, in respect of the fund payment part, to be a beneficiary
in its own right, and not a beneficiary in the capacity of the trustee of
another trust; and
(c) there is an *amount withheld from the fund payment under Subdivision 12‑H.
(4) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b):
(a) treat the *foreign pension fund as having borne all or part of the amount
withheld; and
(b) treat a
beneficiary of the foreign pension fund as not having borne all or part
of the amount withheld.
18‑33 Credit: Seasonal Labour
Mobility Program
(1) An individual is
entitled to a credit if:
(a) the individual’s *ordinary income or *statutory income
includes salary, wages, commission, bonuses or allowances; and
(b) an amount is
withheld from the salary, wages, commission, bonuses or allowances under
Subdivision 12‑FC (about the Seasonal Labour Mobility Program).
(2) The amount of the credit
is the *amount withheld.
18‑35 Credit: penalty under section 12‑415,
16‑30, 16‑35 or 16‑40 or related general interest charge
(1) If an entity has paid:
(a) an amount of
penalty under section 16‑30 or 16‑40 to the Commissioner for a *withholding payment covered by Subdivision 12‑F or 12‑H; or
(b) an amount of *general interest charge under section 298‑25 for the penalty;
the entity liable to pay the *withholding tax for the withholding payment is entitled to a credit
equal to the amount of penalty, or general interest charge, as appropriate.
(1AA) If an entity has paid:
(a) an amount of
penalty under section 16‑30 or 16‑35 to the Commissioner for a *withholding payment covered by Subdivision 12‑FC (Seasonal
Labour Mobility Program); or
(b) an amount of *general interest charge under section 298‑25 for the penalty;
the entity liable to pay the *Seasonal Labour Mobility Program withholding tax for the withholding
payment is entitled to a credit equal to the lesser of:
(c) the amount of the
penalty, or general interest charge, as appropriate; and
(d) the amount of
Seasonal Labour Mobility Program withholding tax (and any general interest
charge under section 840‑910 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997)
in relation to the withholding payment, reduced by:
(i) any
credits from an application of section 18‑33 in relation to the
withholding payment; and
(ii) any
credits from a previous application of this subsection in relation to the
withholding payment.
(1A) If an entity has paid:
(a) an amount of
penalty under section 12‑415 to the Commissioner for a failure to give a
notice, or to make details available on a website, as required by section 12‑395;
or
(b) an
amount of *general interest charge under section 298‑25
for the penalty;
the entity liable to pay the *managed investment trust withholding tax in relation to the amount
(the relevant amount) giving rise to the penalty is entitled to a
credit equal to the lesser of:
(d) the amount of
penalty, or general interest charge, as appropriate; and
(e) the amount of
managed investment trust withholding tax (and any general interest charge under
section 840‑810 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997) in relation
to the relevant amount.
Remission
(2) If:
(a) an entity has
paid to the Commissioner an amount of penalty mentioned in paragraph (1)(a),
(1AA)(a) or (1A)(a); and
(b) the Commissioner
remits the whole or a part of the amount of the penalty under section 298‑20;
then:
(c) any credit under subsection (1),
(1AA) or (1A) relating to the amount paid to the Commissioner is reduced by the
amount that is remitted; and
(d) the Commissioner
must pay to the entity an amount equal to the amount that is remitted.
(3) If:
(a) an entity has
paid to the Commissioner an amount of *general interest
charge mentioned in paragraph (1)(b), (1AA)(b) or (1A)(b); and
(b) the Commissioner
remits the whole or a part of the amount of the charge under section 8AAG;
then:
(c) any credit under subsection (1),
(1AA) or (1A) relating to the amount is reduced by the amount that is remitted;
and
(d) the Commissioner
must pay to the entity an amount equal to the amount that is remitted.
18‑40 Credit: liability under Part 4‑25
(1) If
an entity has paid to the Commissioner:
(a) an amount of
penalty under Subdivision 284‑C in relation to a *scheme
to which paragraph 177C(1)(bc) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
applies for a *withholding payment; or
(b) an amount of *general interest charge under section 298‑25 in relation to
that amount;
the entity liable to pay the *withholding tax for that withholding payment is entitled to a credit
equal to the amount paid by the entity.
Remission
(2) If:
(a) an entity has
paid an amount under Subdivision 284‑C in relation to a penalty mentioned
in paragraph (1)(a); and
(b) the Commissioner
remits the whole or a part of the amount of the penalty under section 298‑20;
then:
(c) any credit under subsection (1)
relating to the amount paid by the entity is reduced by the amount that is
remitted; and
(d) the Commissioner
must pay to the entity an amount equal to the amount that is remitted.
(3) If:
(a) an entity has
paid to the Commissioner an amount of *general interest
charge mentioned in paragraph (1)(b); and
(b) the Commissioner
remits the whole or a part of the amount of the charge under section 8AAG;
then:
(c) any credit under subsection (1)
relating to the amount is reduced by the amount that is remitted; and
(d) the Commissioner
must pay to the entity an amount equal to the amount that is remitted.
Entitlement to credit: departing Australia superannuation payment
18‑42 Credit—departing Australia superannuation payment
Credit—amount withheld
(1) If there is an *amount withheld from a *withholding
payment that is covered by section 12‑305 (departing Australia superannuation payment), the entity liable to pay *withholding
tax under section 301‑175 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 on
the payment is entitled to a credit of an amount equal to the amount withheld.
Credit—penalty amount
(2) If an entity has paid to
the Commissioner a penalty amount under section 16‑30 or 16‑35 in relation
to an *amount required to be withheld under
section 12‑305 (departing Australia superannuation payment), the entity
mentioned in subsection (1) is entitled to a credit equal to the penalty
amount.
Remission
(3) If the Commissioner
remits the whole or a part of the amount of penalty under section 298‑20
that has been paid to the Commissioner by the entity:
(a) any credit that
relates to the amount is reduced by the amount that is remitted; and
(b) the Commissioner
must pay to the entity an amount equal to the amount that is remitted.
Entitlement to credit: mining payment
18‑45 Credit—mining payment
Credit—amount withheld
(1) If there is an *amount withheld from a *withholding
payment that is covered by section 12‑320 (mining payment):
(a) if paragraph (b)
does not apply— the entity liable to pay *mining
withholding tax under section 128V of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1936 on the payment is entitled to a credit of an amount equal to the
amount withheld; or
(b) if, under
subsection 128U(4) of that Act, separate mining payments are taken to have
been made to, or applied for the benefit of, 2 or more entities because of that
payment—each of those entities is entitled to a credit equal to the amount
worked out using the formula:

Credit—penalty amount
(2) If an entity has paid to
the Commissioner a penalty amount under section 16‑30 or 16‑35 in relation
to an *amount required to be withheld under
section 12‑320 (mining payment):
(a) if paragraph (1)(a)
applies—the entity mentioned in that paragraph is entitled to a credit equal to
the penalty amount; or
(b) if paragraph (1)(b)
applies—each of the entities mentioned in that paragraph is entitled to a
credit of an amount worked out using the formula:

Remission
(3) If the Commissioner
remits the whole or a part of the amount of penalty under section 298‑20
that has been paid to the Commissioner by the entity:
(a) any credit that
relates to the amount is reduced by the amount that is remitted; and
(b) the Commissioner
must pay to the entity an amount equal to the amount that is remitted.
Entitlement to credit: Petroleum resource rent tax
18‑55 Credit—Natural resource
payments
(1) An entity is entitled to
a credit in a year of tax (within the meaning of the Petroleum Resource Rent
Tax Assessment Act 1987) if:
(a) one or more *withholding payments covered by section 12‑325 (natural
resource payments) from which there are *amounts
withheld in respect of *petroleum resource rent
tax are made to the entity during the year of tax; and
(b) an assessment has
been made of the petroleum resource rent tax payable, or an assessment has been
made that no petroleum resource rent tax is payable, by the entity for the year
of tax.
(2) The amount of the credit
is so much of the total of the *amounts withheld as is
withheld in respect of *petroleum resource rent
tax.
Subdivision 18‑B—Refund of certain withheld amounts
Table
of sections
18‑65 Refund of withheld
amounts by the payer to the recipient
18‑70 Refund of withheld
amounts by the Commissioner to the recipient
18‑80 Refund by Commissioner
of amount withheld from payment in respect of investment
18‑65 Refund of withheld amounts by
the payer to the recipient
(1) An entity (the
payer) must refund to another entity (the recipient) an amount
if:
(a) the payer:
(i) withheld
the amount purportedly under Division 12 from a payment made to, or
received for, the recipient (whether the amount has been paid to the
Commissioner or not); or
(ia) paid
the amount to the Commissioner purportedly under Division 13 for an *alienated personal services payment in relation to which an amount
is included in the recipient’s assessable income year under section 86‑15
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; or
(ii) paid
the amount to the Commissioner purportedly under Division 14 for a *non‑cash benefit provided to, or received for, the recipient; and
(b) either:
(i) the
amount was so withheld, or paid to the Commissioner, in error; or
(ii) in
the case of an amount withheld from a payment of an amount purported to have
been paid by way of *parental leave pay or *dad and partner pay—the amount paid was not lawfully so payable; and
(c) either:
(i) the
payer becomes aware of the matter mentioned in paragraph (b); or
(ii) the
recipient applies to the payer for the refund;
before the end
of the *financial year in which the amount was so
withheld or paid to the Commissioner; and
(d) any information
requested by the payer under subsection (3) has been given to the payer,
or the time for making the request (see subsection (4)) has passed without
such a request being made.
(2) The amount that must be
refunded under subsection (1) is a debt recoverable by the recipient from
the payer.
Request for tax file number (or in
some cases, ABN)
(3) The payer may request
the recipient to give to the payer:
(a) in any case—the
recipient’s *tax file number; or
(b) in any
case—evidence of the basis on which the recipient is taken to have quoted its
tax file number to the payer; or
(c) if the payment or
*non‑cash benefit was in respect of a *Part VA
investment made by the recipient in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise carried on by it—the recipient’s *ABN;
if:
(d) the payment, *alienated personal services payment or non‑cash benefit was in
respect of any of the following provisions:
(i) Subdivision 12‑B
(payments for work or services);
(ii) Subdivision 12‑C
(Payments for retirement or because of termination of employment);
(iii) Subdivision 12‑D
(benefits and compensation payments);
(iv) section 12‑140
or 12‑145 (recipient does not quote tax file number or ABN);
(v) section 12‑175
or 12‑180 (Payment of income of closely held trust where TFN not quoted); and
(e) when the
application for the refund is made, or when the payer otherwise becomes aware
of the matter mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) of this section, the payer has
a record of none of the following:
(i) the
recipient’s tax file number;
(ii) the
basis on which the recipient is taken to have quoted the tax file number to the
payer;
(iii) if paragraph (c)
applies—the recipient’s ABN.
When must the request be made
(4) The request must be made
within 7 working days (of the payer) after the payer receives the application
for the refund or after the payer otherwise becomes aware of the matter
mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) (as appropriate).
Recovery of refunded amount
(5) If a payer refunds an
amount under subsection (1), the payer may recover from the Commissioner
as a debt due to the payer so much of the amount:
(a) which is withheld
as mentioned in subparagraph (1)(a)(i) and paid to the Commissioner, or
which is paid to the Commissioner as mentioned in subparagraph (1)(a)(ia)
or (ii); and
(b) which the payer
has not recorded as being offset under subsection (6).
Offsetting a refunded amount
(6) If:
(a) a payer refunds
an amount (the refunded amount) under subsection (1); and
(b) the amount
withheld as mentioned in subparagraph (1)(a)(i) that the payer has paid to
the Commissioner, or the amount paid to the Commissioner as mentioned in subparagraph (1)(a)(ia)
or (ii), is equal to all or a part of the refunded amount; and
(c) apart from this
subsection, the payer would be required to pay to the Commissioner another
amount or amounts under Division 13 or 14 or subsection 16‑70(1) (the
payment to the Commissioner); and
(d) the payer records
in writing that it offsets all or a part of the amount paid to the Commissioner
(as mentioned in paragraph (b)) against the payment to the Commissioner;
the payment to the Commissioner is
reduced by so much of the amount as the payer so recorded as being offset.
(7) The payer must not
record that it offsets any part of an amount that:
(a) the payer has
previously recorded under subsection (6); or
(b) the payer has
sought to recover from the Commissioner under subsection (5).
18‑70 Refund of withheld amounts by
the Commissioner to the recipient
(1) An entity (the
recipient) may apply in writing to the Commissioner for the refund of
an amount if:
(a) another entity
(the payer):
(i) withheld
an amount purportedly under Division 12 from a payment made to, or
received for, the recipient; or
(ia) paid
the amount to the Commissioner purportedly under Division 13 for an *alienated personal services payment in relation to which an amount
is included in the recipient’s assessable income year under section 86‑15
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; or
(ii) paid
to the Commissioner an amount purportedly under Division 14 for a *non‑cash benefit provided to, or received for, the recipient; and
(b) either:
(i) the
amount was so withheld, or paid to the Commissioner, in error; or
(ii) in
the case of an amount withheld from a payment of an amount purported to have
been paid by way of *parental leave pay or *dad and partner pay—the amount paid was not lawfully so payable; and
(c) section 18‑65
does not apply because the payer did not become aware of the matter mentioned
in paragraph (b), or the recipient did not apply for a refund, as
mentioned in subsection 18‑65(1); and
(d) if subparagraph (a)(i)
applies—the payer has already paid the withheld amount to the Commissioner.
(2) The Commissioner must
refund the amount if the application sets out:
(a) if the recipient
has a *tax file number—that tax file number; or
(b) if the recipient
does not have a tax file number but was taken to have quoted a tax file number
to the payer before the amount was withheld or paid to the Commissioner—the
basis on which the recipient was taken to have quoted the tax file number; or
(c) if the payment or
*non‑cash benefit was in respect of a *Part VA
investment made by the recipient in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise carried on by it—the recipient’s *ABN;
and the Commissioner is satisfied that it
would be fair and reasonable to refund the amount, having regard to:
(d) the circumstances
that gave rise to the withholding obligation (if any); and
(e) the nature of the
matter mentioned in paragraph (1)(b); and
(f) any other matter
the Commissioner considers relevant.
Note: A person who is dissatisfied
with a decision under this section may object against the decision in the
manner set out in Part IVC.
18‑80 Refund by Commissioner of
amount withheld from payment in respect of investment
The
Commissioner must refund to an entity all or part of an *amount withheld from a *withholding
payment covered by section 12‑140 or 12‑145 that was made to that entity
if:
(a) the entity
applies in writing for the refund; and
(b) the Commissioner
is satisfied that the entity was entitled to give *the
investment body a declaration under Division 5 of Part VA of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 in relation to the *Part VA
investment in respect of which the withholding payment was made, but did not do
so; and
(c) the Commissioner
is also satisfied it is fair and reasonable to make the refund, having regard
to the purposes of this Part and any other matters that the Commissioner
considers appropriate.
Note: A person who is dissatisfied
with a decision under this section may object against the decision in the
manner set out in Part IVC.
Subdivision 18‑C—Recipient’s obligations
18‑100 Obligation to keep payment
summary
(1) An entity that is given
a *payment summary and a copy of it in any financial year under this
Part must retain the copy for:
(a) 5 years after the
end of that financial year; or
(b) a shorter period
determined by the Commissioner in writing for the entity; or
(c) a shorter period
determined by the Commissioner by legislative instrument for a class of
entities that includes the entity.
(1AA) A determination under paragraph (1)(c)
may specify different periods for different classes of entities.
(1A) An offence under subsection (1)
is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability,
see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Subdivision 18‑D—Directors etc. of non‑complying companies
Table of sections
Object of Subdivision
18‑120 Object of Subdivision
PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax
18‑125 Directors of non‑complying
companies
18‑130 Directors of non‑complying
companies—tax reduced in certain circumstances
18‑135 Associates of directors
of non‑complying companies
18‑140 Notices
18‑145 When PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax must be paid
18‑150 General interest charge
payable on unpaid PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax
18‑155 Validity of decisions and
evidence
18‑160 Rights of indemnity and
contribution
Credits for later compliance
18‑165 Credits for later
compliance—scope
18‑170 Credits for later
compliance—Commissioner must give notice in certain circumstances
18‑175 Credits for later
compliance—Commissioner may give notice
18‑180 Effect of earlier credits
Other provisions
18‑185 When Commissioner may
give notice
18‑190 Review of decisions
Object of Subdivision
18‑120 Object of Subdivision
The
object of this Subdivision is to reverse the economic benefit of a credit under
section 18‑15 (Tax credit for recipient of withholding payment) of a
director, or an *associate of a director, of a company if:
(a) the
company does not comply with its obligations under subsection 16‑70(1)
(obligation to pay amounts withheld to the Commissioner); and
(b) the credit is
attributable to *amounts withheld from *withholding payments made by the company to the director or
associate;
until the company complies with its
obligations.
PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax
18‑125 Directors of non‑complying
companies
Liability to pay PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax
(1) An individual must pay *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax in relation to a company for an
income year of the individual if:
(a) the individual is
or has been a director (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001)
of the company; and
(b) the company was
required to pay to the Commissioner under subsection 16‑70(1) in this
Schedule amounts:
(i) the
company withheld from *withholding payments the
company made to any entities during the income year of the individual; and
(ii) to
which subsection (2) applies; and
(c) the company did
not pay the total of those amounts to the Commissioner on or before the last
day (the non‑compliance day) on or before which the company was
required to pay any of those amounts to the Commissioner in accordance with
subsection 16‑70(1); and
(d) a credit to which
the individual is entitled under section 18‑15 is attributable to an
extent to *amounts withheld by the company under
Division 12 from withholding payments made to the individual during the
income year of the individual.
Note: For the purposes of paragraph (1)(d),
it does not matter whether the company pays the amounts withheld from the
withholding payments made to the individual to the Commissioner under
subsection 16‑70(1).
(2) This subsection applies
to *amounts withheld that the company was required to pay to the
Commissioner on or before a particular day (the payment day)
under subsection 16‑70(1), if:
(a) both of the
following subparagraphs apply:
(i) the
individual was a director (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001)
of the company on the payment day;
(ii) the
company did not pay the total of those amounts to the Commissioner in
accordance with subsection 16‑70(1) on or before the payment day; or
(b) all of the
following subparagraphs apply:
(i) the
individual became a director of the company after the payment day;
(ii) the
individual was still a director of the company 30 days after becoming a
director;
(iii) the
company did not pay the total of those amounts to the Commissioner in
accordance with subsection 16‑70(1) on or before the last of those 30
days.
Amount of tax
(3) The amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual must pay is the
lesser of:
(a) the extent of the
credit mentioned in paragraph (1)(d); and
(b) the total amount
the company did not pay to the Commissioner as mentioned in paragraph (1)(c).
18‑130 Directors of non‑complying
companies—tax reduced in certain circumstances
(1) The amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual must pay as
mentioned in section 18‑125 is reduced if the Commissioner gives a notice
to the individual under this section.
Notice
(2) The Commissioner must
give a written notice to the individual on a day (the reduction notice
day) (whether before, on or after the day (if any) the Commissioner
gives the individual the relevant notice under section 18‑140), if the
Commissioner is satisfied that:
(a) because of
illness or for some other good reason, it would have been unreasonable to
expect the individual to take part, and the individual did not take part, in
the management of the company at any time during the period:
(i) starting
on a day on or by which the company was required to pay any of the total
mentioned in paragraph 18‑125(1)(c) to the Commissioner under subsection 16‑70(1);
and
(ii) ending
on the reduction notice day; or
(b) the individual
took all reasonable steps to ensure that one of the following happened:
(i) the
directors (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) of the
company caused the company to pay the total of the amounts mentioned in
paragraph 18‑125(1)(c) to the Commissioner;
(ii) the
directors caused an administrator of the company to be appointed under section 436A,
436B or 436C of the Corporations Act 2001;
(iii) the
directors caused the company to begin to be wound up (within the meaning of
that Act);
or there were
no reasonable steps the individual could have taken to ensure that any of those
things happened.
(3) In determining what are
reasonable steps for the purposes of paragraph (2)(b), the Commissioner
must have regard to:
(a) when, and for how
long, the individual was a director and took part in the management of the
company; and
(b) all other
relevant circumstances.
Amount of reduction
(4) The amount of the
reduction is the amount stated in the notice.
(5) In determining the
amount to state in the notice, the Commissioner must have regard to:
(a) in a case to
which paragraph (2)(a) applies—when, and for how long, the individual
could not have been expected to take part, and did not take part, in the
management of the company; and
(b) in a case to
which paragraph (2)(b) applies—when, and for how long, the individual was
a director and took part in the management of the company; and
(c) in either
case—what is fair and reasonable in the circumstances.
Effect of reduction
(6) The amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual must pay is
treated as always having been that amount as reduced under this section.
18‑135 Associates of directors of
non‑complying companies
Liability to pay PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax
(1) An individual must pay *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax in relation to a company for an
income year of the individual if:
(a) at a time when
another individual (the director) was a director (within the
meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) of the company, the first
individual was an *associate of the director; and
(b) the company was
required to pay to the Commissioner under subsection 16‑70(1) in this
Schedule amounts:
(i) the
company withheld from *withholding payments the
company made to any entities during the income year of the individual; and
(ii) to
which subsection (2) of this section applies; and
(c) the company did
not pay the total of those amounts to the Commissioner on or before the last
day (the non‑compliance day) on or before which the company was
required to pay any of those amounts to the Commissioner in accordance with
subsection 16‑70(1); and
(d) subsection (3)
or (6) of this section applies; and
(e) a credit to which
the individual is entitled under section 18‑15 is attributable to an
extent to *amounts withheld by the company under
Division 12 from withholding payments made to the individual during the
income year of the individual.
Note: For the purposes of paragraph (1)(e),
it does not matter whether the company pays the amounts withheld from the
withholding payments made to the individual to the Commissioner under
subsection 16‑70(1).
(2) This subsection applies
to *amounts withheld that the company was required to pay to the
Commissioner on or before a particular day (the payment day)
under subsection 16‑70(1), if:
(a) all of the
following subparagraphs apply:
(i) the
director was a director (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001)
of the company on the payment day;
(ii) the
individual was an *associate of the director on the payment
day;
(iii) the
company did not pay the total of those amounts to the Commissioner in
accordance with subsection 16‑70(1) on or before the payment day; or
(b) all of the
following subparagraphs apply:
(i) the
director became a director of the company after the payment day;
(ii) the
director was still a director of the company 30 days after becoming a director;
(iii) the
individual was an *associate of the director throughout that
30 day period;
(iv) the
company did not pay the total of those amounts to the Commissioner in
accordance with subsection 16‑70(1) on or before the last of those 30
days.
(3) This subsection applies
if the Commissioner is satisfied that:
(a) because of:
(i) the
individual’s relationship with the director; or
(ii) a
relationship of the individual with the company;
the individual
knew, or could reasonably have been expected to know, of the company’s failure
to pay the total of the amounts mentioned in paragraph (1)(c) to the
Commissioner; and
(b) none of the
following subparagraphs applies:
(i) the
individual took all reasonable steps to influence the director to cause the
company to notify the Commissioner under Subdivision 18‑C of the relevant *amounts withheld;
(ii) the
individual took all reasonable steps to influence the director to cause one of
the events mentioned in subsection (4) to happen, or there were no
reasonable steps the individual could have taken to influence the director to
cause any of those events to happen;
(iii) the
individual reported the company’s non‑payment to the Commissioner or to another
authority with responsibilities relevant to the operation of the company.
Example: Other authorities with
responsibilities relevant to the operation of the company could include the
Minister, the police, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission or
the Building and Construction Industry Commissioner.
(4) The following are the
events:
(a) the company pays
the total of the amounts mentioned in paragraph (1)(c) to the
Commissioner;
(b) an administrator
of the company is appointed under section 436A, 436B or 436C of the Corporations
Act 2001;
(c) the company
begins to be wound up (within the meaning of that Act).
(5) In determining what are
reasonable steps for the purposes of paragraph (3)(b), have regard to:
(a) when, and for how
long, the individual was an *associate of the
director; and
(b) when, and for how
long, the director was a director and took part in the management of the
company; and
(c) all other
relevant circumstances.
(6) This
subsection applies if:
(a) the individual
was an employee of the company; and
(b) the Commissioner
is satisfied that the company treated the individual more favourably than it
treated other employees of the company.
Amount of tax
(7) The amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual must pay is the
lesser of:
(a) the extent of the
credit mentioned in paragraph (1)(e); and
(b) the total amount
the company did not pay to the Commissioner as mentioned in paragraph (1)(c).
18‑140 Notices
Notices
(1) The Commissioner must
not commence proceedings to recover:
(a) the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax an individual must pay for an
income year in relation to a company as mentioned in section 18‑125 or 18‑135;
or
(b) any related *general interest charge payable under section 18‑150;
unless, after the non‑compliance day
mentioned in section 18‑125 or 18‑135, the Commissioner gives a written
notice to the individual under this section.
(2) The Commissioner may
only give the notice if the Commissioner is satisfied, on the basis of
information available to the Commissioner, that it is fair and reasonable for
the individual to pay *PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax in relation to the company for the income year.
(3) The Commissioner must
not give the notice on a day if, on that day:
(a) the individual;
or
(b) in a case to
which section 18‑135 applies—the director mentioned in that section;
is liable to pay to the Commissioner a
penalty under Division 269 because the company has not complied with the
obligation mentioned in item 1 of the table in subsection 269‑10(1)
to pay to the Commissioner an *amount withheld to which
paragraph 18‑125(1)(b) or 18‑135(1)(b) applies.
(4) The notice must specify:
(a) the company; and
(b) the income year;
and
(c) the amount of the
*PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual must pay.
Effect of compliance between non‑compliance
day and notice day
(5) Subsections (6) and
(7) apply if:
(a) the company’s
liability to pay the total of the amounts mentioned in paragraph 18‑125(1)(c)
or 18‑135(1)(c) to the Commissioner is discharged to any extent during the
period:
(i) starting
on the day after the non‑compliance day; and
(ii) ending
on the day before the day the Commissioner gives the notice under this section
to the individual; and
(b) had all
discharges of the company’s liability occurring during that period occurred before
the non‑compliance day:
(i) the
individual would not have been required to pay the *PAYG
withholding non‑compliance tax in relation to the company for the income year;
or
(ii) the
amount of PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual would have been
required to pay would have been less than the actual amount of PAYG withholding
non‑compliance tax.
(6) The amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual must pay is
reduced:
(a) in a case to
which subparagraph (5)(b)(i) applies—to nil; or
(b) otherwise—to the
amount of PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual would have been
required to pay as mentioned in subparagraph (5)(b)(ii).
(7) The amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual must pay is
treated as always having been that amount as reduced under subsection (6).
18‑145 When PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax must be paid
(1) The *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax an individual must pay for an
income year is due and payable at the earliest time any of the income tax the
individual must pay for the *financial year to which
the income year relates is due and payable.
Note: Division 5 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 explains how to work out when to pay your income
tax.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1),
if the individual is not required to pay income tax for the *financial year:
(a) treat the
individual as being required to pay income tax for the financial year; and
(b) if the
Commissioner has made an assessment that the income tax the individual is
required to pay is nil—treat that assessment as being for an amount greater
than nil.
Note: See Part 4‑15 in this
Schedule for collection and recovery provisions.
18‑150 General interest charge
payable on unpaid PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax
If an amount of *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax that an individual must pay to
the Commissioner remains unpaid after the time by which it is due to be paid,
the individual is liable to pay *general interest charge
on the unpaid amount of tax for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the unpaid amount of tax was due to be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day, at the end of which, any of the following remains unpaid:
(i) the
unpaid amount of tax;
(ii) general
interest charge on any of the unpaid amount of tax.
18‑155 Validity of decisions and
evidence
(1) Section 175
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (validity) applies to a decision
of the Commissioner under section 18‑140 in this Schedule in the same way
as it applies to an assessment.
(2) Section 177 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Evidence) applies to a notice under section 18‑140
in this Schedule in the same way as it applies to a notice of
assessment.
18‑160 Rights of indemnity and
contribution
(1) This section applies if
an individual must pay *PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax as mentioned in section 18‑125 or 18‑135 because a company did not pay
an amount to the Commissioner as mentioned in paragraph 18‑125(1)(c) or 18‑135(1)(c).
(2) The individual has the
same rights (whether by way of indemnity, subrogation, contribution or
otherwise) against the company or anyone else as if:
(a) the individual
had made a payment equal to the amount of the *PAYG
withholding non‑compliance tax under a guarantee of the liability of the
company to pay the amount to the Commissioner; and
(b) under the
guarantee:
(i) the
individual; and
(ii) every
individual to whom subsection (3) applies;
were jointly
and severally liable as guarantors (but only, in the case of an individual to
whom subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph applies, to the extent to which subsection (3)
applies to the individual); and
(c) any credit to
which the individual mentioned in subsection (1) is entitled under section 18‑170
or 18‑175 in relation to the amount of PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax were
a repayment of the payment mentioned in paragraph (a) of this subsection.
(3) This subsection applies
to an individual to the extent that:
(a) the individual
was a director (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) of the
company on the day (the payment day) on or by which the company
was required to pay the amount mentioned in subsection (1) to the
Commissioner; or
(b) both of the
following subparagraphs apply:
(i) the
individual became a director of the company after the payment day;
(ii) the
individual was still a director of the company 30 days after becoming a
director.
(4) However, subsection (3)
does not apply to an individual to the extent that the amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual must pay in
relation to the company for the income year as mentioned in section 18‑125
is reduced under section 18‑130.
Credits for later compliance
18‑165 Credits for later
compliance—scope
Sections 18‑170,
18‑175 and 18‑180 apply if:
(a) an individual
must pay *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax in
relation to a company for an income year because the company did not pay to the
Commissioner the total of the amounts mentioned in paragraph 18‑125(1)(c)
or 18‑135(1)(c); and
(b) the Commissioner
gives to the individual a notice under section 18‑140 on a particular day
(the tax notice day) in relation to the PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax the individual must pay; and
(c) on or after the
tax notice day, the company’s liability to pay the total of the amounts to the
Commissioner is discharged to any extent.
18‑170 Credits for later
compliance—Commissioner must give notice in certain circumstances
Commissioner must give notice to
director or associate in certain circumstances
(1) The Commissioner must
give a written notice to the individual on a particular day (the credit
notice day) if, had the discharge mentioned in paragraph 18‑165(c)
(and all previous discharges of the company’s liability mentioned in that
paragraph) occurred before the tax notice day:
(a) the individual
would not have been required to pay the *PAYG
withholding non‑compliance tax in relation to the company for the income year;
or
(b) the amount of
PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax the individual would have been required to
pay would have been less than the actual amount of PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax.
Note 1: Subsection 18‑180(2)
provides that the Commissioner must not give a notice to the individual in
certain circumstances.
Note 2: The amount of PAYG withholding
non‑compliance tax may be limited by:
(a) the
conditions in subsections 18‑125(1) and (2) or 18‑135(1) to (6); or
(b) the limits
on the amount of the tax in subsection 18‑125(3) or 18‑135(7).
Note 3: In working out the actual
amount of the tax for the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), have regard to
other credits to which the individual is entitled under this section or section 18‑175.
See subsection 18‑180(1).
Director or associate entitled to
credit if Commissioner gives notice
(2) The individual is
entitled to a credit if the Commissioner gives a written notice to the
individual under subsection (1).
(3) The individual becomes
entitled to the credit on the day the Commissioner gives the notice to the
individual.
Amount of credit
(4) The amount of the credit
is the amount stated in the notice.
(5) In a case to which paragraph (1)(a)
applies, the amount stated must be the amount of the *PAYG
withholding non‑compliance tax.
(6) In any other case, the
amount stated:
(a) must not exceed
the amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax; and
(b) must not exceed
the amount of the discharge mentioned in paragraph 18‑165(c); and
(c) must not be less
than the amount by which:
(i) the
amount of the PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax; exceeds
(ii) the
amount that would have been the amount of the PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax had the discharge mentioned in paragraph 18‑165(c) (and all previous
discharges of the company’s liability mentioned in that paragraph) occurred
before the tax notice day.
(7) In determining the
amount to state in the notice in a case to which paragraph (1)(a) does not
apply, the Commissioner must have regard to what is fair and reasonable in the
circumstances.
18‑175 Credits for later
compliance—Commissioner may give notice
Commissioner may give notice to
director or associate
(1) The Commissioner may
give a written notice to the individual on a particular day (the credit
notice day).
Note: Subsection 18‑180(2)
provides that the Commissioner must not give a notice to the individual in
certain circumstances.
Director or associate entitled to
credit if Commissioner gives notice
(2) The individual is
entitled to a credit if the Commissioner gives a written notice to the
individual under subsection (1).
(3) The individual becomes
entitled to the credit on the day the Commissioner gives the notice to the
individual.
Amount of credit
(4) The amount of the credit
is the amount stated in the notice.
(5) The amount stated:
(a) must not exceed
the amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax; and
Note: In working out the amount of
the tax for the purposes of paragraph (5)(a), have regard to other credits
to which the individual is entitled under section 18‑170 or this section.
See subsection 18‑180(1).
(b) must not exceed
the amount of the discharge mentioned in paragraph 18‑165(c).
Commissioner’s discretion
(6) In determining:
(a) whether to give a
notice under this section; or
(b) the amount to
state in the notice;
the Commissioner must have regard to what
is fair and reasonable in the circumstances.
18‑180 Effect of earlier credits
(1) A reference in section 18‑170
or 18‑175, or subsection (2) of this section, to the amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax is treated as being a reference
to:
(a) the amount of the
PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax; less
Note: The amount of the PAYG
withholding non‑compliance tax may, in a case to which section 18‑125
applies, be affected by reductions under section 18‑130.
(b) the total of any
credits to which the individual is entitled in relation to the amount of PAYG
withholding non‑compliance tax because of notices given to the individual under
section 18‑170 or 18‑175 before the credit notice day.
(2) The Commissioner must
not give a written notice to the individual under section 18‑170 or 18‑175
if, on the day before the credit notice day, the amount of the *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax is nil.
Other provisions
18‑185 When Commissioner may give
notice
The Commissioner may
give a notice to the individual on a day (the notice day) under
section 18‑130, 18‑140, 18‑170 or 18‑175 if:
(a) on the notice
day, the Commissioner has not given a notice of assessment to the individual
for the income year mentioned in section 18‑125 or 18‑135; or
(b) if the notice
would:
(i) in
the case of a notice under section 18‑130—result in the individual being
liable to pay *PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax or an
increased amount of PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax; or
(ii) in
the case of a notice under section 18‑140—result in the Commissioner being
able to commence proceedings to recover PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax, or
an increased amount of PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax, from the
individual; or
(iii) in
the case of a notice under section 18‑170 or 18‑175—reduce the amount of a
credit or disentitle the individual to a credit;
the
Commissioner gives the notice no later than 2 years after first giving a notice
of assessment to the individual for the income year mentioned in section 18‑125
or 18‑135; or
(c) if
the notice would:
(i) in
the case of a notice under section 18‑130—result in the individual being
liable to pay no PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax, or a reduced amount of
PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax; or
(ii) in
the case of a notice under section 18‑140—result in the Commissioner no
longer being able to commence proceedings to recover PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax, or result in the Commissioner being able to commence proceedings to
recover a reduced amount of PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax, from the
individual; or
(iii) in
the case of a notice under section 18‑170 or 18‑175—increase the amount of
a credit or entitle the individual to a credit;
the
Commissioner gives the notice no later than 4 years after first giving a notice
of assessment to the individual for the income year mentioned in section 18‑125
or 18‑135; or
(d) in any case—the
Commissioner gives the notice:
(i) to
give effect to a decision on a review or appeal; or
(ii) as a
result of an objection made by the individual or pending a review or appeal.
18‑190 Review of decisions
An
individual to whom the Commissioner gives a notice under section 18‑140 in
relation to an amount of *PAYG withholding non‑compliance
tax may object, under Part IVC of this Act, against a decision of the
Commissioner under section 18‑130, 18‑140, 18‑170 or 18‑175 in relation to
the PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax if the individual is dissatisfied with
the decision.
Division 20—Other matters
Table of Subdivisions
20‑B Offences
20‑D Review of decisions
Subdivision 20‑B—Offences
Table of sections
20‑35 Offences
20‑40 Joining of charges
20‑45 Offences that would
otherwise be committed by a partnership or unincorporated company
20‑35 Offences
(1) A person must not:
(a) present a
document issued by the Commissioner that specifies a person (the
specified person); and
(b) falsely pretend
to be the specified person with the intention of obtaining under this Part a
credit for, or a payment of, an *amount withheld from a *withholding payment.
(2) A person must not
attempt to obtain for the person a credit under this Part for an *amount withheld from a *withholding
payment if:
(a) the payment is
not covered by section 12‑215, 12‑250, 12‑285 or 12‑317, or subsection 12‑390(4),
and was made to another person; or
(b) the payment is
covered by section 12‑215, 12‑250, 12‑285 or 12‑317, or subsection 12‑390(4),
and the person is not the foreign resident in respect of which all or a part of
the payment is received as mentioned in that provision.
(3) A person must not, with
the intention of obtaining a credit, a payment or any other benefit, present:
(a) a copy of a *payment summary (except one relating to Subdivision 12‑H); or
(b) a document
purporting to be a copy of such a payment summary;
which is not a copy duly given to the
person.
Penalty: 60 penalty units, or imprisonment for
12 months, or both.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
(4) A person must not, with
the intention of obtaining a credit, a payment or any other benefit, present:
(a) a *payment summary relating to Subdivision 12‑H, or a copy of such
a payment summary; or
(b) a document
purporting to be such a payment summary or a copy of such a payment summary;
which is not a payment summary, or a copy
of a payment summary, duly given to the person.
Penalty: 60 penalty units, or imprisonment
for 12 months, or both.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
20‑40 Joining of charges
(1) Charges against the same
person for a number of offences against this Part may be joined in one
complaint, information or summons if those charges:
(a) are founded on
the same facts; or
(b) form a series of
offences of the same or a similar character; or
(c) are part of a
series of offences of the same or similar character.
(2) Particulars of each
offence charged must be set out in a separate paragraph if 2 or more of the
charges are included in the same complaint, information or summons.
(3) If the charges are
joined, the charges must be tried together unless the court:
(a) considers it just
that any of the charges should be tried separately; and
(b) makes an order to
that effect.
(4) If a person is convicted
of 2 or more of the offences:
(a) the court may
impose one penalty for both or all of those offences; but
(b) the penalty must
not exceed the sum of the maximum penalties that could be imposed in respect of
each offence separately.
20‑45 Offences that would otherwise
be committed by a partnership or unincorporated company
(1) An offence against this
Part that would otherwise be committed by a partnership is taken to have been
committed by each partner who:
(a) aided, abetted,
counselled or procured the relevant act or omission; or
(b) was in any way
knowingly concerned in, or party to, the relevant act or omission (whether
directly or indirectly, and whether by any act or omission of the partner).
(2) An offence against this
Part that would otherwise be committed by a company that is not incorporated is
taken to have been committed by each member of the company’s committee of management
who:
(a) aided, abetted,
counselled or procured the relevant act or omission; or
(b) was in any way
knowingly concerned in, or party to, the relevant act or omission (whether
directly or indirectly, and whether by any act or omission of the member).
Subdivision 20‑D—Review of decisions
20‑80 Reviewable decisions
A person who is
dissatisfied with any of the following decisions of the Commissioner may object
against the decision in the manner set out in Part IVC.
|
Reviewable
decisions
|
|
Item
|
Description
|
|
1A
|
Decision not to grant an exemption under
subsection 12‑319(1) from withholding obligations in relation to
sections 12‑315 and 12‑317
|
|
1
|
Decision not to give a certificate under
subsection 12‑335(1) exempting an entity from notifying the Commissioner
about a natural resource payment
|
|
5
|
Decision to revoke a certificate under
subsection 12‑335(3)
|
|
10
|
Decision to vary a certificate under
subsection 12‑335(3)
|
|
25
|
Refusal to determine under subsection 16‑110(1)
that a large withholder is a *medium withholder or a
*small withholder for a particular month or particular months
|
|
30
|
Refusal to determine under subsection 16‑110(1)
that a medium withholder is a small withholder for a particular month or
particular months
|
|
35
|
Decision to revoke a determination made
under subsection 16‑110(1)
|
|
40
|
Decision to vary a determination made
under subsection 16‑110(1) for a particular month or particular months
|
|
45
|
Determination under subsection 16‑115(1)
that a small withholder is a medium withholder or a large withholder for a
particular month or particular months
|
|
50
|
Determination under subsection 16‑115(1)
that a medium withholder is a large withholder
|
|
55
|
Decision not to revoke a determination
made under subsection 16‑115(1)
|
|
60
|
Decision not to vary a determination made
under subsection 16‑115(1) for a particular month or particular months
|
|
65
|
Decision not to refund an amount under
section 18‑70
|
|
70
|
Decision not to refund an amount under
section 18‑80
|
Note: Division 298 also
provides review rights about remission of administrative penalties.
Division 21—Entitlements relating to insolvent ADIs
and general insurers
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 21
21‑A Treatment of some payments by
APRA
Guide to Division 21
21‑1 What this Division is about
This Part applies in
relation to a payment by APRA under:
(a) Division 2AA
of Part II of the Banking Act 1959 applying in relation to an
account with an ADI; or
(b) Part VC
of the Insurance Act 1973 applying in relation to a general insurance
policy issued by a general insurance company;
in a way
corresponding to the way this Part would have applied if the payment had been
made by the ADI or company in connection with the account or policy.
Subdivision 21‑A—Treatment of some payments by APRA
Table of sections
21‑5 APRA treated like ADI
or general insurance company
21‑5 APRA treated like ADI or
general insurance company
(1) This section applies if:
(a) an entity’s
entitlement under Division 2AA of Part II of the Banking Act 1959
to be paid an amount by *APRA in connection with
the entity’s account with an *ADI is met wholly or
partly; or
(b) an entity’s
entitlement under Part VC of the Insurance Act 1973 to be paid an
amount in connection with a *general insurance policy
issued by a *general insurance company is met wholly or
partly.
Note 1: Division 2AA of Part II
of the Banking Act 1959 entitles entities that have certain accounts
with certain insolvent ADIs to be paid amounts by APRA worked out by reference
to the balance of those accounts.
Note 2: Part VC of the Insurance
Act 1973 entitles entities with valid claims against certain insolvent
general insurance companies under certain general insurance policies issued by
those companies to be paid amounts by APRA.
(2) This Part applies in
relation to *APRA and the meeting of the entitlement in
a way corresponding to the way in which this Part would have applied in
relation to the *ADI or *general
insurance company doing, in connection with the account or policy, whatever was
done in meeting the entitlement.
Example: APRA (or APRA’s agent or
delegate) pays an entity an amount of the entity’s entitlement relating to an
account with an ADI. This Part applies in relation to APRA and the payment in a
way corresponding to the way in which this Part would have applied in relation
to the ADI had the ADI made a payment at that time of that amount under the
arrangements for keeping the account.
Guide to Division 45
45‑1 What this Division is about
If you have business
or investment income, you must pay instalments towards your income tax
liability. However, you do not have to do so unless the Commissioner has given
you an instalment rate. Generally, instalments are payable for each quarter of
your income year. Alternatively, instalments could be payable monthly or
annually.
Your instalments may
be based on your previous year’s income tax liability and notified to you by
the Commissioner, or on your estimate of your income tax liability for the
current income year. (In this case, you are a quarterly payer who pays on the
basis of GDP adjusted notional tax). Generally, four quarterly instalments are
payable annually on this basis, but you may only be required to pay two.
If you are not
eligible to pay instalments on that basis, or if you are so eligible but choose
not to do so, you must work out the amount of your quarterly instalment by
multiplying your instalment income for an instalment quarter by the rate the
Commissioner gave you, or by a rate you choose yourself. (In this case, you are
a quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income).
If your business or
investment income exceeds a certain limit, you may have to pay an instalment
after the end of each month. (In this case, you are a monthly payer).
If you are not
required to be registered for GST purposes, you may be able to choose to pay an
annual instalment after the end of the income year. (In this case, you are an
annual payer).
The amount of annual
instalment can be your instalment income for the income year multiplied by the
rate the Commissioner gave you, or an amount based on your previous year’s
income tax liability and notified to you by the Commissioner, or your own
estimate of your income tax liability for the income year.
Subdivision 45‑A—Basic rules
Table
of sections
45‑5 Object
of this Part
45‑10 Application of Part
45‑15 Liability for
instalments
45‑20 Information
to be given to the Commissioner by certain payers
45‑25 Penalty for failure to
notify Commissioner
45‑30 Credit for instalments
payable
45‑5 Object of this Part
(1) The object of this Part
is to ensure the efficient collection of:
(a) income tax; and
(b) *Medicare levy; and
(ca) amounts of
liabilities to the Commonwealth under Chapter 4 of the Higher Education
Support Act 2003; and
(cd) amounts of
liabilities to the Commonwealth under Chapter 3 of the Trade Support
Loans Act 2014; and
(d) amounts of
liabilities to the Commonwealth under Part 2B.3 of the Social Security
Act 1991; and
(e) amounts of
liabilities to the Commonwealth under Division 6 of Part 4A of the Student
Assistance Act 1973;
through the application of the principles
set out in the rest of this section.
(2) As you earn *instalment income, you pay instalments after the end of each *instalment quarter worked out on the basis of your instalment income
for that quarter if you are required or choose to work out your instalment on
this basis. However, you may be able to pay an amount notified by the
Commissioner. (There are exceptions to this).
(2A) Alternatively:
(a) you may be
required to pay instalments after the end of each *instalment
month worked out on the basis of your instalment income for that month; or
(b) you may be able
to choose to pay an annual instalment for the income year.
(3) The total of your
instalments for an income year is as close as possible to the total of your
liabilities for the income year that are covered by subsection (1), except
so far as the amounts of those liabilities are attributable to a *net capital gain. (The exception does not apply to the entities
listed in subsections 45‑120(2) and (2A) or the net capital gains
specified in subsection 45‑120(2B).)
(4) Consequently, the
additional amounts you have to pay to discharge those liabilities, after an
assessment of your income tax for the income year is made, are as low as
possible.
(5) If you are a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income, the
amount of each of your instalments for an income year is the same proportion
(as nearly as possible, subject to the principles in subsections (3) and
(4)) of the total of those instalments as your *instalment
income for that *instalment quarter is of your total
instalment income for the income year.
(5A) If you are a *monthly payer, the amount of each of your instalments for an income
year is the same proportion (as nearly as possible, subject to the principles
in subsections (3) and (4)) of the total of those instalments as your *instalment income for that *instalment month
is of your total instalment income for the income year.
(6) When instalments are
payable, and how their amount is calculated, are the same for different kinds
of entities, except as expressly provided.
Note: Subdivision 45‑P
penalises an entity whose tax position, so far as it relates to PAYG
instalments and related matters, is altered by a scheme that is inconsistent
with the object of this Part.
45‑10 Application of Part
This
Part applies to individuals, companies, and the entities listed in items 4
to 10, and 12 and 13, of the table in section 9‑1 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 (which lists the entities that must pay income tax).
Note 1: Section 45‑450 provides
for how this Part applies to a trustee covered by any of items 4 to 8, and
12 and 13, of the table in section 9‑1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997. In most respects, the trust is treated like a company.
Note 2: This Part also applies to a
trustee covered by item 11 of the table in section 9‑1 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997, but only to the extent set out in section 45‑455,
and the rest of Subdivision 45‑N, in this Schedule.
45‑15 Liability for instalments
(1) The Commissioner may
give you an instalment rate from time to time, by giving you written notice of
the rate.
(2) You are liable to pay
instalments under this Division if the Commissioner has given you an instalment
rate.
Note 1: The instalment rate that the
Commissioner gives you is worked out under section 45‑320 or 45‑775.
Note 2: If your assessable income has
always consisted wholly of withholding payments (other than non‑quotation
withholding payments), the Commissioner will not give you an instalment rate.
Note 3: Work out the amount of your
instalments under Subdivision 45‑C.
Note 4: If the Commissioner withdraws
the rate under section 45‑90, you are not liable to pay further
instalments.
Note 5: For provisions about
collection and recovery of amounts you are liable to pay under this Part, see
Part 4‑15.
45‑20 Information to be given to the
Commissioner by certain payers
(1) If you are liable to pay
an instalment for a period (even if it is a nil amount), you must notify the
Commissioner of the amount of your *instalment income
for the period.
(2) You must notify the
Commissioner in the *approved form and on or before
the day when the instalment is due (regardless of whether it is paid).
(2A) If you are a *monthly payer for the period, you must give the notification
electronically, unless the Commissioner otherwise approves.
Note: A penalty applies if you fail
to give the notification electronically as required—see section 288‑10.
(2B) The notification is given
electronically if it is transmitted to the Commissioner in an electronic format
approved by the Commissioner.
Exceptions
(3) Subsection (1) does
not apply to:
(a) a quarterly instalment
worked out under section 45‑112 (on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
or estimated benchmark tax); or
(b) an annual
instalment, unless it is worked out under paragraph 45‑115(1)(a) (based on
the Commissioner’s rate and your instalment income for the income year).
45‑25 Penalty for failure to notify
Commissioner
(1) If you fail to notify
the Commissioner of an amount as required by section 45‑20, or you notify
an amount that is less than the correct amount, you are liable to pay the *failure to notify penalty on the amount, or on the shortfall,
multiplied by the instalment rate that you are required to use to work out the
instalment for the period, for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the amount was due to be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the day before you notify the Commissioner of the correct amount, or he
or she otherwise becomes aware of it.
(2) This
section does not apply to a notification required to be lodged on or after 1 July
2000.
Note: See instead Division 286
in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953.
45‑30 Credit for instalments payable
(1) You are entitled to a
credit when the Commissioner makes an assessment of the income tax you are
liable to pay for an income year or an assessment that no income tax is payable
by you for an income year.
(2) The credit is equal to:
• the total of
each instalment payable by you for the income year (even if you have not yet
paid it);
reduced by:
• the total of
each credit that you have claimed under section 45‑215 or 45‑420 in
respect of such an instalment.
(3) The making of the
assessment, and the resulting credit entitlement, do not affect the liability
to pay an instalment.
Note: How the credit is applied is
set out in Division 3 of Part IIB.
(4) If:
(a) you are a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group
at any time during a *consolidation transitional year
for you; and
(b) an amount of
instalment payable by you, or an amount of credit claimed by you under section 45‑215
or 45‑420, is taken into account in working out a credit to which the *head company of that consolidated group is entitled under section 45‑865
for a consolidation transitional year for the head company;
that amount, to the extent to which it is
so taken into account under that section, is not to be taken into account in
working out any credit to which you are entitled under this section for any
year.
Subdivision 45‑B—When instalments are due
Table
of sections
45‑50 Liability to pay
instalments
45‑60 Meaning
of instalment quarter
45‑61 When quarterly
instalments are due—payers of quarterly instalments
45‑65 Meaning of instalment
month
45‑67 When monthly instalments
are due—payers of monthly instalments
45‑70 When annual instalments
are due
45‑72 Means of payment of
instalment
45‑75 Instalments recoverable
in same way as income tax
45‑80 General interest charge
on late payment
45‑90 Commissioner may
withdraw instalment rate
45‑50 Liability to pay instalments
(1) Subject to subsection (4),
you are liable to pay an instalment for an *instalment
quarter in an income year if, at the end of that instalment quarter, you are:
(a) a *quarterly payer who pays 4 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax; or
(b) a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income.
(2) Subject to subsection (4),
you are liable to pay an instalment for an *instalment
quarter that is the third or fourth instalment quarter in an income year if, at
the end of that quarter, you are a *quarterly payer
who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax.
(2A) Subject to subsection (4),
you are liable to pay an instalment for an *instalment
month if, at the end of that month, you are a *monthly
payer.
(3) Subject to subsection (4),
you are liable to pay an instalment for an income year if, at the end of the *starting instalment quarter in that year, you are an *annual payer.
(4) You are only liable to
pay an instalment for an *instalment quarter, an *instalment month or an income year if:
(a) the Commissioner
has given you an instalment rate; and
(b) the Commissioner
has not withdrawn your instalment rate before the end of that quarter, month or
year.
45‑60 Meaning of instalment
quarter
For an income year
(whether it ends on 30 June or not), the following are the instalment
quarters:
(a) your first instalment
quarter consists of the first 3 months of the income year; and
(b) your second instalment
quarter consists of the fourth, fifth and sixth months of the income
year; and
(c) your third instalment
quarter consists of the seventh, eighth and ninth months of the income
year; and
(d) your fourth instalment
quarter consists of the tenth, 11th and 12th months of the income year.
45‑61 When quarterly instalments are
due—payers of quarterly instalments
You are not a deferred BAS payer
(1) Subject to subsection (2), if you are:
(a) a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income; or
(b) a *quarterly payer who pays 4 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax; or
(c) a *quarterly payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax;
the instalment for an *instalment quarter that you are liable to pay is due on or before
the 21st day of the month after the end of that quarter.
Note: You are only liable to pay
instalments for the third and fourth instalment quarters in an income year if
you are a quarterly payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax. See section 45‑50.
You are a deferred BAS payer
(2) If:
(a) subsection (1)
would, but for this subsection, have applied to you in relation to an *instalment quarter; but
(b) you are a *deferred BAS payer on the 21st day of the month after the end of
that quarter;
the instalment for that quarter is
instead due on or before:
(c) the 28th day of
the month after the end of that quarter unless all or a part of a December
falls within the last month of that quarter; or
(d) if all or a part
of a December falls within the last month of that quarter—the next 28 February.
Note 1: You are only liable to pay
instalments for the third and fourth instalment quarters in an income year if
you are a quarterly payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax. See section 45‑50.
Note 2: If you are the head company of
a consolidated group to which Subdivision 45‑Q applies, the instalment is
due on or before the 21st day of the month after the end of the quarter: see
section 45‑715.
45‑65 Meaning of instalment month
For an income year
(whether it ends on 30 June or not), the following are instalment
months:
(a) the month that
starts on the first day of the income year;
(b) each subsequent
month.
Note: For the meaning of month,
see section 2G of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
45‑67 When monthly instalments are
due—payers of monthly instalments
You are not a deferred BAS payer
(1) If you are a *monthly payer, the instalment for an *instalment
month that you are liable to pay is due on or before the 21st day of the next
instalment month.
(2) If:
(a) subsection (1)
would, but for this subsection, have applied to you in relation to an *instalment month; but
(b) you are a *deferred BAS payer on the 21st day of the next instalment month;
the instalment for the month mentioned in
paragraph (a) is instead due on or before:
(c) the 28th day of
that next instalment month unless that next instalment month is January; or
(d) if that next
instalment month is January—the next 28 February.
Note: If you are the head company
of a consolidated group to which Subdivision 45‑Q applies, the instalment
is due on or before the 21st day of that next month: see section 45‑715
(as it has effect because of section 45‑703).
45‑70 When annual instalments are
due
(1) This section applies if
you are liable to pay an annual instalment for the 2002‑03 income year or a
later income year.
(2) If the income year ends
on 30 June, the instalment is due on or before the next 21 October.
(3) If the income year ends
on a day other than 30 June, the instalment is due on or before the 21st
day of the fourth month after the end of the income year.
45‑72 Means
of payment of instalment
You must pay an instalment by *electronic
payment, or any other means approved in writing by the Commissioner.
45‑75 Instalments recoverable in
same way as income tax
Instalments are to be
treated as income tax for the purposes of sections 254 and 255 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936.
45‑80 General interest charge on
late payment
If you fail to pay some
or all of an instalment by the time by which the instalment is due to be paid,
you are liable to pay the *general interest charge
on the unpaid amount for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the instalment was due to be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following
remains unpaid:
(i) the
instalment;
(ii) general
interest charge on any of the instalment.
45‑90 Commissioner may withdraw
instalment rate
(1) The Commissioner may:
(a) by giving you
written notice, withdraw your instalment rate; or
(b) by notice
published in the Gazette, withdraw the instalment rate of a class of
entities that includes you.
Note: If the Commissioner does so,
you cease to be liable to pay instalments (even if you have chosen a rate under
section 45‑205). See subsection 45‑50(4).
(2) If the Commissioner
withdraws your instalment rate and later gives you another one:
(a) you are again
liable to pay instalments in accordance with section 45‑50; and
(b) this Division has
effect as if the Commissioner has given you an instalment rate for the first
time.
Subdivision 45‑C—Working out instalment amounts
Table of sections
45‑110 How
to work out amount of quarterly instalment on instalment income basis
45‑112 Amount of instalment for
quarterly payer who pays on basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
45‑114 How to work out amount of
monthly instalment
45‑115 How to work out amount of
annual instalment
45‑120 Meaning of instalment
income
45‑110 How to work out amount of
quarterly instalment on instalment income basis
(1) Work out the amount of
an instalment you are liable to pay for an *instalment
quarter as follows if, at the end of that instalment quarter, you are a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income:

(2) For the purposes of the
formula in subsection (1):
Applicable instalment rate means:
(a) unless paragraph (b)
or (c) applies—the most recent instalment rate given to you by the Commissioner
under section 45‑15 before the end of that quarter; or
(b) if you have
chosen an instalment rate for that quarter under section 45‑205—that rate;
or
(c) if you have
chosen an instalment rate under section 45‑205 for an earlier *instalment quarter in that income year (and paragraph (b) does
not apply)—that rate.
Note: If you believe the
Commissioner’s rate is not appropriate for the current income year, you may
choose a different instalment rate under Subdivision 45‑F.
45‑112 Amount of instalment for
quarterly payer who pays on basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
(1) If, at the end of an *instalment quarter in an income year, you are a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
who is liable to pay an instalment for that quarter, the amount of your
instalment for that quarter is:
(a) unless paragraph (b)
or (c) applies—the amount that the Commissioner works out under Subdivision 45‑L,
and notifies to you, as the amount of the instalment; or
(b) if you choose to
work out the amount of the instalment on the basis of your estimate of your *benchmark tax for that income year, and you notify the Commissioner
in accordance with subsection (2)—the amount worked out under Subdivision 45‑M;
or
(c) if paragraph (b)
applied to your instalment for an earlier *instalment
quarter in that income year—the amount that the Commissioner works out under
Subdivision 45‑M, and notifies to you, as the amount of the instalment.
(2) If the amount of the
instalment is worked out under paragraph (1)(b) on the basis of your
estimate of your *benchmark tax for the income year, you
must notify the Commissioner in the *approved form, on
or before the day when the instalment is due (disregarding subsection (3)),
of the amount of that estimate.
(3) If:
(a) after the
end of an *instalment quarter the Commissioner
notifies you of an amount as the amount of your instalment for that quarter;
and
(b) the amount of
your instalment for that quarter is not worked out under paragraph (1)(b);
the instalment is due on or before the
21st day after the day on which the notice is given.
45‑114 How to work out amount of
monthly instalment
(1) Work out the amount of
an instalment you are liable to pay for an *instalment
month as follows if, at the end of that instalment month, you are a *monthly payer:

(2) For the purposes of the
formula in subsection (1):
applicable instalment rate means:
(a) unless paragraph (b)
or (c) applies—the most recent instalment rate given to you by the Commissioner
under section 45‑15 before the end of that month; or
(b) if you have chosen an instalment rate for that month under
section 45‑205—that rate; or
(c) if you have
chosen an instalment rate under section 45‑205 for an earlier *instalment month in that income year (and paragraph (b) does
not apply)—that rate.
Note: If you believe the
Commissioner’s rate is not appropriate for the current income year, you may
choose a different instalment rate under Subdivision 45‑F.
(3) The Commissioner may, by
legislative instrument, determine one or more specified additional methods by
which a specified class of entity that is a *monthly
payer at the end of an *instalment month may
work out, in specified circumstances, the amount of an instalment that it is
liable to pay for the instalment month.
Note: For specification by class,
see subsection 13(3) of the Legislative Instruments Act 2003.
(4) You may choose a method
specified in the determination:
(a) unless paragraph (b)
applies—for any *instalment month; or
(b) if the
determination provides that that method can be chosen only for the first
instalment month in an *instalment quarter—for
the first instalment month in an instalment quarter.
(5) The determination may
provide that an entity that chooses a method in accordance with paragraph (4)(b)
for the first *instalment month in an *instalment quarter is taken to have chosen that method under subsection (4)
for the other instalment months in that quarter. The determination has effect
accordingly.
(6) Subsection (7)
applies if:
(a) the Commissioner
has made a determination under subsection (3); and
(b) at the end of an *instalment month, you are a *monthly
payer; and
(c) you choose under subsection (4),
for that month:
(i) if
the determination specifies one additional method to work out that amount—that
method; or
(ii) if
the determination specifies more than one additional method to work out that
amount—one of those methods.
(7) Despite subsection (1),
work out the amount of an instalment you are liable to pay for that *instalment month in accordance with the method that you chose for
that month under subsection (4).
45‑115 How to work out amount of
annual instalment
(1) The amount of an
instalment you are liable to pay for the 2002‑03 income year or a later income
year is whichever of the following you choose:
(a) the amount worked
out using the formula:

(b) your most recent *notional tax notified by the Commissioner before the end of the
income year;
(c) the amount that
you estimate will be your *benchmark tax for the
income year.
Note 1: You cannot choose a different
instalment rate under Subdivision 45‑F if you are an annual payer. Instead
you can work out the amount of your instalment under paragraph (c).
Note 2: You may be liable to general
interest charge under section 45‑235 if working out your instalment under paragraph (c)
leads you to pay an instalment that is less than 85% of your benchmark tax for
the income year (worked out by the Commissioner under section 45‑365).
(2) Commissioner’s
instalment rate for an income year means the most recent instalment
rate given to you by the Commissioner before the end of the income year.
(3) If you choose to work
out your instalment under paragraph (1)(c), you must notify the
Commissioner, in the *approved form, of the amount of
the instalment on or before the day when it is due.
45‑120 Meaning of instalment
income
General rule
(1) Your instalment
income for a period includes your *ordinary
income *derived during that period, but only to
the extent that it is assessable income of the income year that is or includes
that period.
Note 1: No other amount is instalment
income unless it is covered by another provision of this section or by
Subdivision 45‑H or 45‑I.
Note 1A: The
operation of this section and other provisions relating to instalment income is
affected by sections 45‑855 and 45‑860 (about a member of a consolidated
group during a period before the members of the group are treated as a single
entity for the purposes of this Part.)
Note 2: If during that period you are
a partner in a partnership, or a beneficiary of a trust, your instalment income
also includes some of the partnership’s or trust’s instalment income for the
period (except in some cases). See Subdivision 45‑H or 45‑I.
Statutory income included for some
entities
(2) The instalment
income of:
(a) a *complying approved deposit fund or a *non‑complying
approved deposit fund; or
(b) a *complying superannuation fund or a *non‑complying
superannuation fund; or
(c) a *pooled superannuation trust; or
(ca) an *FHSA trust;
for a period also includes the entity’s *statutory income, to the extent that:
(d) it is reasonably
attributable to that period; and
(e) it is assessable
income of the income year that is or includes that period.
(2A) The instalment income of a
*life insurance company for a period also includes any part of its *statutory income that:
(a) is reasonably
attributable to that period; and
(b) is included in
the *complying superannuation/FHSA class of its
taxable income for the income year that is or includes that period.
Net gains under Subdivision 250‑E
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 included in instalment income
(2B) Your instalment income for
a period also includes the difference between:
(a) a gain (or gains)
you make from a *financial arrangement to the extent to
which it is (or they are):
(i) assessable
under Subdivision 250‑E of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; and
(ii) reasonably
attributable to that period; and
(b) a loss (or
losses) you make from a financial arrangement to the extent to which it is (or
they are):
(i) allowable
to you as a deduction under Subdivision 250‑E of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997; and
(ii) reasonably
attributable to that period.
This is so only if the gain (or gains)
referred to in paragraph (a) exceeds the loss (or losses) referred to in paragraph (b).
Effect of Division 230 of the
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 on instalment income
(2C) Your instalment income for
a period also includes the difference between:
(a) a gain (or gains)
you make from a *financial arrangement to the extent to
which it is (or they are):
(i) assessable
under Division 230 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; and
(ii) reasonably
attributable to that period; and
(b) a loss (or
losses) you make from a financial arrangement to the extent to which it is (or
they are):
(i) allowable
to you as a deduction under Division 230 of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997; and
(ii) reasonably
attributable to that period.
This is so only if the gain (or gains)
referred to in paragraph (a) equals or exceeds the loss (or losses)
referred to in paragraph (b).
(2D) However, your instalment
income for a period is worked out disregarding subsection (2C) if any of
the following apply:
(a) you are an
individual;
(b) the only gains
and losses that would be taken into account under subsection (2C) for the
period are from *financial arrangements that are *qualifying securities.
(2E) A gain or loss that is
taken into account under subsection (2C) in working out an amount
(including a nil amount) to be included in your instalment income for a period
is not to be, to any extent, taken into account again under another provision
of this section in calculating your instalment income for the same or any other
period.
Exclusion: amounts in respect of
withholding payments
(3) Your instalment
income for a period does not include amounts in respect of:
(a) *withholding payments (except *non‑quotation
withholding payments) made to you during that period; and
(b) amounts included
in your assessable income under section 86‑15 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 for which there are amounts required to be paid under
Division 13; and
(c) which a penalty
is applicable under section 12‑415.
Farm management deposits: effect of
making and repayment
(4) Your instalment
income for a period is reduced (but not below nil) by a *farm management deposit made during that period, but only to the
extent that, at the end of that period, you can reasonably expect to be able to
deduct the deposit under section 393‑5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997 for the income year that is or includes that period.
(5) Your instalment
income for a period also includes an amount that section 393‑10 of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 includes in your assessable income,
for the income year that is or includes that period, because of a repayment during
that period of all or some of a *farm management deposit.
Gross proceeds on disposal of
registered emissions units included in instalment income
(5A) Your instalment
income for a period also includes an amount that section 420‑25 of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 includes in your assessable income,
for the income year that is or includes that period, because you cease to *hold a *registered emissions unit during that
period.
Instalment income of entity that is
not liable for instalments
(6) An entity can have *instalment income for a period even if the entity is not liable to
pay an instalment for that period.
Note: For example, although a
partnership does not pay instalments, it is necessary to work out the
partnership’s instalment income in order to work out instalments payable by the
partners. See Subdivision 45‑H.
Subdivision 45‑D—Quarterly payers
Table
of sections
45‑125 Quarterly
payer who pays instalments on the basis of instalment income
45‑130 Quarterly
payer who pays on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
45‑132 Quarterly
payer who pays 4 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
45‑134 Quarterly
payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
45‑125 Quarterly payer who pays instalments
on the basis of instalment income
(1) You are a quarterly
payer who pays on the basis of instalment income if:
(a) at the end of the
*starting instalment quarter in an income year, you are not a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
and you are not a *monthly payer or an *annual payer; or
(b) but for this
section, you would be a quarterly payer who pays on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax at the end of the starting instalment quarter in an income year
but you choose to pay quarterly instalments on the basis of your instalment
income.
Note: The entity must make the
choice mentioned in paragraph (b) in accordance with subsection (4).
(2) The starting
instalment quarter in an income year (the current year)
is:
(a) if the
Commissioner gives you an instalment rate for the first time during an *instalment quarter in the current year—that instalment quarter (even
if it is not the first instalment quarter in the current year); or
(b) if the
Commissioner has given you an instalment rate during a previous income year and
your instalment rate has not been withdrawn—the first instalment quarter in the
current year.
How and when you become such a payer
(3) You become a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income just
before the end of the *starting instalment
quarter if paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is satisfied.
(4) You must make the choice
mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) by notifying the Commissioner in the *approved form on or before the day on which the instalment for that
quarter is due (disregarding subsection 45‑112(3)).
How and when you stop being such a
payer
(5) If you are a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income because
of paragraph (1)(a), you stop being such a payer at the start of the first
*instalment quarter in the next income year if:
(a) at the end of
that quarter, you become:
(i) a
quarterly payer who pays on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax; or
(ii) an *annual payer; or
(b) at the end of the
first *instalment month of that quarter, you
become a *monthly payer.
No quarterly payer status in quarter
if monthly payer in following month
(5A) Despite subsections (1)
and (3), you cannot be a *quarterly payer who pays
on the basis of instalment income at a time in an *instalment
quarter if you are a *monthly payer at a time in the
first *instalment month that ends after that
quarter.
(6) If you are a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income because
of paragraph (1)(b), you stop being such a payer at the start of the first
*instalment quarter in the next income year if:
(a) you become an *annual payer at the end of that quarter; or
(b) both of the
following conditions apply:
(i) you
choose not to be a quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income;
(ii) you
become a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of
GDP‑adjusted notional tax at the end of that quarter.
(7) You may only make the
choice mentioned in paragraph (6)(b) if you would otherwise satisfy
paragraph 45‑130(1)(a), (b), (c) or (d) at the end of that quarter. You
must make that choice by notifying the Commissioner in the *approved form on or before the day on which the instalment for that
quarter is due (disregarding subsection 45‑112(3)).
45‑130 Quarterly payer who pays on
the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
(1) You are a quarterly
payer who pays on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax if, at the end
of the *starting instalment quarter in an income
year:
(a) you are an
individual who is not an *annual payer, a *monthly payer or a *quarterly payer who pays
on the basis of instalment income; or
(b) you are a *self‑assessment entity:
(i) that
is not an *annual payer or a *quarterly
payer who pays on the basis of instalment income; and
(ii) your
base assessment instalment income (within the meaning of section 45‑320)
for the *base year is $2 million or less; or
(c) you satisfy all
of the following conditions:
(i) you
are a self‑assessment entity whose base assessment instalment income (within
the meaning of section 45‑320) for the *base
year is more than $2 million;
(ii) you
are not an annual payer, but you satisfy the conditions set out in subsection 45‑140(1)
for an annual payer;
(iia) you
are not a *monthly payer;
(iii) you
are not a quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income; or
(d) for the 2009‑10
income year or a later income year—you are a *small
business entity (other than because of subsection 328‑110(4) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997).
Note: Paragraph (a) may apply
to you if you are a multi‑rate trustee. See section 45‑468.
How and when you become such a payer
(2) You become such a payer
just before the end of the *starting instalment
quarter if paragraph (1)(a), (b), (c) or (d) is satisfied.
(2A) For the purposes of subsection (2),
you satisfy proposed paragraph (1)(d) at the end of the *starting instalment quarter in an income year if you are a *small business entity (other than because of subsection 328‑110(4)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997) for the income year that includes
that instalment quarter.
How and when you stop being such a
payer
(3) You stop being a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
at the start of the first *instalment quarter in the
next income year if you fail to satisfy paragraph (1)(a), (b), (c)
or (d) at the end of that quarter.
(3A) For the purposes of subsection (3),
you fail to satisfy proposed paragraph (1)(d) at the end of the first *instalment quarter in an income year if you are not a *small business entity (other than because of subsection 328‑110(4)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997) for the income year that includes
that instalment quarter.
(4) In addition, you stop
being such a payer at the start of the first *instalment
quarter in the next income year if:
(a) at the end of
that quarter, you become:
(i) a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income; or
(ii) an *annual payer; or
(b) at the end of the
first *instalment month of that quarter, you
become a *monthly payer.
No quarterly payer status in quarter
if monthly payer in following month
(5) Despite subsections (1)
and (2), you cannot be a *quarterly payer who pays
on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax at a time in an *instalment quarter if you are a *monthly
payer at a time in the first *instalment month that
ends after that quarter.
45‑132 Quarterly payer who pays 4
instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
(1) You
are a quarterly payer who pays 4 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax if, at the end of the *starting
instalment quarter in an income year:
(a) you
satisfy the conditions to be a *quarterly payer who pays
on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax under section 45‑130; and
(b) you do not
satisfy the conditions to be a *quarterly payer who pays
2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax under section 45‑134.
How and when you become such a payer
(2) You become such a payer
just before the end of the *starting instalment
quarter if paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) are satisfied.
How and when you stop being such a
payer
(3) You stop being a *quarterly payer who pays 4 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax at the start of the first *instalment
quarter in the next income year if you fail to satisfy paragraphs (1)(a)
and (b) at the end of that quarter.
(4) In addition, you stop
being such a payer at the start of the first *instalment
quarter in the next income year if:
(a) at the end of
that quarter, you become:
(i) a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income; or
(ii) an *annual payer; or
(b) at the end of the
first *instalment month of that quarter, you
become a *monthly payer.
45‑134 Quarterly payer who pays 2
instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
(1) You are a quarterly
payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
if, at the end of the *starting instalment
quarter in an income year, you are an individual that is a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
and one or more of the following paragraphs apply:
(a) both of the
following conditions are satisfied:
(i) you
are carrying on a *primary production business in the income
year;
(ii) the
assessable income that was *derived from, or
resulted from, a primary production business that you carried on in the *base year exceeded the amount of so much of your deductions in that
year that are reasonably related to that income;
(b) both
of the following conditions are satisfied:
(i) you
are a *special professional in the income year;
(ii) your *assessable professional income in the base year exceeded the amount
of so much of your deductions in that year that are reasonably related to that
income.
Note: This section may apply to you
if you are a multi‑rate trustee. See section 45‑468.
How and when you become such a payer
(2) You become such a payer
just before the end of the *starting instalment
quarter if subsection (1) is satisfied.
How and when you stop being such a
payer
(3) You stop being a *quarterly payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax at the start of the first *instalment
quarter in the next income year if you fail to satisfy subsection (1)
at the end of that quarter.
(4) In addition, you stop
being such a payer at the start of the first *instalment
quarter in the next income year if:
(a) at the end of
that quarter, you become:
(i) a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income; or
(ii) an *annual payer; or
(b) at the end of the
first *instalment month of that quarter, you
become a *monthly payer.
Subdivision 45‑DA—Monthly payers
Table
of sections
45‑136 Monthly payer
45‑138 Monthly
payer requirement
45‑136 Monthly payer
(1) You are a monthly
payer at a time if:
(a) you were a
monthly payer immediately before that time; or
(b) if paragraph (a)
does not apply—you satisfy the requirement in subsection 45‑138(1) for the
income year in which that time occurs.
Note: If paragraph (b)
applies, see subsection (3) for the time at which you become a monthly
payer.
(2) The starting
instalment month in an income year (the current year) is:
(a) if the
Commissioner gives you an instalment rate for the first time during an *instalment month in the current year—the next instalment month in
the current year; or
(b) if the
Commissioner has given you an instalment rate during a previous income year and
your instalment rate has not been withdrawn—the first instalment month in the
current year.
How and when you become such a payer
(3) Despite subsection (1),
if paragraph (1)(b) applies, you become a *monthly
payer just before the end of the *starting instalment
month in the income year.
How and when you stop being such a
payer
(4) Despite subsection (1),
you stop being a *monthly payer at the start of the first *instalment month in a later income year if:
(a) you do not
satisfy the requirement in subsection 45‑138(1) for that later income
year; and
(b) you give the
Commissioner a notice (the MP stop notice) in the *approved form for that later income year before the start of that
later income year.
45‑138 Monthly payer requirement
(1) You satisfy the
requirement in this subsection for an income year if at the start of your *MPR test day for that income year, your base assessment instalment
income (within the meaning of section 45‑320) for the *base year equals or exceeds:
(a) $20 million; or
(b) if regulations
made for the purposes of this paragraph specify a different amount—that amount.
(2) However, you do not
satisfy the requirement in subsection (1) for an income year if, at the
start of your *MPR test day for that income year:
(a) you have (or, if
you are a *member of a *GST
group, the *representative member of the GST group
has) an obligation to give the Commissioner a *GST
return for a quarterly *tax period; and
(b) you are not
the *head company of a *consolidated
group nor the *provisional head company of a *MEC group; and
(c) your base
assessment instalment income (within the meaning of section 45‑320) for
the *base year is less than $100 million.
(3) For the purposes of subsections (1)
and (2), at the start of an entity’s *MPR test day:
(a) determine the
amount of the entity’s base assessment instalment income (within the meaning of
section 45‑320) for the *base year only on the
basis of the information provided by the Commissioner to the entity before that
start of that day; and
(b) in determining on
that day whether an entity has an obligation mentioned in paragraph (2)(a),
disregard any creation or removal of such an obligation after that day (even if
that change is made retrospective to that day).
(4) An entity’s MPR test
day for an income year is:
(a) if the
Commissioner gives the entity an instalment rate for the first time during an *instalment month in the income year—the last day of that month; or
(b) otherwise—the
first day of the third last month of the previous income year.
(5) Subsection (6)
applies if, disregarding that subsection, an entity does not satisfy the
requirement in subsection (1) for an income year.
(6) For the purposes of this
section, in determining the entity’s base assessment instalment income (within
the meaning of section 45‑320) for the *base
year:
(a) disregard
subsection 45‑120(2C); and
(b) disregard paragraph (3)(a)
of this section, to the extent that that paragraph relates to the operation of
subsection 45‑120(2C).
(7) If, because of subsection (6),
the entity satisfies the requirement in subsection (1) for an income year,
the entity must give the Commissioner a notice in the *approved
form in respect of that income year before:
(a) if the *starting instalment month in the income year is determined under
paragraph 45‑136(2)(a)—the end of that starting instalment month; or
(b) if the starting
instalment month in the income year is determined under paragraph 45‑136(2)(b)—the
start of that starting instalment month.
Subdivision 45‑E—Annual payers
Table
of sections
When you start and stop being an
annual payer
45‑140 Choosing to pay annual
instalments
45‑145 Meaning of instalment
group
45‑150 Entity
stops being annual payer if involved with GST registration or instalment group
45‑155 Entity stops being annual
payer if notional tax is $8,000 or more, or entity chooses to pay quarterly
45‑160 Head company of a
consolidated group stops being annual payer
When you start and stop being an annual payer
45‑140 Choosing to pay annual
instalments
(1) You may choose to pay
instalments annually instead of quarterly if, at the end of the *starting instalment quarter, you satisfy the following conditions:
(a) you are neither
registered, nor *required to be registered, under Part 2‑5
of the *GST Act; and
(b) you are not a
partner in a partnership that is registered, or required to be registered,
under that Part; and
(c) your most recent *notional tax notified by the Commissioner is less than $8,000; and
(d) in the case of a
company—the company is not a *participant in a *GST joint venture under Division 51 of that Act; and
(e) in the case of a
company—the company is not part of an *instalment group.
Note: You cannot choose to be an
annual payer while you are the head company of a consolidated group to which
Subdivision 45‑Q applies: see section 45‑720.
(1A) You may also choose at a
time (subject to subsection (2)) to pay instalments annually instead of
quarterly if at that time either:
(a) an *annual tax period election of yours has effect and, if you are a
partner in one or more partnerships that are registered under Part 2‑5 of
the *GST Act, an annual tax period election of
each of those partnerships has effect; or
(b) all of the
following subparagraphs apply:
(i) you
are neither registered, nor *required to be
registered, under Part 2‑5 of the GST Act;
(ii) you
are a partner in one or more partnerships that are registered under that Part;
(iii) an
annual tax period election of each of those partnerships has effect;
and at the end of the *starting instalment quarter, you satisfy the following conditions:
(c) you are not a
partner in a partnership that is required to be registered under Part 2‑5
of the GST Act;
(d) your most recent *notional tax notified by the Commissioner is less than $8,000;
(e) in the case of a
company—the company is not a *participant in a *GST joint venture under Division 51 of that Act;
(f) in the case of a
company—the company is not part of an *instalment group.
Note: You cannot choose to be an
annual payer while you are the head company of a consolidated group to which
Subdivision 45‑Q applies: see section 45‑720.
(2) You must make the choice
under subsection (1) or (1A) by notifying the Commissioner, in the *approved form, on or before the day on which that instalment would
otherwise be due.
(3) You become an annual
payer just before the end of the *starting
instalment quarter if:
(a) you satisfy the
conditions in subsection (1) or (1A); and
(b) you choose to pay
instalment annually.
45‑145 Meaning of instalment
group
(1) An
instalment group consists of:
(a) a
company:
(i) that
has *majority control of at least one other
company; but
(ii) of
which no other company has *majority control; and
(b) any other company
of which the first‑mentioned company has *majority
control.
(2) A company has majority
control of another company if, and only if:
(a) the first company
is in a position to cast, or control the casting of, more than 50% of the
maximum number of votes that might be cast at a general meeting of the other
company; or
(b) the first company
has the power to appoint or remove the majority of the directors of the other
company; or
(c) the other company
is, or a majority of its directors are, accustomed or under an obligation,
whether formal or informal, to act according to the directions, instructions or
wishes of the first company.
45‑150 Entity stops being annual
payer if involved with GST registration or instalment group
(1) You stop being an *annual payer if, during an *instalment quarter
that is in an income year that starts after the commencement of this section:
(a) you become *required to be registered under Part 2‑5 of the *GST Act; or
(b) you become a
partner in a partnership that is required to be registered under that Part; or
(c) a partnership in
which you are a partner becomes required to be registered under that Part; or
(d) in the case of a
company—the company becomes a *participant in a *GST joint venture under Division 51 of that Act; or
(e) in the case of a
company—the company becomes part of an *instalment
group; or
(f) an *annual tax period election of yours, or of a partnership in which
you are a partner, ceases to have effect.
(2) If you stop being an *annual payer under subsection (1):
(a) you must still
pay an annual instalment for the income year mentioned in that subsection; and
(b) you must pay an
instalment for each instalment quarter in the next income year for which
subsection 45‑50(1) or (2) requires you to do so.
(3) You may again become an *annual payer if:
(a) after you stop
being an *annual payer under subsection (1),
you satisfy the conditions in subsection 45‑140(1) or (1A); and
(b) you again choose
under section 45‑140 to pay instalments annually.
45‑155 Entity stops being annual
payer if notional tax is $8,000 or more, or entity chooses to pay quarterly
(1) You stop being an *annual payer at the start of the first *instalment
quarter in an income year (the current year) if:
(a) after the end of
the first instalment quarter in the previous income year and before the end of
the first instalment quarter in the current year, the Commissioner notifies you
of your *notional tax, and it is $8,000 or more; or
(b) you choose to pay
instalments quarterly instead of annually.
(1A) You must make the choice
by notifying the Commissioner, in the *approved form, on
or before the day on which the instalment for the first *instalment quarter for the current year would otherwise be due
(disregarding subsection 45‑112(3)).
(2) You must pay an
instalment for the first *instalment quarter of
the next income year, and later instalment quarters, in accordance with
Subdivision 45‑B.
(3) You must still pay an
annual instalment for the previous income year referred to in subsection (1).
(4) You may again become an *annual payer at the end of the first *instalment
quarter in a later income year if:
(a) at that time, you
satisfy the conditions in subsection 45‑140(1) or in paragraphs 45‑140(1A)(c),
(d), (e) and (f); and
(b) you again choose
under section 45‑140 to pay annually.
45‑160 Head company of a
consolidated group stops being annual payer
(1) You stop being an *annual payer at the start of an *instalment
quarter if Subdivision 45‑Q starts applying to you as the *head company of a *consolidated group
during that quarter.
(2) You must pay an
instalment for that *instalment quarter and later
instalment quarters in accordance with Subdivision 45‑B.
(3) You may again become an *annual payer if:
(a) after you stop
being an *annual payer under subsection (1),
you satisfy the conditions in subsection 45‑140(1) or (1A); and
(b) you again choose
under section 45‑140 to pay instalments annually.
Note: You cannot choose to be an
annual payer while you are the head company of a consolidated group to which
Subdivision 45‑Q applies: see section 45‑720.
Subdivision 45‑F—Varying the instalment rate for quarterly or monthly payers
who pay on the basis of instalment income
Table of sections
45‑200 Application
45‑205 Choosing a varied
instalment rate
45‑210 Notifying Commissioner of
varied instalment rate
45‑215 Credit on using varied
rate in certain cases
45‑200 Application
(1) This Subdivision applies
if you are a *quarterly payer who pays on the basis of
instalment income at the end of an *instalment
quarter.
(2) If you are a *monthly payer, this Subdivision has effect in relation to you in
respect of an *instalment month in the same way in which
it has effect in relation to a *quarterly payer in
respect of an *instalment quarter.
45‑205 Choosing a varied instalment
rate
(1) You may choose an
instalment rate for working out under section 45‑110 the amount of your
instalment for an *instalment quarter in an income year.
(2) If you do so, you must
use that instalment rate to work out the amount of that instalment. (You cannot
later choose another instalment rate for working out that amount.)
Note 1: If choosing a rate leads you
to pay an instalment that is too low, you may be liable to general interest
charge under section 45‑230.
Note 2: If you choose a rate under
this section, you must use it even if the Commissioner later gives you a new
instalment rate.
(3) You must also use that
instalment rate to work out the amount of the instalment that you are liable to
pay for each later *instalment quarter in that income
year, unless you choose another instalment rate under subsection (1) for
working out that amount.
Note 1: If you choose a rate under
this section, you must use it even if the Commissioner later gives you a new
instalment rate.
Note 2: If a rate you have chosen for
an instalment quarter is not appropriate for a later instalment quarter in the
same income year, you should choose another rate under subsection (1) for
the later quarter. If the earlier rate is too low, you may be liable to general
interest charge under section 45‑230.
(4) However, for working out
under section 45‑110 the amount of your instalment for an *instalment quarter in a later income year, you must use the most
recent instalment rate given to you by the Commissioner before the end of that
quarter, unless you again choose another instalment rate under subsection (1).
(5) Subsection (6)
applies if you are a monthly payer.
(6) Treat the references in subsections (1)
and (4) to section 45‑110 as instead being references to section 45‑114.
45‑210 Notifying Commissioner of
varied instalment rate
If you work out the
amount of an instalment using an instalment rate you have chosen under section 45‑205,
you must specify that rate in the notice about your instalment income that you
must give the Commissioner under section 45‑20.
45‑215 Credit on using varied rate
in certain cases
(1) You
are entitled to claim a credit if:
(a) the amount of
your instalment for an *instalment quarter (the current
quarter) in an income year is to be worked out using an instalment rate
you chose under section 45‑205; and
(b) that rate is
lower than the instalment rate you used to work out the amount of your
instalment for the previous instalment quarter (if any) in the same income
year; and
(c) the amount worked
out using the method statement is greater than nil.
Method statement
Step 1. Add up
the instalments you are liable to pay for the earlier *instalment
quarters in the income year (even if you have not yet paid all of them).
Step 2. Subtract
from the step 1 amount each earlier credit that you have claimed under this
section or section 45‑420 in respect of the income year.
Step 3. Multiply the total of your *instalment
income for those earlier *instalment quarters by
the instalment rate to be used for the current quarter.
Step 4. Subtract
the step 3 amount from the step 2 amount.
Step 5. If the
result is a positive amount, it is the amount of the credit you can claim.
(2) A claim for a credit
must be made in the *approved form on or before the
day on which the instalment for the current quarter is due.
Note: How the credit is applied is
set out in Division 3 of Part IIB.
(3) The credit entitlement
does not affect your liability to pay an instalment.
Subdivision 45‑G—General interest charge payable in certain cases if
instalments are too low
Table of sections
45‑225 Effect of Subdivision in
relation to monthly payers
45‑230 Liability to GIC on
shortfall in quarterly instalment worked out on the basis of varied rate
45‑232 Liability to GIC on
shortfall in quarterly instalment worked out on the basis of estimated
benchmark tax
45‑233 Reduction in GIC
liability under section 45‑232 if shortfall is made up in later instalment
45‑235 Liability to GIC on
shortfall in annual instalment
45‑240 Commissioner may remit
general interest charge
45‑225 Effect of Subdivision in
relation to monthly payers
If you are a *monthly payer, this Subdivision has effect in relation to you in
respect of an *instalment month in the same way in which
it has effect in relation to a *quarterly payer in
respect of an *instalment quarter.
45‑230
Liability to GIC on shortfall in quarterly instalment worked out on the basis
of varied rate
(1) You are liable to pay
the *general interest charge under this section
if:
(a) you use an instalment rate (the varied
rate) under section 45‑205 to work out the amount of your
instalment for an *instalment quarter (the variation
quarter) in an income year; and
(b) the varied rate
is less than 85% of your *benchmark instalment
rate for that income year that the Commissioner works out under Subdivision 45‑K.
(2) You are liable to pay
the *general interest charge on the amount
worked out as follows:

where:
rate discrepancy means the difference between the varied rate and the lesser of:
(a) the most recent
instalment rate given to you by the Commissioner before the end of the
variation quarter; and
(b) your *benchmark instalment rate for that income year.
credit
adjustment means:
(a) if, as a result
of using the varied rate for the variation quarter, you claimed a credit under
section 45‑215—the amount worked out as follows:

or the amount
of the credit, whichever is less; and
(b) otherwise—nil.
(2A) If the variation quarter
is in a *consolidation transitional year for you as
a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated
group, a reference in subsection (2) to:
(a) your *instalment income for the variation quarter; or
(b) your instalment
income for the earlier instalment quarters in the income year;
is taken to be a reference to so much of
that income as is reasonably attributable to the period in that quarter or
those quarters (as appropriate) during which you are not a subsidiary member of
the group.
(3) You
are liable to pay the charge for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the instalment for the variation quarter was due
to be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the day on which your assessed tax for the income year is due to be
paid.
(4) The Commissioner must
give you written notice of the *general interest charge
to which you are liable under subsection (2). You must pay the charge
within 14 days after the notice is given to you.
(5) If any of the *general interest charge to which you are liable under subsection (2)
remains unpaid at the end of the 14 days referred to in subsection (4),
you are also liable to pay the *general interest charge
on the unpaid amount for each day in the period that:
(a) starts at the end
of those 14 days; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following remains
unpaid:
(i) the
unpaid amount;
(ii) general
interest charge on the unpaid amount.
45‑232 Liability to GIC on shortfall
in quarterly instalment worked out on the basis of estimated benchmark tax
(1) You are liable to pay
the *general interest charge under this section
if:
(a) the amount of
your instalment for an *instalment quarter (the variation
quarter) in an income year is worked out under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b)
or (c) on the basis of your estimate of your *benchmark
tax for that income year; and
(b) the estimate used
is less than 85% of your *benchmark tax for the
income year (which the Commissioner works out under section 45‑365).
Amount on which the charge is payable
(2) You are liable to pay
the *general interest charge on the amount worked
out as follows (if it is a positive amount):

where:
acceptable amount, of your instalment for an *instalment
quarter in an income year, has the meaning given by subsections (3), (3A),
(3B), (3C) and (3D).
actual amount means:
(a) the amount of
your instalment, as worked out on the basis of the estimate; or
(b) if, as a result
of using the estimate, you claimed a credit under section 45‑420 for the
variation quarter—the amount of the credit, expressed as a negative amount.
(3) If you are a *quarterly payer who pays 4 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax, the acceptable amount of your instalment for that
instalment quarter is:
(a) if the amount of
the instalment is worked out under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c)—the
amount worked out using the table in this subsection (which can be a
negative amount); or
(b) otherwise—the
amount notified to you by the Commissioner under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as
the amount of your instalment for that *instalment
quarter.
|
Acceptable
amount of an instalment
|
|
Item
|
If the
*instalment quarter is:
|
The
acceptable amount of your instalment for that instalment quarter is:
|
|
1
|
the first in that income year for which
you are liable to pay an instalment
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner notified
to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of your instalment for
that *instalment quarter; and
(b) 25% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
|
2
|
the second in that income year for which
you are liable to pay an instalment
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner would
have notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of
your instalment for that *instalment quarter if
the amounts of all your instalments for that income year had been required to
be worked out under Subdivision 45‑L; and
(b) the amount worked out by subtracting:
• the *acceptable amount of your instalment for the earlier instalment
quarter in that income year;
from:
• 50% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
|
3
|
the third in that income year for which
you are liable to pay an instalment
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner would
have notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of
your instalment for that *instalment quarter if
the amounts of all your instalments for that income year had been required to
be worked out under Subdivision 45‑L; and
(b) the amount worked out by subtracting:
• the total of the *acceptable amounts of your instalments for the earlier instalment
quarters in that income year;
from:
• 75% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
|
4
|
the fourth in that income year for which you
are liable to pay an instalment
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner would
have notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of
your instalment for that *instalment quarter if
the amounts of all your instalments for that income year had been required to
be worked out under Subdivision 45‑L; and
(b) the amount worked out by subtracting:
• the total of the *acceptable amounts of your instalments for the earlier instalment
quarters in that income year;
from:
• 100% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
(3A) Subject
to subsections (3B), (3C) and (3D), if you are a *quarterly
payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional
tax, the acceptable amount of your instalment for an *instalment quarter in an income year is:
(a) if the amount of
the instalment is worked out under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c)—the
amount worked out using the table in this subsection (which can be a
negative amount); or
(b) otherwise—the
amount notified to you by the Commissioner under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as
the amount of your instalment for that instalment quarter.
|
Acceptable
amount of an instalment
|
|
Item
|
If the
*instalment quarter is:
|
The
acceptable amount of your instalment for that instalment quarter is:
|
|
1
|
the third *instalment quarter in that income year
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner
notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of your
instalment for that *instalment quarter;
and
(b) 75% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
|
2
|
the fourth *instalment quarter in that income year
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner would
have notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of
your instalment for that *instalment quarter if
the amounts of all your instalments for that income year had been required to
be worked out under Subdivision 45‑L; and
(b) the amount worked out by subtracting:
• the *acceptable amount of your instalment for the earlier instalment
quarter in that income year;
from:
• 100% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
(3B) If:
(a) you are a *quarterly payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax; and
(b) the Commissioner
first gives you an instalment rate during the second *instalment
quarter in an income year;
the acceptable amount of
your instalment for an instalment quarter in that income year is:
(c) if the amount of
the instalment is worked out under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c)—the
amount worked out using the table in this subsection (which can be a
negative amount); or
(d) otherwise—the
amount notified to you by the Commissioner under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as
the amount of your instalment for that instalment quarter.
|
Acceptable amount of an instalment
|
|
Item
|
If the *instalment quarter is:
|
The acceptable amount of your
instalment for that instalment quarter is:
|
|
1
|
the third *instalment quarter in that income year
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner
notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of your
instalment for that *instalment quarter;
and
(b) 50% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
|
2
|
the fourth *instalment quarter in that income year
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner would
have notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of
your instalment for that *instalment quarter if
the amounts of all your instalments for that income year had been required to
be worked out under Subdivision 45‑L; and
(b) the amount worked out by subtracting:
• the *acceptable amount of your instalment for the earlier instalment
quarter in that income year;
from:
• 75% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
(3C) If:
(a) you are a *quarterly payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax; and
(b) the Commissioner
first gives you an instalment rate during the third *instalment
quarter in an income year;
the acceptable amount of
your instalment for an instalment quarter in that income year is:
(c) if the amount of
the instalment is worked out under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c)—the
amount worked out using the table in this subsection (which can be a
negative amount); or
(d) otherwise—the
amount notified to you by the Commissioner under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as
the amount of your instalment for that instalment quarter.
|
Acceptable
amount of an instalment
|
|
Item
|
If the
*instalment quarter is:
|
The
acceptable amount of your instalment for that instalment quarter is:
|
|
1
|
the third *instalment quarter in that income year
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner
notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of your
instalment for that *instalment quarter;
and
(b) 25% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works out
under section 45‑365).
|
|
2
|
the fourth *instalment quarter in that income year
|
the lower of:
(a) the amount that the Commissioner would
have notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the amount of
your instalment for that *instalment quarter if
the amounts of all your instalments for that income year had been required to
be worked out under Subdivision 45‑L; and
(b) the amount worked out by subtracting:
• the *acceptable amount of your instalment for the earlier instalment
quarter in that income year;
from:
• 50% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works
out under section 45‑365).
|
(3D) If:
(a) you are a *quarterly payer who pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax; and
(b) the Commissioner
first gives you an instalment rate during the fourth *instalment
quarter in an income year;
the acceptable amount of
your instalment for an instalment quarter in that income year is the lower of
the following amounts:
(c) the amount that
the Commissioner notified to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) as the
amount of your instalment for that instalment quarter;
(d) 25% of your *benchmark tax for the income year (which the Commissioner works out
under section 45‑365).
Period for which the charge is payable
(4) You are liable to pay
the charge for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the instalment for the variation quarter was due
to be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the day on which your assessed tax for the income year is due to be
paid.
Commissioner to notify you
(5) The Commissioner must
give you written notice of the *general interest charge
to which you are liable under subsection (2). You must pay the charge
within 14 days after the notice is given to you.
Further charge if charge under subsection (2)
remains unpaid
(6) If any of the *general interest charge to which you are liable under subsection (2)
remains unpaid at the end of the 14 days referred to in subsection (5),
you are also liable to pay the *general interest charge
on the unpaid amount for each day in the period that:
(a) starts at the end
of those 14 days; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following
remains unpaid:
(i) the
unpaid amount;
(ii) general
interest charge on the unpaid amount.
Modifications for subsidiary member of
consolidated group
(7) Subsections (1) to
(6) apply to you with the modifications set out in subsections (8) to (10)
if the variation quarter is in a *consolidation
transitional year for you as a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group.
(8) For the purposes of subsection (7),
a reference in subsection (1), (3), (3A), (3B), (3C) and (3D) to your *benchmark tax for that year is taken to be a reference to the amount
worked out as follows:

(9) For the purposes of subsection (7),
a reference in this section to:
(a) the acceptable
amount of your instalment for an *instalment quarter in
an income year; or
(b) the acceptable
amount of your instalment for the earlier instalment quarter in an
income year; or
(c) the acceptable
amounts of your instalments for the earlier instalment quarters in an income
year;
is taken to be a reference to so much of
the acceptable amount of instalment or acceptable amounts of instalments,
worked out under subsection (3), (3A), (3B), (3C) or (3D) for that quarter
or those quarters (as appropriate), as is reasonably attributable to the period
in that quarter or those quarters (as appropriate) during which you are not a *subsidiary member of the group.
(10) For the purposes of subsection (7),
a reference to the actual amount in subsection (2) is taken to be a
reference to so much of the actual amount worked out under that subsection as
is reasonably attributable to the period in the variation quarter during which
you are not a *subsidiary member of the group.
45‑233 Reduction in GIC liability
under section 45‑232 if shortfall is made up in later instalment
(1) This section reduces the
amount (the shortfall) on which you are liable to pay the *general interest charge under subsection 45‑232(2) if, for a
later *instalment quarter (the later
quarter) that is in the same income year as the variation
quarter, the amount worked out as follows is a negative amount:

That amount (expressed as a positive
number) is called the top up.
(2) For
the purposes of the formula in subsection (1):
actual
amount of your instalment for the later quarter
means:
(a) the amount of
your instalment for the later quarter, as worked out under section 45‑112;
or
(b) if you claimed a
credit under section 45‑420 for the later quarter—the amount of the
credit, expressed as a negative amount.
Amount of the reduction
(3) The shortfall is reduced
by applying so much of the top up as does not exceed the shortfall.
(4) However, if some of the
top up has already been applied (under any other application or applications of
this section) to reduce the amount on which you are liable to pay the *general interest charge under subsection 45‑232(2) as it applies
to a different *instalment quarter, the shortfall is
reduced by applying so much of the top up as has not already been applied, and
does not exceed the shortfall.
Period for which reduction has effect
(5) The reduction has effect
for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the instalment for the later quarter was due to
be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the day on which your assessed tax for the income year is due to be
paid.
45‑235 Liability to GIC on shortfall
in annual instalment
(1) You
are liable to pay the *general interest charge
under this section if:
(a) you choose to
estimate the amount of your instalment (the estimated instalment amount)
for an income year under paragraph 45‑115(1)(c) or former paragraph 45‑175(1)(b);
and
(b) that amount is
less than 85% of your *benchmark tax for the
income year (which the Commissioner works out under section 45‑365).
(2) If you estimated the
amount of the instalment under former paragraph 45‑175(1)(b), you are
liable to pay the *general interest charge on the difference
between the estimated instalment amount and the lower of the following amounts:
(a) your most recent *notional tax notified by the Commissioner at least 30 days before
the day on which the instalment was due;
(b) your *benchmark tax for the income year.
(3) If you estimated the
amount of the instalment under paragraph 45‑115(1)(c), you are liable to
pay the *general interest charge on the difference
between the estimated instalment amount and the lowest of the following
amounts:
(a) the amount of
your instalment worked out using the most recent instalment rate given to you
by the Commissioner before the end of the income year;
(b) your most recent *notional tax notified by the Commissioner before the end of the
income year under subsection 45‑320(5);
(c) your *benchmark tax for the income year.
(4) You are liable to pay
the charge for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the instalment for the income year was due to be
paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the day on which your assessed tax for the income year is due to be
paid.
(5) The Commissioner must
give you written notice of the *general interest charge
to which you are liable under subsection (2) or (3). You must pay the
charge within 14 days after the notice is given to you.
(6) If any of the *general interest charge to which you are liable under subsection (2)
or (3) remains unpaid at the end of the 14 days referred to in subsection (5),
you are also liable to pay the *general interest charge
on the unpaid amount for each day in the period that:
(a) starts at the end
of those 14 days; and
(b) finishes
at the end of the last day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following
remains unpaid:
(i) the
unpaid amount;
(ii) general
interest charge on the unpaid amount.
45‑240 Commissioner may remit
general interest charge
The Commissioner may,
if he or she is satisfied that because special circumstances exist it would be
fair and reasonable to do so, remit the whole or any part of any *general interest charge payable under subsection 45‑230(2) or
45‑232(2) or subsection 45‑235(2) or (3).
Subdivision 45‑H—Partnership income
45‑260 Instalment income for a
period in which you are in a partnership
(1) Your instalment
income for a period (the current period) includes an
amount for each partnership in which you are a partner at any time during the
current period. The amount is worked out using the formula:

(2) For the purposes of the
formula in subsection (1):
your assessable income from the
partnership for the last income year means so
much of your individual interest in the partnership’s net income for an income
year as was included by section 92 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1936 in your assessable income for the most recent income year:
(a) that ended before
the start of the current period; and
(b) for which you
have an assessment, or for which the Commissioner has notified you that you do
not have a taxable income.
(3) However, if
for any reason the component defined in subsection (2) does not exist or
is a nil amount, or the partnership had no *instalment
income for that income year, your instalment income for the
current period includes, for that partnership, an amount that is fair and
reasonable having regard to:
(a) the extent of
your interest in the partnership during the current period; and
(b) the partnership’s
*instalment income for the current period; and
(c) any other
relevant circumstances.
Exception for corporate limited
partnerships
(4) Your instalment
income for the current period does not include an amount for a
partnership that is a *corporate limited
partnership for the income year that is or includes that period.
Note: Your instalment income will
still include a distribution by the partnership that is ordinary income. See
section 45‑120.
Subdivision 45‑I—Trust income included in instalment income of beneficiary
Table of sections
45‑280 Instalment income for a
period in which you are a beneficiary of a trust
45‑285 Instalment income
includes distributions by certain resident unit trusts
45‑286 Instalment income
includes distributions by certain managed investment trusts
45‑287 When trusts are
disqualified due to concentrated ownership
45‑288 Resident investment
trusts for beneficiaries who are absolutely entitled
45‑290 Exceptions to exclusion
of trust capital gains from beneficiary’s instalment income
45‑280 Instalment income for a
period in which you are a beneficiary of a trust
(1) Your instalment
income for a period (the current period) includes an
amount for each trust of which you are a beneficiary at any time during the
current period. The amount is worked out using the formula:

(2) For
the purposes of the formula in subsection (1):
your assessable income from the
trust for the last income year means so much of
a share of the trust’s net income for an income year as:
(a) Division 6
of Part III of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 included in your
assessable income for the most recent income year:
(i) that
ended before the start of the current period; and
(ii) for
which you have an assessment, or for which the Commissioner has notified you
that you do not have a taxable income; and
(b) is not attributable
to a *capital gain made by the trust.
Note: For exceptions to paragraph (b),
see section 45‑290.
(3) However, if
for any reason the component defined in subsection (2) does not exist or
is a nil amount, or the trust had no *instalment income
for that income year, your instalment income for the current
period includes, for that trust, an amount that is fair and reasonable having
regard to:
(a) the extent of
your interest in the trust, and your interest in the income of the trust,
during the current period; and
(b) the trust’s *instalment income for the current period; and
(c) any other
relevant circumstances.
Exception for corporate unit trusts
and public trading trusts
(4) Your instalment
income for the current period does not include an amount for a
trust if the trustee is liable to be assessed, and to pay tax, under section 102K
or 102S of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 for the income year that
is or includes that period.
Note: Your instalment income will
still include a distribution by the trust that is ordinary income. See section 45‑120.
Exception for certain resident unit
trusts
(5) Your instalment
income for the current period does not include an amount for a
trust under subsection (1) if the conditions in either subsection 45‑285(1)
or (2) are satisfied for you for that trust for that period.
Note: Your instalment income will
instead include a distribution by the trust: see section 45‑285.
Exception for trusts whose beneficiary
is absolutely entitled
(6) Your instalment
income for the current period does not include an amount for a
trust under subsection (1) if, throughout the current period:
(a) the trustee of
the trust did not have any active duties to perform in the management of the
trust (other than the duty to deal with the trust income and capital in
accordance with any requests made or directions given by the beneficiary or
beneficiaries); and
(b) if there was only
one beneficiary, the beneficiary:
(i) was
absolutely entitled to the trust assets; and
(ii) had a
vested and indefeasible interest in any trust income arising from time to time;
and
(c) if there was more
than one beneficiary, each beneficiary:
(i) was
absolutely entitled to that beneficiary’s interest in the trust assets; and
(ii) had a
vested and indefeasible interest in a proportion of any trust income arising
from time to time, being a proportion that corresponded to the beneficiary’s
proportional interest in the trust capital.
Instead, your instalment income
for the current period includes the following amount:

45‑285 Instalment income includes
distributions by certain resident unit trusts
(1) Your
instalment income for a period includes trust income or trust
capital that a unit trust distributes to you, or applies for your benefit,
during that period if:
(a) the unit trust is
a resident unit trust (within the meaning of section 102Q of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936) for the income year of the trust that is or
includes that period; and
(b) throughout that
period:
(i) any
of the units in the trust were listed for quotation in the official list of a
stock exchange in Australia or elsewhere; or
(ii) any
of the units in the trust were offered to the public; or
(iii) the
units in the trust were held by at least 50 persons; and
(c) section 45‑287
in this Schedule did not apply to the trust at any time during that period; and
(d) throughout that
period, the trust’s activities consisted only of activities listed in the
definition of eligible investment business in section 102M
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.
(It does not matter whether the trust
income or trust capital is included in your assessable income for the income
year that is or includes that period.)
(2) Your instalment
income for a period also includes trust income or trust capital that a
unit trust distributes to you, or applies for your benefit, during that period
if:
(a) the income or
capital is not included in your instalment income under subsection (1);
and
(b) the unit trust is
a resident unit trust (within the meaning of section 102Q of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936) for the income year of the trust that is or
includes that period; and
(c) throughout that
period, the trust’s activities consisted only of activities listed in the
definition of eligible investment business in section 102M
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936; and
(d) throughout
that period, either:
(i) you
are yourself the trustee of a unit trust that satisfies each of paragraphs (1)(a)
to (d) of this section; or
(ii) you
are yourself the trustee of one or more trusts covered by section 45‑288;
or
(iii) you
are exempt from tax; or
(iv) you
are a *complying superannuation entity or a
statutory fund of a *life insurance company.
(It does not matter whether the trust
income or trust capital is included in your assessable income for the income
year that is or includes that period.)
Extension—nominee and bare trust
situations
(3) In determining, for the
purposes of subparagraph (1)(b)(iii), how many persons hold units in a
unit trust, if:
(a) another trust
(the holding trust) is a unit holder in the unit trust; and
(b) the holding trust
is a trust of the kind covered by subsection 45‑280(6); and
(c) the beneficiary’s
or beneficiaries’ absolute entitlement exists at all times while the holding
trust is in existence;
the beneficiary or beneficiaries count as
persons who hold units in the unit trust, and the trustee of the holding trust
does not.
45‑286 Instalment income includes
distributions by certain managed investment trusts
Your instalment
income for a period includes trust income or trust capital that a trust
distributes to you, or applies for your benefit, during that period if:
(a) the income or
capital is not included in your instalment income under section 45‑280 or
45‑285; and
(b) the trust
satisfies the condition in paragraph 12‑400(1)(a) in relation to the
income year that is or includes that period; and
(c) the trust is:
(i) a *managed investment trust for that income year; or
(ii) treated
as a managed investment trust for that income year for the purposes of Division 275
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; and
(d) the trust meets
the requirement in section 275‑110 of that Act throughout the income year.
(It does not matter whether the trust
income or trust capital is included in your assessable income for the income
year that is or includes that period.)
45‑287 When trusts are disqualified
due to concentrated ownership
Concentrated ownership
(1) This section applies to
a trust if an individual holds, or up to 20 individuals hold between them
directly or indirectly and for their own benefit, interests in the trust:
(a) carrying *fixed entitlements to:
(i) at
least 75% of the trust’s income; or
(ii) at
least 75% of the trust’s capital; or
(b) if beneficiaries
of the trust have a right to vote in respect of activities of the
trust—carrying at least 75% of those voting rights.
Single individual
(2) Subsection (1)
operates as if all of these were a single individual:
(a) an individual,
whether or not the individual holds interests in the trust; and
(b) the individual’s *associates; and
(c) for any interests
in respect of which other individuals are nominees of the individual or of the
individual’s associates—those other individuals.
Concentrated ownership—potential due
to possible variation of rights etc.
(3) This section also
applies to a trust if, because of:
(a) any provision in
the trust’s constituent document, or in any contract, agreement or instrument:
(i) authorising
the variation or abrogation of rights attaching to any of the interests in the
trust; or
(ii) relating
to the conversion, cancellation, extinguishment or redemption of any of those
interests; or
(b) any contract, *arrangement, option or instrument under which a person has power to
acquire any of those interests; or
(c) any power,
authority or discretion in a person in relation to the rights attaching to any
of those interests;
it is reasonable to conclude that the
rights attaching to any of the interests are capable of being varied or
abrogated in such a way (even if they are not in fact varied or abrogated in
that way) that, directly or indirectly, the trust would be disqualified under subsection (1).
Tracing
(4) In applying this
section:
(a) if a *complying superannuation fund, *approved
deposit fund or *superannuation fund for foreign residents
has more than 50 members and has, directly or indirectly, a *fixed entitlement to any of the trust’s income or capital—that
entitlement is taken to be held by more than 20 individuals for their own
benefit; and
(b) if a complying
superannuation fund, approved deposit fund or superannuation fund for foreign
residents has 50 or fewer members and has, directly or indirectly, a fixed
entitlement to any of the trust’s income or capital—each of the members is
taken to have a share of that entitlement, in equal proportions, for his or her
own benefit.
45‑288 Resident investment trusts
for beneficiaries who are absolutely entitled
This
section covers a trust if:
(a) the
trust is a resident unit trust within the meaning of section 102Q of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936; and
(b) the
trust is of the kind covered by subsection 45‑280(6) in this Schedule; and
(c) the requests or
directions that beneficiaries may give the trustee are limited to requests or
directions as to which of the activities listed in the definition of eligible
investment business in section 102M of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1936 the trustee should engage in; and
(d) all of the
trust’s beneficiaries became beneficiaries as a result of a public offer to
invest in the trust; and
(e) either:
(i) the
trust has 50 or more beneficiaries; or
(ii) if
the trustee of the trust is also the trustee of one or more other trusts that
satisfy paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d) of this section—all those trusts
together have a total of 50 or more beneficiaries.
45‑290 Exceptions to exclusion of
trust capital gains from beneficiary’s instalment income
(1) This section sets out
cases where paragraph (b) of the definition of your assessable
income from the trust for the last income year in subsection 45‑280(2)
does not apply.
(2) It
does not apply in the case of:
(a) a *complying approved deposit fund or a *non‑complying
approved deposit fund for the income year that is or includes the current
period; or
(b) a *complying superannuation fund or a *non‑complying
superannuation fund for that year; or
(c) a *pooled superannuation trust for that year; or
(d) an *FHSA trust for that year.
(3) It does not apply in the
case of a *life insurance company to the extent that
the share of the trust’s net income is included in the *complying
superannuation/FHSA class of its taxable income for the income year that is or
includes the current period.
Subdivision 45‑J—How Commissioner works out your instalment rate and notional
tax
Table
of sections
45‑320 Working out instalment
rate
45‑325 Working out your notional
tax
45‑330 Working out your adjusted
taxable income
45‑335 Working out your adjusted
withholding income
45‑340 Adjusted tax on
adjusted taxable income or on adjusted withholding income
45‑320 Working out instalment rate
(1) Except as provided by
section 45‑775, an instalment rate that the Commissioner gives you must be
the percentage worked out to 2 decimal places (rounding up if the third decimal
place is 5 or more) using the formula:

However, the instalment rate must be a
nil rate if either component of the formula is nil.
(2) For the purposes of the
formula in subsection (1):
base assessment instalment income means so much of your assessable income, as worked out for the
purposes of the *base assessment, as the Commissioner
determines is *instalment income for the *base year.
(3) The base
assessment is the latest assessment for your most recent income year
for which an assessment has been made. However, if the Commissioner is
satisfied that there is a later income year for which you do not have a taxable
income, the base assessment is the latest return or other
information from which an assessment for that income year would have been made.
(4) The base year
is the income year to which the *base assessment relates.
(5) When the Commissioner
gives you the instalment rate, he or she must also notify you of the amount of
your *notional tax, as worked out for the
purposes of working out the instalment rate.
(6) The Commissioner may
incorporate notice of the instalment rate and the amount of your *notional tax in notice of your assessment.
45‑325 Working out your notional
tax
Notional tax if you have no
withholding income
(1) Your notional tax
is your *adjusted tax (worked out under section 45‑340)
on your *adjusted taxable income (worked out under
section 45‑330) for the *base year.
Notional tax if you have no‑TFN
contributions income
(1A) In working out the notional
tax of a *complying superannuation fund, *non‑complying superannuation fund or *RSA
provider for the *base year, assume that the entity had no *no‑TFN contributions income for the base year and that the entity
was not entitled to a *tax offset for the base
year under Subdivision 295‑J of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Notional tax if you have withholding
income
(2) However, your notional
tax (as worked out under subsection (1)) is reduced if your
assessable income for the *base assessment includes
amounts in respect of *withholding payments
(except *non‑quotation withholding payments).
(3) It is reduced (but not
below nil) by your *adjusted tax (worked out under
section 45‑340) on your *adjusted withholding
income (worked out under section 45‑335) for the *base
year.
Commissioner may take into account
effect of the law, as applying to income years after base year
(4) For the purposes of
working out your *notional tax, the Commissioner may work
out an amount as if provisions of an Act or regulations, as they may reasonably
be expected to apply for the purposes of your assessment for a later income
year, had applied for the purposes of the *base
assessment.
Commissioner may take into account
proposed changes to the law so as to reduce instalment rate
(5) For the purposes of
working out your *notional tax, the Commissioner may work
out an amount as if provisions of an Act or regulations that, in the
Commissioner’s opinion, are likely to be enacted or made had applied for the
purposes of the *base assessment. But the Commissioner may
do so only if, as a result, the instalment rate given to you is reduced.
(6) If the *base year is the income year immediately preceding the income year
in which 1 July 2000 occurred, subsections (4) and (5) apply for the
purpose of working out the *base assessment
instalment income of a *life insurance company
in the same way as they apply for the purpose of working out such a company’s *notional tax.
45‑330 Working out your adjusted
taxable income
(1) Your adjusted
taxable income for the *base year is your total
assessable income for the *base assessment, reduced
by:
(a) any *net capital gain included in that assessable income; and
(b) your deductions
for the base year (except *tax losses), as used in
making that assessment; and
(c) the amount of any
tax loss, to the extent that it is *unutilised at the
end of the base year.
Exception: superannuation entities and
net capital gains
(2) Paragraph (1)(a)
does not apply in the case of:
(a) a *complying approved deposit fund or a *non‑complying
approved deposit fund for the *base year; or
(b) a *complying superannuation fund or a *non‑complying
superannuation fund for that year; or
(c) a *pooled superannuation trust for that year; or
(d) an *FHSA trust for that year.
Special rule for some entities
(2A) If
an entity:
(a) has *tax losses transferred to it under Subdivision 707‑A of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997; or
(b) is a *corporate tax entity at any time during the *base
year;
the adjusted taxable income
of the entity for the base year is worked out under subsection (1) as if paragraph (1)(c)
were replaced by the following provision:
(c) the lesser of the
following amounts:
(i) the
amount of any tax loss, to the extent that it is *unutilised
at the end of the base year;
(ii) the
amount of the deductions for tax losses used in making your *base assessment.
Amounts assessable under Subdivision 250‑E
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
(2AA) To avoid doubt, paragraph (1)(a)
does not apply to a *net capital gain that is included
in your assessable income under Subdivision 250‑E of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997.
Special rule for life insurance
companies
(3) The adjusted
taxable income of a *life insurance company
for the *base year is worked out as follows:
Method statement
Step 1. Recalculate
the taxable income of the *ordinary class for the *base assessment on the basis that it did not include any *net capital gain.
Step 2. Add to
the step 1 result the deductions for *tax losses of the *ordinary class that were used in making the *base
assessment.
Step 3. Reduce
the step 2 result by the lesser of the following amounts:
(a) the
amount of any *tax losses of the *ordinary
class, to the extent that they are *unutilised at the
end of the *base year;
(b) deductions
for tax losses of the ordinary class that were used in making the *base assessment.
Step 4. Add to
the step 3 result the taxable income of the *complying
superannuation/FHSA class for the *base assessment.
Step 5. Add to
the step 4 result the deductions for *tax losses of the *complying superannuation/FHSA class that were used in making the *base assessment.
Step 6. Reduce the step 5 result by the lesser of the following
amounts:
(a) the amount of any *tax
losses of the *complying superannuation/FHSA class, to
the extent that tthey are *unutilised at the end of
the *base year;
(b) deductions
for tax losses of the complying superannuation/FHSA class that were used in
making the *base assessment.
The
result of this step is the adjusted taxable income of the company
for the *base year.
45‑335 Working out your adjusted
withholding income
Your
adjusted withholding income for the *base
year is:
• the
total of the amounts included in your assessable income for the *base assessment in respect of *withholding
payments (except *non‑quotation withholding payments);
reduced by:
• your
deductions for that year, as used in making that assessment, to the extent that
they reasonably relate to those amounts.
45‑340 Adjusted tax on
adjusted taxable income or on adjusted withholding income
Your adjusted tax
on your *adjusted taxable income, or on your *adjusted withholding income, for the *base
year is worked out as follows:
Method statement
Step 1. The income tax payable on your *adjusted
taxable income, or on your *adjusted withholding
income, for the *base year is worked out disregarding any *tax offset under:
(a) Subdivision 61‑G
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the private health insurance tax
offset); or
(b) Subdivision 61‑IA
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the child care tax offset); or
(da) Subdivision 61‑L
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (tax offset for Medicare levy
surcharge (lump sum payments in arrears)); or
(e) section 205‑70
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the tax offset for *franking deficit tax liabilities); or
(f) section 159N
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (the tax offset for certain low
income earners); or
(g) section 290‑230
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the tax offset for superannuation
contributions made for a spouse); or
(h) Subdivision 418‑B
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the exploration development
incentive tax offset).
Step 2. The *Medicare levy payable on your *adjusted
taxable income, or on your *adjusted withholding
income, for the *base year is worked out disregarding
sections 8B, 8C, 8D, 8E, 8F and 8G of the Medicare Levy Act 1986
(which increase Medicare levy in certain cases).
Step 3. The
amount (if any) that you would have been liable to pay for the *base year in respect of an *accumulated HELP
debt if your taxable income for the base year had been your *adjusted taxable income, or your *adjusted
withholding income, for that year is worked out.
Step 3AC. The
amount (if any) that you would have been liable to pay for the *base year in respect of an *accumulated TSL
debt if your taxable income for the base year had been your *adjusted taxable income, or your *adjusted
withholding income, for that year is worked out.
Step 3A. The
amount (if any) that you would have been liable to pay for the *base year by way of an *FS assessment debt
if your taxable income for the base year had been your *adjusted
taxable income, or your *adjusted withholding
income, for that year is worked out.
Step 4. The
results of steps 1, 2, 3, 3AC and 3A are added together. The result is your adjusted
tax on your *adjusted taxable income, or on
your *adjusted withholding income.
Subdivision 45‑K—How Commissioner works out your benchmark instalment rate
and benchmark tax
Table of sections
45‑355 When Commissioner works
out benchmark instalment rate and benchmark tax
45‑360 How Commissioner works
out benchmark instalment rate
45‑365 Working out your benchmark
tax
45‑370 Working out your adjusted
assessed taxable income for the variation year
45‑375 Adjusted assessed tax
on adjusted assessed taxable income
45‑355 When Commissioner works out
benchmark instalment rate and benchmark tax
(1) The Commissioner may
work out your *benchmark instalment rate for an income
year (the variation year) if, under section 45‑205, you choose
an instalment rate to work out the amount of your instalment for an *instalment quarter in that year.
(1A) The Commissioner may work
out your *benchmark tax for an income year (the variation
year) if, under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c), the amount of your
instalment for an *instalment quarter in an income year is
worked out on the basis of your estimate of your *benchmark
tax for that income year.
(2) The Commissioner may
work out your *benchmark tax for an income year (the variation
year) if, under paragraph 45‑115(1)(c), you estimate the amount of
your annual instalment for that year.
45‑360 How Commissioner works out benchmark
instalment rate
(1) Your benchmark
instalment rate for the variation year is the percentage worked out to
2 decimal places (rounding up if the third decimal place is 5 or more) using
the formula:

However, your benchmark instalment
rate is a nil rate if either component of the formula is nil.
(2) For the purposes of the
formula in subsection (1):
variation year instalment income means so much of your assessable income for the variation year as
the Commissioner determines is *instalment income for
that year.
45‑365 Working out your benchmark
tax
Benchmark tax if you had no
withholding income
(1) Your benchmark tax
is your *adjusted assessed tax (worked out under
section 45‑375) on your *adjusted assessed
taxable income (worked out under section 45‑370) for the variation year.
Benchmark tax if you have no‑TFN
contributions income
(1A) In working out the benchmark
tax of a *complying superannuation fund, *non‑complying superannuation fund or *RSA
provider for the variation year, assume that the entity had no *no‑TFN contributions income for the variation year and that the
entity was not entitled to a *tax offset for the
variation year under Subdivision 295‑J of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997.
Benchmark tax if you had withholding
income
(2) However, your benchmark
tax (as worked out under subsection (1)) is reduced if your
assessable income for the variation year includes amounts in respect of *withholding payments.
(3) It
is reduced (but not below nil) by the sum of:
(a) the total amount
of the credits to which you are entitled for the variation year under section 18‑15
(for amounts withheld from withholding payments made to you during the
variation year); and
(b) the total amount
of the credits to which you are entitled for the variation year under section 18‑27
(for amounts paid under Division 13 in respect of amounts included in your
assessable income under section 86‑15 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997).
45‑370 Working out your adjusted
assessed taxable income for the variation year
(1) Your adjusted
assessed taxable income for the variation year is your taxable income
for the year, reduced by any *net capital gain
included in your assessable income for the year.
Exception: superannuation entities and
net capital gains
(2) In working out the adjusted
assessed taxable income, taxable income is not reduced by any *net capital gain in the case of:
(a) a *complying approved deposit fund or a *non‑complying
approved deposit fund for the variation year; or
(b) a *complying superannuation fund or a *non‑complying
superannuation fund for the variation year; or
(c) a *pooled superannuation trust for the variation year; or
(d) an *FHSA trust for the variation year.
Special rule for life insurance
companies
(3) The adjusted
assessed taxable income of a *life insurance
company for the variation year is worked out as follows:
Method statement
Step 1. Recalculate the *ordinary class of
the taxable income for the variation year on the basis that the assessable
income that relates to the class did not include any *net
capital gain.
Step 2. Add to
the step 1 result the *complying
superannuation/FHSA class of the taxable income for the variation year.
45‑375 Adjusted assessed tax
on adjusted assessed taxable income
Your adjusted
assessed tax on your *adjusted assessed
taxable income for the variation year is worked out as
follows:
Method
statement
Step 1. The
income tax payable on your *adjusted assessed
taxable income for the variation year is worked out disregarding any *tax offset under:
(a) Subdivision 61‑G
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the private health insurance tax
offset); or
(b) Subdivision 61‑IA
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the child care tax offset); or
(ca) Subdivision 61‑L
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (tax offset for Medicare levy
surcharge (lump sum payments in arrears)); or
(d) section 205‑70
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the tax offset for *franking deficit tax liabilities); or
(e) section 159N
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (the tax offset for certain low
income earners); or
(f) section 290‑230
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the tax offset for superannuation
contributions made for a spouse); or
(g) Subdivision 418‑B
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the exploration development
incentive tax offset).
Step 2. The *Medicare levy payable on
your *adjusted assessed taxable income for the
variation year is worked out disregarding sections 8B, 8C, 8D, 8E, 8F and
8G of the Medicare Levy Act 1986 (which increase Medicare levy in
certain cases).
Step 3. The amount (if any) that you would have been liable to pay
for the variation year in respect of an *accumulated
HELP debt if your taxable income for that year had been your *adjusted assessed taxable income for that year is worked out.
Step 3AC. The
amount (if any) that you would have been liable to pay for the variation year
in respect of an *accumulated TSL debt if your taxable
income for that year had been your *adjusted assessed
taxable income for that year is worked out.
Step 3A. The amount (if any) that you would have been liable to pay
for the variation year by way of an *FS assessment debt
if your taxable income for that year had been your *adjusted
assessed taxable income for that year is worked out.
Step 4. The
results of steps 1, 2, 3, 3AC and 3A are added together. The result is your adjusted
assessed tax on your *adjusted assessed
taxable income for the variation year.
Subdivision 45‑L—How Commissioner works out amount of quarterly instalment on
basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
Table of sections
45‑400 Working
out amount of instalment—payers of 4 quarterly instalments
45‑402 Working out amount of
instalment—payers of 2 quarterly instalments
45‑405 Working out your GDP‑adjusted
notional tax
45‑400 Working out amount of
instalment—payers of 4 quarterly instalments
Scope
(1) This section applies if
you are a *quarterly payer who pays 4 instalments
annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax at the end of an *instalment quarter in an income year (the current year).
Working out amount of instalment
(2) The amount of your
instalment for that *instalment quarter which the Commissioner
must work out and notify to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) is:
(a) the amount worked
out in accordance with the table if it is positive; or
(b) otherwise—nil.
|
Amount
of quarterly instalment worked out on basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
|
|
Item
|
If the
instalment quarter is:
|
The
amount of the instalment is:
|
|
1
|
the first in that income year for which
you are liable to pay an instalment
|
25% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax
|
|
2
|
the second in that income year for which
you are liable to pay an instalment
|
50% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax, reduced by the amount of your
instalment for the earlier *instalment quarter in
that income year
|
|
3
|
the third in that income year for which
you are liable to pay an instalment
|
75% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax, reduced by the total of your
instalments for earlier *instalment quarters in
that income year
|
|
4
|
the fourth in that income year for which
you are liable to pay an instalment
|
100% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax, reduced by the total of your
instalments for earlier *instalment quarters in
that income year
|
Note: Your instalments for earlier
instalment quarters may have been worked out on a basis other than GDP‑adjusted
notional tax.
Amount reduced in circumstances
specified by regulations
(3) In the circumstances (if
any) specified by the regulations, the amount worked out in accordance with the
table in subsection (2) is reduced by the amount worked out under the
regulations.
(4) Without limiting subsection (3),
the regulations may specify circumstances by:
(a) specifying the
particular *instalment quarter to which the reduction
applies; or
(b) specifying the
kind of payers to whom the reduction applies.
(5) In working out, under subsection (2),
the amount of your instalment for an *instalment quarter
in an income year, assume that there had not been any reductions under subsection (3)
for earlier instalment quarters in that year.
45‑402 Working out amount of
instalment—payers of 2 quarterly instalments
(1) This section applies if
you are a *quarterly payer who pays 2 instalments
annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax at the end of an *instalment quarter in an income year (the current year).
(2) If you are liable to pay
an instalment for that *instalment quarter, the
amount of that instalment which the Commissioner must work out and notify to
you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(a) is:
(a) the amount worked
out in accordance with this section if it is positive; or
(b) otherwise—nil.
Amount of instalment
(3) Subject to subsections (4)
to (6), the amount of that instalment is worked out in accordance with the
following table:
|
Amount
of quarterly instalment
|
|
Item
|
If the
*instalment quarter is:
|
the
amount of the instalment is:
|
|
1
|
the third *instalment quarter in the income year
|
75% of
your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax
|
|
2
|
the fourth *instalment quarter in the income year
|
100% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax, reduced by your instalment for earlier
instalment quarter in that income year
|
You receive instalment rate for the
first time in second quarter
(4) If the Commissioner
gives you an instalment rate for the first time during the second *instalment quarter in that income year, the amount of the instalment
is worked out in accordance with the following table:
|
Amount
of quarterly instalment
|
|
Item
|
If the
*instalment quarter is:
|
the
amount of the instalment is:
|
|
1
|
the third *instalment quarter in the income year
|
50% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax
|
|
2
|
the fourth *instalment quarter in the income year
|
75% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax, reduced by your instalment for the
earlier instalment quarter in that income year
|
You receive instalment rate for the
first time in third quarter
(5) If the Commissioner
first gives you an instalment rate during the third *instalment
quarter in that income year, the amount of the instalment is worked out in
accordance with the following table:
|
Amount
of quarterly instalment
|
|
Item
|
If the *instalment quarter is:
|
the amount of the instalment is:
|
|
1
|
the third *instalment quarter in the income year
|
25% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax
|
|
2
|
the fourth *instalment quarter in the income year
|
50% of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax, reduced by your instalment for the
earlier instalment quarter in that income year
|
You receive instalment rate for the
first time in fourth quarter
(6) If the Commissioner
first gives you an instalment rate during the fourth *instalment
quarter in that income year, the amount of the instalment must be equal to 25%
of your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax.
45‑405 Working out your GDP‑adjusted
notional tax
(1) Except as provided by
section 45‑775, your GDP‑adjusted notional tax is worked out
in the same way as your *notional tax would be
worked out for the purposes of working out an instalment rate if that
instalment rate were to be given to you at the same time as notice of the
amount of the instalment referred to in section 45‑400 or 45‑402 (as
appropriate).
(2) However, for the
purposes of subsection (1):
(a) your *adjusted taxable income for the *base
year; and
(b) your *adjusted withholding income (if any) for the *base year;
are each increased in accordance with the
formula:

(3) For
the purposes of the formula in subsection (2):
original amount means the amount that, apart from subsection (2), would be
your *adjusted taxable income for the *base year, or your *adjusted withholding
income for the *base year, as appropriate.
GDP adjustment means:
(aa) if the current
year is the 2011‑12 income year—4%; or
(b) otherwise:
(i) the
percentage (rounded to the nearest whole number, rounding down a number ending
in .5) worked out using the following formula; or
(ii) if
the percentage worked out using the formula is negative—0%:

Note: Paragraph (aa) will be
repealed on 1 July 2016: see Part 2 of Schedule 1 to the Tax
Laws Amendment (2011 Measures No. 4) Act 2011.
(4) For the purposes of the
formula in subsection (3):
sum of GDP amounts (current year) means the sum of the *GDP amounts, for the *quarters in the last calendar year (the later calendar year)
ending at least 3 months before the start of the current year,
specified in the document referred to in subsection (6).
sum of GDP amounts (previous year) means the sum of the *GDP amounts, for the *quarters in the calendar year (the earlier calendar year)
before the later calendar year, specified in the document referred to in subsection (6).
(5) The GDP amount
for a *quarter is the amount published by the
Australian Statistician as the original gross domestic product at current
prices for that quarter.
(6) In a case covered by paragraph (b)
of the definition of GDP adjustment in subsection (3), the GDP
adjustment must be worked out on the basis of the first document that:
(a) is published by
the Australian Statistician after the end of the later calendar year; and
(b) sets out the *GDP amounts for all the *quarters in both
the later calendar year and the earlier calendar year.
(7) To avoid doubt,
subsections 45‑325(4) and (5) also have effect for the purposes of working
out your *GDP‑adjusted notional tax.
Subdivision 45‑M—How amount of quarterly instalment is worked out on basis of
your estimate of your benchmark tax
Table
of sections
45‑410 Working out amount of
instalment—payers of 4 quarterly instalments
45‑412 Working out amount of
instalment—payers of 2 quarterly instalments
45‑415 Estimating your benchmark
tax
45‑420 Credit in certain cases
where amount of instalment is nil
45‑410 Working out amount of
instalment—payers of 4 quarterly instalments
(1A) This section applies if
you are a *quarterly payer who pays 4 instalments
annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax at the end of an *instalment quarter in an income year (the current year).
(1) For the purposes of
paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c), the amount of your instalment for that *instalment quarter in an income year is:
(a) the amount worked
out, in accordance with this section, on the basis of the estimate of your *benchmark tax for that income year that section 45‑415 requires
to be used, if that amount is positive; or
(b) otherwise—nil.
Note: If the amount is negative,
you can claim a credit under section 45‑420.
First instalment quarter
(2) If the *instalment quarter is the first in that income year for which you
are liable to pay an instalment, the amount is 25% of the estimate of
your *benchmark tax.
Second instalment quarter
(3) If the *instalment quarter is the second in that income year for which you
are liable to pay an instalment, the amount is worked out by
subtracting:
• the amount of
your instalment under section 45‑112 for the earlier *instalment quarter in that income year;
from:
• 50% of the
estimate of your *benchmark tax.
Third instalment quarter
(4) If the *instalment quarter is the third in that income year for which you
are liable to pay an instalment, the amount is worked out using this
method statement.
Method statement
Step 1. The total of your instalments under section 45‑112
for earlier *instalment quarters in that income year is
subtracted from 75% of the estimate of your *benchmark
tax.
Step 2. If you
were entitled to claim a credit under section 45‑420 for the second of
those earlier *instalment quarters, the amount of the
credit is added to the step 1 amount.
Fourth instalment quarter
(5) If the *instalment quarter is the fourth in that income year for which you
are liable to pay an instalment, the amount is worked out using this
method statement.
Method statement
Step 1. The total of your instalments under section 45‑112
for earlier *instalment quarters in that income year is
subtracted from the estimate of your *benchmark tax.
Step 2. For each
credit that you were entitled to claim under section 45‑420 for any of
those earlier *instalment quarters, the amount of the
credit is added to the step 1 amount.
45‑412 Working out amount of
instalment—payers of 2 quarterly instalments
(1) This
section applies if you are a *quarterly payer who pays
2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax at the end of
an *instalment quarter in an income year.
(2) If you are liable to pay
an instalment for that quarter, the amount of that instalment for the purposes
of paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c) is:
(a) the amount worked
out, in accordance with this section, on the basis of the estimate of your *benchmark tax for that income year that section 45‑415 requires
to be used, if that amount is positive; or
(b) otherwise—nil.
Note: If the amount is negative,
you can claim a credit under section 45‑420.
Instalment for third quarter
(3) Subject to subsections (5)
to (9), the amount of the instalment for the third *instalment
quarter in that year is 75% of the estimate of your *benchmark
tax.
Instalment for fourth quarter
(4) Subject to subsections (5)
to (9), the amount of the instalment for the fourth *instalment
quarter in that year is worked out by subtracting:
(a) the amount of
your instalment for the earlier instalment quarter in that year;
from:
(b) the estimate of
your *benchmark tax.
You receive instalment rate for the
first time in second quarter
(5) If the Commissioner
gives you an instalment rate for the first time during the second *instalment quarter in the income year, the amount of the instalment
for the third *instalment quarter in that year is 50% of
the estimate of your *benchmark tax.
(6) If the Commissioner
gives you an instalment rate for the first time during the second *instalment quarter in the income year, the amount of the instalment
for the fourth instalment quarter in that year is worked out by subtracting:
(a) the amount of
your instalment for the earlier instalment quarter in that year;
from:
(b) 75% of the
estimate of your *benchmark tax.
You receive instalment rate for the
first time in third quarter
(7) If the Commissioner
gives you an instalment rate for the first time during the third *instalment quarter in the income year, the amount of the instalment
for the third instalment quarter in that year is 25% of the estimate of your *benchmark tax.
(8) If the Commissioner
gives you an instalment rate for the first time during the third *instalment quarter in the income year, the amount of the instalment
for the fourth instalment quarter in that year is worked out by subtracting:
(a) the amount of
your instalment for the earlier instalment quarter in that year;
from:
(b) 50% of the
estimate of your *benchmark tax.
You receive instalment rate for the
first time in fourth quarter
(9) If the Commissioner
gives you an instalment rate for the first time during the fourth *instalment quarter in the income year, the amount of the instalment
for that quarter is 25% of the estimate of your *benchmark
tax.
45‑415 Estimating your benchmark tax
(1) If you choose under
paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) to work out the amount of your instalment for an *instalment quarter in an income year on the basis of your estimate
of your *benchmark tax for that income year, you
must make the estimate on or before the day on which the instalment is due
(disregarding subsection 45‑112(3)).
(2) Having done so, you must
use that estimate to work out the amount of that instalment. (You cannot later
make another estimate for working out that amount.)
Note: If your estimate leads you to
pay an instalment that is too low, you may be liable to general interest charge
under section 45‑232.
(3) The Commissioner must
also use that estimate to work out under this Subdivision the amount of each
instalment:
(a) that you are
liable to pay for a later *instalment quarter in
that income year; and
(b) whose amount he
or she must notify to you under paragraph 45‑112(1)(c);
unless a later application of this
subsection requires him or her to use a later estimate you make under subsection (1)
of this section.
Note: This means that if an
estimate you have made is not appropriate for a later instalment quarter in the
same income year, you should choose under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) to work
out the amount of your instalment for that later quarter on the basis of a new
estimate under this section. If the instalment that the Commissioner works out
on the basis of the earlier estimate is too low, you may be liable to general
interest charge under section 45‑232.
45‑420 Credit in certain cases where
amount of instalment is nil
(1) You are entitled to
claim a credit if the amount of your instalment for an *instalment
quarter (the current quarter) in an income year is nil because
the amount worked out for the current quarter in accordance with section 45‑410
or 45‑412 (as appropriate) is negative. The amount of the credit is equal to
that amount, expressed as a positive amount.
(2) A claim for a credit
must be made in the *approved form on or before the
day on which the instalment for the current quarter is due.
Note: How the credit is applied is
set out in Division 3 of Part IIB.
Subdivision 45‑N—How this Part applies to the trustee of a trust
Table
of sections
Trustees
to whom this Part applies
45‑450 Trustees to whom a single
instalment rate is given
45‑455 Trustees to whom several
instalment rates are given
45‑460 Rest of Subdivision
applies only to multi‑rate trustees
45‑465 Meaning of instalment
income
45‑468 Multi‑rate
trustee may pay quarterly instalments
How
Commissioner works out instalment rate and notional tax for a multi‑rate
trustee
45‑470 Working out instalment
rate
45‑473 Commissioner must notify
you of notional tax
45‑475 Working out your notional
tax
45‑480 Working out your adjusted
taxable income
45‑483 Meaning of reduced
beneficiary’s share and reduced no beneficiary’s share
45‑485 Working out your adjusted
withholding income
How Commissioner works out
benchmark instalment rate and benchmark tax for a multi‑rate trustee
45‑525 When Commissioner works
out benchmark instalment rate and benchmark tax
45‑530 How Commissioner works
out benchmark instalment rate
45‑535 Working out your benchmark
tax
Trustees to whom this Part applies
45‑450 Trustees to whom a single
instalment rate is given
(1) This Part applies to a
trustee covered by any of items 4 to 8, and 12 and 13, of the table in
section 9‑1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(2) Such a trustee is called
a single‑rate trustee.
(3) This
Part applies to the trustee of a trust that is a *corporate
unit trust, or a *public trading trust, for an income year
as if the trustee had a taxable income for the income year equal to the net
income of the trust for the income year.
45‑455 Trustees to whom several
instalment rates are given
Trustee previously assessed in respect
of beneficiary
(1) This Part also applies
for an income year (the current year), to the trustee of a trust,
in respect of a beneficiary of the trust, if for a previous income year the
trustee of the trust was liable to be assessed, and to pay tax, under
subsection 98(1) or (2) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 in
respect of that beneficiary.
(2) However, this Part does
not apply for the current year to the trustee in respect of that beneficiary
if:
(a) for that previous
income year the trustee was liable to be assessed, and to pay tax, under
subsection 98(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 in respect
of that beneficiary; and
(b) that beneficiary
will no longer be under a legal disability, or it is reasonable to expect that
he or she will no longer be under a legal disability, at the end of the current
year.
Trustee previously assessed under
section 99 or 99A
(3) This Part also applies
for an income year to the trustee of a trust if for a previous income year the
trustee was liable to be assessed, and to pay tax, under section 99 or 99A
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.
Multiple applications of this Part to
the same trustee for the same income year
(4) The application of this
Part for an income year, to the trustee of a trust, in respect of a beneficiary
of the trust, because of subsection (1), is distinct from, and additional
to, each of the following:
(a) the application
of this Part for that income year, to the trustee of the trust, in respect of
another beneficiary;
(b) the application
of this Part for that income year, to the trustee of the trust, because of subsection (3);
(c) the application
of this Part for that income year to a beneficiary of the trust.
(5) The application of this
Part for an income year, to the trustee of a trust, because of subsection (3),
is distinct from, and additional to, each of the following:
(a) the application
of this Part for that income year, to the trustee of the trust, in respect of a
beneficiary of the trust, because of subsection (1);
(b) the application
of this Part for that income year to a beneficiary of the trust.
(6) A multi‑rate
trustee is a trustee to whom this Part applies because of this section.
45‑460 Rest of Subdivision applies
only to multi‑rate trustees
The rest of this
Subdivision applies to you if, and only if, you are a *multi‑rate
trustee. (It applies instead of Subdivisions 45‑J and 45‑K.)
Note: Except as provided in the
rest of this Subdivision or elsewhere, this Part applies according to its terms
to a multi‑rate trustee. For example, a multi‑rate trustee can become an annual
payer under Subdivision 45‑E.
45‑465 Meaning of instalment
income
Your instalment
income for a period is the whole of the trust’s *instalment income for that period.
45‑468 Multi‑rate trustee may pay
quarterly instalments
Subdivision 45‑D
(about quarterly payers) applies to you in the same way as it applies to an
individual.
Note: This means that a multi‑rate
trustee may pay instalments on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax if the
trustee otherwise satisfies the relevant test that applies to an individual.
How Commissioner works out instalment rate and notional tax for a
multi‑rate trustee
45‑470 Working out instalment rate
(1) An instalment rate that
the Commissioner gives you must be the percentage worked out to 2 decimal
places (rounding up if the third decimal place is 5 or more) using the formula:

However, the instalment rate must be a
nil rate if either component of the formula is nil.
(2) For
the purposes of the formula in subsection (1):
base
assessment instalment income means so much of
the assessable income of the trust, as worked out for the purposes of the *base assessment, as the Commissioner determines is *instalment income of the trust for the *base
year.
(3) The base
assessment is the latest assessment for the most recent income year for
which an assessment has been made of the tax payable by you:
(a) under subsection 98(1)
or (2) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 in respect of the same
beneficiary; or
(b) under section 99
or 99A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936;
as appropriate.
(4) However, if the
Commissioner is satisfied that there is a later income year for which no tax is
payable as mentioned in subsection (3), the base assessment
is the latest return or other information from which an assessment of tax so
payable for that income year would have been made.
(5) The base year
is the income year to which the *base assessment relates.
45‑473 Commissioner must notify you
of notional tax
(1) When the Commissioner
gives you the instalment rate, he or she must also notify you of the amount of
your *notional tax, as worked out for the
purposes of working out the instalment rate.
(2) The Commissioner may
incorporate notice of the instalment rate and the amount of your *notional tax in notice of your assessment.
45‑475 Working out your notional
tax
Notional tax if no withholding income
(1) Your notional tax
is your *adjusted tax (worked out under section 45‑340)
on your *adjusted taxable income (worked out under
section 45‑480) for the *base year.
Notional tax if trust has withholding
income
(2) However, your notional
tax (as worked out under subsection (1)) is reduced if the trust’s
assessable income for the *base assessment includes
amounts in respect of *withholding payments
(except *non‑quotation withholding payments).
(3) It is reduced (but not
below nil) by your *adjusted tax (worked out under
section 45‑340) on your *adjusted withholding
income (worked out under section 45‑485) for the *base
year.
Commissioner may take into account
actual and proposed changes to the law
(4) Subsections 45‑325(4)
and (5) apply for the purposes of working out your *notional
tax under this section.
45‑480 Working out your adjusted
taxable income
(1) Your
adjusted taxable income for the *base
year is worked out using the formula:

(2) For the purposes of the
formula in subsection (1):
adjusted net income of the trust means the net income of the trust, as worked out for the purposes
of the *base assessment and:
(a) reduced by any *net capital gain included in the trust’s assessable income as so
worked out; and
(b) increased by any
deductions for *tax losses that were made in so working
out that net income; and
(c) reduced by the
amount of any tax loss, to the extent that it is *unutilised
at the end of the *base year.
reduced net income of the trust means the net income of the trust, as worked out for the purposes
of the *base assessment and reduced by any *net capital gain included in the trust’s assessable income as so
worked out.
relevant share means the *reduced beneficiary’s
share, or the *reduced no beneficiary’s share, as
appropriate, of the net income of the trust, as worked out for the purposes of
the *base assessment.
45‑483 Meaning of reduced
beneficiary’s share and reduced no beneficiary’s share
(1) If the trustee of a
trust is liable to be assessed, and to pay tax, for an income year under
subsection 98(1) or (2) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 in
respect of a particular beneficiary, the reduced beneficiary’s share
of the net income is the amount on which the trustee is so liable to be
assessed and to pay tax, except so much of that amount as is attributable to a *net capital gain included in the trust’s assessable income for that
income year.
(2) If
the trustee of a trust is liable to be assessed, and to pay tax, for an income
year under section 99 or 99A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936,
the reduced no beneficiary’s share of the net income is the
amount on which the trustee is so liable to be assessed and to pay tax, except
so much of that amount as is attributable to a *capital
gain made by the trust during that income year.
45‑485 Working out your adjusted
withholding income
(1) Your adjusted
withholding income for the *base year is
worked out using the formula:

(2) For the purposes of the
formula in subsection (1):
net withholding income of the trust means:
• the total of the
amounts included in the trust’s assessable income for the *base assessment in respect of *withholding
payments (except *non‑quotation withholding payments);
reduced by:
• the trust’s
deductions for that year, as used in making that assessment, to the extent that
they reasonably relate to those amounts.
reduced net income of the trust has the meaning given by subsection 45‑480(2).
relevant share has the meaning given by subsection 45‑480(2).
How Commissioner works out benchmark instalment rate and benchmark
tax for a multi‑rate trustee
45‑525 When Commissioner works out
benchmark instalment rate and benchmark tax
(1) The Commissioner may
work out your *benchmark instalment rate for an income
year (the variation year) if, under section 45‑205, you
choose an instalment rate to work out the amount of your instalment for an *instalment quarter in that year.
(2) The Commissioner may
work out your *benchmark tax for an income year (the variation
year) if, under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c), the amount of your
instalment for an *instalment quarter in an income year is
worked out on the basis of your estimate of your *benchmark
tax for that income year.
(3) The Commissioner may
work out your *benchmark tax for an income year (the variation
year) if, under paragraph 45‑115(1)(c), you estimate the amount of
your annual instalment for that year.
45‑530 How Commissioner works out benchmark
instalment rate
(1) Your benchmark
instalment rate for the variation year is the percentage worked out to
2 decimal places (rounding up if the third decimal place is 5 or more) using
the formula:

However, your benchmark instalment
rate is a nil rate if either component of the formula is nil.
(2) For
the purposes of the formula in subsection (1):
variation
year instalment income means so much of the
trust’s assessable income for the variation year as the Commissioner determines
is *instalment income for that year.
45‑535 Working out your benchmark
tax
Benchmark tax if no withholding income
(1) Your benchmark tax
is your *adjusted assessed tax (worked out under
section 45‑375) on the *reduced beneficiary’s
share, or the *reduced no beneficiary’s share, as
appropriate, of the net income of the trust for the variation year.
Benchmark tax if you had withholding
income
(2) However, your benchmark
tax (as worked out under subsection (1)) is reduced if the trust’s
assessable income for the variation year includes amounts in respect of *withholding payments.
(3) It is reduced (but not
below nil) by the total amount of the credits to which you are entitled for the
variation year under section 18‑25 (for amounts withheld from the
withholding payments).
Subdivision 45‑P—Anti‑avoidance rules
Table
of sections
45‑595 Object
of this Subdivision
45‑597 Effect
of Subdivision in relation to instalment months
45‑600 General interest charge
on tax benefit relating to instalments
45‑605 When do you get a tax
benefit from a scheme?
45‑610 What is your tax
position for an income year?
45‑615 What is your hypothetical
tax position for an income year?
45‑620 Amount on which GIC is
payable, and period for which it is payable
45‑625 Credit if you also got a
tax detriment from the scheme
45‑630 When do you get a tax detriment
from a scheme?
45‑635 No tax benefit or
detriment results from choice for which income tax law expressly provides
45‑640 Commissioner may remit
general interest charge in special cases
45‑595 Object of this Subdivision
(1) The object of this Subdivision
is to penalise an entity whose *tax position, so far as
it relates to *PAYG instalments (and related credits and *general interest charge), is altered by a *scheme
that is inconsistent with:
(a) the purposes and
objects of this Part; or
(b) the purposes and
objects of any relevant provisions of this Part;
(whether those purposes and objects are
stated expressly or not).
(2) This Subdivision is not
intended to apply to a straightforward use of structural features of this Part
if that use is consistent with the purposes and objects mentioned in subsection (1).
(3) This Subdivision is to
be interpreted and applied accordingly.
45‑597 Effect of Subdivision in
relation to instalment months
This Subdivision has
effect in relation to an *instalment month in the
same way in which it has effect in relation to an *instalment
quarter.
45‑600 General interest charge on
tax benefit relating to instalments
(1) You are liable to pay
the *general interest charge under section 45‑620
if:
(a) you get a *tax benefit from a *scheme; and
(b) the tax benefit
relates to a *component of your *tax
position for an income year, and that component is covered by section 45‑610;
and
(c) having regard to
the matters referred to in subsection (3), it would be concluded that an
entity that entered into or carried out the scheme (or part of it) did so for
the sole or dominant purpose of:
(i) an
entity (whether you, that entity or another entity) getting one or more tax
benefits from the scheme; or
(ii) 2 or
more entities (whether or not including you or that entity) each getting one or
more tax benefits from the scheme.
(2) It does not matter:
(a) whether or not
you entered into or carried out the *scheme (or part of
it); or
(b) whether the
entity that entered into or carried out the scheme (or part of it) did so alone
or together with one or more others; or
(c) whether the
scheme (or any part of it) was entered into or carried out inside or outside Australia; or
(d) whether or not
the *tax benefit you got is of the same kind as
a tax benefit mentioned in paragraph (1)(c).
Matters to be considered in
determining purpose of scheme
(3) In considering an
entity’s purpose in entering into or carrying out a *scheme
(or part of one), have regard to these matters:
(a) the manner in
which the scheme or part was entered into or carried out;
(b) the
form and substance of the scheme, including:
(i) the
legal rights and obligations involved in the scheme; and
(ii) the
economic and commercial substance of the scheme;
(c) the purposes and
objects of this Part and of any relevant provisions of this Part (whether those
purposes and objects are stated expressly or not);
(d) the
timing of the scheme;
(e) the period over
which the scheme was entered into and carried out;
(f) the effect that
this Act would have in relation to the scheme apart from this Subdivision;
(g) any change in
your financial position that has resulted from the scheme, or may reasonably be
expected to result from it;
(h) any change that
has resulted from the scheme, or may reasonably be expected to result from it,
in the financial position of an entity that has or had a connection or dealing
with you, whether the connection or dealing is or was of a family, business or
other nature;
(i) any other
consequence for you, or for such an entity, of the scheme having been entered
into or carried out;
(j) the nature of
the connection between you and such an entity, including the question whether
the dealing is or was at *arm’s length.
GIC is payable on each of 2 or more
tax benefits
(4) If you get 2 or more *tax benefits from the *scheme, this section has
a separate application to each of them.
45‑605 When do you get a tax
benefit from a scheme?
(1) This section describes
how to work out whether you get a tax benefit from a *scheme and, if so, the amount of the tax benefit.
(2) First, determine your
actual *tax position for an income year (apart
from this Subdivision).
(3) Next, determine your *hypothetical tax position for the same income year (apart from this
Subdivision).
(4) Then compare each *component of the 2 positions. If the amount of that component of the
actual *tax position is lower than the
amount of that component of the *hypothetical tax
position, the difference between the 2 amounts is a tax benefit
that you get from the *scheme.
Note 1: The difference between the 2
amounts is not a tax benefit to the extent that it is attributable to
certain things for which the income tax law expressly provides. See section 45‑635.
Note 2: An entity may get 2 or more
tax benefits from the same scheme. One reason is that the scheme may affect 2
or more components of the entity’s tax position for an income year. Another
reason is that the scheme may affect the tax position for 2 or more income
years.
45‑610 What is your tax position
for an income year?
Your tax position
for an income year consists of a number of components. The table
sets out each component, and how to work out the amount of the component.
|
Components
of your tax position that relate to PAYG instalments and credits
|
|
Item
|
Each
of these is a component:
|
The
amount of that component is:
|
|
1
|
Your instalment for each *instalment quarter in the income year is a quarterly instalment
component.
|
The amount worked out as follows:
(a) if you are liable to pay an instalment
for that instalment quarter—the amount of the instalment; or
(b) if for any reason you are not liable to
pay an instalment for that instalment quarter—nil (even if you are an *annual payer or a *quarterly payer who
pays 2 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax); or
(c) if you are entitled to claim a credit
for that instalment quarter under section 45‑420 (because the instalment
for that quarter is to be worked out on the basis of your estimated benchmark
tax)—the amount of the credit (expressed as a negative amount).
|
|
2
|
Your annual instalment for the income
year is the annual instalment component.
|
The amount worked out as follows:
(a) if you are liable to pay an annual
instalment for the income year—the amount of the instalment; or
(b) if for any reason you are not liable to
pay an annual instalment for the income year—nil (even if you are a *quarterly payer).
|
|
3
|
A variation credit component
is a credit arising under section 45‑215 because the amount of your
instalment for an *instalment quarter in the
income year is to be worked out using an instalment rate you chose under
section 45‑205.
|
The amount worked out as follows:
(a) if you are entitled to the credit—the
amount of the credit (expressed as a negative amount); or
(b) otherwise—nil.
|
|
4
|
A variation GIC component
is the *general interest charge you are liable
to pay under:
(a) subsection 45‑230(2) (varied
instalment rate); or
(b) subsection 45‑232(2) (estimated
benchmark tax); or
(c) subsection 45‑235(2) or (3)
(annual instalment);
because of how your instalment for an *instalment quarter in the income year, or for the income year, was
worked out.
|
The amount worked out as follows:
(a) if you are liable to pay the charge—the
amount of the charge; or
(b) otherwise—nil.
|
Example: A scheme results in X Pty Ltd
being able to choose to be an annual payer for the 2000‑01 income year.
The following table shows
the actual tax position of X Pty Ltd for that year, and also its hypothetical
tax position as defined in section 45‑615. X Pty Ltd has got 4 tax
benefits from the scheme: one for each of the 4 instalment quarters.
|
2000‑01 income year
|
|
For this
component:
|
The amount of
that component of the actual tax position is:
|
The amount of
that component of the hypothetical tax position is:
|
|
Quarterly
instalment component for first instalment quarter
|
nil
|
$3,000
|
|
Quarterly
instalment component for second instalment quarter
|
nil
|
$4,000
|
|
Quarterly
instalment component for third instalment quarter
|
nil
|
$3,000
|
|
Quarterly
instalment component for fourth instalment quarter
|
nil
|
$2,000
|
|
Annual instalment
component
|
$12,000
|
nil
|
45‑615 What is your hypothetical
tax position for an income year?
Your hypothetical
tax position for an income year is what would have been, or what could
reasonably be expected to have been, your *tax
position for the income year if the *scheme had not
been entered into or carried out.
45‑620 Amount on which GIC is
payable, and period for which it is payable
(1) You are liable to pay
the *general interest charge on twice the *tax benefit mentioned in paragraph 45‑600(1)(a).
Note 1: To the extent that you also
got a tax detriment from the scheme, you get a credit: see section 45‑625.
Note 2: In special circumstances the
Commissioner can remit some or all of the general interest charge: see section 45‑640.
(2) You are liable to pay
the charge for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which your instalment for the period mentioned in the
applicable item of the table in section 45‑610 was due to be paid, or
would have been due to be paid if you had been liable to pay an instalment for
that period; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the day on which your assessed tax for the income year is due to be
paid.
(3) The Commissioner must
give you written notice of the *general interest charge
to which you are liable under subsection (1). You must pay the charge
within 14 days after the notice is given to you.
(4) If any of the *general interest charge to which you are liable under subsection (1)
remains unpaid at the end of the 14 days referred to in subsection (3),
you are also liable to pay the general interest charge on the unpaid amount for
each day in the period that:
(a) starts at the end
of those 14 days; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following
remains unpaid:
(i) the
unpaid amount;
(ii) general
interest charge on the unpaid amount.
45‑625 Credit if you also got a tax
detriment from the scheme
(1) You are entitled to a
credit if:
(a) you are liable to
pay *general interest charge under section 45‑620
because you got one or more *tax benefits from the *scheme; and
(b) the Commissioner
is satisfied that:
(i) you
got a *tax detriment from the scheme; and
(ii) the
tax detriment relates to a *component of your *tax position for an income year, and that component is covered by
section 45‑610.
(It does not matter whether that income
year is the same as the one referred to in section 45‑600.)
Note: How the credit is applied is
set out in Division 3 of Part IIB.
(2) The credit is equal to
the *general interest charge on twice the
amount of the *tax detriment for each day in the period
that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which your instalment for the period mentioned in the
item of the table in section 45‑610 that applies for the purposes of
working out the amount of the tax detriment:
(i) was
due to be paid; or
(ii) would
have been due to be paid if you had been liable to pay an instalment for that
period; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the day on which your assessed tax for the income year is due to be
paid.
(3) However, the credit
cannot exceed the total *general interest charge
you are liable to pay under section 45‑620 because you got one or more *tax benefits from the *scheme.
Credit for each of 2 or more tax
detriments
(4) If you get 2 or more *tax detriments from the scheme, subsections (1) and (2) have a
separate application to each of them. However, the total of the credits cannot
exceed the total *general interest charge referred to in subsection (3).
45‑630 When do you get a tax
detriment from a scheme?
(1) This section describes
how to work out whether you get a tax detriment from a *scheme and, if so, the amount of the tax detriment.
(2) First, determine your
actual *tax position for an income year (apart
from this Subdivision).
(3) Next, determine your *hypothetical tax position for the same income year (apart from this
Subdivision).
(4) Then compare each *component of the 2 positions. If the amount of that component of the
actual *tax position is higher than the
amount of that component of the *hypothetical tax
position, the difference between the 2 amounts is a tax detriment
that you get from the *scheme.
Example: In the fact situation in the
example in section 45‑610, X Pty Ltd gets a tax detriment from the scheme
for the annual instalment component of its tax position for the income year.
Note 1: The difference between the 2
amounts is not a tax detriment to the extent that it is attributable to
certain things for which the income tax law expressly provides. See section 45‑635.
Note 2: An
entity may get 2 or more tax detriments from the same scheme. One reason is
that the scheme may affect 2 or more components of the entity’s tax position
for an income year. Another reason is that the scheme may affect the tax
position for 2 or more income years.
45‑635 No tax benefit or detriment
results from choice for which income tax law expressly provides
Choice under the income tax law
generally
(1) The difference between
the 2 amounts referred to in subsection 45‑605(4) or 45‑630(4) is not
a *tax benefit or *tax detriment if there
would have been no difference between the 2 amounts but for one or more matters
covered by subsection (3).
(2) The difference between
the 2 amounts is not a *tax benefit or *tax detriment to the extent that the difference between the 2
amounts would have been less but for one or more matters covered by subsection (3).
(3) This subsection covers:
(a) an entity making
an agreement, choice, declaration, election or selection; or
(b) an entity giving
a notice or exercising an option;
for which this Act expressly provides.
However, this subsection does not cover an entity doing such a thing
under:
(c) Subdivision 126‑B
(about CGT roll‑overs involving certain companies in the same wholly‑owned
group) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; or
(d) Subdivision 170‑B
of that Act (about transferring a net capital loss between certain companies in
the same wholly‑owned group).
Matters excluded in applying subsection (1)
or (2)
(4) Subsection (1) or
(2) does not apply to a matter covered by subsection (3) if an entity
entered into or carried out the *scheme (or part of it)
for the sole or dominant purpose of creating a circumstance or state of affairs
whose existence is necessary for the entity referred to in subsection (3):
(a) to make the
agreement, choice, declaration, election or selection; or
(b) to give the
notice or exercise the option.
Choice under some CGT provisions
(5) The difference between
the 2 amounts is not a *tax benefit or *tax detriment if:
(a) there would have
been no difference between the 2 amounts but for one or more matters covered by
subsection (7); and
(b) the *scheme consisted wholly of that matter or those matters.
(6) Also, the difference
between the 2 amounts is not a *tax benefit or *tax detriment to the extent that the difference between the 2 amounts
would have been less but for one or more matters covered by subsection (7),
but only if the *scheme consisted wholly of that matter or
those matters.
(7) This subsection covers:
(a) a choice made
under Subdivision 126‑B (about CGT roll‑overs involving certain companies
in the same wholly‑owned group) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997;
or
(b) an agreement made
under Subdivision 170‑B of that Act (about transferring a net capital loss
between certain companies in the same wholly‑owned group);
45‑640 Commissioner may remit
general interest charge in special cases
(1) The Commissioner may, if
he or she is satisfied that because special circumstances exist it would be
fair and reasonable to do so, remit the whole or any part of any *general interest charge payable under section 45‑620.
(2) If the Commissioner does
so, section 45‑625 (about credits for tax detriments from schemes)
applies, and is taken always to have applied, as if the remitted amount had
never been payable.
Subdivision 45‑Q—General rules for consolidated groups
Guide to Subdivision 45‑Q
45‑700 What this Subdivision is
about
This Subdivision
allows the members of a consolidated group to be treated as a single entity for
the purposes of Pay as you go (PAYG) instalments. Generally, the head company
of the group is the entity liable to pay PAYG instalments.
The PAYG instalments
provisions in this Part apply to the head company in much the same way as they
apply to any other company. However, the operation of some of these provisions
is modified by this Subdivision.
This Subdivision also
contains special rules to deal with changes in the membership of the group.
Note 1: Subdivision 45‑R contains
special rules that apply to members of a consolidated group before they are
treated as a single entity for the purposes of this Part. It also contains
special rules that affect the operation of this Subdivision (see sections 45‑880
and 45‑885).
Note 2: Subdivision 45‑S extends
the operation of this Subdivision so that it can apply to members of a MEC
group. It contains modifications of this Subdivision for the purposes of that
extended operation.
Table of sections
Application of Subdivision
45‑703 Effect of this
Subdivision and Subdivision 45‑R in relation to monthly payers
45‑705 Application of
Subdivision to head company
Usual
operation of this Part for consolidated group members
45‑710 Single entity rule
45‑715 When instalments are
due—modification of section 45‑61
45‑720 Head company cannot be an
annual payer—modification of section 45‑140
Membership
changes
45‑740 Change
of head company
45‑755 Entry
rule (for an entity that becomes a subsidiary member of a consolidated group)
45‑760 Exit rule (for an entity
that ceases to be a subsidiary member of a consolidated group)
45‑775 Commissioner’s power to
work out different instalment rate or GDP‑adjusted notional tax
Application of Subdivision
45‑703 Effect of this Subdivision
and Subdivision 45‑R in relation to monthly payers
(1) If:
(a) a company is the *head company of a *consolidated group; and
(b) the company is a *monthly payer;
this Subdivision and Subdivision 45‑R
have effect in relation to the company as the head company of the group in
respect of an *instalment month in the same way in which
they have effect in relation to a company that is a *quarterly
payer as the head company of a consolidated group in respect of an *instalment quarter.
(2) If:
(a) an entity is a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated
group; and
(b) the entity is a *monthly payer;
this Subdivision and Subdivision 45‑R
have effect in relation to the entity in respect of an *instalment
month in the same way in which they have effect in relation to an entity that
is a *quarterly payer in respect of an *instalment quarter.
(3) However, those effects
are subject to any modifications set out in those Subdivisions.
Note: Subdivision 45‑S can
also have effect in relation to a monthly payer because of the operation of
this section and section 45‑910.
45‑705 Application of Subdivision to
head company
Period during which Subdivision
applies to head company
(1) Subject to sections 45‑880
and 45‑885, this Subdivision applies to a company as the *head company of a *consolidated group
during the period:
(a) starting at the
start of the *instalment quarter of the company
determined under subsection (2), (3) or (4); and
(b) ending:
(i) at
the end of the instalment quarter of the company determined under paragraph (5)(a)
or (b); or
(ii) just
before the instalment quarter of the company determined under paragraph (5)(c)
or (d).
When the period begins—initial head
company instalment rate
(2) This Subdivision starts
to apply to a company as the *head company of a *consolidated group at the start of an *instalment
quarter under this subsection if, during that quarter, the Commissioner gives
the company (as that head company) the *initial
head company instalment rate.
Note: The operation of this
subsection may be affected by section 45‑885.
When the period begins—group created
from MEC group
(3) This Subdivision starts
to apply to a company as the *head company of a *consolidated group at the start of an *instalment
quarter (the starting quarter) under this subsection if all of
the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) the consolidated
group is *created from a *MEC
group during the starting quarter;
(b) the company is
the head company of the consolidated group when the consolidated group is
created from the MEC group;
(c) either of the
following applies:
(i) this
Subdivision applied, in accordance with Subdivision 45‑S, to the *provisional head company of the MEC group at the end of the previous
instalment quarter;
(ii) the
Commissioner gives the *initial head company
instalment rate to the provisional head company of the MEC group during the
starting quarter.
Note: For the application of this
Subdivision to a provisional head company of a MEC group: see section 45‑915.
When the period begins—new head
company
(4) This Subdivision starts
to apply to a company as the *head company of a *consolidated group at the start of an *instalment
quarter (the starting quarter) under this subsection if all of
the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) the company is an
interposed company mentioned in subsection 615‑30(2) of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997;
(b) the company
chooses under that subsection that the consolidated group is to continue in
existence at and after the completion time mentioned in that subsection;
(c) the completion
time occurs during the starting quarter;
(d) one of the
following subparagraphs applies:
(i) this
Subdivision applied to the original entity mentioned in that subsection (as
the head company of the consolidated group) at the end of the previous
instalment quarter;
(ii) the
Commissioner gives the *initial head company
instalment rate to the original entity mentioned in that subsection (as
the head company of the consolidated group) during the starting quarter;
(iii) the
consolidated group is *created from a *MEC group during the starting quarter and this Subdivision applied
to the *provisional head company of the MEC group
at the end of the previous instalment quarter;
(iv) the
consolidated group is created from a MEC group during the starting quarter and
the Commissioner gives the initial head company instalment rate to the
provisional head company of the MEC group during the starting quarter.
When the period begins—modified timing
for head company that is monthly payer
(4A) Subsection (4B)
applies if:
(a) apart from subsection (4B),
this Subdivision starts to apply to a company as the *head
company of a *consolidated group at a particular time
because of the operation of subsection (2), (3) or (4); and
(b) the company is a *monthly payer; and
(c) the Commissioner
gave the *initial head company instalment rate as
mentioned in subsection (2), subparagraph (3)(c)(ii), subparagraph (4)(d)(ii)
or subparagraph (4)(d)(iv) in an *instalment month.
(4B) Treat subsection (2),
(3) or (4) (as the case requires) as providing that this Subdivision starts to
apply to the company as the *head company of the
group at the start of the next *instalment month.
Note: For the application of this
Subdivision to a monthly payer, see section 45‑703.
When the period ends
(5) This Subdivision stops
applying to a company as the *head company of a *consolidated group at the earliest of the following times after the
company becomes the head company:
(a) the end of the *instalment quarter during which the consolidated group ceases to
exist (other than because a *MEC group is *created from the consolidated group);
(b) the end of the
instalment quarter during which the Commissioner is notified of the creation of
a MEC group from the consolidated group if the MEC group is created during that
instalment quarter;
(c) just before the
instalment quarter during which the Commissioner is notified of the creation of
a MEC group from the consolidated group if the MEC group was created before
that instalment quarter;
(d) just before the
instalment quarter that includes the completion time mentioned in subsection 615‑30(2)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 where an interposed company
mentioned in that subsection chooses under that subsection that the
consolidated group is to continue in existence.
Note: The operation of this
subsection because of paragraph (a) may be affected by section 45‑880.
(6) For the purposes of subsection (5),
the Commissioner is notified of the creation of a *MEC
group from a *consolidated group when the Commissioner
receives a notice of the consolidation of the MEC group under subsection 719‑40(1)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(7) If this Subdivision
stops applying to a company as the *head company of a *consolidated group just before an *instalment
quarter under paragraph (5)(c), then, for the purposes of this Part, this
Act has effect for the company and other *members
of the group as if:
(a) the consolidated
group had continued to exist until just before the start of that quarter; and
(b) the company were
the head company of the group until just before the start of that quarter.
(8) To avoid doubt, this
Subdivision does not apply to a company as the *head
company of a *consolidated group for any time at all if:
(a) subsection (2),
(3) or (4), and subsection (5), would, apart from this subsection, apply
to the company; but
(b) the time at which
this Subdivision would stop applying to the company under subsection (5)
is before the time at which this Subdivision would start to apply to the
company under subsection (2), (3) or (4).
(9) To avoid doubt, and
apart from the operation of subsection (7), this Subdivision may apply to
a company as the *head company of a *consolidated
group at a time when the company is not in fact the head company of the group.
Note: An example of this is when an
interposed company becomes the new head company of a consolidated group. Under
this section and section 45‑740, this Subdivision may start applying to
the company as if it had already become the head company when it is not yet
such a company.
Usual operation of this Part for consolidated group members
45‑710 Single entity rule
If an entity is a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group
for any period during which this Subdivision applies to the *head company of the group:
(a) that entity; and
(b) any other
subsidiary member of the group;
are taken for the purposes of this Part
to be parts of that head company (rather than separate entities) during that
period.
Note: That means, amongst other
things, the head company would be liable to pay instalments for that period as
if the subsidiary members were parts of the head company.
45‑715 When instalments are
due—modification of section 45‑61
(1) If:
(a) the *head company of a *consolidated group is
liable to pay an instalment for an *instalment
quarter; and
(b) this Subdivision
applies to the head company during that quarter;
then, despite subsection 45‑61(2),
the instalment is due on or before the 21st day of the month after the end of
that quarter whether or not the head company is a *deferred
BAS payer on that day.
(2) Subsection (3)
applies if section 45‑703 applies to the *head
company of the *consolidated group (because it is a *monthly payer).
(3) Treat the reference in subsection (1)
to subsection 45‑61(2) as instead being a reference to subsection 45‑67(2).
45‑720 Head company cannot be an
annual payer—modification of section 45‑140
Despite any other
provisions in this Part, the *head company of a *consolidated group cannot choose to be an *annual
payer under section 45‑140 while this Subdivision applies to the
head company.
Note: You stop being an annual
payer when this Subdivision starts applying to you as the head company of a
consolidated group: see section 45‑160.
Membership changes
45‑740 Change of head company
Object
(1) The object of this
section (except subsection (8)) is to ensure that, for the purposes of
this Part, when a company becomes the new *head
company of a *consolidated group:
(a) the company
inherits the history of the former head company of the group; and
(b) the history of
the new head company is effectively ignored.
(2) This section applies to
a *head company of a *consolidated group if:
(a) the company is an
interposed company mentioned in subsection 45‑705(4) (an interposed
company that chooses under subsection 615‑30(2) of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 that the consolidated group is to continue in existence
at and after the completion time mentioned in that subsection); and
(b) the conditions in
subsection 45‑705(4) are satisfied in relation to the interposed company
(whether or not this Subdivision applies to the company as the head company of
the group for any period of time).
(3) Everything that happened
before the completion time in relation to the company (the original
company) that was the *head company of the *consolidated group immediately before the completion time:
(a) is taken to have
happened in relation to the interposed company instead of in relation to the
original company; and
(b) is taken to have
happened in relation to the interposed company instead of what would (apart
from this section) be taken to have happened in relation to the interposed
company before the completion time;
just as if, at all times before the
completion time:
(c) the interposed
company had been the original company; and
(d) the original
company had been the interposed company.
(4) To avoid doubt, subsection (3)
also covers everything that, immediately before the completion time, was taken
to have happened in relation to the original company because of:
(a) section 701‑1
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (single entity rule); or
(b) section 701‑5
of that Act (entry history rule); or
(c) section 703‑75
of that Act (effects of an interposed company becoming the *head company of a *consolidated group); or
(d) section 719‑90
of that Act (effects of a change of head company of a *MEC
group); or
(e) section 45‑710
in this Schedule (single entity rule for the purposes of this Part), including
an application of that section under Subdivision 45‑S in this Schedule; or
(f) this section; or
(g) section 45‑920
in this Schedule (effects of a change of *provisional
head company of a MEC group for the purposes of this Part); or
(h) one or more
previous applications of any of the provisions covered by paragraphs (a)
to (g).
(5) In addition, and without
affecting subsection (3):
(a) an assessment of
the original company for an income year that ends before the income year that
includes the completion time; or
(b) an amendment of
the assessment;
is taken to be something that had
happened to the interposed company, whether or not the assessment or amendment
is made before the completion time.
(6) This section has effect
for the purposes of applying this Part to *members
of the *consolidated group in relation to an *instalment quarter of the interposed company that ends after the
completion time.
Note: An assessment mentioned in subsection (5)
may therefore be taken to be the base assessment of the interposed company for
the purposes of this Part.
(7) Subsections (1) to
(6) are to be disregarded in applying section 45‑705 (about the
application of this Subdivision to a company as the *head
company of a *consolidated group).
Note: For example, if the
Commissioner has given an initial head company instalment rate to the original
company during an earlier instalment quarter, the rate is not, despite this
section, treated as if it had been given to the interposed company for the
purposes of section 45‑705. Subject to the other provisions in that
section, this Subdivision therefore starts applying to the interposed company
under subsection 45‑705(4).
Special rule for the original company
(8) A provision of this Part
that applies on an entity becoming a *subsidiary member
of a *consolidated group does not apply to the
original company when it is taken to have become such a member at the
completion time as a result of section 703‑70 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997.
Note: Section 45‑755 (the
entry rule) therefore does not apply to the original company on the company
becoming a subsidiary member of the consolidated group.
45‑755 Entry rule (for an entity that becomes a subsidiary member
of a consolidated group)
(1) Despite any other
provisions in this Part, an entity is liable to pay an instalment for an *instalment quarter or income year (as appropriate) during which the
entity becomes a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group if:
(a) this Subdivision
applies to the *head company of the group at any time
during that quarter or year (as appropriate); and
(b) the entity would
otherwise be liable to pay an instalment for that quarter or year (as
appropriate) if it had not become a subsidiary member of the group; and
(c) the entity
becomes a subsidiary member of the group on a day other than the first day of
that quarter or the first day of that year (as appropriate).
Note: Under paragraph (b),
this section could apply to an entity that, at the time of becoming a subsidiary
member of the group, was not a subsidiary member of another consolidated group,
or was a member of another consolidated group but this Subdivision did not
apply to the head company of that other group at that time.
Modifications for a quarterly payer
who pays 4 instalments annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
(2) Subsections (3) and
(4) apply to the entity if:
(a) the entity would
have been a *quarterly payer who pays 4 instalments
annually on the basis of GDP‑adjusted notional tax at the end of the *instalment quarter mentioned in subsection (1) if it had not
become a *subsidiary member of the group; and
(b) the amount of the
instalment payable by the entity for that quarter would have been worked out
under paragraph 45‑112(1)(b); and
(c) that quarter is
not the fourth instalment quarter in an income year.
(3) For the purposes of
working out the amount of the instalment payable by the entity for that *instalment quarter, subsection 45‑410(5) applies to the entity
as if that quarter were the fourth instalment quarter in the income year for
which the entity is liable to pay an instalment.
(4) For the purposes of
working out the *acceptable amount of the entity’s
instalment for that instalment quarter, subsection 45‑232(3) applies to
the entity as if that quarter were the fourth instalment quarter in the income
year for which the entity is liable to pay an instalment.
45‑760 Exit rule (for an entity that
ceases to be a subsidiary member of a consolidated group)
(1) This section applies to
an entity if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) the entity ceases
to be a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group during an *instalment
quarter of the *head company of the group;
(b) this Subdivision
applies to the head company of the group during that instalment quarter;
(c) the entity does
not, at the time it ceases to be a subsidiary member of the group, become:
(i) a
subsidiary member of another consolidated group the head company of which is
one to which this Subdivision applies at that time; or
(ii) a
member (other than the *provisional head
company) of a *MEC group the provisional head company of
which is one to which this Subdivision applies, in accordance with Subdivision 45‑S,
at that time;
(d) this Part applies
to the entity under section 45‑10.
(2) This
Part applies to the entity as if:
(a) the Commissioner
had given the entity an instalment rate equal to the most recent instalment
rate given to the *head company mentioned in paragraph (1)(a)
before the end of the *instalment quarter
mentioned in that paragraph; and
(b) the entity were a
*quarterly payer who pays on the basis of instalment income at the
end of that instalment quarter, and of each subsequent instalment quarter,
until:
(i) if
the Commissioner first gives the entity an instalment rate worked out on the
basis of the *base assessment covered by subsection (3)
during the first instalment quarter of an income year—immediately before the
end of that first instalment quarter; or
(ii) if
that rate is given to the entity during any other instalment quarter of an
income year—immediately after the end of the last instalment quarter of that
year.
(3) This section only covers
the first *base assessment of the entity for an
income year that is, or includes, a period after the entity ceases to be a *subsidiary member of the group.
45‑775 Commissioner’s power to work
out different instalment rate or GDP‑adjusted notional tax
(1) This section applies if
any of the following changes (the membership change) occurs in
relation to a *consolidated group while this Subdivision
applies to the *head company of the group:
(a) an entity becomes
a *subsidiary member of the group or a number of entities become
subsidiary members of the group;
(b) an entity ceases
to be a subsidiary member of the group or a number of entities cease to be
subsidiary members of the group.
(2) If the Commissioner,
having regard to the object of this Part and the membership change, is of the
opinion that it would be reasonable to do so, the Commissioner may work out:
(a) an instalment
rate that is higher, or lower, than the most recent instalment rate given by
the Commissioner to the *head company under
section 45‑15; or
(b) an amount of *GDP‑adjusted notional tax that is higher, or lower, than the amount
of GDP‑adjusted notional tax worked out for the purposes of the most recent
amount of instalment notified by the Commissioner to the head company under
paragraph 45‑112(1)(a).
(3) The new instalment rate
or amount of *GDP‑adjusted notional tax must be a rate
or amount that, in the opinion of the Commissioner, is reasonable having regard
to the object of this Part and the membership change.
Note 1: Subdivision 45‑J does not
apply for the purpose of working out an instalment rate under this section.
Note 2: Section 45‑405 does not
apply for the purpose of working out an amount of GDP‑adjusted notional tax
under this section.
Additional applications of subsection (2)
(4) If, after exercising the
power in relation to the membership change under subsection (2) for the
first time, and on the basis of an assessment (including an amendment) of the *head company for the income year in which the change occurs, or for
an earlier year, the Commissioner has worked out:
(a) another instalment
rate under section 45‑320 for the company (whether or not the Commissioner
has given that rate to the company); or
(b) another amount of
*GDP‑adjusted notional tax under section 45‑405 for the company
(whether or not the Commissioner has notified the company an amount of
instalment based on that other amount);
the Commissioner may again exercise the
power under subsection (2) in relation to the membership change, as if:
(c) the rate
mentioned in paragraph (a) were the most recent instalment rate mentioned
in paragraph (2)(a); and
(d) the amount of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax mentioned in paragraph (b) were the amount of GDP‑adjusted
notional tax worked out for the purposes of the most recent amount of
instalment that is mentioned in paragraph (2)(b).
(5) To
avoid doubt, in relation to the membership change, the Commissioner:
(a) may exercise the
power under subsection (2) by applying subsection (4) more than once;
but
(b) must not exercise
that power more than once in relation to a particular instalment rate mentioned
in paragraph (4)(a) or a particular amount of *GDP‑adjusted
notional tax mentioned in paragraph (4)(b).
Subdivision 45‑R—Special rules for consolidated groups
Guide to Subdivision 45‑R
45‑850 What this Subdivision is
about
This Subdivision deals with the application of this Part to members
of a consolidated group after the group has come into existence but before the
members are treated as a single entity for the purposes of this Part.
This Subdivision also
contains special rules in relation to the application of Subdivision 45‑Q
to members of a consolidated group in these circumstances:
(a) a
group whose members were treated as a single entity under that Subdivision (a mature
group) is acquired by another group (see section 45‑880); or
(b) a
member of a mature group ceases to be such a member and becomes the head
company of a new group (see section 45‑885).
Note: Subdivision 45‑S extends
the operation of this Subdivision so that it can apply to members of a MEC
group. It contains modifications of this Subdivision for the purposes of that
extended operation.
Table
of sections
Operative
provisions
45‑855 Section 701‑1
disregarded for certain purposes
45‑860 Member having a different
instalment period
45‑865 Credit rule
45‑870 Head company’s liability
to GIC on shortfall in quarterly instalment
45‑875 Other rules about the
general interest charge
45‑880 Continued application of
Subdivision 45‑Q to the head company of an acquired group
45‑885 Early application of
Subdivision 45‑Q to the head company of a new group
Operative provisions
45‑855 Section 701‑1
disregarded for certain purposes
If:
(a) an amount is
required to be worked out for the purpose of determining the *instalment income of an entity that is a *member
of a *consolidated group for a period that is
all or a part of a *consolidation transitional year
for the entity; and
(b) the period ends
before Subdivision 45‑Q starts to apply, because of subsection 45‑705(2)
or subparagraph 45‑705(3)(c)(ii), (4)(d)(ii) or (iv), to the *head company of the group;
that amount must be worked out without
regard to any application of section 701‑1 of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997 to the entity in relation to the period.
45‑860 Member having a different
instalment period
Different instalment period—instalment
quarter
(1) If:
(a) but for
Subdivision 45‑Q, a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group would be liable to pay an instalment for an *instalment quarter of the subsidiary member that includes the
starting time; and
(b) that quarter starts
before the start of the instalment quarter of the *head
company of the group that includes the starting time;
then, despite section 45‑710, the
subsidiary member is liable to pay an instalment for that quarter.
Different instalment period—income
year
(2) If:
(a) but for
Subdivision 45‑Q, a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group would be liable to pay an annual instalment for
an income year of the subsidiary member that includes the starting time; and
(b) that year ends
before the end of the income year of the *head
company of the group that includes the starting time;
then, despite section 45‑710, the
subsidiary member is liable to pay an instalment for that year.
Assumptions for working out amount of
instalment
(3) The amount of the
instalment must be worked out on the following assumptions:
(a) that the *instalment quarter or income year of the *subsidiary
member (as appropriate) consists only of the period that is the part of the
quarter or year occurring before the starting time;
(b) that an amount
required to be worked out for the purpose of determining the *instalment income of the subsidiary member for that period is worked
out under section 45‑855.
(4) For the purposes of this
section, the starting time is the time at which Subdivision 45‑Q
starts to apply to the *head company of the
group because of subsection 45‑705(2) or subparagraph 45‑705(3)(c)(ii),
(4)(d)(ii) or (iv).
45‑865 Credit rule
(1) When
the Commissioner makes an assessment:
(a) of
the income tax that the *head company of a *consolidated group is liable to pay for a *consolidation
transitional year for the head company; or
(b) that
no income tax is payable by the head company for that year;
the head
company is, in addition to any credit to which it is entitled under section 45‑30
for that year, entitled to a credit in relation to instalments payable by an
entity that is a *subsidiary member of the group at any time
during that year.
(2) The credit is equal to:
(a) the sum of so much
of each instalment payable by the entity (even if it has not paid it) for an *instalment quarter of a *consolidation
transitional year for the entity, or for that year, as is reasonably
attributable to so much of that quarter or year:
(i) which
is, or is included in, the consolidation transitional year for the *head company; and
(ii) during
which the entity is a *subsidiary member of the
group;
minus
(b) the sum of so
much of each credit that the entity has claimed under section 45‑215 or 45‑420
for each instalment quarter covered by paragraph (a) as is reasonably
attributable to:
(i) for a
credit under section 45‑215—so much of the preceding instalment quarters
of that consolidation transitional year for the entity which is covered by subparagraphs (a)(i)
and (ii); or
(ii) for a
credit under section 45‑420—so much of that instalment quarter and the
preceding instalment quarters of that consolidation transitional year for the
entity which is covered by subparagraphs (a)(i) and (ii).
(3) To
avoid doubt, if:
(a) during the *instalment quarter or the *consolidation
transitional year mentioned in paragraph (2)(a), the entity is a *subsidiary member of:
(i) 2 or
more *consolidated groups; or
(ii) one
or more consolidated groups and one or more *MEC
groups; and
(b) an amount is
taken into account under that paragraph or paragraph (2)(b) in working out
the credit to which the *head company of one of
the groups is entitled under subsection (1);
that amount is not to be taken into
account in working out the credit to which the head company of another of those
groups is entitled under that subsection.
(4) A reference in subsection (3)
to subsection (1) or paragraph (2)(a) or (b) includes a reference to
that provision in its extended operation in relation to a *MEC group under Subdivision 45‑S.
Note: This section applies to
members of a MEC group with the modifications set out in section 45‑930.
45‑870 Head company’s liability to
GIC on shortfall in quarterly instalment
Liability for the general interest charge
(1) Subject to subsections (3)
and (4), the *head company of a *consolidated
group is liable to pay the *general interest charge
under this section for an *instalment quarter in a *consolidation transitional year for the head company if:
(a) the instalment
payable by at least one *member of the group for
that quarter is worked out:
(i) under
paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c); or
(ii) by
using an instalment rate under section 45‑205; and
(b) the sum of
instalments payable by the members of the group for that quarter, reduced by
credits claimed by those members under section 45‑215 or 45‑420 for that
quarter, is less than 17/80 of the head
company’s *benchmark tax for that consolidation
transitional year.
Note: 17/80 of the head
company’s benchmark tax represents an amount that is 85% of one quarter of that
benchmark tax.
Amount on which the charge is payable
(2) Subject to subsections (3)
and (4), the *general interest charge is payable on the
amount worked out in accordance with the following method statement (if the
amount is a positive amount).
Method statement
Step 1. Work
out the amount that is 1/4 of the *benchmark tax of the *head company for that *consolidation transitional year of that head company.
Step 2. Work out the sum of instalments that would have been
payable by all the *members of the group for that *instalment quarter of that *head company if
none of the members had worked out its instalment for that quarter under
paragraph 45‑112(1)(b) or (c) or by using an instalment rate under section 45‑205.
Step 3. Work
out the sum of instalments payable by all the *members
of the group for that *instalment quarter,
reduced by credits claimed by the members under section 45‑215 or 45‑420
for that quarter.
Step 4. Reduce
the lesser of the results of steps 1 and 2 by the result of step 3. The result
of this step is the amount on which the *general
interest charge is payable if it is a positive amount. No general interest
charge is payable if the result of this step is nil or a negative amount.
Amounts of instalments or credits that
are taken into account
(3) In working out an amount
of instalment or credit for a *subsidiary member of the
group for the purposes of any of the following provisions:
(a) paragraph (1)(b);
(b) step 2 or 3 of
the method statement;
take into account only an amount of
instalment or credit covered by that provision that is reasonably attributable
to a period in that *consolidation transitional year
of the *head company during which it is a
subsidiary member of the group.
Members having different instalment
quarters
(4) In working out an amount
of instalment or credit for a *subsidiary member whose *instalment quarters differ from those of the *head company for the purposes of any of the following provisions:
(a) paragraph (1)(a)
or (b);
(b) step 2 or 3 of
the method statement;
a reference to an instalment quarter in a
*consolidation transitional year of the head company in any of those
provisions includes a reference to the last instalment quarter of that
subsidiary member ending before the end of that instalment quarter of the head
company.
(5) Subsections (6) and
(7) apply if:
(a) the *head company of the *consolidated group is a *monthly payer at a time in an *instalment
month (the current month); and
(b) any of the other *members of the group (the subsidiary quarterly payers)
are *quarterly payers at a time in the *instalment quarter (the current quarter) in which the
current month starts.
(6) Apply the following
rules:
(a) treat the
reference in subsection (1) to an *instalment
quarter as being a reference to the current month;
(b) treat the
references in this section to that quarter (or that instalment quarter) as
being references to the current month.
(7) Also apply the following
rules, for the purposes of subsections (1) to (5):
(a) treat the
subsidiary quarterly payers as *monthly payers for each *instalment month (a notional instalment month) that
starts (disregarding paragraph (6)(a)) in the current quarter;
(b) apply this
section separately in relation to each of those notional instalment months;
(c) treat the amount
of instalment or credit for a subsidiary quarterly payer in respect of a
notional instalment month as being the extent to which the amount of instalment
or credit for the subsidiary quarterly payer for the current quarter is
attributable to that notional instalment month.
45‑875 Other rules about the general
interest charge
(1) The *general interest charge under section 45‑870 for an *instalment quarter in an income year is payable by the *head company for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the instalment for that quarter was due to be
paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the day on which the head company’s assessed tax for that income year is
due to be paid.
(2) The Commissioner must
give the *head company written notice of the *general interest charge. The head company must pay the charge within
14 days after the notice is given to the head company.
(3) If any of the *general interest charge remains unpaid at the end of the 14 days,
the *head company is also liable to pay the
general interest charge on the unpaid amount for each day in the period that:
(a) starts at the end
of those 14 days; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following
remains unpaid:
(i) the
unpaid amount;
(ii) general
interest charge on the unpaid amount.
(4) The Commissioner may, if
he or she is satisfied that because special circumstances exist it would be
fair and reasonable to do so, remit the whole or any part of any *general interest charge payable under section 45‑870.
45‑880 Continued application of Subdivision 45‑Q
to the head company of an acquired group
(1) This section applies to
a company for which all of the following conditions are satisfied in relation
to a particular time (the takeover time):
(a) just before the
takeover time, Subdivision 45‑Q applied to the company as the *head company of a *consolidated group;
(b) at the takeover
time, the company becomes a *wholly‑owned subsidiary
of a *member of another consolidated group or *MEC group;
(c) that other group
is consolidated at or before the takeover time under section 703‑50 or 719‑50
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997;
(d) the Commissioner
receives the choice (or notice) under that section for the consolidation of
that other group not later than 28 days after the takeover time, or within such
further period (if any) as the Commissioner allows;
(e) at the takeover
time, Subdivision 45‑Q (including that Subdivision as applied under
Subdivision 45‑S) does not apply to the head company or the *provisional head company of that other group.
(2) For the purposes of this
Part only, this Act has effect in relation to the company and the other *members of the *consolidated group
mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) (the preserved group) as if,
during the period covered by subsection (5):
(a) the preserved
group had continued to exist as a consolidated group; and
(b) the company were
still the *head company of the preserved group; and
(c) Subdivision 45‑Q
had continued to apply to the company as the head company of the preserved
group; and
(d) an entity, while
being a *subsidiary member of the preserved group,
were not treated as a member of the group mentioned in paragraph (1)(b)
(the new group).
(3) Subsection (2) does
not stop the company from being a member of the new group for the purposes of
this Part during the period covered by subsection (5).
Note: This means, for example,
sections 45‑855 and 45‑860 apply to the head company as a member of the
new group.
(4) However, for the
purposes of applying section 45‑855 to the company, a reference in that
section to an application of section 701‑1 of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997 to the company in relation to the period mentioned in section 45‑855
is taken to be:
(a) a reference only
to an application of section 701‑1 of that Act to the company as a member
of the new group during that period; and
(b) not a reference
to an application (because of subsection (2) of this section) of section 701‑1
of that Act to the company as the *head company of
the preserved group during that period.
(5) This subsection covers
the period that starts from the start of the *instalment
quarter of the company that includes the takeover time and ends at the earlier
of the following times:
(a) the end of the
instalment quarter of the company during which the company ceases to be a
member of the new group;
(b) just before the
instalment quarter of the company during which the Commissioner gives the *initial head company instalment rate to the *head
company, or the *provisional head company, of the new
group.
(6) The Commissioner may, on
the application of the company made not later than 28 days after the takeover
time, allow such extension of time for the purposes of paragraph (1)(d) as
he or she considers appropriate.
(7) To avoid doubt, nothing
in this section prevents the operation of section 45‑755 or 45‑760 to *members of the preserved group while it continues to exist under subsection (2).
45‑885 Early application of
Subdivision 45‑Q to the head company of a new group
(1) This section applies to
a company for which all of the following conditions are satisfied in relation
to a particular time (the starting time):
(a) just before the
starting time, the company was a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated group, or a member of a *MEC
group;
(b) just before the
starting time, the consolidated group or MEC group was a mature group (see subsection (4));
(c) at the starting
time, either of the following applies:
(i) the
company ceases to be a subsidiary member of the consolidated group, or a member
of the MEC group;
(ii) the
group ceases to exist (otherwise than because a MEC group or consolidated group
is *created from the group, or because its *head
company or *provisional head company becomes a *wholly‑owned subsidiary of a member of another mature group);
(d) at the starting
time, the company is the head company of another consolidated group;
(e) within 28 days
after the starting time, or within such further period (if any) as the
Commissioner allows, the Commissioner receives the notice under section 703‑58
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 in relation to the choice to
consolidate, at and after the starting time, that other consolidated group
under section 703‑50 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(2) For
the purposes of this Part:
(a) the instalment
rate that the Commissioner is taken to have given to the company under
paragraph 45‑760(2)(a) has effect as if it were the *initial head company instalment rate for the company as the *head company of the *consolidated group
mentioned in paragraph (1)(d); and
(b) an instalment
rate that would otherwise be the initial head company instalment rate for the
company as the head company of that consolidated group is not to be treated as
that initial head company instalment rate.
Note: This means, subject to the
provisions in section 45‑705, Subdivision 45‑Q starts applying to the
company as the head company of the consolidated group at the start of the
instalment quarter that includes the starting time: see subsection (2) of
that section and paragraph 45‑760(2)(a).
(3) The Commissioner may, on
the application of the company made within 28 days after the starting time,
allow such extension of time for the purposes of paragraph (1)(e) as he or
she considers appropriate.
Mature group
(4) For the purposes of this
section, a *consolidated group or a *MEC group is a mature group at a particular time if:
(a) for a
consolidated group—Subdivision 45‑Q applies to its *head company at that time; or
(b) for a MEC
group—Subdivision 45‑Q, as applied under Subdivision 45‑S, applies to
its *provisional head company at that time.
Subdivision 45‑S—MEC groups
Guide to Subdivision 45‑S
45‑900 What this Subdivision is
about
This Subdivision sets out how this Part applies in relation to MEC
groups and their members.
Table
of sections
Preliminary
45‑905 Objects of Subdivision
General modification rules
45‑910 Extended operation of
Part to cover MEC groups
Extended operation of
Subdivision 45‑Q
45‑913 Sections 45‑705 and
45‑740 do not apply to members of MEC groups
45‑915 Application of
Subdivision 45‑Q to provisional head company
45‑917 Assumption for applying
section 45‑710 (single entity rule)
45‑920 Change of provisional
head company
45‑922 Life insurance company
Extended operation of Subdivision 45‑R
45‑925 Additional modifications
of sections 45‑855 and 45‑860
45‑930 Modifications of sections 45‑865
and 45‑870 and a related provision
45‑935 Additional modifications
of section 45‑885
Preliminary
45‑905 Objects of Subdivision
The
objects of this Subdivision are to:
(a) extend the
operation of this Part (except sections 45‑705 and 45‑740 and this
Subdivision) so that it can apply in relation to *MEC
groups and their members; and
(b) modify the rules
in this Part for that extended operation so that they take account of the
special characteristics of MEC groups.
General modification rules
45‑910 Extended operation of Part to
cover MEC groups
(1) This Part (except
sections 45‑705 and 45‑740 and this Subdivision) has effect in relation to
members of a *MEC group in the same way in which it has
effect in relation to *members of a *consolidated group.
(2) However, that effect is
subject to the modifications set out in the following table and elsewhere in
this Subdivision.
|
Modifications
of this Part
|
|
Item
|
A
reference in this Part to:
|
Is
taken to be a reference to:
|
|
1
|
a *consolidated group
|
a *MEC group
|
|
2
|
the *head company of a *consolidated group
|
the *provisional head company of a *MEC group
|
|
3
|
a *subsidiary member of a *consolidated
group
|
a member (other than the *provisional head company) of a *MEC group
|
Exceptions
(3) The modifications set
out in the table do not apply to the following provisions:
(a) this Subdivision;
(b) subsection 45‑30(4)
(see section 45‑930);
(d) note 2 at the end
of section 45‑700;
(e) sections 45‑705
and 45‑740 (see sections 45‑913, 45‑915 and 45‑920);
(f) subparagraphs 45‑760(1)(c)(i)
and (ii);
(g) the note at the
end of section 45‑850;
(h) sections 45‑865
and 45‑870 (see section 45‑930);
(i) paragraphs (1)(b),
(c), (d) and (e), and subsection (5), of section 45‑880;
(j) paragraphs (1)(a),
(b) and (c), and subsection (4), of section 45‑885.
Note: The provisions covered by paragraphs (d),
(f), (g), (i) and (j) apply to members of a MEC group without any
modifications.
Extended operation of Subdivision 45‑Q
45‑913 Sections 45‑705 and 45‑740
do not apply to members of MEC groups
In applying Subdivision 45‑Q
to members of a *MEC group, the Subdivision has effect as
if:
(a) section 45‑705
had no effect and section 45‑915 had effect instead; and
(b) section 45‑740
had no effect and section 45‑920 had effect instead.
45‑915 Application of Subdivision 45‑Q
to provisional head company
Period during which Subdivision
applies to provisional head company
(1) Subject to sections 45‑880
and 45‑885 (as applied under this Subdivision), Subdivision 45‑Q applies
to a company as the *provisional head company of a *MEC group during the period:
(a) starting at the start
of the *instalment quarter of the company
determined under subsection (2), (3) or (4); and
(b) ending:
(i) at
the end of the instalment quarter of the company determined under paragraph (6)(a)
or (b); or
(ii) just
before the instalment quarter of the company determined under paragraph (6)(c).
Note: The application of
Subdivision 45‑Q to the provisional head company is subject to the
modifications set out in this section and elsewhere in this Subdivision.
When the period begins—initial head
company instalment rate
(2) Subdivision 45‑Q
starts to apply to a company as the *provisional head
company of a *MEC group at the start of an *instalment quarter under this subsection if, during that quarter,
the Commissioner gives the company (as that provisional head company) the *initial head company instalment rate.
Note: The operation of this
subsection may be affected by section 45‑885 (as applied under this
Subdivision).
When the period begins—group created
from consolidated group
(3) Subdivision 45‑Q
starts to apply to a company as the *provisional head
company of a *MEC group at the start of an *instalment quarter (the starting quarter) under this
subsection if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) during the
starting quarter, the Commissioner is notified of the creation of the MEC group
from a *consolidated group (see subsection (5));
(b) the company is
the provisional head company of the MEC group when the Commissioner is so
notified;
(c) either of the
following applies:
(i) Subdivision 45‑Q
applied to the *head company of the consolidated group at
the end of the previous instalment quarter;
(ii) the
Commissioner gives the *initial head company
instalment rate to the head company of the consolidated group during the
starting quarter.
Note: For the application of
Subdivision 45‑Q to a head company of a consolidated group: see section 45‑705.
When the period begins—new provisional
head company
(4) Subdivision 45‑Q
starts to apply to a company as the *provisional head
company of a *MEC group at the start of an *instalment quarter (the starting quarter) under this
subsection if both of the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) the company is
appointed as the provisional head company of the MEC group under subsection 719‑60(3)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 during the starting quarter;
(b) one of the
following applies:
(i) Subdivision 45‑Q
applied to the former provisional head company of the MEC group at the end of
the previous instalment quarter;
(ii) the
Commissioner gives the *initial head company
instalment rate to the former provisional head company of the MEC group during
the starting quarter;
(iii) the
Commissioner is notified during the starting quarter of the creation of the MEC
group from a *consolidated group and Subdivision 45‑Q
applied to the *head company of the consolidated group at
the end of the previous instalment quarter;
(iv) the
Commissioner is notified during the starting quarter of the creation of the MEC
group from a consolidated group and the Commissioner gives the initial head
company instalment rate to the head company of the consolidated group during
the starting quarter.
When the period begins—modified timing
for provisional head company that is monthly payer
(4A) Subsection (4B)
applies if:
(a) apart from subsection (4B),
Subdivision 45‑Q starts to apply to a company as the *provisional head company of a *MEC
group at a particular time because of the operation of subsection (2), (3)
or (4); and
(b) the company is a *monthly payer; and
(c) the Commissioner
gave the *initial head company instalment rate as
mentioned in subsection (2), subparagraph (3)(c)(ii), subparagraph (4)(b)(ii)
or subparagraph (4)(b)(iv) in an *instalment month.
(4B) Treat
subsection (2), (3) or (4) (as the case requires) as providing that
Subdivision 45‑Q starts to apply to the company as the *provisional head company of the *MEC
group at the start of the next *instalment month.
Note: For the application of this
Subdivision to a monthly payer, see sections 45‑703 and 45‑910.
Notification of creation of MEC group
from consolidated group
(5) For the purposes of subsections (3)
and (4), the Commissioner is notified of the creation of a *MEC group from a *consolidated group when
the Commissioner receives a notice of the consolidation of the MEC group under
subsection 719‑40(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
When the period ends
(6) Subdivision 45‑Q
stops applying to a company as the *provisional head
company of a *MEC group at the earliest of the following
times after the company becomes the provisional head company:
(a) the end of the *instalment quarter during which the MEC group ceases to exist (other
than because a *consolidated group is *created from the MEC group);
(b) the
end of the instalment quarter during which a consolidated group is created from
the MEC group;
(c) just before the
instalment quarter during which another company is appointed as the provisional
head company of the MEC group under subsection 719‑60(3) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Note: The operation of this
subsection because of paragraph (a) may be affected by section 45‑880
(as applied under this Subdivision).
(7) To avoid doubt,
Subdivision 45‑Q does not apply to a company as the *provisional head company of a *MEC
group for any time at all if:
(a) subsection (2),
(3) or (4), and subsection (6), would, apart from this subsection, apply
to the company; but
(b) the time at which
Subdivision 45‑Q would stop applying to the company under subsection (6)
is before the time at which that Subdivision would start to apply to the
company under subsection (2), (3) or (4).
(8) To avoid doubt,
Subdivision 45‑Q may apply to a company as the *provisional
head company of a *MEC group at a time when the company is
not in fact the provisional head company of the group.
Note: An example of this is when a
company replaces another company as the provisional head company of a MEC
group. Under this section and section 45‑920, Subdivision 45‑Q may
start applying to the company as if it had already become the provisional head
company when it is not yet such a company.
45‑917 Assumption for applying
section 45‑710 (single entity rule)
In applying section 45‑710
to members of a *MEC group at a particular time, the
company that is the *provisional head company of the
group at that time must be assumed to be the *head
company of the group at all times during the period:
(a) throughout which
the group is in existence; and
(b) that is all or a
part of the income year of the company that includes that particular time.
45‑920 Change of provisional head
company
Object
(1) The object of this
section (except subsection (9)) is to ensure that, for the purposes of
this Part, when a company becomes the new *provisional
head company of a *MEC group:
(a) the company
inherits the history of the former provisional head company; and
(b) the history of
the new provisional head company is effectively ignored.
(2) This section applies to
a *provisional head company of a *MEC
group (the new provisional head company) that is appointed under
subsection 719‑60(3) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 if one
of the following conditions is satisfied:
(a) the conditions in
subsection 45‑915(4) are satisfied in relation to the new provisional head
company (whether or not Subdivision 45‑Q applies to the company as the
provisional head company of the group for any period of time);
(b) the new
provisional head company is so appointed during the *instalment
quarter of the company in which the MEC group is *created
from a *consolidated group and either:
(i) the
Commissioner gives the *initial head company
instalment rate to the *head company of the
consolidated group during that instalment quarter; or
(ii) Subdivision 45‑Q
applied to the head company of the consolidated group at the end of the
previous instalment quarter.
(3) Everything that happened
before the starting time in relation to the company (the former company)
that was the *provisional head company of the *MEC group immediately before the starting time:
(a) is taken to have
happened in relation to the new provisional head company instead of in relation
to the former company; and
(b) is taken to have
happened in relation to the new provisional head company instead of what would
(apart from this section) be taken to have happened in relation to the new
provisional head company before the starting time;
just as if, at all times before the
starting time:
(c) the new
provisional head company had been the former company; and
(d) the former
company had been the new provisional head company.
(4) For the purposes of this
section, the starting time is the time at which the *cessation event happened to the former company (the event that
results in the appointment of the new provisional head company).
(5) To avoid doubt, subsection (3)
also covers everything that, immediately before the starting time, was taken to
have happened in relation to the former company because of:
(a) section 701‑1
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (single entity rule); or
(b) section 701‑5
of that Act (entry history rule); or
(c) section 703‑75
of that Act (effects of an interposed company becoming the *head company of a *consolidated group); or
(d) section 719‑90
of that Act (effects of a change of head company of a *MEC
group); or
(e) section 45‑710
in this Schedule (single entity rule for the purposes of this Part), including
an application of that section under this Subdivision; or
(f) section 45‑740
in this Schedule (effects of an interposed company becoming the head company of
a consolidated group for the purposes of this Part); or
(g) this section; or
(h) one or more
previous applications of any of the provisions covered by paragraphs (a)
to (g).
(6) In addition, and without
affecting subsection (3):
(a) an assessment of
the former company for an income year that ends before the income year that
includes the starting time; or
(b) an amendment of
the assessment;
is taken to be something that had
happened to the new provisional head company, whether or not the assessment or
amendment is made before the starting time.
(7) This section has effect
for the purposes of applying this Part to members of the *MEC group in relation to an *instalment
quarter of the new provisional head company that ends after the starting time.
Note: An assessment mentioned in subsection (6)
may therefore be taken to be the base assessment of the new provisional head
company for the purposes of this Part.
(8) Subsections (1) to
(7) are to be disregarded in applying section 45‑915 (about the
application of Subdivision 45‑Q to a company as the *provisional head company of a *MEC
group).
Note: For example, if the
Commissioner has given an initial head company instalment rate to the former
company during an earlier instalment quarter, the rate is not, despite this
section, treated as if it had been given to the new provisional head company
for the purposes of section 45‑915. Subject to the other provisions in
that section, Subdivision 45‑Q therefore starts applying to the new
provisional head company under subsection 45‑915(4).
Special rule for the former company
(9) A provision of this Part
that applies on an entity becoming a member (other than the *provisional head company) of a *MEC
group does not apply to the former company when it becomes such a member at the
starting time.
Note: Section 45‑755 (the
entry rule, as applied under this Subdivision) therefore does not apply to the
former company on the company becoming such a member of the MEC group.
45‑922 Life insurance company
In applying Subdivision 45‑Q
to members of a *MEC group for an *instalment
quarter of the *provisional head company of the group in
an income year of the provisional head company, the company is taken to be a *life insurance company for that quarter if:
(a) one or more life
insurance companies are members of the group at any time during that quarter;
or
(b) one or more life
insurance companies were members of the group at any time during a previous
instalment quarter of the company in that year.
Extended operation of Subdivision 45‑R
45‑925 Additional modifications of
sections 45‑855 and 45‑860
In applying sections 45‑855
and 45‑860 to members of a *MEC group, those
sections have effect as if, in addition to the modifications set out in the
table in section 45‑910:
(a) a reference in
those sections to subsection 45‑705(2) were a reference to subsection 45‑915(2);
and
(b) a reference in
those sections to subparagraph 45‑705(3)(c)(ii), (4)(d)(ii) or (iv) were a
reference to subparagraph 45‑915(3)(c)(ii), (4)(b)(ii) or (iv).
45‑930 Modifications of sections 45‑865
and 45‑870 and a related provision
(1) In
applying sections 45‑865 and 45‑870, and subsection 45‑30(4) (which
is related to section 45‑865), to members of a *MEC
group, those provisions have effect as if:
(a) a reference in
those provisions to a *consolidated group were
a reference to a *MEC group; and
(b) a reference in
those provisions to a MEC group were a reference to a consolidated group.
Note: This means a reference in
those provisions to the head company of a consolidated group has effect as if
it were a reference to the head company of a MEC group. Similarly, a reference
in those provisions to a subsidiary member of a consolidated group has effect
as if it were a reference to a subsidiary member of a MEC group.
(2) However, the
modifications in subsection (1) do not apply to subsection 45‑865(4)
and the note at the end of section 45‑865.
Note: This means subsection 45‑865(4)
and the note apply to members of a MEC group without any modifications.
45‑935 Additional modifications of
section 45‑885
In applying section 45‑885
to members of a *MEC group, that section has effect as if,
in addition to the modifications set out in the table in section 45‑910,
it had been modified as set out in the following table:
|
Modifications
of section 45‑885
|
|
Item
|
Provision:
|
Modification:
|
|
1
|
Paragraph
45‑885(1)(e)
|
The
paragraph is taken to have been replaced by the following paragraph:
(e) within 28
days after the starting time, or within such further period (if any) as the
Commissioner allows, the Commissioner receives a notice under section 719‑76
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 in relation the consolidation of
that other MEC group, at and after the starting time, under section 719‑50
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
|
|
2
|
Subsection 45‑885(2) (including the
note at the end of the subsection)
|
A reference to paragraph 45‑760(2)(a)
is taken to be a reference to that paragraph as applied under this
Subdivision
|
|
3
|
The note at the end of subsection 45‑885(2)
|
The reference to section 45‑705 is
taken to be a reference to section 45‑915
|
Part 2‑15—Returns and assessments
Division 70—Tax receipts
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 70
70‑A Tax receipts
Guide to Division 70
70‑1 What this Division is about
The Commissioner must
provide you with a tax receipt for an income year if you are an individual
taxpayer and the total tax assessed to you for the income year is $100 or more
(or such other amount as determined by the Commissioner from time to time).
The tax receipt must
include information about how the total tax assessed to you for the income year
is notionally used to finance different categories of Commonwealth government
expenditure.
The tax receipt must
also include information about the total amount of Commonwealth government
debt, for the current and previous financial years, and the expected total
amount of interest to be paid on that debt during the current financial year.
Subdivision 70‑A—Tax receipts
Table of sections
70‑5 Tax receipt to be
provided to certain individual taxpayers
70‑5 Tax receipt to be provided to
certain individual taxpayers
(1) The Commissioner must
give you a *tax receipt in respect of an income year
if:
(a) the Commissioner
is required to give you a notice of assessment in respect of the income year
and has not previously given you a notice in respect of the income year; and
(b) you are an
individual; and
(c) the amount of
income tax you owe (as worked out under step 4 of subsection 4‑10(3) of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997) for the *financial
year that corresponds to the income year is equal to or greater than:
(i) if subparagraph (ii)
does not apply—$100; or
(ii) if
the Commissioner has made a determination under subsection (2)—the amount
specified in the determination; and
(d) the notice is
given to you within the period of 18 months after the end of the income year.
(2) The Commissioner may, by
legislative instrument, make a determination that specifies an amount for the
purposes of subparagraph (1)(c)(ii).
(3) The *tax receipt must include the following information:
(a) your name;
(b) the amount
mentioned in paragraph (1)(c);
(c) how the amount
mentioned in paragraph (1)(c) is notionally used to finance different
categories of Commonwealth government expenditure (other than expenditure that
relates to amounts collected under the *GST
law that are paid to the States and Territories);
(d) an estimate of
the total face value of Commonwealth stock and securities on issue at the end
of the previous *financial year;
(e) an estimate of
the expected total face value of Commonwealth stock and securities on issue at
the end of the financial year;
(f) the expected
total interest to be paid during the financial year in respect of the
Commonwealth stock and securities referred to in paragraph (e).
Note: The allocation of how the
total tax assessed to you is spent is a notional calculation and may not
represent how the tax assessed to you is actually spent.
(4) For the purposes of
determining the amounts in paragraphs (2)(d) to (f), the Commissioner must
use the information in the budget economic and fiscal outlook report prepared
for the purpose of section 10 of the Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998
in respect of the *financial year referred to in paragraph (1)(c).
(5) For the purposes of
determining the form of the information to be included in the *tax receipt, the Commissioner must seek the advice of the Minister
and take that advice into account.
(6) The Commissioner must
give you the *tax receipt as soon as practicable.
Part 2‑30—Collecting Medicare levy with income tax
Division 90—Medicare levy and Medicare levy surcharge
Table of Subdivisions
90‑A Treatment like income tax
Subdivision 90‑A—Treatment like income tax
Table of sections
90‑1 Laws apply in relation
to Medicare levy and Medicare levy surcharge as they apply in relation to
income tax
90‑1 Laws apply in relation to Medicare
levy and Medicare levy surcharge as they apply in relation to income tax
Except so far as the
contrary intention appears, this Schedule and the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997 apply, and are taken always to have applied, in relation to the
following in the same way as they apply in relation to income tax and *tax:
(a) *Medicare levy;
(b) *Medicare levy (fringe benefits) surcharge.
Part 2‑35—Excess superannuation contributions
Division 95—Excess concessional contributions charge
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 95
95‑A Object of Division
95‑B Excess concessional
contributions charge
Guide to Division 95
95‑1 What this Division is about
You are liable to pay
a charge on the income tax you pay on excess concessional contributions.
The charge is applied
at a uniform rate that is the same as the shortfall interest charge.
The period for the
excess concessional contributions charge starts at the start of the income year
and ends just before tax is due to be paid under your first assessment for the
year.
Subdivision 95‑A—Object of Division
Table of sections
95‑5 Object of Division
95‑5 Object of Division
The object of this
Division is to neutralise benefits that taxpayers could otherwise receive from *excess concessional contributions, so that they do not receive an
advantage in the form of:
(a) the later time at
which *tax is collected, as compared to tax that
is collected through the Pay as you go system; and
(b) the earnings on
the contributions, which receive a concessional tax rate and remain in
superannuation even if the contributions are released under Division 96.
Subdivision 95‑B—Excess concessional contributions charge
Table of sections
95‑10 Liability to excess
concessional contributions charge
95‑15 Amount of excess concessional
contributions charge
95‑20 When excess concessional
contributions charge is due and payable
95‑25 General interest charge
95‑10 Liability to excess
concessional contributions charge
(1) If:
(a) you have *excess concessional contributions for a *financial
year; and
(b) you are liable to
pay an amount of *tax (your actual tax) for
the corresponding income year; and
(c) your actual tax
exceeds the amount of tax you would be liable to pay for the income year if the
excess concessional contributions were disregarded;
the excess is an amount of tax on which
you are liable to pay excess concessional contributions charge.
Note 1: Excess concessional
contributions are included in assessable income and give rise to a tax offset:
see section 291‑15 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Note 2: In this Act, tax
is an assessed amount: see subsection 995‑1(1) of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997.
(2) If you would not be
liable to pay *tax for the income year if the *excess concessional contributions were disregarded, apply paragraph (1)(c)
as if you would be liable to pay a nil amount of tax.
Period for which the charge is payable
(3) The liability is for
each day in the period:
(a) beginning on the
first day of the income year; and
(b) ending on the day
before the day on which *tax under your first
notice of assessment for that income year is due to be paid, or would be due to
be paid if there were any.
95‑15 Amount of excess concessional
contributions charge
The *excess concessional contributions charge for a day is worked out by
multiplying the rate worked out under section 4 of the Superannuation
(Excess Concessional Contributions Charge) Act 2013 for that day by the sum
of the following amounts:
(a) the amount of *tax on which you are liable to pay the charge;
(b) the excess
concessional contributions charge on that amount from previous days.
95‑20 When excess concessional
contributions charge is due and payable
(1) The *excess concessional contributions charge you are liable to pay for
an income year is due and payable on the day on which *tax
is due to be paid under your first notice of assessment for that income year
that includes an amount of tax on which you are liable to pay the charge.
Note: For when income tax is due
and payable, see section 5‑5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Determination required
(2) An amount of *excess concessional contributions charge is only due and payable if
the Commissioner gives you an *excess concessional
contributions determination stating the amount of the charge (although it may
be taken by subsection (1) to have been due and payable at a time before
the determination was made).
Note: For excess concessional
contributions determinations, see Division 97.
Amended determinations
(3) However, if the Commissioner
amends your *excess concessional contributions
determination, any extra charge resulting from the amendment is due and payable
21 days after the Commissioner gives you notice of the amended determination.
95‑25 General interest charge
If an amount of *excess concessional contributions charge or *shortfall
interest charge on excess concessional contributions charge that you are liable
to pay remains unpaid after the time by which it is due to be paid, you are
liable to pay the *general interest charge on the unpaid
amount for each day in the period that:
(a) begins on the day
on which the amount was due to be paid; and
(b) ends on the last
day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following remains unpaid:
(i) the
excess concessional contributions charge or shortfall interest charge;
(ii) the
general interest charge on any of the excess concessional contributions charge
or shortfall interest charge.
Note 1: The general interest charge is
worked out under Part IIA.
Note 2: Shortfall interest charge is
worked out under Division 280 in this Schedule.
Note 3: See section 5‑10 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 for when the amount of shortfall interest charge
becomes due and payable.
Division 96—Releasing money from superannuation
Table of Subdivisions
96‑A Releasing money from
superannuation
Subdivision 96‑A—Releasing money from superannuation
Guide to Subdivision 96‑A
96‑1 What this Subdivision is about
You may elect to
release from your superannuation interests:
(a) up
to 85% of your excess concessional contributions for a financial year; and
(b) your
non‑concessional contributions that exceed your non‑concessional contributions
cap for the financial year, and 85% of any associated earnings.
Superannuation
providers will usually be required to pay an amount from the superannuation
interests. However, for certain interests the provider may choose whether or
not to pay.
Released concessional
contributions are paid to the Commissioner. You get a credit for the released
amount. Surplus credits are refunded to you under Division 3A of
Part IIB.
Released non‑concessional
contributions and associated earnings are paid to you.
Table of sections
Requesting a release authority
96‑5 Electing to release
excess concessional contributions
96‑7 Electing to release non‑concessional
contributions etc.
Issuing
a release authority to superannuation provider
96‑10 Release authorities for
elections under section 96‑5
96‑12 Release authorities for
elections under section 96‑7
96‑15 Varying and revoking a release
authority
Complying with a release
authority
96‑20 Obligations of
superannuation providers
96‑25 Voluntary compliance
with a release authority relating to voluntary release interests and defined
benefit interests
96‑30 Meaning of maximum available release amount
96‑35 Notifying Commissioner
96‑40 Notifying
individual—unsuccessful release attempt
96‑42 Notifying
individual—successful releases under section 96‑12
96‑45 Compensation for
acquisition of property
Consequences of releasing
amounts
96‑50 Entitlement to credits
96‑55 Interest for late
payments of money received by the Commissioner in accordance with release
authority
96‑60 Income tax treatment of
amounts released—proportioning rule does not apply
Requesting a release authority
96‑5 Electing to release excess
concessional contributions
Original determinations
(1) If you receive an *excess concessional contributions determination for a *financial year, you may elect to release from a *superannuation interest an amount not exceeding 85% of the *excess concessional contributions stated in the determination.
Note 1: For excess concessional
contributions determinations, see Subdivision 97‑A.
Note 2: Released excess concessional
contributions are not included in your non‑concessional contributions (a gross‑up
also applies): see subsection 292‑90(1A) of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997.
Amended determinations
(2) However, if the *excess concessional contributions determination is an amended
determination increasing the stated amount of your *excess
concessional contributions, you may elect to release an amount not exceeding:
(a) 85% of the excess
concessional contributions stated in the amended determination; less
(b) any amount you
elect to release under subsection (1) in relation to an earlier determination.
Requirements for election
(3) You make the election
by:
(a) notifying the
Commissioner of the amount you elect to release; and
(b) identifying the *superannuation interest or interests you have from which the amount
is to be released; and
(c) if you identify
more than one superannuation interest—stating the amount to be released from
each such interest.
(4) The election must:
(a) be in the *approved form; and
(b) be given to the
Commissioner within:
(i) 21
days after receiving notice of the *excess
concessional contributions determination or amended excess concessional
contributions determination; or
(ii) a
further period allowed by the Commissioner.
Unsuccessful elections—making a
further election
(5) If:
(a) you make a valid
election under this section; and
(b) the Commissioner
gives you a notice under subsection 96‑40(1) stating an amount (the unreleased
amount) that a *superannuation provider
did not pay in relation to the release authority issued in relation to that
election;
you may make a further election to
release the unreleased amount from another superannuation interest you have.
(6) The further election
must comply with subsection (3) and paragraph (4)(a), and must be
given to the Commissioner within:
(a) 21 days after receiving
the notice mentioned in paragraph (5)(b); or
(b) a further period
allowed by the Commissioner.
Election is irrevocable
(7) An election under this
section is irrevocable.
96‑7 Electing to release non‑concessional
contributions etc.
Original determinations
(1) If you receive an *excess non‑concessional contributions determination for a *financial year, you may:
(a) elect to release
the *total release amount stated in the
determination from your *superannuation
interests; or
(b) elect not to release
that total release amount if the value of your superannuation interests is nil;
or
(c) elect not to
release that total release amount for some other reason.
Note 1: For excess non‑concessional
contributions determinations, see Subdivision 97‑B.
Note 2: The released amount will be
non‑assessable non‑exempt income (see section 303‑17 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997), but an amount corresponding to your associated
earnings on those excess contributions will be included in your assessable
income (see Subdivision 292‑B of that Act).
Note 3: If the value of your
superannuation interests is between nil and that total release amount, you
could first make an election under paragraph (a) and then a further
election under paragraph (b) (see subsection (6)).
Note 4: An election purportedly made
under paragraph (b) will be invalid if the value of your superannuation
interests was not nil.
Amended determinations
(2) However, if that
determination is an amended determination that increased the *total release amount, any election under subsection (1)
relating to the amended determination is to be made as if that new total
release amount were reduced by:
(a) if you made an
election under paragraph (1)(a) for each earlier *excess
non‑concessional contributions determination you received for the *financial year—the sum of any amounts paid to you in response to
release authorities issued in relation to those determinations; or
(b) otherwise—the
total release amount stated in the most recent of those earlier determinations.
(3) Receiving an amended
determination does not prevent you from making an election under subsection (1)
in relation to an earlier determination.
Requirements for election
(4) You make an election
under paragraph (1)(a) by identifying:
(a) one or more
superannuation providers who hold one or more *superannuation
interests for you; and
(b) the amount each
superannuation provider is to release.
(5) An election under paragraph (1)(a),
(b) or (c) relating to an *excess non‑concessional
contributions determination must:
(a) be in the *approved form; and
(b) be given to the
Commissioner within:
(i) 60
days after the Commissioner issued notice of that determination; or
(ii) a
further period allowed by the Commissioner.
Unsuccessful release—making a further
election
(6) If:
(a) you make a valid
election under paragraph (1)(a); and
(b) the
Commissioner gives you a notice under subsection 96‑40(2) stating an
amount (the unpaid amount) that a *superannuation
provider did not pay in relation to the release authority issued in relation to
that election;
you may make a further election under paragraph (1)(a)
or (b) for the release, or non‑release, of the unpaid amount.
Note: That further election would
be under paragraph (1)(b) if the value of your superannuation interests is
now nil.
(7) The further election
must comply with subsection (4) and paragraph (5)(a), and must be
given to the Commissioner within:
(a) 60 days after the
Commissioner issued the notice mentioned in paragraph (6)(b); or
(b) a further period
allowed by the Commissioner.
Election is irrevocable
(8) An election under this
section is irrevocable.
Issuing a release authority to superannuation provider
96‑10 Release authorities for
elections under section 96‑5
(1) If you make a valid
election under section 96‑5, the Commissioner must issue a release
authority to each *superannuation provider that holds a *superannuation interest identified in the election.
(2) The release authority
must:
(a) state the amount
to be released from the *superannuation interest,
as stated in the election; and
(b) be dated; and
(c) contain any other
information that the Commissioner considers relevant.
96‑12 Release authorities for
elections under section 96‑7
(1) The Commissioner must
issue one or more release authorities under this section if you make a valid
election under paragraph 96‑7(1)(a).
(2) A release authority may
be issued to:
(a) a *superannuation provider identified in the election; or
(b) any other
superannuation provider who holds one or more *superannuation
interests for you.
(3) Each release authority
must:
(a) state the total
amount to be released by the *superannuation provider
from *superannuation interests held by the
provider for you; and
(b) be dated; and
(c) contain any other
information that the Commissioner considers relevant.
96‑15 Varying and revoking a release
authority
The Commissioner may
vary or revoke a release authority at any time before the Commissioner receives
a notice under section 96‑35 relating to the release authority.
Complying with a release authority
96‑20 Obligations of superannuation
providers
(1) A *superannuation provider issued with a release authority under
section 96‑10 must, within 7 days after the release authority is issued,
pay to the Commissioner the lesser of:
(a) the amount stated
in the release authority; and
(b) the sum of the *maximum available release amounts for each *superannuation
interest held by the superannuation provider for the individual in *superannuation plans.
Note 1: Subsection 288‑95(3)
provides for an administrative penalty for failing to comply with this section.
Note 2: For the taxation treatment of
the payment, see section 96‑60.
(1A) A *superannuation
provider issued with a release authority under section 96‑12 must, within
21 days after the release authority is issued (or a further period allowed by
the Commissioner), pay to the individual the lesser of:
(a) the amount stated
in the release authority; and
(b) the sum of the *maximum available release amounts for each *superannuation
interest held by the superannuation provider for the individual in *superannuation plans.
Note 1: Subsection 288‑95(3)
provides for an administrative penalty for failing to comply with this section.
Note 2: For the taxation treatment of
the payment, see section 96‑60.
Exception—interests not subject to
compulsory release
(2) However, the *maximum available release amount for a *superannuation
interest is not to be included in the sum worked out under paragraph (1)(b)
if the interest is of any of the following kinds (a voluntary release
interest):
(a) a *defined benefit interest;
(b) a superannuation
interest in a *non‑complying superannuation fund;
(c) a superannuation
interest that is treated as a separate interest under regulations made for the
purposes of section 307‑200 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 in
circumstances where the interest is supporting a *superannuation
income stream.
(3) Despite paragraph (1A)(b),
the *maximum available release amount for a *defined benefit interest is not to be included in the sum worked out
under that paragraph.
96‑25 Voluntary compliance with a
release authority relating to voluntary release interests and defined benefit
interests
(1) A *superannuation provider issued with a release authority under
section 96‑10 may, within 7 days after the release authority is issued,
pay to the Commissioner the lesser of:
(a) the amount stated
in the release authority; and
(b) the sum of the *maximum available release amounts for each voluntary release
interest held by the superannuation provider for the individual in *superannuation plans.
(2) A *superannuation provider issued with a release authority under
section 96‑12 may, within 21 days after the release authority is issued
(or a further period allowed by the Commissioner), pay to the individual the
lesser of:
(a) the amount stated
in the release authority; and
(b) the sum of the *maximum available release amounts for each *defined
benefit interest held by the superannuation provider for the individual in *superannuation plans.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(a)
or (2)(a), reduce the amount mentioned in that paragraph by any amount the
provider pays under section 96‑20 in relation to the release authority.
96‑30 Meaning of maximum
available release amount
The maximum
available release amount for a *superannuation
interest at a particular time is the total amount of all the *superannuation lump sums that could be payable from the interest at
that time.
96‑35 Notifying Commissioner
(1) A *superannuation provider issued with a release authority under
section 96‑10 or 96‑12 must notify the Commissioner of a payment made in
accordance with this Subdivision.
(2) A *superannuation provider that:
(a) has been issued
with a release authority under section 96‑10 or 96‑12; and
(b) is not required
to pay an amount under section 96‑20, or is required under that section to
pay an amount less than the amount stated in the release authority;
must notify the Commissioner that the
provider is not required to comply with the release authority.
(3) A notice under this
section must be given in the *approved form:
(a) within 7 days
after the release authority is issued, if the release authority was issued
under section 96‑10; or
(b) within 21 days
after the release authority is issued (or a further period allowed by the
Commissioner), if the release authority was issued under section 96‑12.
Note: Subsection 286‑75(1)
provides for an administrative penalty for failing to comply with this section.
96‑40 Notifying
individual—unsuccessful release attempt
(1) The Commissioner must
notify an individual if, in relation to the individual’s election under section 96‑5,
the Commissioner:
(a) receives a notice
from a *superannuation provider under subsection 96‑35(2);
or
(b) does not receive
a payment from a superannuation provider of the full amount stated in a release
authority within the time mentioned in subsection 96‑20(1) or 96‑25(1).
(2) The Commissioner must
notify an individual if, in relation to the individual’s election under
paragraph 96‑7(1)(a):
(a) the Commissioner
receives a notice from a *superannuation provider
under subsection 96‑35(2); or
(b) the individual
does not receive a payment from a superannuation provider of the full amount
stated in a release authority within the time mentioned in subsection 96‑20(1A)
or 96‑25(2).
(3) A notice under subsection (1)
or (2) must:
(a) be in writing;
and
(b) identify the *superannuation provider; and
(c) state how much of
the amount stated in the release authority was not paid within the applicable
time.
96‑42 Notifying
individual—successful releases under section 96‑12
(1) A *superannuation provider issued with a release authority under
section 96‑12 must notify an individual of a payment made to the
individual in accordance with the release authority and this Subdivision.
(2) The notice must be given
in the *approved form within:
(a) 21 days after the
release authority is issued; or
(b) a further period
allowed by the Commissioner.
Note: Subsection 286‑75(2AA)
provides an administrative penalty for failing to comply with this section.
96‑45 Compensation for acquisition
of property
(1) If the operation of
section 96‑20 would result in an acquisition of property (within the
meaning of paragraph 51(xxxi) of the Constitution) from an entity
otherwise than on just terms (within the meaning of that paragraph), the
Commonwealth is liable to pay a reasonable amount of compensation to the
entity.
(2) If the Commonwealth and
the entity do not agree on the amount of the compensation, the entity may
institute proceedings in a court of competent jurisdiction for the recovery
from the Commonwealth of such reasonable amount of compensation as the court
determines.
Consequences of releasing amounts
96‑50 Entitlement to credits
(1) If a *superannuation provider pays an amount in relation to a release
authority issued under section 96‑10 in relation to an election you make,
you are entitled to a credit equal to that amount.
Note: Division 3 of
Part IIB provides for the treatment of credits that an entity is entitled
to under a taxation law.
(2) The credit arises on the
day the Commissioner receives the amount.
96‑55 Interest for late payments of
money received by the Commissioner in accordance with release authority
(1) You are entitled to an
amount of interest worked out under subsection (2) if:
(a) the Commissioner
is required under Division 3A of Part IIB to refund all or part of a
credit you are entitled to under section 96‑50; and
(b) the Commissioner
does not so refund all or part of that credit within 60 days after receiving
the payment that gave rise to the credit.
(2) The interest is to be
calculated:
(a) on so much of the
amount of the credit as the Commissioner fails to refund under that Division;
and
(b) for the period:
(i) beginning
60 days after the day the Commissioner receives the amount; and
(ii) ending
on the day the Commissioner refunds the amount mentioned in paragraph (1)(a);
and
(c) on a daily basis;
and
(d) at the *base interest rate for the day the interest is calculated.
96‑60 Income tax treatment of
amounts released—proportioning rule does not apply
Section 307‑125 of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the proportioning rule) does not
apply to a payment made as required or permitted under this Subdivision.
Note: The income tax treatment of
released amounts is also affected by Subdivision 292‑B, and sections 303‑15
and 303‑17, of that Act.
Division 97—Excess contributions determinations
Table of Subdivisions
97‑A Excess concessional
contributions determinations
97‑B Excess non‑concessional
contributions determinations
Subdivision 97‑A—Excess concessional contributions determinations
Guide to Subdivision 97‑A
97‑1 What this Subdivision is about
The Commissioner must
give you a determination stating the amount of your excess concessional
contributions and any excess concessional contributions charge.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
97‑5 Determination of excess
concessional contributions and charge
97‑10 Review
Operative provisions
97‑5 Determination of excess
concessional contributions and charge
(1) If you have *excess concessional contributions for a *financial
year, the Commissioner must make a written determination stating:
(a) the amount of
those excess concessional contributions; and
(b) the amount (if
any) of *excess concessional contributions charge
you are liable to pay for the corresponding income year.
(2) A determination under
this section is an excess concessional contributions determination.
(3) The Commissioner may
amend a determination at any time.
(4) Notice of the
determination may be included in any other notice given to you by the
Commissioner.
(5) Notice of a determination
given by the Commissioner under this section is prima facie evidence of the
matters stated in the notice.
97‑10 Review
If you are dissatisfied
with an *excess concessional contributions
determination made in relation to you, you may object against the determination
in the manner set out in Part IVC.
Subdivision 97‑B—Excess non‑concessional contributions determinations
Guide to Subdivision 97‑B
97‑20 What this Subdivision is about
The Commissioner must
give you a determination stating:
(a) the
amount by which your non‑concessional contributions exceed your non‑concessional
contributions cap; and
(b) a
proxy amount for your associated earnings on this excess; and
(c) the
total amount that can be released from your superannuation interests in
relation to this excess and those earnings.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
97‑25 Excess non‑concessional
contributions determinations
97‑30 Associated earnings
97‑35 Review
Operative provisions
97‑25 Excess non‑concessional
contributions determinations
(1) If your *non‑concessional contributions for a *financial
year (the contributions year) exceed your *non‑concessional contributions cap for the contributions year, the
Commissioner must make a written determination stating:
(a) the amount of the
excess; and
(b) the amount of
your associated earnings worked out under section 97‑30; and
(c) the following
amount (the total release amount):

(2) A determination under
this section is an excess non‑concessional contributions determination.
(3) The Commissioner may
amend a determination at any time.
(4) Notice of the
determination may be included in any other notice given to you by the
Commissioner.
(5) Notice of a
determination given by the Commissioner under this section is prima facie
evidence of the matters stated in the notice.
97‑30 Associated earnings
(1) You are taken to have
associated earnings equal to the sum (rounded down to the nearest dollar) of
the amounts worked out under the following formula for each of the days during
the period:
(a) starting on the
first day of the contributions year; and
(b) ending on the day
the Commissioner makes the first *excess non‑concessional
contributions determination you receive for the contributions year.

where:
excess means the amount of the excess referred to in paragraph 97‑25(1)(a).
proxy rate means the lower of:
(a) the rate worked
out under subsection 8AAD(1) for the first day of that period as if the
base interest rate (within the meaning of subsection 8AAD(2)) for that day
were the average of the base interest rates for each of the days of the
contributions year; and
(b) a rate determined
under subsection (2) for the contributions year.
sum of earlier daily proxy amounts means the sum of the amounts worked out under the formula for each
of the earlier days (if any) during that period.
Note: Any excess non‑concessional
contributions determination you receive after the first one for the
contributions year is an amended determination.
(2) The Minister may, by
legislative instrument, determine a rate for a specified *financial year.
97‑35 Review
If you are dissatisfied
with an *excess non‑concessional contributions
determination made in relation to you, you may object against the
determination in the manner set out in Part IVC.
Chapter 3—Collection, recovery and administration of other taxes
Part 3‑10—Indirect taxes
Division 105—General rules for indirect taxes
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 105
105‑A Assessments
105‑B Review of indirect tax
decisions
105‑C Limits on credits, refunds
and recovering amounts
105‑D General interest charge and
penalties
105‑F Indirect tax refund schemes
105‑G Other administrative
provisions
Guide to Division 105
105‑1 What this Division is about
This Division
contains rules relating to the administration of the indirect tax laws.
Note
1: Administration rules relevant to particular indirect tax laws are
in Divisions 110, 111 and 112.
Note
2: For assessment of assessable amounts under indirect tax laws, see
Division 155.
The rules in this
Division deal with the following:
(a) how
assessments are made or amended and their effect;
(b) review
of assessments;
(c) limits on credits, refunds and recovering
amounts;
(e) the
effect of not passing on refunds of overpaid amounts;
(f) charges
and penalties;
(h) refunding
indirect tax because of Australia’s international obligations;
(i) your
address for service of documents and requirements for notifications.
Subdivision 105‑A—Assessments
Table of sections
105‑3 Application of Subdivision
105‑5 Commissioner may make
assessment of indirect tax
105‑10 Request for assessment
105‑15 Indirect tax liabilities
do not depend on assessment
105‑20 Commissioner must give
notice of the assessment
105‑25 Amendment of assessment
105‑30 Later assessment prevails
in case of inconsistency
105‑3 Application of Subdivision
This Subdivision
applies to:
(a) *tax periods, and *fuel tax return periods,
starting before 1 July 2012; and
(b) *indirect tax payable by you on an importation of goods, if:
(i) the
indirect tax does not relate to any tax periods; and
(ii) the
liability to pay the indirect tax arose before 1 July 2012.
Note: This Subdivision will be
repealed on 1 January 2017: see Part 2 of Schedule 1 to the Indirect
Tax Laws Amendment (Assessment) Act 2012.
105‑5 Commissioner may make
assessment of indirect tax
(1) The
Commissioner may at any time make an assessment of:
(a) your *net amount, or any part of your net amount, for a *tax period; or
(b) your *net fuel amount, or any part of your net fuel amount, for a tax
period or *fuel tax return period.
(2) The Commissioner may at
any time make an assessment of the amount of *indirect
tax payable by you on an importation of goods.
(3) The Commissioner may make
an assessment under this section even if he or she has already made an
assessment for the *tax period, *fuel tax return period or importation concerned.
Note: An assessment made under this
section is a reviewable indirect tax decision: see Subdivision 105‑B.
105‑10 Request for assessment
(1) You may request the
Commissioner in the *approved form to make an
assessment of:
(a) your *net amount for a *tax period; or
(b) your *net fuel amount for a tax period or *fuel
tax return period; or
(c) an amount of *indirect tax payable by you on an importation of goods.
(2) The Commissioner must
comply with the request if it is made within:
(a) 4 years after:
(i) the
end of the *tax period or *fuel
tax return period; or
(ii) the
importation; or
(b) such further
period as the Commissioner allows.
105‑15 Indirect tax liabilities do
not depend on assessment
(1) Your liability to pay *indirect tax or a *net fuel amount, and the
time by which a *net amount, a net fuel amount or an amount
of indirect tax must be paid, do not depend on, and are not in any way affected
by, the making of an assessment under this Subdivision.
(2) The Commissioner’s
obligation to pay:
(a) a *net amount under section 35‑5 of the *GST
Act; or
(b) a *net fuel amount under section 61‑5 of the Fuel Tax Act 2006;
and the time by which it must be paid, do
not depend on, and are not in any way affected by, the making of an assessment
under this Subdivision.
Note: However, a notice of
assessment can be used as evidence of liability: see section 105‑100.
105‑20 Commissioner must give notice
of the assessment
(1) The Commissioner must
give you notice of an assessment as soon as practicable after the assessment is
made. However, failing to do so does not affect the validity of the assessment.
(2) The Commissioner may
give you the notice electronically if you are required to lodge or have lodged
your *GST returns electronically.
105‑25 Amendment of assessment
The Commissioner may
amend an assessment at any time. An amended assessment is an assessment for all
purposes of any *indirect tax law.
Note 1: However, there is a time limit
on the recovery of overpaid or underpaid net amounts, net fuel amounts and
indirect tax: see sections 105‑50 and 105‑55.
Note 2: An amendment under this
section is a reviewable indirect tax decision: see Subdivision 105‑B.
105‑30 Later assessment prevails in
case of inconsistency
If there is an
inconsistency between assessments that relate to the same *tax period, *fuel tax return period
or importation of goods, the later assessment prevails to the extent of the
inconsistency.
Subdivision 105‑B—Review of indirect tax decisions
Table
of sections
105‑40 Reviewable indirect tax
decisions
105‑40 Reviewable indirect tax
decisions
(1) You may object, in the
manner set out in Part IVC, against a decision you are dissatisfied with
that is a *reviewable indirect tax decision relating
to you.
(2) A decision under section 105‑5
or 105‑25 involving an assessment of a *net
amount, a *net fuel amount or an amount of *indirect tax is a reviewable indirect tax decision.
Note: This Subdivision will be
repealed on 1 January 2017: see Part 2 of Schedule 1 to the Indirect
Tax Laws Amendment (Assessment) Act 2012.
Subdivision 105‑C—Limits on credits, refunds and recovering amounts
Table of sections
105‑50 Time limit on recovery by
the Commissioner
105‑55 Time limit on refunds
etc. from the Commissioner
105‑65 Restriction on GST refunds
105‑50 Time limit on recovery by the
Commissioner
(1) Any unpaid *net amount, *net fuel amount or
amount of *indirect tax (together with any relevant *general interest charge under this Act) ceases to be payable 4 years
after it became payable by you.
(2) If:
(a) an amount was
paid to you, or applied under Division 3 of Part IIB of this Act, as:
(i) a
refund in relation to a *net amount, *net fuel amount or amount of *indirect
tax; or
(ii) an
amount of indirect tax that was overpaid or wrongly paid; and
(b) that amount
exceeded the amount (if any) that you were entitled to be paid, or to have
applied under Division 3 of Part IIB of this Act;
the amount of the excess (together with
any relevant *general interest charge under this Act)
ceases to be payable 4 years after it became payable by you.
(3) However, subsection (1)
does not apply to an amount, and subsection (2) does not apply to an
amount of an excess, if:
(a) within those 4
years the Commissioner has required payment of the amount or the amount of
excess by giving a notice to you; or
(b) the Commissioner
is satisfied that:
(i) the
payment of the amount was avoided by fraud or evaded; or
(ii) the
payment of the amount of excess, or its application under Division 3 of
Part IIB of this Act, was brought about by fraud or evasion.
Sunsetting provision
(4) This section applies in
relation to payments and refunds that:
(a) relate to *tax periods, and *fuel tax return periods,
that start before 1 July 2012; or
(b) do not relate to
any tax periods or fuel tax return periods, but relate to liabilities or
entitlements that arose before 1 July 2012.
Note: This section will be repealed
on 1 January 2017: see Part 2 of Schedule 1 to the Indirect
Tax Laws Amendment (Assessment) Act 2012.
105‑55 Time limit on refunds etc.
from the Commissioner
(1) You are not entitled to
a refund, other payment or credit to which this subsection applies in respect
of a *tax period or importation unless:
(a) within 4 years
after:
(i) the
end of the tax period; or
(ii) the importation;
as the case
requires, you notify the Commissioner (in a *GST
return or otherwise) that you are entitled to the refund, other payment or
credit; or
(b) within that
period the Commissioner notifies you (in a notice of assessment or otherwise)
that you are entitled to the refund, other payment or credit; or
(c) in the case of a
credit—the credit is taken into account in working out:
(i) a *net amount or *net fuel amount that the
Commissioner may recover from you only because of subparagraph 105‑50(3)(b)(i);
or
(ii) an
amount of excess referred to in subsection 105‑50(2) that the Commissioner
may recover from you only because of subparagraph 105‑50(3)(b)(ii).
Note: Division 93 of the GST
Act puts a time limit on your entitlement to an input tax credit. Division 47
of the Fuel Tax Act 2006 puts a time limit on your entitlement to a fuel
tax credit.
(2) Subsection (1)
applies to:
(a) a refund in
relation to a *net amount or *net
fuel amount in respect of a particular *tax
period; or
(aa) another payment
that represents some or all of an amount:
(i) that
you paid as an amount of *indirect tax payable by
you in respect of a particular tax period; and
(ii) that
exceeded the amount (if any) of such tax that you were liable to pay in respect
of that tax period; or
(b) an *input tax credit or *fuel tax credit that is
attributable to a particular tax period; or
(c) a *wine tax credit the amount of which could have been included in a
reduction of your *net amount for a tax period under section 21‑15
of the *Wine Tax Act; or
(d) a refund of an
amount of *indirect tax relating to an importation.
(2A) A request by you to the
Commissioner to treat a document as a *tax invoice for
the purposes of attributing a credit to a *tax
period is taken to be a notification, for the purposes of paragraph (1)(a),
of your entitlement to the credit if:
(a) you made the
request within the 4 year period referred to in that paragraph in relation to
the credit; and
(b) the Commissioner
agrees to the request (whether or not within that period).
Fuel tax—non‑business taxpayers
(3) If you are neither *registered for GST nor *required to be
registered for GST, you are not entitled to a refund, other payment or *fuel tax credit to which this subsection applies in respect of a *fuel tax return period, acquisition, manufacture or importation
unless:
(a) within 4 years
after:
(i) the
end of the fuel tax return period; or
(ii) the
acquisition, manufacture or importation;
(as the case
requires) you notify the Commissioner that you are entitled to the refund,
other payment or credit; or
(b) within that
period the Commissioner notifies you (in a notice of assessment or otherwise)
that you are entitled to the refund, other payment or credit; or
(c) in the case of a
fuel tax credit—the credit is taken into account in working out:
(i) a *net fuel amount that the Commissioner may recover from you only
because of subparagraph 105‑50(3)(b)(i); or
(ii) an
amount of excess referred to in subsection 105‑50(2) that the Commissioner
may recover from you only because of subparagraph 105‑50(3)(b)(ii).
Note: Division 47 of the Fuel
Tax Act 2006 puts a time limit on your entitlement to a fuel tax credit.
(4) Subsection (3)
applies to:
(a) a refund in
relation to a *net fuel amount attributable to a *fuel tax return period; or
(b) a *fuel tax credit for *taxable fuel that you
acquire, manufacture or import.
(5) To avoid doubt, if,
under subsection (3), you are not entitled to a *fuel
tax credit, then you are not entitled to a refund or other payment in relation
to the credit.
Sunsetting provision
(6) This section applies in
relation to payments and refunds that:
(a) relate to *tax periods, and *fuel tax return periods,
that start before 1 July 2012; or
(b) do not relate to
any tax periods, or fuel tax return periods, but relate to liabilities or
entitlements that arose before 1 July 2012.
Note: This section will be repealed
on 1 January 2017: see Part 2 of Schedule 1 to the Indirect
Tax Laws Amendment (Assessment) Act 2012.
105‑65 Restriction on GST refunds
(1) The Commissioner need
not give you a refund of an amount to which this section applies, or apply
(under Division 3 or 3A of Part IIB) an amount to which this section
applies, if:
(a) you overpaid the
amount, or the amount was not refunded to you, because a *supply was treated as a *taxable supply, or
an *arrangement was treated as giving rise to a taxable supply, to any
extent; and
(b) the supply is not
a taxable supply, or the arrangement does not give rise to a taxable supply, to
that extent (for example, because it is *GST‑free);
and
(c) one of the
following applies:
(i) the
Commissioner is not satisfied that you have reimbursed a corresponding amount
to the recipient of the supply or (in the case of an arrangement treated as
giving rise to a taxable supply) to an entity treated as the recipient;
(ii) the
recipient of the supply, or (in the case of an arrangement treated as giving
rise to a taxable supply) the entity treated as the recipient, is *registered or *required to be
registered.
Note: Divisions 3 and 3A of
Part IIB deal with payments, credits and RBA surpluses.
(2) This section applies to
the following amounts that relate to a *tax
period starting on or before the day the Tax Laws Amendment (2014 Measures
No. 1) Act 2014 receives the Royal Assent:
(a) in the case of a *supply:
(i) so
much of any *assessed net amount or amount of *GST as you have overpaid (as mentioned in paragraph (1)(a)); or
(ii) so
much of any assessed net amount that is payable to you under section 35‑5
of the *GST Act as the Commissioner has not
refunded to you (as mentioned in paragraph (1)(a)), either by paying it to
you or by applying it under Division 3 of Part IIB of this Act;
(b) in the case of an
*arrangement:
(i) so
much of any assessed net amount or amount of GST to which subparagraph (a)(i)
would apply if the arrangement were a supply; or
(ii) so
much of any assessed net amount to which subparagraph (a)(ii) would apply
if the arrangement were a supply.
Note: Division 3 of Part IIB
deals with payments, credits and RBA surpluses.
(3) The Commissioner must
notify you in writing of any decision relating to you made under subsection (1)
after the day mentioned in subsection (2).
(4) You may object, in the
manner set out in Part IVC, against a decision you are dissatisfied with
that was made under subsection (1).
Note: This section will be repealed
on 1 July 2018: see Part 3 of Schedule 2 to the Tax Laws
Amendment (2014 Measures No. 1) Act 2014.
Subdivision 105‑D—General interest charge and penalties
Table of sections
105‑80 General interest charge
105‑85 Amending Acts cannot
impose penalties or general interest charge earlier than 28 days after Royal
Assent
105‑80 General interest charge
(1) If any of an amount (the
liability) to which this section applies remains unpaid after the
time by which it is due to be paid, you are liable to pay the *general interest charge on the unpaid amount of the liability for
each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the liability was due to be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following
remains unpaid:
(i) the
liability;
(ii) general
interest charge on any of the liability.
Note: The general interest charge
is worked out under Division 1 of Part IIA.
(2) This section applies to
either of the following amounts that you are liable to pay:
(a) an *assessed net fuel amount;
(b) an assessed
amount of *indirect tax (including an *assessed net amount).
105‑85 Amending Acts cannot impose
penalties or general interest charge earlier than 28 days after Royal Assent
(1) An Act that amends an *indirect tax law does not have the effect of making you liable to:
(a) a penalty for an
offence against an indirect tax law; or
(b) *general interest charge under section 105‑80;
for any act or omission that happens
before the 28th day (the postponed day) after the day on which
the amending Act receives the Royal Assent.
(2) If the amending Act
would (apart from this section) have the effect of making you liable to such a
penalty or charge because you contravened a requirement to do something:
(a) within a
specified period ending before the postponed day; or
(b) before
a specified time happening before the postponed day;
the requirement has effect instead by
reference to a period ending at the start of the postponed day, or by reference
to the start of the postponed day, as the case requires.
(3) This section does not
relieve you from liability to such a penalty or charge to the extent to which
the liability would have existed if the amending Act had not been enacted.
Subdivision 105‑F—Indirect tax refund schemes
Table of sections
105‑120 Refund scheme—defence
related international obligations
105‑125 Refund
scheme—international obligations
105‑120 Refund scheme—defence
related international obligations
(1) The Commissioner must,
on behalf of the Commonwealth, pay you an amount equal to the amount of *indirect tax borne by you in respect of an acquisition (within the
meaning of the *GST Act) if:
(a) you are in a
class of entities determined by the *Defence Minister;
and
(b) the acquisition
is covered by a determination of the Defence Minister; and
(c) the acquisition
is made:
(i) by or
on behalf of a *visiting force that is; or
(ii) by a
member (within the meaning of the Defence (Visiting Forces) Act 1963) of
the visiting force who is; or
(iii) by
any other entity that is;
covered by a
determination of the Defence Minister; and
(d) at the time of
the acquisition, it was intended for:
(i) the
official use of the visiting force; or
(ii) the
use of a member (within the meaning of the Defence (Visiting Forces) Act
1963) of the visiting force; or
(iii) any
other use;
and that use is
covered by a determination of the Defence Minister; and
(e) you claim the
amount in the *approved form.
(2) The amount is payable:
(a) in accordance
with the conditions and limitations; and
(b) within the period
and manner;
determined by the *Defence Minister.
(3) The *Defence Minister may only determine an entity under subparagraph (1)(c)(iii)
or a use under subparagraph (1)(d)(iii) if the Commonwealth is under an
international obligation to grant *indirect tax
concessions in relation to the kind of entity or the kind of use.
(4) A determination under
this section is a legislative instrument.
105‑125 Refund scheme—international
obligations
(1) The Commissioner must,
on behalf of the Commonwealth, pay you, or an entity in a class of entities
determined by the Commissioner, an amount equal to the amount of *indirect tax borne by you in respect of an acquisition (within the
meaning of the *GST Act) made by you if:
(a) you are a kind of
entity specified in the regulations; and
(b) the acquisition
is of a kind specified in the regulations; and
(c) you or the entity
claims the amount in the *approved form.
(2) The amount is payable:
(a) in accordance
with the conditions and limitations; and
(b) within the period
and manner;
set out in the regulations.
(3) The regulations may only
specify a kind of entity for the purposes of paragraph (1)(a) or a kind of
acquisition for the purposes of paragraph (1)(b) if the Commonwealth is
under an international obligation to grant *indirect
tax concessions in relation to the kind of entity or the kind of acquisition.
(4) A determination by the
Commissioner under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.
Subdivision 105‑G—Other administrative provisions
Table of sections
105‑140 Address for service
105‑145 Commissioner must give
things in writing
105‑140 Address for service
(1) Your address for service
for the purposes of an *indirect tax law is:
(a) if you are
registered in the *Australian Business Register—the address
shown in the Register under subsection 25(2) of the A New Tax System
(Australian Business Number) Act 1999 as your address for service; or
(b) if you are not
registered in that Register—the address last notified by you in a document
under an indirect tax law; or
(c) if you have not
notified an address in a document under an indirect tax law—your Australian
place of business or residence last known to the Commissioner; or
(d) any other address
that the Commissioner reasonably believes to be your address for service.
Note: If you are a company, see
also sections 444‑10 and 444‑15.
(2) If:
(a) under an *indirect tax law, you are:
(i) liable
to pay an amount of *indirect tax; or
(ii) entitled
to a credit; and
(b) you change your
address for service;
you must notify the Commissioner in
writing of the new address within 28 days after the change.
(3) If:
(a) a notice or other
document must be served on you:
(i) under
an *indirect tax law; or
(ii) in
proceedings for recovery of an amount under an indirect tax law; and
(b) you have notified
the Commissioner of an Australian address for service;
the Commissioner may serve the notice or
document by post to that address.
(4) However, if:
(a) you must lodge or
have lodged *GST returns electronically; and
(b) you notify the
Commissioner of an address for effecting service by way of electronic
transmission;
the Commissioner may serve a notice of
assessment, or notice of penalty or *general interest
charge under an *indirect tax law, on you by electronic transmission
to that address.
105‑145 Commissioner must give
things in writing
(1) Any notice, approval,
direction, authority or declaration that the Commissioner may give, or must
give, to you under an *indirect tax law must be
in writing.
(2) However, this does not
prevent the Commissioner giving any of those things to you by electronic
transmission if a provision of an *indirect tax law
allows the Commissioner to do so.
Division 110—Goods and services tax
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 110
110‑F Review of GST decisions
Guide to Division 110
110‑1 What this Division is about
This Division gives
you the right to object against reviewable GST decisions that relate to you.
Section 110‑50 sets out the reviewable GST decisions.
Subdivision 110‑F—Review of GST decisions
Table of sections
110‑50 Reviewable GST decisions
110‑50 Reviewable GST decisions
(1) You may object, in the
manner set out in Part IVC, against a decision you are dissatisfied with
that is:
(a) a *reviewable GST decision relating to you; or
(b) a *reviewable GST transitional decision relating to you.
(2) Each of the following
decisions is a reviewable GST decision:
|
Reviewable
GST decisions under GST Act
|
|
Item
|
Decision
|
Provision
of GST Act under which decision is made
|
|
1
|
refusing to register you
|
subsection 25‑5(1)
|
|
2
|
registering you
|
subsection 25‑5(2)
|
|
3
|
deciding the date of effect of your registration
|
section 25‑10
|
|
4
|
refusing to cancel your registration
|
subsection 25‑55(1)
|
|
5
|
cancelling your registration
|
subsection 25‑55(2)
|
|
6
|
refusing to cancel your registration
|
section 25‑57
|
|
7
|
deciding the date on which the
cancellation of your registration takes effect
|
section 25‑60
|
|
8
|
determining that the *tax periods that apply to you are each individual month
|
subsection 27‑15(1)
|
|
9
|
deciding the date of effect of a
determination
|
subsection 27‑15(2)
|
|
10
|
refusing to revoke your election under
section 27‑10
|
subsection 27‑22(1)
|
|
11
|
deciding the date of effect of a
revocation
|
subsection 27‑22(3)
|
|
12
|
refusing to revoke a determination under
section 27‑15
|
subsection 27‑25(1)
|
|
13
|
deciding the date of effect of a
revocation
|
subsection 27‑25(2)
|
|
14
|
determining that a specified period is a *tax period that applies to you
|
section 27‑30
|
|
15
|
refusing a request for a determination
|
section 27‑37
|
|
16
|
revoking a determination under section 27‑37
|
subsection 27‑38(1)
|
|
17
|
deciding the date of a revocation
|
subsection 27‑38(2)
|
|
18
|
refusing to permit you to account on a
cash basis
|
subsection 29‑45(1)
|
|
19
|
deciding the date of effect of your
permission to account on a cash basis
|
subsection 29‑45(2)
|
|
20
|
revoking your permission to account on a
cash basis
|
subsection 29‑50(3)
|
|
21
|
deciding the date of effect of the
revocation of your permission to account on a cash basis
|
subsection 29‑50(4)
|
|
22
|
refusing an application for a decision
that an event is a *fund‑raising event
|
paragraph 40‑165(1)(c)
|
|
23
|
approving another day of effect
|
paragraph 48‑71(1)(b)
|
|
24
|
revoking
an approval of a day of effect
|
subsection 48‑71(2)
|
|
29
|
refusing an application for approval
|
section 49‑5
|
|
30
|
refusing an application for approval or
revocation
|
subsection 49‑70(1)
|
|
31
|
revoking an approval under Division 49
|
subsection 49‑70(2)
|
|
32
|
refusing an application for revocation
|
subsection 49‑75(1)
|
|
33
|
revoking the approval of a *GST religious group
|
subsection 49‑75(2)
|
|
34
|
deciding the date of effect of any
approval, or any revocation of an approval, under Division 49
|
section 49‑85
|
|
35
|
approving another day of effect
|
paragraph 51‑75(1)(b)
|
|
36
|
revoking an approval of a day of effect
|
subsection 51‑75(2)
|
|
42
|
refusing an application for registration
|
section 54‑5
|
|
43
|
deciding the date of effect of registration
as a *GST branch
|
section 54‑10
|
|
44
|
refusing to cancel the registration of a *GST branch
|
subsection 54‑75(1)
|
|
45
|
cancelling the registration of a *GST branch
|
subsection 54‑75(2)
|
|
46
|
deciding the date of effect of the
cancellation of the registration of a *GST branch
|
section 54‑80
|
|
47
|
cancelling the registration of an
Australian resident agent
|
subsection 57‑25(1)
|
|
48
|
determining that the *tax periods that apply to a resident agent are each individual
month
|
subsection 57‑35(1)
|
|
49
|
deciding the date of effect of a
determination
|
subsection 57‑35(2)
|
|
49A
|
cancelling the registration of a *representative of an *incapacitated
entity
|
subsection 58‑25(1)
|
|
49B
|
deciding to direct a *representative of an *incapacitated
entity to give to the Commissioner a *GST return
|
paragraph 58‑50(1)(b)
|
|
50
|
cancelling the registration of a *non‑profit sub‑entity
|
subsection 63‑35(1)
|
|
51
|
refusing to allow, or allowing, a further
period within which to make an agreement that the margin scheme is to apply
|
paragraph 75‑5(1A)(b)
|
|
52
|
refusing a request to allow an annual
apportionment election to take effect from the start of another *tax period
|
paragraph 131‑10(2)(b)
|
|
53
|
disallowing an annual apportionment
election
|
subsection 131‑20(3)
|
|
53A
|
refusing to make requested decision about
excess GST
|
subsection 142‑15(1)
|
|
55
|
refusing a request to allow an annual *tax period election to take effect from the start of another tax
period
|
paragraph 151‑10(2)(b)
|
|
56
|
refusing a request to be allowed to make
an annual *tax period election on a specified day
|
subsection 151‑20(3)
|
|
57
|
disallowing an annual *tax period election
|
subsection 151‑25(3)
|
|
58
|
refusing a request to allow an election
to pay *GST by instalments to take effect from
the start of another *tax period
|
paragraph 162‑15(2)(b)
|
|
59
|
refusing a request to be allowed to make
an election on a specified day
|
subsection 162‑25(3)
|
|
60
|
disallowing an election to pay *GST by instalments
|
subsection 162‑30(3)
|
|
61
|
making a declaration that states:
(a) the amount that is (and has been at all
times) a *net amount for a *tax period that ended before 1 July 2012; or
(b) the amount that is (and has been at all
times) the amount of *GST on a *taxable importation, if the GST was payable before 1 July
2012
|
subsection 165‑40(1)
|
|
62
|
making a declaration to negate or reduce
a GST disadvantage
|
subsection 165‑45(3)
|
|
63
|
deciding whether to grant a request for a
declaration to negate or reduce a GST disadvantage
|
subsection 165‑45(5)
|
(3) A decision under section 24B
of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Transition) Act 1999
refusing an application for a determination under that section, or making a
determination under that section, is a reviewable GST transitional
decision.
Division 111—Wine tax and luxury car tax
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 111
111‑C Review of wine tax decisions
111‑D Effect on contracts from
amendments to laws
Guide to Division 111
111‑1 What this Division is about
This Division gives
you the right to object against decisions that relate to you disallowing the
whole or part of a claim for a wine tax credit.
It also explains how
contracts to supply wine or a luxury car are affected if a wine tax law or
luxury car tax law changes.
Subdivision 111‑C—Review of wine tax decisions
Table of sections
111‑50 Reviewable wine tax
decisions
111‑50 Reviewable wine tax decisions
(1) You may object, in the
manner set out in Part IVC, against a decision you are dissatisfied with
that is a *reviewable wine tax decision relating to
you.
(2) Each of the following
decisions is a reviewable wine tax decision:
|
Reviewable
wine tax decisions
|
|
Item
|
Decision
|
Provision
of Wine Tax Act under which decision is made
|
|
1
|
disallowing the whole or a part of your
claim for a *wine tax credit
|
section 17‑45
|
|
2
|
deciding the date of effect of your
approval as a New Zealand participant
|
section 19‑7
|
|
3
|
refusing to approve you as a New Zealand participant
|
section 19‑7
|
|
4
|
revoking your approval as a New Zealand participant
|
section 19‑8
|
|
5
|
deciding the date of effect of revocation
of your approval as a New Zealand participant
|
section 19‑8
|
Subdivision 111‑D—Effect on contracts from amendments to laws
Table of sections
111‑60 Alteration of contracts
if cost of complying with agreement is affected by later alteration to wine tax
or luxury car tax laws
111‑60 Alteration of contracts if
cost of complying with agreement is affected by later alteration to wine tax or
luxury car tax laws
(1) If, after a contract
involving a *supply or a *wine
taxable dealing has been made, an alteration to the *wine
tax law or the *luxury car tax law happens and the
alteration directly causes an increase or decrease in the cost to a party to
the agreement of complying with the agreement, then the contract is altered as
follows:
(a) if the cost is
increased—by allowing the party to add the increase to the contract price;
(b) if the cost is
decreased—by allowing the other party to deduct the decrease from the contract
price.
(2) The contract is not
altered if:
(a) the contract has
express written provision to the contrary; or
(b) it is clear from
the terms of the contract that the alteration of the *wine
tax law or the *luxury car tax law has been taken into
account in the agreed contract price.
Division 112—Fuel tax
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 112
112‑E Review of fuel tax decisions
Guide to Division 112
112‑1 What this Division is about
This Division gives
you the right to object against reviewable fuel tax decisions that relate to
you. Section 112‑50 sets out the reviewable fuel tax decisions.
Subdivision 112‑E—Review of fuel tax decisions
Table of sections
112‑50 Reviewable fuel tax
decisions
112‑50 Reviewable fuel tax decisions
(1) You may object, in the
manner set out in Part IVC, against a decision you are dissatisfied with
that is a *reviewable fuel tax decision relating to
you.
(2) Each of the following
decisions is a reviewable fuel tax decision:
|
Reviewable
fuel tax decisions
|
|
Item
|
Decision
|
Provision
of the Fuel Tax Act 2006 under which decision is made
|
|
1
|
making a
declaration that states the amount that is (and has been at all times) the *net fuel amount for a *tax period, or *fuel tax return period, that ended before 1 July 2012
|
subsection 75‑40(1)
|
|
2
|
making a
declaration to negate or reduce a *fuel tax disadvantage
|
subsection 75‑45(3)
|
|
3
|
deciding whether or not to grant a
request to negate or reduce a *fuel tax disadvantage
|
subsection 75‑45(5)
|
Part 3‑20—Sustaining the superannuation contribution concession
Division 133—Deferred payment
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 133
133‑A Deferral determination
133‑B Debt account
133‑C Compulsory payment
Guide to Division 133
133‑1 What this Division is about
Payment of Division 293
tax is deferred to the extent to which the tax is attributable to defined
benefit interests from which no superannuation benefit has yet become payable.
This reflects the
fact that money generally cannot be released from defined benefit interests
until a superannuation benefit is paid, usually upon retirement.
Subdivision 133‑A—Deferral determination
Guide to Subdivision 133‑A
133‑5 What this Subdivision is about
The Commissioner
determines the amount of your tax that is deferred to a debt account by working
out the extent to which your assessed tax is attributable to defined benefit
interests.
Table
of sections
Operative
provisions
133‑10 Determination of tax that
is deferred to a debt account
133‑15 Defined benefit tax
133‑20 How to attribute the
defined benefit tax to defined benefit interests
133‑25 Determination reducing
tax deferred to a debt account
133‑30 General provisions
applying to determinations under this Subdivision
Operative provisions
133‑10 Determination of tax that is deferred
to a debt account
(1) The Commissioner must
make a determination specifying the amount the Commissioner has ascertained as
being the extent to which your *assessed Division 293
tax for an income year is *defined benefit tax
attributable to a *superannuation interest.
Note 1: For variation and revocation,
see subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
Note 2: For general provisions,
including review, see section 133‑30.
(2) The amount of *assessed Division 293 tax specified in the determination is deferred
to a debt account for the *superannuation
interest.
(3) However, the
Commissioner must not make a determination under this section in relation to a *superannuation interest if, at the time the determination is to be
made:
(a) the *end benefit for the superannuation interest has become payable; or
(b) a notice under
section 133‑125 has been made in relation to the superannuation interest.
Note: For the meaning of end
benefit, see section 133‑130.
(4) Subsection (1) does
not apply if the Commissioner ascertains that no part of your *assessed Division 293 tax for an income year is *defined benefit tax attributable to a *superannuation
interest.
133‑15 Defined benefit tax
(1) Your defined
benefit tax for an income year is the amount worked out using the
formula:

where:
defined benefit contribution
component means the amount worked out as
follows:
(a) work out the
lesser of the following for the corresponding *financial
year:
(i) your *low tax contributions;
(ii) the
total amount of your *defined benefit contributions in
respect of all *defined benefit interests you have in the
financial year;
(b) subtract from the
result of paragraph (a) the difference (if any) between:
(i) your *taxable contributions for the income year; and
(ii) your
low tax contributions for the corresponding financial year.
Note: A difference may exist for paragraph (b)
because of the $300,000 high income threshold: see subsection 293‑20(1) of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Exception—defined benefit contribution
component is nil or less
(2) However, if the defined
benefit contribution component mentioned in subsection (1) is nil, or a
negative amount, no part of the *Division 293 tax
for the income year is defined benefit tax.
133‑20 How to attribute the defined
benefit tax to defined benefit interests
(1) If you have one *defined benefit interest in a *financial
year, your *defined benefit tax for the corresponding
income year is attributable to that interest.
(2) If you have more than
one *defined benefit interest in a *financial year, your *defined benefit tax for
the corresponding income year is attributable to each such interest in
proportion to the *defined benefit contributions for the
interest for the financial year.
133‑25 Determination reducing tax
deferred to a debt account
(1) If an amount of *assessed Division 293 tax that is *deferred
to a debt account for a *superannuation interest
is reduced as a result of an amended assessment, the Commissioner must make a
determination under this section in respect of the reduced amount.
(2) The amount so determined
is a deferral reversal for the *superannuation
interest.
Note: For variation and revocation,
see subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
133‑30 General provisions applying
to determinations under this Subdivision
(1) The Commissioner must:
(a) make a
determination as soon as practicable after:
(i) for a
determination under section 133‑10—assessing the amount (whether by way of
a first assessment or an amended assessment); or
(ii) for a
determination under section 133‑25—amending the assessment; and
(b) give you notice
in writing of the determination as soon as practicable after making it.
(2) The Commissioner:
(a) may include 2 or
more determinations under this Subdivision in the same notice; and
(b) may include a
notice under this Subdivision in a notice of an assessment under this Act.
(3) The validity of the
determination is not affected because any of the provisions of this Act have
not been complied with.
Review
(4) If you are dissatisfied
with a determination made under this Subdivision in relation to you, you may
object against the determination in the manner set out in Part IVC.
(5) If you are dissatisfied
with a decision the Commissioner makes not to make a determination under this
Subdivision:
(a) you may object
against the decision in the manner set out in Part IVC; and
(b) for the purpose
of working out the period within which the objection must be lodged, notice of
the decision is taken to have been served on you on the day notice is given to
you of:
(i) for a
determination under section 133‑10—the assessment of the amount; or
(ii) for a
determination under section 133‑25—the amended assessment.
Note: For the period within which
objections must be lodged, see section 14ZW.
Subdivision 133‑B—Debt account
Guide to Subdivision 133‑B
133‑55 What this Subdivision is
about
The Commissioner
keeps debt accounts for tax that is deferred to a debt account for a
superannuation interest.
You can make
voluntary payments of the debt account.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
133‑60 Debt account to be kept
for deferred tax
133‑65 Interest on debt account
balance
133‑70 Voluntary payments
133‑75 Commissioner must notify
superannuation provider of debt account
Operative provisions
133‑60 Debt account to be kept for
deferred tax
Accounts to be kept
(1) The Commissioner is to
keep a debt account for *Division 293 tax
for you for a *superannuation interest, if an amount of
your *assessed Division 293
tax is *deferred to a debt account for the
superannuation interest.
Account to be debited for Division 293
tax
(2) The Commissioner must
debit the debt account for the amount of *assessed
Division 293 tax that is *deferred to a debt
account for the *superannuation interest.
133‑65 Interest on debt account
balance
Interest to be debited at end of
financial year
(1) If a debt account for a *superannuation interest is in debit at the end of a *financial year, the Commissioner is to debit the account for
interest on the amount by which the account is in debit, calculated at the *long term bond rate for that financial year.
Note: Interest would not be debited
to a debt account that is no longer being kept by the Commissioner because the
assessed Division 293 tax liability being tracked in the account has been
finally discharged as mentioned in subsection 133‑105(3).
Remission of interest—deferral
reversal
(2) The Commissioner may
remit the whole or any part of an amount of interest debited, or to be debited,
from a debt account under subsection (1) if:
(a) the debt account
is credited:
(i) under
section 133‑70 because of a *deferral reversal; or
(ii) because
a determination under section 133‑10 is varied or revoked; and
(b) the Commissioner
is satisfied that, because of that credit, it would be fair and reasonable to
do so.
Remission of interest—special
circumstances
(3) The Commissioner may
remit the whole or any part of an amount of interest debited, or to be debited,
to a debt account under subsection (1) if the Commissioner is satisfied
that, because special circumstances exist, it would be fair and reasonable to
do so.
133‑70 Voluntary payments
(1) You may make payments to
the Commissioner for the purpose of reducing the amount by which a debt account
for a *superannuation interest is in debit.
(2) The Commissioner is to:
(a) acknowledge
receipt of the payment to you; and
(b) credit the
payment to the debt account; and
(c) notify you of the
revised balance of the debt account.
The credit mentioned in paragraph (b)
is to be made when the payment is received.
(3) The amount of a *deferral reversal for the *superannuation
interest is to be treated as if it were a voluntary payment under this section
in relation to the debt account for that interest. However, paragraphs (2)(a)
and (c) do not apply in relation to that amount.
133‑75 Commissioner must notify
superannuation provider of debt account
If the Commissioner
starts to keep a debt account for *Division 293
tax for you for a *superannuation interest, the Commissioner
must give the *superannuation provider in relation to the
superannuation interest a notice saying so.
Subdivision 133‑C—Compulsory payment
Guide to Subdivision 133‑C
133‑100 What this Subdivision is
about
The deferred tax liability must be paid when a superannuation
benefit becomes payable from the superannuation interest.
In some cases, the
amount that must be paid is capped.
Table of sections
Debt account discharge liability
133‑105 Liability to pay debt
account discharge liability
133‑110 When debt account
discharge liability must be paid
133‑115 General interest charge
133‑120 Meaning of debt account discharge liability
133‑125 Notice of debt account
discharge liability
End benefit
133‑130 Meaning of end
benefit
133‑135 End benefit
notice—individual
133‑140 End benefit
notice—superannuation provider
133‑145 End benefit
notice—material changes or omissions
Debt account discharge liability
133‑105 Liability to pay debt
account discharge liability
(1) You are liable to pay
the amount of your *debt account discharge liability
for a *superannuation interest if the *end benefit for the interest becomes payable.
(2) The liability arises:
(a) unless paragraph (b)
applies—at the time the *end benefit becomes
payable; or
(b) if the end
benefit is a *superannuation death benefit—just before
you die.
Note 1: For paragraph (a), a
release authority allows money to be released from the superannuation plan to
pay this amount: see subsection 135‑10(1).
Note 2: For paragraph (b), the
debt will be recovered from your estate: see Subdivision 260‑E.
(3) Payment of your *debt account discharge liability for a *superannuation
interest discharges your liability for so much of your total *assessed Division 293 tax for all income years as is *deferred to a debt account for the superannuation interest.
133‑110 When debt account discharge
liability must be paid
The amount of your *debt account discharge liability for a *superannuation
interest is due and payable at the end of 21 days after
the day on which the *end benefit for the
superannuation interest is paid.
133‑115 General interest charge
If your *debt account discharge liability remains
unpaid after the time by which it is due and payable, you are liable to pay the
*general interest charge on the unpaid amount for each day in the
period that:
(a) begins on the day
on which the debt account discharge liability was due to be paid; and
(b) ends on the last
day on which, at the end of the day, any of the following remains unpaid:
(i) the
debt account discharge liability;
(ii) general
interest charge on any of the debt account discharge liability.
Note: The general interest charge
is worked out under Part IIA.
133‑120 Meaning of debt account
discharge liability
(1) The
debt account discharge liability for a *superannuation
interest for which the Commissioner keeps a debt account is the lesser of:
(a) the amount by
which the debt account is in debit at the earlier of:
(i) the
time the *end benefit for the superannuation
interest becomes payable; and
(ii) the
time a notice under section 133‑125 is made; and
(b) the end benefit
cap specified in a notice given to the Commissioner by the *superannuation provider under subsection (2) or section 133‑140
(as the case requires).
(2) If requested by the
Commissioner, the *superannuation provider in relation to a *superannuation interest must give the Commissioner notice of the
amount (the end benefit cap) that is 15% of the employer‑financed
component of any part of the *value of the
superannuation interest that accrued after 1 July 2012.
Note: A person may make a complaint
to the Superannuation Complaints Tribunal under section 15CA of the Superannuation
(Resolution of Complaints) Act 1993 if the person is dissatisfied with
notice given to the Commissioner under this subsection.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (2),
the *value of the *superannuation
interest is to be worked out at the end of the *financial
year before the financial year in which the *end
benefit becomes payable.
(4) A notice under subsection (2)
must be given:
(a) in the *approved form; and
(b) within 14 days of
the Commissioner making the request.
133‑125 Notice of debt account
discharge liability
(1) The Commissioner must
give you a notice under this section if:
(a) the *end benefit becomes payable from a *superannuation
interest for which the Commissioner keeps a debt account; or
(b) the Commissioner
receives a notice from you under section 133‑135 in relation to such a
superannuation interest.
(2) The notice must state
that you are liable to pay your *debt account discharge
liability for the *superannuation interest and specify:
(a) the amount of
that debt; and
(b) the day on which
that debt is due and payable; and
(c) whether the
amount of that debt is:
(i) the
amount by which the debt account is in debit as mentioned in paragraph 133‑120(1)(a);
or
(ii) the
end benefit cap mentioned in paragraph 133‑120(1)(b).
(3) If you are dissatisfied
with a notice given under this section in relation to you, you may object
against it in the manner set out in Part IVC of this Act.
(4) However, you cannot
object against a notice stating that the amount you are liable to pay is the
amount by which the debt account is in debit, unless you are seeking to be
liable to pay the end benefit cap specified in a notice given to the
Commissioner by the *superannuation provider under subsection (2)
or section 133‑140 (as the case requires).
End benefit
133‑130 Meaning of end benefit
(1) A *superannuation benefit is the end benefit for a *superannuation interest if it is the first superannuation benefit to
become payable from the interest, disregarding a benefit that is any of the
following:
(a) a *roll‑over superannuation benefit paid to a *complying
superannuation plan that is a *successor fund;
(b) a benefit that
becomes payable under the condition of release specified in item 105 of
the table in Schedule 1 to the Superannuation Industry (Supervision)
Regulations 1994 (about severe financial
hardship);
(c) a benefit that
becomes payable under the condition of release specified in item 107 of
that table (about compassionate ground);
(d) a benefit
specified in an instrument under subsection (2).
(2) The Minister may, by
legislative instrument, specify a *superannuation
benefit for the purposes of paragraph (1)(d).
(3) Despite subsection 12(2)
of the Legislative Instruments Act 2003, a legislative instrument made
under subsection (2) may be expressed to take effect from any time on or
after 1 July 2012.
133‑135 End benefit
notice—individual
(1) If an individual
requests a *superannuation provider to pay the *end benefit from a *superannuation interest
for which the Commissioner keeps a debt account, the individual must notify the
Commissioner of the request.
(2) The notice must be given
within 21 days after making the request.
(3) A notice under this
section must be given in the *approved form.
133‑140 End benefit
notice—superannuation provider
(1) If the *end benefit becomes payable from a *superannuation
interest for which the Commissioner keeps a debt account, the *superannuation provider in relation to the interest must give the
Commissioner a notice stating:
(a) the amount of the
end benefit cap mentioned in subsection 133‑120(2) for the superannuation
interest (unless the provider has already given the Commissioner notice of the
end benefit cap under that subsection); and
(b) the expected date
of payment of the benefit.
Note: A person may make a complaint
to the Superannuation Complaints Tribunal under section 15CA of the Superannuation
(Resolution of Complaints) Act 1993 if the person is dissatisfied with
notice given to the Commissioner under this section.
(2) The notice must be given
within 14 days after the earlier of:
(a) the *superannuation provider receiving a request (if any) to pay the *superannuation benefit; and
(b) the
superannuation benefit becoming payable.
(3) However,
this section does not apply if the *superannuation
provider has not been given a notice under section 133‑75 saying that the
Commissioner has started to keep a debt account for the *superannuation interest.
(4) A notice under this
section must be given in the *approved form.
133‑145 End benefit notice—material
changes or omissions
(1) If an entity that gives
the Commissioner a notice under section 133‑135 or 133‑140 becomes aware
of a material change or material omission in any information given to the
Commissioner in the notice, the entity must:
(a) tell the
Commissioner of the change in the *approved form; or
(b) give the omitted
information to the Commissioner in the approved form.
(2) Information required by
this section must be given no later than 7 days after the entity becomes aware
of the change or omission.
Division 135—Releasing money from superannuation
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 135
135‑A When the Commissioner must
issue a release authority
135‑B When a release authority can
be given to a superannuation provider
135‑C Release of superannuation
money under a release authority
Guide to Division 135
135‑1 What this Division is about
This Division
contains rules about release authorities, which allow money to be released from
a superannuation plan to pay amounts relating to the Division 293 tax.
Subdivision 135‑A—When the Commissioner must issue a release authority
Guide to Subdivision 135‑A
135‑5 What this Subdivision is about
The Commissioner must
issue you with a release authority to allow money to be released from a
superannuation plan to pay assessed Division 293 tax that is due and
payable, make voluntary payments in reduction of a debt account, or pay your
debt account discharge liability.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
135‑10 Release authorities
Operative provisions
135‑10 Release authorities
(1) If the condition
mentioned in column 1 of an item in the following table is satisfied:
(a) the Commissioner
must issue you with a release authority under that item; and
(b) you have a release
entitlement:
(i) equal
to the amount mentioned in column 2 of that item; and
(ii) arising
at the time mentioned in column 3 of that item.
|
Release entitlement
|
|
Item
|
Column 1
Condition:
|
Column 2
Amount of the release entitlement:
|
Column 3
Time at which the release entitlement arises:
|
|
1
|
An amount of your *assessed Division 293 tax for an income year is due and
payable in accordance with subsection 293‑65(1) or 293‑70(1)
|
The amount of tax that is due and payable
as mentioned in column 1
|
On assessing the amount
|
|
2
|
An amount of your *assessed Division 293 tax for an income year is *deferred to a debt account for a *superannuation interest
|
The amount so deferred
|
On the making of the determination under
section 133‑10
|
|
3
|
You become liable to pay your *debt account discharge liability for a *superannuation interest
|
The amount of your debt account discharge
liability
|
On the giving of the notice under section 133‑125
|
Note: A release authority issued
under item 3 of the table can only be given to the superannuation provider
that holds the superannuation interest to which the debt account relates: see
subsection 135‑40(3).
Requirements for release authority
(2) A release authority must:
(a) state the amount
of the *release entitlement in respect of which it
is given; and
(b) be dated; and
(c) contain any other
information that the Commissioner considers relevant.
Commissioner may issue a further
release authority
(3) The Commissioner may at
any time issue you with a further release authority in respect of a *release entitlement if:
(a) the Commissioner
is satisfied that it is reasonable in the circumstances to do so; and
(b) the Commissioner
has issued you with an earlier release authority in respect of that release
entitlement.
Despite paragraph (2)(a), the
further release authority must state the amount the Commissioner considers
reasonable in the circumstances, but not exceeding the amount of the release
entitlement.
Note: For variation and revocation
of release authorities, see subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation
Act 1901.
Release authority not to be issued to
trustee of deceased estate
(4) To avoid doubt, this
section does not require or permit the Commissioner to issue a release
authority to the trustee of a deceased estate.
Subdivision 135‑B—When a release authority can be given to a superannuation
provider
Guide to Subdivision 135‑B
135‑35 What this Subdivision is
about
You may give a release authority to a superannuation provider within
120 days of being issued with it.
The Commissioner may
give the release authority to a superannuation provider if you fail to pay
assessed Division 293 tax that is due and payable within 120 days after
the release authority being issued.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
135‑40 When you may give release
authority to superannuation provider
135‑45 When Commissioner may
give release authority to superannuation provider
Operative provisions
135‑40 When you may give release authority
to superannuation provider
(1) You may give the release
authority to a *superannuation provider that holds a *superannuation interest for you within 120 days after the date of the release authority.
(2) You may request the *superannuation provider, in writing, to pay a specified amount in
relation to the release authority.
Note 1: For the amount that the
provider pays under a release authority, see section 135‑85.
Note 2: If excess amounts are paid in
relation to a release authority:
(a) the excess
is assessable income (see section 304‑20 of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997); and
(b) you are
liable to an administrative penalty (see section 288‑100 in this
Schedule).
(3) However, a release
authority issued under item 3 of the table in subsection 135‑10(1)
(for debt account discharge liability) may only be given to the *superannuation provider that holds the *superannuation
interest to which the debt account relates.
135‑45 When Commissioner may give
release authority to superannuation provider
(1) The Commissioner may, at
any time, give a release authority issued under item 1 of the table in
subsection 135‑10(1) to one or more *superannuation
providers that hold a *superannuation interest
for you, if, at the end of 120 days after the date of the release authority:
(a) some or all of
the *assessed Division 293 tax that is due
and payable in accordance with subsection 293‑65(1) or 293‑70(1) (as the
case requires) is unpaid; and
(b) the Commissioner
reasonably believes any of the following:
(i) that
you have not given the release authority to a superannuation provider that
holds a superannuation interest for you in accordance with section 135‑40;
(ii) that
you have given the release authority to one or more superannuation providers in
accordance with that section, but that the sum of the amounts to be paid by the
providers under those release authorities falls short of the amount of your
assessed Division 293 tax;
(iii) that
the total of the *values of every superannuation interest (other than a *defined benefit
interest) held for you by superannuation providers to
which the release authority has been given falls short of the amount of your
assessed Division 293 tax.
Note: No payment may be made from a
defined benefit interest: see subsection 135‑75(4).
(2) The Commissioner may
request the *superannuation provider, in writing, to
pay a specified amount in relation to the release authority.
Note: For the amount that the
provider pays under a release authority, see section 135‑85.
Subdivision 135‑C—Release of superannuation money under a release authority
Guide to Subdivision 135‑C
135‑70 What this Subdivision is
about
This Subdivision sets
out a general requirement for a superannuation provider to comply with a
release authority.
The Subdivision also
includes provisions about how much must be paid, who it must be paid to, which
interest it is to be paid from, and how the payments are treated by the
Commissioner.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
135‑75 Requirement for
superannuation provider to release money
135‑80 Compensation for
acquisition of property
135‑85 Release amount
135‑90 How the Commissioner
applies amounts received under a release authority
135‑95 Defined benefit
interests—releasing amounts to pay debt account discharge liability
135‑100 Income tax treatment of
amounts released—proportioning rule does not apply
Operative provisions
135‑75 Requirement for
superannuation provider to release money
(1) If:
(a) a *superannuation provider has been given a release authority in accordance
with Subdivision 135‑B; and
(b) the amount
mentioned in section 135‑85 (the release amount) is greater
than nil;
the superannuation provider must pay the
release amount within 30 days after receiving the release authority.
Who superannuation provider pays the
amount to
(2) The release amount must
be paid to the Commissioner.
(3) However, if the release
authority was:
(a) issued under item 1
of the table in subsection 135‑10(1) (which is about Division 293 tax
that is due and payable within 21 days); and
(b) given to the *superannuation provider by the individual under section 135‑40;
the release amount may be paid to the
individual.
Note 1: Section 288‑95 provides
for an administrative penalty for failing to comply with this section.
Note 2: For the taxation treatment of
the payment, see sections 303‑20 and 304‑20 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997.
Note 3: For reporting obligations on
the superannuation provider in these circumstances, see section 390‑65 in
this Schedule.
Which superannuation interest the
amount is to be paid from
(4) The payment must be made
out of one or more *superannuation interests (other
than a *defined benefit interest) held by the *superannuation provider for the individual.
135‑80 Compensation for acquisition
of property
(1) If the operation of
section 135‑75 would result in an acquisition of property (within the
meaning of paragraph 51(xxxi) of the Constitution) from an entity
otherwise than on just terms (within the meaning of that paragraph), the
Commonwealth is liable to pay a reasonable amount of compensation to the
entity.
(2) If the Commonwealth and
the entity do not agree on the amount of the compensation, the entity may
institute proceedings in a court of competent jurisdiction for the recovery
from the Commonwealth of such reasonable amount of compensation as the court
determines.
135‑85 Release amount
The amount is the least
of the following amounts:
(a) the amount stated
in the release authority, as issued by the Commissioner;
(b) if the individual
or Commissioner requests the *superannuation provider,
in writing, to pay a specified amount in relation to the release authority—that
amount;
(c) the sum of the *maximum available release amounts for each *superannuation
interest (other than a *defined benefit
interest) held by the superannuation provider for the individual in *superannuation plans.
Note: For the maximum
available release amount, see section 96‑30.
135‑90 How the Commissioner applies
amounts received under a release authority
(1) If the Commissioner
receives a payment under a release authority, it is taken for the purposes of
Part IIB to have been received in respect of a current or anticipated tax
debt of the individual.
Note: Part IIB is about
running balance accounts and the application of payments and credits.
Exception for voluntary payments of
Division 293 tax debt account
(2) However, if the
Commissioner receives the payment under a release authority issued under item 2
of the table in subsection 135‑10(1) in respect of a *superannuation interest, the payment is to be treated as if it were
a voluntary payment under section 133‑70 in relation to the debt account
for that interest.
Commissioner to notify individual if
payment received
(3) If:
(a) the release
authority was given by the Commissioner in accordance with section 135‑45;
and
(b) the payment is
made to the Commissioner;
the Commissioner must, as soon as
possible, give the individual written notice that the payment has been made.
135‑95 Defined benefit
interests—releasing amounts to pay debt account discharge liability
The exclusion of *defined benefit interests from subsection 135‑75(4) and
paragraph 135‑85(c) is to be disregarded for a release authority issued
under item 3 of the table in subsection 135‑10(1) (about debt account
discharge liability).
135‑100 Income tax treatment of
amounts released—proportioning rule does not apply
Section 307‑125 of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the proportioning rule) does not
apply to a payment made as required or permitted under this Division.
Note: Further provisions about the
income tax treatment of amounts released are in sections 303‑20 and 304‑20
of that Act.
Chapter 4—Generic assessment, collection and recovery rules
Part 4‑1—Returns and assessments
Division 155—Assessments
Table of
Subdivisions
Guide to Division 155
155‑A Making assessments
155‑B Amending assessments
155‑C Validity and review of
assessments
155‑D Miscellaneous
Guide to Division 155
155‑1 What this Division is about
This Division
contains rules relating to assessments.
The rules in this
Division deal with the following:
(a) how
assessments are made or amended and their effect;
(b) review
of assessments.
Subdivision 155‑A—Making assessments
Table of sections
155‑5 Commissioner may make
assessment
155‑10 Commissioner must give
notice of assessment
155‑15 Self‑assessment
155‑20 Assessment of indirect
tax on importations and customs dealing
155‑25 Special assessment
155‑30 Delays in making
assessments
155‑5 Commissioner may make
assessment
(1) The Commissioner may at
any time make an assessment of an *assessable amount
(including an assessment that the amount is nil).
Note 1: For amendment of assessments,
see Subdivision 155‑B.
Note 2: An assessment can be reviewed:
see Subdivision 155‑C.
(2) Each of the following is
an assessable amount:
(a) a *net amount;
(b) a *net fuel amount;
(c) an amount of *indirect tax not included in an amount covered by another paragraph
of this subsection;
(d) a credit under an
*indirect tax law not included in an amount covered by another
paragraph of this subsection;
(f) an amount of *Division 293 tax payable for an income year in relation to an
individual’s *taxable contributions for the income year;
(g) an amount of *excess exploration credit tax for an income year.
155‑10 Commissioner must give notice
of assessment
(1) The Commissioner must
give you notice of an assessment of an *assessable
amount of yours as soon as practicable after the assessment is made.
Note: This section also applies to
an amended assessment: see section 155‑80.
(2) The Commissioner may
give you the notice electronically if you are required to lodge, or have
lodged, the return (if any) that relates to the *assessable
amount electronically.
155‑15 Self‑assessment
(1) The Commissioner is
treated as having made an assessment under section 155‑5 of an *assessable amount mentioned in an item of the following table, if
the document mentioned in the item is given to the recipient mentioned in the
item:
|
Self‑assessed
amounts
|
|
Item
|
Column
1
Assessable
amount
|
Column
2
Recipient
|
Column
3
Document
|
|
1
|
your *net amount for a *tax period
|
the Commissioner
|
your *GST return for the tax period
|
|
2
|
your *net fuel amount for a *tax period
|
the Commissioner
|
your *fuel tax return for the tax period
|
|
3
|
the *GST payable by you on a *taxable
importation
|
Customs
|
return, given
as described in one of the following provisions, in relation to the
importation:
(a) paragraph 69(8)(a), (b) or (c), or
70(7)(a), of the Customs Act 1901;
(b) regulations prescribed for the purposes
of paragraph 69(8)(d) of that Act
|
|
4
|
an amount of *excess exploration credit tax for an income year
|
the Commissioner
|
return given
under section 418‑160 for the income year
|
Note: There is no self‑assessment
of Division 293 tax.
(2) The assessment is
treated as having been made on the day the document is given to the recipient
mentioned in column 2.
(3) The amount assessed is:
(a) if the document
is required to state the *assessable amount—the
amount (including a nil amount) stated; or
(b) otherwise—the
amount (including a nil amount) worked out in accordance with the information
stated in the document.
(4) The document is treated
as being a notice of the assessment:
(a) signed by the
Commissioner; and
(b) given to you
under section 155‑10 on the day the document is given to the recipient.
(5) This section does not
apply to an *assessable amount if the Commissioner has
already assessed the assessable amount on or before the day mentioned in paragraph (4)(b).
155‑20 Assessment of indirect tax on
importations and customs dealing
(1) The Commissioner is
treated as having made an assessment under section 155‑5 of the *GST, *luxury car tax or *wine
tax (whichever is applicable) payable by you on a *taxable
importation, *taxable importation of a luxury car or *customs dealing, if:
(a) the document
mentioned in column 1 of an item of the following table is communicated to
Customs in respect of the importation or dealing; and
(b) Customs gives the
document mentioned in column 2 of the item to an entity in respect of the
importation or dealing.
|
Customs
documents
|
|
Item
|
Column
1
Document
communicated to Customs
|
Column
2
Document
given to an entity
|
|
1
|
an *import declaration
|
an *import declaration advice
|
|
2
|
a self‑assessed clearance declaration
(within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901)
|
a *self‑assessed clearance declaration advice
|
(2) The assessment is
treated as having been made on the day Customs gives the document mentioned in paragraph (1)(b)
to the entity.
(3) The amount assessed is
the amount (including a nil amount) worked out in accordance with the
information stated in the 2 documents.
(4) The 2 documents are
treated as together being a notice of the assessment:
(a) signed by the
Commissioner; and
(b) given to you
under section 155‑10 on the day Customs gives the document mentioned in paragraph (1)(b)
of this section to the entity.
(5) This section does not
apply if the Commissioner has already assessed the *GST,
*luxury car tax or *wine tax on or before
the day mentioned in paragraph (4)(b).
155‑25 Special assessment
For the purposes of
making, under section 155‑5, an assessment of an *assessable
amount that relates to a period (e.g. a tax period), the Commissioner may treat
part of the period as being the whole period.
155‑30 Delays in making assessments
(1) You may give the
Commissioner a written notice requiring the Commissioner to make an assessment
of an *assessable amount of yours, if, 6 months
after the day on which the relevant return (if any) for the assessable amount
is given to the Commissioner, the Commissioner has not given to you notice of
an assessment of the assessable amount under section 155‑10.
(2) You may object, in the
manner set out in Part IVC of this Act, against the Commissioner’s failure
to make the assessment if the Commissioner does not make the assessment within
30 days after the day the notice is given under subsection (1).
(3) This section does not
apply if the *assessable amount is the *Division 293 tax payable by you in relation to an income year
in relation to your *taxable contributions for the
income year.
Subdivision 155‑B—Amending assessments
Table of sections
When Commissioner may amend
assessments
155‑35 Amendment during period
of review
155‑40 Amendment during period
of review—certain applications taken to be notices
155‑45 Amendment on application
155‑50 Amendment to give effect
to private ruling
155‑55 Amendment to give effect
to certain anti‑avoidance declarations
155‑60 Amendment because of
review, objection or fraud
Special
rules about amending amended assessments
155‑65 Amending amended
assessments
155‑70 Refreshed period of
review
General rules
155‑75 Refunds of amounts
overpaid
155‑80 Amended assessments are
assessments
When Commissioner may amend assessments
155‑35 Amendment during period of
review
Amendment
(1) The Commissioner may
amend an assessment of an *assessable amount within
the *period of review for the assessment.
Note 1: An amendment of an assessment
can be reviewed: see Subdivision 155‑C.
Note 2: This section also applies to
amended assessments: see section 155‑80. However, there are limits on how
amended assessments can be amended: see sections 155‑65 and 155‑70.
Meaning of period of review
(2) The period of
review, for an assessment of an *assessable
amount of yours, is:
(a) the period:
(i) starting
on the day on which the Commissioner first gives notice of the assessment to
you under section 155‑10; and
(ii) ending
on the last day of the period of 4 years starting the day after that day; or
(b) if the period of
review is extended under subsection (3) or (4) of this section—the period
as so extended.
Extensions
(3) The Federal Court of
Australia may order an extension of the *period
of review for an assessment of an *assessable amount
of yours for a specified period, if:
(a) the Commissioner
has started to examine your affairs in relation to the assessment; and
(b) the Commissioner
has not completed the examination within the period of review for the
assessment; and
(c) the Commissioner,
during the period of review, applies to the Federal Court of Australia for an
order extending the period; and
(d) the Court is
satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable, or it was inappropriate, for
the Commissioner to complete the examination within the period of review,
because of:
(i) any
action taken by you; or
(ii) any
failure by you to take action that it would have been reasonable for you to
take.
(4) You may, by written
notice given to the Commissioner, consent to the extension of the *period of review for an assessment of an *assessable
amount of yours for a specified period, if:
(a) the Commissioner
has started to examine your affairs in relation to the assessment; and
(b) the Commissioner
has not completed the examination within the period of review for the
assessment; and
(c) the Commissioner,
during the period of review, requests you to consent to extending the period of
review.
(5) An order may be made
under subsection (3), or consent given under subsection (4), in
relation to an assessment of an *assessable amount more
than once.
155‑40 Amendment during period of
review—certain applications taken to be notices
(1) An application made by
you for an amendment of an assessment of an *assessable
amount of yours is treated as being a notice of the amended assessment given to
you by the Commissioner under section 155‑10, if:
(a) the application
is in the *approved form; and
(b) the Commissioner
makes the amendment:
(i) to
give effect to the decision on the application; and
(ii) during
the *period of review for the assessment; and
(c) the amendment the
Commissioner makes is the entire amendment for which you applied, and nothing
else.
(2) The notice is treated as
having been given to you on whichever of the following is applicable:
(a) the first day the
Commissioner adjusts the balance of an *RBA
of yours as a result of the amendment;
(b) the day Customs
gives an *import declaration advice, or a *self‑assessed clearance declaration advice, to an entity in respect
of the relevant *taxable importation, *taxable importation of a luxury car or *customs
dealing as a result of the amendment.
155‑45 Amendment on application
The Commissioner may
amend an assessment of an *assessable amount of
yours at any time, if you apply for an amendment in the *approved form during the *period of review
for the assessment. The Commissioner may amend the assessment to give effect to
his or her decision on the application.
Note: The Commissioner must give
you notice of the amended assessment under section 155‑10: see section 155‑80.
155‑50 Amendment to give effect to
private ruling
The Commissioner may
amend an assessment of an *assessable amount of
yours at any time, if:
(a) you apply for a *private ruling during the *period of review
for the assessment; and
(b) the Commissioner
makes a private ruling because of the application.
The Commissioner
may amend the assessment to give effect to the ruling.
155‑55 Amendment to give effect to
certain anti‑avoidance declarations
The Commissioner may
amend an assessment of an *assessable amount at any
time, if:
(a) the Commissioner
makes a declaration under subsection 165‑45(3) of the *GST Act (about compensating adjustments for anti‑avoidance
declarations); or
(b) the Commissioner
makes a declaration under subsection 75‑45(3) of the Fuel Tax Act 2006
(about compensating adjustments for anti‑avoidance declarations).
The Commissioner may amend the assessment
to give effect to the declaration.
155‑60 Amendment because of review,
objection or fraud
Despite anything in
this Subdivision, the Commissioner may amend an assessment of an *assessable amount of yours at any time:
(a) to give effect to
a decision on a review or appeal; or
(b) as a result of an
objection made by you, or pending a review or appeal; or
(c) if he or she is
of the opinion there has been fraud or evasion.
Special rules about amending amended assessments
155‑65 Amending amended assessments
The Commissioner cannot
amend an amended assessment of an *assessable amount
under section 155‑35 if the *period of review for the
assessment has ended.
Note: The Commissioner can amend
amended assessments at any time under sections 155‑45 to 155‑60.
155‑70 Refreshed period of review
(1) This section applies if
the Commissioner has made one or more amendments of an assessment of an *assessable amount of yours under section 155‑35 about a
particular.
(2) Despite section 155‑65,
the Commissioner may amend (the later amendment) the amended
assessment after the end of the *period of review for the
assessment, if:
(a) the Commissioner
makes the later amendment before the end of the period of 4 years starting on
the day after the day on which the Commissioner gave notice of the last of the
amendments mentioned in subsection (1) to you under section 155‑10;
and
(b) the later
amendment is about the particular mentioned in subsection (1) of this
section; and
(c) the Commissioner
has not previously amended the assessment under this section about that
particular.
General rules
155‑75 Refunds of amounts overpaid
(1) This section applies if:
(a) an assessment of
an *assessable amount of yours is amended; and
(b) as a result of
the amendment, a *tax‑related liability (the earlier
liability) of yours is reduced.
(2) For the purposes of any *taxation law that applies the *general
interest charge, the amount by which the *tax‑related
liability is reduced is taken never to have been payable.
Note 1: The general interest charge is
worked out under Part IIA of this Act.
Note 2: Subsection 8AAB(4) of
this Act lists the provisions that apply the charge.
(3) The Commissioner must
apply the amount of any *tax‑related liability
overpaid in accordance with Divisions 3 and 3A of Part IIB of this
Act (about running balance accounts and the application of payments and
credits).
(4) However, if:
(a) a later amendment
of an assessment of an *assessable amount is
made; and
(b) all or some of
your earlier liability in relation to a particular is reinstated;
this section is taken not to have applied
to the extent that the earlier liability is reinstated.
155‑80 Amended assessments are
assessments
An amended assessment
of an *assessable amount is an assessment for all
purposes of any *taxation law.
Note: The Commissioner must give
notice of the amended assessment under section 155‑10. Under section 155‑40,
an application for an amendment is treated as being a notice of the amendment
in certain circumstances.
Subdivision 155‑C—Validity and review of assessments
Table of sections
155‑85 Validity of assessment
155‑90 Review of assessments
155‑85 Validity of assessment
The validity of any
assessment of an *assessable amount is not affected by non‑compliance
with the provisions of this Act or of any other *taxation
law.
155‑90 Review of assessments
You may object, in the
manner set out in Part IVC of this Act, against an assessment of an *assessable amount of yours if you are dissatisfied with the
assessment.
Note: An individual may make a
complaint to the Superannuation Complaints Tribunal under section 15CA of
the Superannuation (Resolution of Complaints) Act 1993 if the individual
is dissatisfied with a statement given to the Commissioner by a superannuation
provider under section 390‑5 in this Schedule.
Subdivision 155‑D—Miscellaneous
Table of sections
155‑95 Entities
155‑95 Entities
This Division applies,
in relation to an *assessable amount under a *taxation law, to an entity under that taxation law in the same way
as the Division applies to an entity under the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997.
Part 4‑15—Collection and recovery of tax‑related liabilities and other
amounts
Division 250—Introduction
Table of Subdivisions
250‑A Guide to Part 4‑15
250‑B Object of this Part
Subdivision 250‑A—Guide to Part 4‑15
250‑1 What this Part is about
This Part deals with the methods by which the Commissioner may
collect and recover amounts of taxes and other liabilities.
These rules may affect you if you are liable to pay an amount of a
tax‑related liability (see, for example, Division 255). Some of the rules
may also affect you because of your relationship with someone else who is
liable for such an amount (see Division 260).
Table of sections
250‑5 Some important concepts
about tax‑related liabilities
250‑10 Summary of tax‑related
liabilities
250‑5 Some important concepts about
tax‑related liabilities
(1) A tax‑related liability
may arise for an entity before it becomes due and payable by that entity.
Example: Under Part 2‑5, an entity’s
liability to pay a withheld amount may arise before the amount is due and
payable.
(2) For some tax‑related
liabilities, an assessment needs to be made before the amount of the relevant
liability becomes due and payable.
Example: Under Division 5 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997, an amount of income tax needs to be assessed
before it becomes due and payable.
(3) An amount of a tax‑related
liability may become payable by an entity (for example, when the amount has
been assessed) before it is due and payable by that entity.
250‑10 Summary of tax‑related
liabilities
(1) The following table is
an index of each tax‑related liability under the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.
The key provision for the liability, as set out in the table, specifies when
the liability becomes due and payable.
Note 1: The Commissioner may vary the
time at which the amount becomes due and payable. See Subdivision 255‑B.
Note 2: Members and former members of
consolidated groups and MEC groups may be jointly and severally liable to pay
certain tax‑related liabilities related to the group’s activities (see Division 721
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997).
|
Tax‑related liabilities under the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936
|
|
Item
|
Topic
|
Provision
|
|
5
|
trustee beneficiary non‑disclosure tax
|
102UO
|
|
10
|
withholding tax on dividend, interest or
royalty
|
128C(1)
|
|
15
|
special tax payable on dealings by
offshore banking units
|
128NB(3)
|
|
20
|
mining withholding tax
|
128W(1)
|
|
50
|
late lodgment penalty
|
163A(3)
|
|
70
|
excessive tax offset refunds
|
172A(2)
|
|
90
|
family trust distribution tax
|
271‑75 in Schedule 2F
|
|
100
|
interest payable under section 102AAM
(about distributions from non‑resident trust estates)
|
5‑5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997
|
|
105
|
tax payable under section 159GZZZZH
(Tax payable where infrastructure borrowing certificate cancelled)
|
5‑5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997
|
(2) The following table is
an index of each tax‑related liability under other Acts. The key provision for
the liability, as set out in the table, specifies when the liability becomes
due and payable.
Note 1: The Commissioner may vary the
time at which the amount becomes due and payable. See Subdivision 255‑B.
Note 2: Members and former members of
consolidated groups and MEC groups may be jointly and severally liable to pay
certain tax‑related liabilities related to the group’s activities (see Division 721
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997).
Note 3: Companies that are or were
members of the same wholly‑owned group as an NZ franking company may be jointly
and severally liable to pay certain tax‑related liabilities of the NZ franking
company (see Division 220 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997).
Note 4: Penalties under Division 175
of the Australian Charities and Not‑for‑profits Commission Act 2012, and
related general interest charge, are treated in the same way as tax‑related
liabilities: see subsection 175‑70(2) of that Act.
|
Tax‑related liabilities under other
legislation
|
|
Item
|
Topic
|
Provision
|
Act
|
|
5
|
assessed net amount, including amounts in
respect of luxury car tax and wine equalisation tax
|
33‑3, 33‑5, 35‑5(2)
|
A New Tax System (Goods and Services
Tax) Act 1999
|
|
10
|
amount of assessed GST on importations
|
33‑15
|
A New Tax System (Goods and Services
Tax) Act 1999
|
|
12A
|
assessed GST on supplies made in
settlement of claims under insurance policies
|
78‑90
|
A New Tax System (Goods and Services
Tax) Act 1999
|
|
12B
|
assessed GST on supplies made in
satisfaction of debts
|
105‑20
|
A New Tax System (Goods and Services
Tax) Act 1999
|
|
13
|
repayments of amounts paid under tourist
refund scheme
|
168‑10
|
A New Tax System (Goods and Services
Tax) Act 1999
|
|
15
|
amount of assessed luxury car tax on
importation
|
13‑20
|
A New Tax System (Luxury Car Tax) Act 1999
|
|
16
|
excess luxury car tax credits
|
17‑15
|
A New Tax System (Luxury Car Tax) Act
1999
|
|
18
|
excess wine tax credits
|
17‑25
|
A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation
Tax) Act 1999
|
|
20
|
amount of assessed wine tax on customs
dealings
|
23‑5
|
A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation
Tax) Act 1999
|
|
21
|
repayments of amounts paid under tourist
refund scheme
|
25‑10
|
A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation
Tax) Act 1999
|
|
22A
|
amount of advance to be repaid
|
14A
|
Diesel and Alternative Fuels Grants
Scheme Act 1999
|
|
22B
|
amount payable as a result of an amended
assessment
|
15E
|
Diesel and Alternative Fuels Grants
Scheme Act 1999
|
|
24
|
excise duty
|
54
|
Excise Act 1901
|
|
24A
|
accounting for excisable goods
|
60(1), (1A), (1B) and (1C)
|
Excise Act 1901
|
|
24B
|
tobacco leaf stock deficiency
|
77AA
|
Excise Act 1901
|
|
24C
|
accounting for spirit
|
77FH
|
Excise Act 1901
|
|
24CA
|
penalty for using LPG for excisable LPG
use
|
77M
|
Excise Act 1901
|
|
24D
|
returnable Government FHSA contributions
|
43
|
First Home Saver Accounts Act 2008
|
|
24E
|
returnable underpaid amounts in relation
to Government FHSA contributions
|
47
|
First Home Saver Accounts Act 2008
|
|
25
|
fringe benefits tax
|
90
|
Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act
1986
|
|
35
|
fringe benefits tax instalments
|
103
|
Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act
1986
|
|
36
|
assessed net fuel amount
|
61‑5(2) 61‑10
|
Fuel Tax Act 2006
|
|
36A
|
compulsory repayment amount under the Higher
Education Support Act 2003
|
5‑5
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
36D
|
compulsory TSL repayment amount under the
Trade Support Loans Act 2014
|
5‑5
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
37
|
income tax
|
5‑5
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
37AA
|
shortfall interest charge on income tax
|
5‑10
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
37AB
|
shortfall interest charge on excess non‑concessional
contributions tax
|
5‑10
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
37AC
|
shortfall interest charge on Division 293
tax
|
5‑10
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
37AD
|
shortfall interest charge on excess
concessional contributions charge
|
5‑10
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
|
37A
|
untainting tax
|
197‑70
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
38
|
franking tax
|
214‑150(1), (2), (3) and (4)
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
38B
|
excess non‑concessional contributions tax
|
292‑385
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
38BB
|
Division 293 tax
|
293‑65 and 293‑70
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
38C
|
FHSA misuse tax
|
section
345‑110
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
38D
|
excess exploration credit tax
|
418‑155
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
39
|
TSA liability
|
721‑30
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
39A
|
managed investment trust withholding tax
|
840‑810(1)
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
39AA
|
Seasonal Labour Mobility Program
withholding tax
|
840‑910
|
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
|
|
39B
|
managed investment trust withholding tax
|
840‑810(1)
|
Income Tax (Transitional Provisions)
Act 1997
|
|
40
|
petroleum resource rent tax
|
82
|
Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment
Act 1987
|
|
41
|
shortfall interest charge on petroleum
resource rent tax
|
82
|
Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment
Act 1987
|
|
45
|
petroleum resource rent tax instalments
|
95
|
Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment
Act 1987
|
|
45A
|
instalment transfer interest charge
|
98C(4)
|
Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment
Act 1987
|
|
45B
|
liability for excess private health
insurance premium reduction or refund
|
282‑18
|
Private Health Insurance Act 2007
|
|
46
|
amount of advance to be repaid
|
13
|
Product Grants and Benefits
Administration Act 2000
|
|
47
|
amount payable as a result of an amended
assessment
|
20
|
Product Grants and Benefits
Administration Act 2000
|
|
48
|
penalty under section 35
|
36
|
Product Grants and Benefits
Administration Act 2000
|
|
50
|
superannuation contributions surcharge
|
15(3)
|
Superannuation Contributions Tax
(Assessment and Collection) Act 1997
|
|
55
|
superannuation contributions surcharge
|
15(8)
|
Superannuation Contributions Tax
(Members of Constitutionally Protected Superannuation Funds) Assessment and
Collection Act 1997
|
|
60
|
superannuation guarantee charge
|
46
|
Superannuation Guarantee
(Administration) Act 1992
|
|
65
|
additional superannuation guarantee
charge
|
47
|
Superannuation Guarantee
(Administration) Act 1992
|
|
67
|
Superannuation (Self Managed Funds) Levy
|
15DB
|
Superannuation (Self Managed
Superannuation Funds) Taxation Act 1987
|
|
67A
|
payment of unclaimed money to the
Commissioner
|
17
|
Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and
Lost Members) Act 1999
|
|
67B
|
payment from Commissioner that cannot be
credited
|
18C
|
Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and
Lost Members) Act 1999
|
|
68
|
payment in respect of a superannuation
interest to the Commissioner
|
20F
|
Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and
Lost Members) Act 1999
|
|
69
|
repayment of Commissioner’s payment
|
20M
|
Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and
Lost Members) Act 1999
|
|
69A
|
payment of value of lost member accounts
to the Commissioner
|
24E
|
Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and
Lost Members) Act 1999
|
|
69B
|
payment from Commissioner that cannot be
credited
|
24L
|
Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and
Lost Members) Act 1999
|
|
70
|
general interest charge
|
8AAE
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
85
|
RBA deficit debt
|
8AAZH(1)
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
90
|
administrative overpayment made by
Commissioner
|
8AAZN
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
95
|
TFN withholding tax
|
14‑55 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
100
|
TFN
withholding tax (ESS)
|
14‑155 in
Schedule 1
|
Taxation
Administration Act 1953
|
|
105
|
payment of withheld amount to
Commissioner
|
16‑75 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
110
|
PAYG withholding non‑compliance tax
|
18‑145 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
115
|
quarterly PAYG instalment
|
45‑61 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
115A
|
monthly PAYG instalment
|
45‑67 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
|
120
|
annual PAYG instalment
|
45‑70 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
125
|
general interest charge on shortfall in
quarterly instalment worked out on basis of varied rate
|
45‑230(4) in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
130
|
general interest charge on shortfall in
quarterly instalment worked out on basis of estimated benchmark tax
|
45‑232 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
135
|
general interest charge on shortfall in
annual instalment
|
45‑235(5) in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
135Q
|
excess concessional contributions charge
|
95‑20 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
|
135R
|
amount in accordance with excess superannuation
contributions release authority
|
96‑20 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
|
136A
|
debt account discharge liability
|
133‑105 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
137
|
amount to be recovered from a debtor
under a registered foreign revenue claim
|
263‑30 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
138
|
estimate of payable amounts
|
268‑20 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
139
|
penalty
under Subdivision 269‑B
|
269‑20 in
Schedule 1
|
Taxation
Administration Act 1953
|
|
140
|
administrative penalties
|
298‑15 in Schedule 1
|
Taxation Administration Act 1953
|
|
145
|
termination payment surcharge
|
11(2)
|
Termination Payments Tax (Assessment
and Collection) Act 1997
|
Subdivision 250‑B—Object of this Part
250‑25 Object
The
object of this Part is to ensure that unpaid amounts of *tax‑related liabilities and other related amounts are collected or
recovered in a timely manner.
Division 255—General rules about collection and
recovery
Table of Subdivisions
255‑A Tax‑related liabilities
255‑B Commissioner’s power to vary
payment time
255‑C Recovery proceedings
255‑D Security deposits
Subdivision 255‑A—Tax‑related liabilities
Table of sections
255‑1 Meaning of tax‑related
liability
255‑5 Recovering
a tax‑related liability that is due and payable
255‑1 Meaning
of tax‑related liability
(1) A tax‑related
liability is a pecuniary liability to the Commonwealth arising directly
under a *taxation law (including a liability the
amount of which is not yet due and payable).
Note 1: See section 250‑10 for an
index of tax‑related liabilities.
Note 2: A taxation law, or a provision
of it, may be excluded from being applied to this Part. See section 265‑65.
(2) A civil penalty under
Division 290 of this Schedule or Part 5 of the Tax Agent Services
Act 2009 is not a tax‑related liability.
255‑5
Recovering a tax‑related liability that is due and payable
(1) An amount of a *tax‑related liability that is due and payable:
(a) is a debt due to
the Commonwealth; and
(b) is payable to the
Commissioner.
(2) The Commissioner, a *Second Commissioner or a *Deputy
Commissioner may sue in his or her official name in a court of competent
jurisdiction to recover an amount of a *tax‑related
liability that remains unpaid after it has become due and payable.
Note: The tables in section 250‑10
set out each provision that specifies when an amount of a tax‑related liability
becomes due and payable. The Commissioner may vary that time under Subdivision 255‑B.
Subdivision 255‑B—Commissioner’s power to vary payment time
Table of sections
255‑10 To defer the payment time
255‑15 To permit payments by
instalments
255‑20 To bring forward the
payment time in certain cases
255‑10 To defer the payment time
Deferrals for particular taxpayers
(1) The Commissioner may,
having regard to the circumstances of your particular case, defer the time at
which an amount of a *tax‑related liability is, or
would become, due and payable by you (whether or not the liability has already
arisen). If the Commissioner does so, that time is varied accordingly.
Note: General interest charge or
any other relevant penalty, if applicable for any unpaid amount of the
liability, will begin to accrue from the time as varied. See, for example, paragraph 5‑15(a)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(2) The Commissioner must do
so by written notice given to you.
Deferrals for classes of taxpayers
(2A) The Commissioner, having
regard to the circumstances of the case, may, by notice published on the
Australian Taxation Office website, defer the time at which amounts of *tax‑related liabilities are, or would become, due and payable by a
class of taxpayers (whether or not the liabilities have already arisen).
(2B) If the Commissioner does
so, that time is varied accordingly.
Note: General interest charge and
any other relevant penalties, if applicable for any unpaid amounts of the
liabilities, will begin to accrue from the time as varied. See, for example,
paragraph 5‑15(a) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(2C) A notice published under subsection (2A)
is not a legislative instrument.
Deferral does not affect time for
giving form
(3) A deferral under this
section does not defer the time for giving an *approved
form to the Commissioner.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
255‑15 To permit payments by
instalments
(1) The Commissioner may,
having regard to the circumstances of your particular case, permit you to pay
an amount of a *tax‑related liability by instalments under
an *arrangement between you and the Commissioner (whether or not the
liability has already arisen).
(2) The *arrangement does not vary the time at which the amount is due and
payable.
Note: Despite an arrangement under
this section, any general interest charge or other relevant penalty, if
applicable for any unpaid amount of the liability, begins to accrue when the
liability is due and payable under the relevant taxation law, or at that time
as varied under section 255‑10 or 255‑20.
255‑20 To bring forward the payment
time in certain cases
(1) If the Commissioner
reasonably believes that you may leave Australia before the time at which an
amount of a *tax‑related liability becomes due and
payable by you, the Commissioner may bring that time forward. If the
Commissioner does so, that time is varied accordingly.
Note: General interest charge or
any other relevant penalty, if applicable for any unpaid amount of the
liability, will begin to accrue from the time as varied. See, for example, paragraph 5‑15(a)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(2) The Commissioner must do
so by written notice given to you.
Subdivision 255‑C—Recovery proceedings
Guide to Subdivision 255‑C
255‑35 What this Subdivision is
about
This Subdivision
deals with procedural and evidentiary matters relating to proceedings to
recover an amount of a tax‑related liability.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
255‑40 Service of documents if
person absent from Australia or cannot be found
255‑45 Evidentiary certificate
255‑50 Certain statements or
averments
255‑55 Evidence by affidavit
Operative provisions
255‑40 Service of documents if
person absent from Australia or cannot be found
(1) This section applies if
a document needs to be served on a person in respect of a proceeding to recover
an amount of a *tax‑related liability, and the
Commissioner, after making reasonable inquiries, is satisfied that:
(a) the person is
absent from Australia and does not have any agent in Australia on whom the
document can be served; or
(b) the person cannot
be found.
(2) The Commissioner may,
without the court’s leave, serve the document by posting it, or a sealed copy
of it, in a letter addressed to the person at any Australian address of the
person (including the person’s Australian place of business or residence) that
is last known to the Commissioner.
(3) For the purposes of
giving effect to a provision of an international agreement of a kind referred
to in Subdivision 263‑A (about foreign revenue claims), if a document
needs to be served on a person and the Commissioner, after making reasonable
inquiries, is satisfied that:
(a) the person is
absent from Australia and does not have an agent in Australia on whom the
document can be served; and
(b) the person has an
address in a foreign country, a constituent part of a foreign country or a
foreign territory;
the Commissioner may serve the document
on the person at the address mentioned in paragraph (b).
255‑45 Evidentiary certificate
(1) A certificate:
(a) stating one or
more of the matters covered by subsection (2) or (3); and
(b) signed by the
Commissioner, a *Second Commissioner or a *Deputy Commissioner;
is prima facie evidence of the matter or
matters in a proceeding to recover an amount of a *tax‑related
liability.
(2) A certificate may state:
(a) that a person
named in the certificate has a *tax‑related liability;
or
(b) that an *assessment relating to a tax‑related liability has been made, or is
taken to have been made, under a *taxation law; or
(c) that notice of an
assessment, or any other notice required to be served on a person in respect of
an amount of a tax‑related liability, was, or is taken to have been, served on
the person under a *taxation law; or
(d) that the
particulars of a notice covered by paragraph (c) are as stated in the
certificate; or
(e) that a sum
specified in the certificate is, as at the date specified in the certificate, a
debt due and payable by a person to the Commonwealth.
(3) A
certificate may state:
(a) that a *foreign revenue claim for an amount specified in the certificate has
been made by the competent authority under the relevant international
agreement; or
(b) that the relevant
requirements of the relevant international agreement have been complied with in
relation to the foreign revenue claim; or
(c) that the claim
was registered under Division 263 on the date specified in the
certificate; or
(d) that, as at the
date of the certificate, the Commissioner has or has not received advice from
the competent authority under the relevant international agreement about the
reduction or discharge of an amount to be recovered under the claim; or
(e) that the
particulars of any reduction or discharge of an amount to be recovered under
the claim are as specified in the certificate.
255‑50 Certain statements or
averments
(1) In
a proceeding to recover an amount of a *tax‑related
liability, a statement or averment about a matter in the plaintiff’s complaint,
claim or declaration is prima facie evidence of the matter.
(2) This
section applies even if the matter is a mixed question of law and fact.
However, the statement or averment is prima facie evidence of the fact only.
(3) This section applies
even if evidence is given in support or rebuttal of the matter or of any other
matter.
(4) Any evidence given in
support or rebuttal of the matter stated or averred must be considered on its
merits. This section does not increase or diminish the credibility or probative
value of the evidence.
(5) This section does not
lessen or affect any onus of proof otherwise falling on a defendant.
255‑55 Evidence by affidavit
In
a proceeding to recover an amount of a *tax‑related
liability:
(a) a person may give
evidence by affidavit; and
(b) the court may
require the person to attend before it:
(i) to be
cross‑examined on that evidence; or
(ii) to
give other evidence relating to the proceedings.
Subdivision 255‑D—Security deposits
Table of sections
255‑100 Commissioner may require
security deposit
255‑105 Notice of requirement to
give security
255‑110 Offence
255‑100 Commissioner may require
security deposit
(1) The Commissioner may
require you to give security for the due payment of an existing or future *tax‑related liability of yours if:
(a) the Commissioner
has reason to believe that:
(i) you
are establishing or *carrying on an *enterprise in Australia; and
(ii) you
intend to carry on that enterprise for a limited time only; or
(b) the Commissioner
reasonably believes that the requirement is otherwise appropriate, having
regard to all relevant circumstances.
Note: A requirement to give
security under this section is not a tax‑related liability. As such, the
collection and recovery provisions in this Part do not apply to it.
(2) The Commissioner may
require you to give the security:
(a) by way of a bond
or deposit (including by way of payments in instalments); or
(b) by any other
means that the Commissioner reasonably believes is appropriate.
(3) The
Commissioner may require you to give security under this section:
(a) at any time the
Commissioner reasonably believes is appropriate; and
(b) as often as the
Commissioner reasonably believes is appropriate.
Example: The Commissioner may require
additional security if he or she reasonably believes that the original security
requirement underestimated the amount of the likely tax‑related liability.
255‑105 Notice of requirement to
give security
Commissioner must give notice of
requirement to give security
(1) If the Commissioner
requires you to give security under section 255‑100, he or she must give
you written notice of the requirement.
Content of notice
(2) The notice must:
(a) state that you
are required to give the security to the Commissioner; and
(b) explain why the
Commissioner requires the security; and
(c) set out the
amount of the security; and
(d) describe the
means by which you are required to give the security under subsection 255‑100(2);
and
(e) specify the time
by which you are required to give the security; and
(f) explain how you
may have the Commissioner’s decision to require you to give the security
reviewed.
(3) To avoid doubt, a single
notice may relate to security for the payment of 2 or more existing or future *tax‑related liabilities, but must comply with subsection (2) in
relation to each of them.
When notice is given
(4) Despite section 29
of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901, a notice under subsection (1)
is taken to be given at the time the Commissioner leaves or posts it.
Note: Section 28A of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 may be relevant to giving a notice under subsection (1).
Miscellaneous
(5) A failure to comply with
this section does not affect the validity of the requirement to give the
security under section 255‑100.
255‑110 Offence
You
commit an offence if:
(a) the Commissioner
requires you to give security under section 255‑100; and
(b) you fail to give
that security as required.
Penalty: 100 penalty units.
Division 260—Special rules about collection and
recovery
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 260
260‑A From third party
260‑B From liquidator
260‑C From receiver
260‑D From agent winding up business
for foreign resident principal
260‑E From deceased person’s estate
Guide to Division 260
260‑1 What this Division is about
This Division deals
with the collection and recovery of an amount from a person who is not
personally liable to pay that amount. Apart from Subdivision 260‑A, which
covers a wider range of amounts, this Division primarily deals with amounts of
tax‑related liabilities.
Subdivision 260‑A—From third party
Table of sections
260‑5 Commissioner may collect
amounts from third party
260‑10 Notice to Commonwealth,
State or Territory
260‑15 Indemnity
260‑20 Offence
260‑5 Commissioner may collect
amounts from third party
Amount recoverable under this
Subdivision
(1) This Subdivision applies
if any of the following amounts (the debt) is payable to the
Commonwealth by an entity (the debtor) (whether or not the debt
has become due and payable):
(a) an amount of a *tax‑related liability;
(b) a judgment debt
for a *tax‑related liability;
(c) costs for such a
judgment debt;
(d) an amount that a
court has ordered the debtor to pay to the Commissioner following the debtor’s
conviction for an offence against a *taxation law.
Commissioner may give notice to an
entity
(2) The Commissioner may
give a written notice to an entity (the third party) under this
section if the third party owes or may later owe money to the debtor.
Third party regarded as owing money in
these circumstances
(3) The third party is taken
to owe money (the available money) to the debtor if the third
party:
(a) is an entity by
whom the money is due or accruing to the debtor; or
(b) holds the money
for or on account of the debtor; or
(c) holds the money
on account of some other entity for payment to the debtor; or
(d) has authority
from some other entity to pay the money to the debtor.
The third party is so taken to owe the
money to the debtor even if:
(e) the money is not
due, or is not so held, or payable under the authority, unless a condition is
fulfilled; and
(f) the condition
has not been fulfilled.
How much is payable under the notice
(4) A notice under this
section must:
(a) require the third
party to pay to the Commissioner the lesser of, or a specified amount not
exceeding the lesser of:
(i) the
debt; or
(ii) the
available money; or
(b) if there will be
amounts of the available money from time to time—require the third party to pay
to the Commissioner a specified amount, or a specified percentage, of each
amount of the available money, until the debt is satisfied.
When amount must be paid
(5) The notice must require
the third party to pay an amount under paragraph (4)(a), or each amount
under paragraph (4)(b):
(a) immediately
after; or
(b) at or within a
specified time after;
the amount of the available money
concerned becomes an amount owing to the debtor.
Debtor must be notified
(6) The Commissioner must
send a copy of the notice to the debtor.
Setting‑off amounts
(7) If an entity other than
the third party has paid an amount to the Commissioner that satisfies all or
part of the debt:
(a) the Commissioner
must notify the third party of that fact; and
(b) any amount that
the third party is required to pay under the notice is reduced by the amount so
paid.
260‑10 Notice to Commonwealth, State
or Territory
If the third party is
the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, the Commissioner may give the notice
to a person who:
(a) is employed by
the Commonwealth, or by the State or Territory (as appropriate); and
(b) has the duty of
disbursing public money under a law of the Commonwealth, or of the State or
Territory (as appropriate).
260‑15 Indemnity
An amount that the
third party pays to the Commissioner under this Subdivision is taken to have
been authorised by:
(a) the debtor; and
(b) any other person
who is entitled to all or a part of the amount;
and the third party is indemnified for
the payment.
260‑20 Offence
(1) The third party must not
fail to comply with the Commissioner’s notice.
Penalty: 20 penalty units
Note 1: Chapter 2 of the Criminal
Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 2: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
(2) The court may, in
addition to imposing a penalty on a person convicted of an offence against subsection (1)
in relation to failing to pay an amount under the notice, order the person to
pay to the Commissioner an amount not exceeding that amount.
Subdivision 260‑B—From liquidator
Table of sections
260‑40 Subdivision does not
apply to superannuation guarantee charge
260‑45 Liquidator’s obligation
260‑50 Offence
260‑55 Joint
liability of 2 or more liquidators
260‑60 Liquidator’s other
obligation or liability
260‑40 Subdivision does not apply to
superannuation guarantee charge
This Subdivision does
not apply to a *tax‑related liability that is
superannuation guarantee charge imposed by the Superannuation Guarantee
Charge Act 1992.
260‑45 Liquidator’s obligation
(1) This Subdivision applies
to a person who becomes a liquidator of a company.
(2) Within 14 days after
becoming liquidator, the liquidator must give written notice of that fact to
the Commissioner.
(3) The
Commissioner must, as soon as practicable, notify the liquidator of the amount
(the notified amount) that the Commissioner considers is enough
to discharge any *outstanding tax‑related liabilities that
the company has when the notice is given.
(4) The liquidator must not,
without the Commissioner’s permission, part with any of the company’s assets
before receiving the Commissioner’s notice.
(5) However, subsection (4)
does not prevent the liquidator from parting with the company’s assets to pay
debts of the company not covered by either of the following paragraphs:
(a) the *outstanding tax‑related liabilities;
(b) any debts of the
company which:
(i) are
unsecured; and
(ii) are
not required, by an *Australian law, to be paid in
priority to some or all of the other debts of the company.
(6) After receiving the
Commissioner’s notice, the liquidator must set aside, out of the assets
available for paying amounts covered by paragraph (5)(a) or (b) (the ordinary
debts), assets with a value calculated using the following formula:

where:
amount of remaining ordinary debts means the sum of the company’s ordinary debts other than the *outstanding tax‑related liabilities.
(7) The liquidator must, in
his or her capacity as liquidator, discharge the *outstanding
tax‑related liabilities, to the extent of the value of the assets that the
liquidator is required to set aside.
(8) The liquidator is
personally liable to discharge the liabilities, to the extent of that value, if
the liquidator contravenes this section.
260‑50 Offence
The liquidator must not
fail to comply with subsection 260‑45(2), (4), (5), (6) or (7).
Penalty: 10 penalty units.
Note 1: Chapter 2 of the Criminal
Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 2: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
260‑55 Joint liability of 2 or more
liquidators
If there are 2 or more
persons who become liquidators of the company, the obligations and liabilities
under this Subdivision:
(a) apply to all the
liquidators; but
(b) may be discharged
by any of them.
260‑60 Liquidator’s other obligation
or liability
This Subdivision does
not reduce any obligation or liability of a liquidator arising elsewhere.
Subdivision 260‑C—From receiver
Table of sections
260‑75 Receiver’s obligation
260‑80 Offence
260‑85 Joint
liability of 2 or more receivers
260‑90 Receiver’s other
obligation or liability
260‑75 Receiver’s obligation
(1) This Subdivision applies
to a person (the receiver) who, in the capacity of receiver, or
of receiver and manager, takes possession of a company’s assets for the
company’s debenture holders.
(2) Within 14 days after
taking possession of the assets, the receiver must give written notice of that
fact to the Commissioner.
(3) The Commissioner must,
as soon as practicable, notify the receiver of the amount (the notified
amount) that the Commissioner considers is enough to discharge any *outstanding tax‑related liabilities that the company has when the
notice is given.
(4) The receiver must not,
without the Commissioner’s permission, part with any of the company’s assets
before receiving the Commissioner’s notice.
(5) However, subsection (4)
does not prevent the receiver from parting with the company’s assets to pay
debts of the company not covered by either of the following paragraphs:
(a) the *outstanding tax‑related liabilities;
(b) any debts of the
company which:
(i) are
unsecured; and
(ii) are
not required, by an *Australian law, to be paid in
priority to some or all of the other debts of the company.
(6) After receiving the
Commissioner’s notice, the receiver must set aside, out of the assets available
for paying amounts covered by paragraph (5)(a) or (b) (the ordinary
debts), assets with a value calculated using the following formula:

where:
amount of remaining ordinary debts means the sum of the company’s ordinary debts other than the *outstanding tax‑related liabilities.
(7) The receiver must, in
his or her capacity as receiver, or as receiver and manager, discharge the *outstanding tax‑related liabilities, to the extent of the value of
the assets that the receiver is required to set aside.
(8) The receiver is
personally liable to discharge the liabilities, to the extent of that value, if
the receiver contravenes this section.
260‑80 Offence
The receiver must not
fail to comply with subsection 260‑75(2), (4), (5), (6) or (7).
Penalty: 10 penalty units.
Note 1: Chapter 2 of the Criminal
Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 2: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
260‑85 Joint liability of 2 or more
receivers
If 2 or more persons
(the receivers) take possession of a company’s assets, for the
company’s debenture holders, in the capacity of receiver, or of receiver and
manager, the obligations and liabilities under this Subdivision apply to:
(a) all the
receivers; but
(b) may be discharged
by any of them.
260‑90 Receiver’s other obligation
or liability
This Subdivision does
not reduce any obligation or liability of the receiver or receivers arising
elsewhere.
Subdivision 260‑D—From agent winding up business for foreign resident
principal
Table of sections
260‑105 Obligation of agent
winding up business for foreign resident principal
260‑110 Offence
260‑115 Joint liability of 2 or
more agents
260‑120 Agent’s other obligation
or liability
260‑105 Obligation of agent winding
up business for foreign resident principal
(1) This Subdivision applies
to an agent whose principal:
(a) is a foreign
resident; and
(b) has instructed
the agent to wind up so much of the principal’s business as is carried on in Australia.
(2) Within 14 days after
receiving the instructions, the agent must give written notice of that fact to
the Commissioner.
(3) The Commissioner must,
as soon as practicable after receiving the notice, notify the agent of the
amount (the notified amount) that the Commissioner considers is
enough to discharge any *outstanding tax‑related
liabilities that the principal has when the notice is given.
(4) Before receiving the
Commissioner’s notice, the agent must not, without the Commissioner’s
permission, part with any of the principal’s assets that are available for
discharging the *outstanding tax‑related liabilities.
(5) After receiving the
notice, the agent must set aside:
(a) out of the assets
available for discharging the *outstanding tax‑related
liabilities, assets to the value of the notified amount; or
(b) all of the assets
so available, if their value is less than the notified amount.
(6) The agent must, in that
capacity, discharge the *outstanding tax‑related
liabilities, to the extent of the value of the assets that the agent is required
to set aside.
(7) The agent is personally
liable to discharge the liabilities, to the extent of that value, if the agent
contravenes this section.
260‑110 Offence
A person must not fail
to comply with subsection 260‑105(2), (4), (5) or (6).
Penalty: 10 penalty units.
Note 1: Chapter 2 of the Criminal
Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 2: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of penalty units.
260‑115 Joint liability of 2 or more
agents
If 2 or more agents are
jointly instructed by the principal to wind up the business, the obligations
and liabilities under this Subdivision:
(a) apply to all the
agents; but
(b) may be discharged
by any of them.
260‑120 Agent’s other obligation or
liability
This Subdivision does
not reduce any obligation or liability of the agent or agents arising
elsewhere.
Subdivision 260‑E—From deceased person’s estate
Table of sections
260‑140 Administered estate
260‑145 Unadministered estate
260‑150 Commissioner may authorise
amount to be recovered
260‑140 Administered estate
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a person has an *outstanding tax‑related liability when the person dies; and
(b) either of the
following is granted after the death:
(i) probate
of the person’s will;
(ii) letters
of administration of the person’s estate.
(2) The Commissioner may, in
respect of the liability, deal with the trustee of the deceased person’s estate
as if:
(a) the deceased
person were still alive; and
(b) the trustee were
the deceased person.
(3) Without limiting subsection (2),
the trustee must:
(a) provide any
returns and other information that the deceased person was liable to provide,
or would have been liable to provide if he or she were still alive; and
(b) provide any
additional returns or other information relating to the liability that the
Commissioner requires; and
(c) in the trustee’s
representative capacity, discharge the liability and any penalty imposed in
respect of the liability under a *taxation law (including
any *general interest charge) for which the
deceased person would be liable if he or she were still alive.
(4) If:
(a) the amount of the
liability requires an *assessment under a *taxation law but the assessment has not been made; and
(b) the trustee fails
to provide a return or other information in relation to assessing that amount
as required by the Commissioner;
the Commissioner may assess that amount.
If the Commissioner does so, the assessment has the same effect as if it were
made under that taxation law.
(5) A trustee who is
dissatisfied with an *assessment under subsection (4)
may object in the manner set out in Part IVC.
(6) Part IVC applies in
relation to the objection as if the trustee were the deceased person.
260‑145 Unadministered estate
(1) This section applies if
neither of the following is granted within 6 months after a person’s death:
(a) probate of the
person’s will;
(b) letters of
administration of the person’s estate.
(2) The Commissioner may
determine the total amount of *outstanding tax‑related
liabilities that the person had at the time of death.
(3) The Commissioner must
publish notice of the determination twice in a daily newspaper circulating in
the State or Territory in which the person resided at the time of death.
(4) A notice of the
determination is conclusive evidence of the *outstanding
tax‑related liabilities, unless the determination is amended.
(5) A person who is
dissatisfied with the determination may object in the manner set out in Part IVC
if the person:
(a) claims an
interest in the estate; or
(b) is granted
probate of the deceased person’s will or letters of administration of the
estate.
(6) Part IVC applies in
relation to the objection as if the person making it were the deceased person.
260‑150 Commissioner may authorise
amount to be recovered
(1) The Commissioner may, in
writing, authorise a person (the authorised person) who is:
(a) a member or a
special member of the Australian Federal Police; or
(b) a member of the
police force of a State or Territory; or
(c) any other person;
to recover:
(d) the total amount
of the *outstanding tax‑related liabilities of a
deceased person as determined under section 260‑145 (about unadministered
estates); and
(e) any reasonable
costs incurred by the authorised person in recovering that amount;
by seizing and disposing of any property
of the deceased person.
(2) The authorised person
may seize and dispose of the property as prescribed by the regulations.
Division 263—Mutual assistance in collection of foreign
tax debts
Table of Subdivisions
263‑A Foreign revenue claims
Subdivision 263‑A—Foreign revenue claims
Guide to Subdivision 263‑A
263‑5 What this Subdivision is about
This Subdivision can
be activated if there is in force an agreement between Australia and a foreign country or territory that contains an article relating to
assistance in collection of foreign tax debts.
The Commissioner can
collect from an entity an amount in respect of a tax debt that the person owes
to such a country or territory or take action to conserve assets of the entity.
The Commissioner is
required to remit amounts collected to the foreign country or territory
concerned.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
263‑10 Meaning of foreign revenue
claim
263‑15 Requirements for foreign
revenue claims
263‑20 Foreign Revenue Claims
Register
263‑25 Registering
claims
263‑30 When amount is due and
payable
263‑35 Amending the Register
etc.
263‑40 Payment to competent
authority
Operative provisions
263‑10 Meaning of foreign revenue
claim
A foreign revenue
claim is a claim made to the Commissioner:
(a) in accordance
with an agreement (the international agreement) between Australia and:
(i) a
foreign country or a constituent part of a foreign country; or
(ii) an
overseas territory;
(the overseas
entity); and
(b) for one or both
of these purposes:
(i) the
recovery by the Commissioner of an amount from an entity (the debtor)
in respect of taxes imposed otherwise than by an *Australian
law (including any associated amounts);
(ii) the
conserving of assets for the purposes of a recovery of that kind.
263‑15 Requirements for foreign
revenue claims
A *foreign revenue claim must:
(a) be made by or on
behalf of an entity that is, under the relevant international agreement, the
competent authority; and
(b) be consistent
with the provisions of that agreement; and
(c) be made in the *approved form; and
(d) specify the
amount owed by the debtor in Australian currency (calculated as at the day the claim
is made); and
(e) be accompanied by
a declaration by the competent authority stating that the claim fulfils the
requirements of that agreement.
263‑20 Foreign Revenue Claims
Register
(1) The Commissioner must
keep a register called the Foreign Revenue Claims Register (the Register).
(2) The regulations may make
provision in relation to the form in which the Register may be kept.
(3) The register is not a
legislative instrument.
263‑25 Registering claims
If the Commissioner is
satisfied that a *foreign revenue claim has been made in
accordance with section 263‑15, the Commissioner must register the claim
by entering particulars of it in the Register within 90 days after receiving
the claim.
263‑30 When amount is due and
payable
(1) When particulars of a *foreign revenue claim are entered in the Register, the amount owed
by the debtor becomes a pecuniary liability to the Commonwealth by the debtor.
Note 1: The amount to be recovered
from the debtor will be a primary tax debt for the purposes of Part IIB
and the Commissioner may allocate the debt to a running balance account under
that Part.
Note 2: For provisions about
collection and recovery of the debt, see Part 4‑15.
(1A) To avoid doubt, the amount
owed by the debtor may not be the same as the amount (if any) entered in the
Register.
(2) The amount owed by the
debtor becomes due and payable 30 days after notice of the particulars of the *foreign revenue claim is given to the debtor or on a later day
specified in the notice.
(3) If that amount remains
unpaid after it is due and payable, the debtor is liable to pay *general interest charge on the unpaid amount for each day in the
period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the amount was due to be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day at the end of which either of the following remains unpaid:
(i) the
amount;
(ii) general
interest charge on any of the amount.
263‑35 Amending the Register etc.
(1) The Commissioner may,
with the agreement of the relevant competent authority, amend the Register to
correct an error.
(2) The Commissioner may,
with the agreement of the relevant competent authority:
(a) remove from the
Register the particulars of a *foreign revenue claim;
or
(b) reduce an amount
to be recovered from a debtor under the claim.
(2A) To avoid doubt, the
Commissioner may reduce an amount to be recovered from a debtor under paragraph (2)(b)
without amending the Register.
(3) A debtor may, after
receiving a copy of the particulars of a *foreign
revenue claim entered in the Register, apply to the Commissioner in the *approved form to have those particulars removed from the Register.
(4) The Commissioner may,
after considering the application, remove those particulars from the Register.
(5) If the Commissioner
removes particulars of a *foreign revenue claim
relating to the recovery of an amount from the Register under paragraph (2)(a)
or subsection (4), the debtor is entitled to a credit for the purposes of
Part IIB equal to the sum of:
(a) the amount (as
reduced by any previous application of subsection (6)); and
(b) any *general interest charge for which the debtor is liable as a result
of the foreign revenue claim.
Note: How the credit is applied is
set out in Part IIB.
(6) If the Commissioner
reduces the amount to be recovered from a debtor under a *foreign revenue claim under paragraph (2)(b), the debtor is
entitled to a credit for the purposes of Part IIB equal to the amount of
the reduction.
Note: How the credit is applied is
set out in Part IIB.
263‑40 Payment to competent
authority
(1) The Commissioner must,
if the Commissioner recovers all or part of an amount to be recovered from a
debtor under a registered *foreign revenue claim,
pay that amount to the competent authority concerned or to another entity on
behalf of that competent authority.
(2) The Commissioner may
also pay to the competent authority all or part of an amount that the
Commissioner has received and that is attributable to *general
interest charge in relation to the claim.
(3) The Commissioner may
also pay to the competent authority all or part of an amount that the
Commissioner has received and that is attributable to any of the following in
relation to the claim:
(a) judgment
interest;
(b) costs that:
(i) have
been recovered in the course of legal proceedings; and
(ii) represent
an amount that has previously been paid by the competent authority to the
Commonwealth in relation to the recovery of the claim.
Division 265—Other matters
Table of Subdivisions
265‑A Right of person to seek
recovery or contribution
265‑B Application of laws
Subdivision 265‑A—Right of person to seek recovery or contribution
Guide to Subdivision 265‑A
265‑35 What this Subdivision is
about
This Division deals
with a person’s right to recover from another person an amount paid in
discharge of a tax‑related liability if:
• the person
has paid the amount for or on behalf of the other person;
• the
persons are jointly liable to pay the amount.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
265‑40 Right of recovery if
another person is liable
265‑45 Right of contribution if
persons are jointly liable
Operative provisions
265‑40 Right of recovery if another
person is liable
A person who has paid
an amount of a *tax‑related liability for or on behalf of
another person may:
(a) recover that
amount from the other person as a debt (together with the costs of recovery) in
a court of competent jurisdiction; or
(b) retain or deduct
the amount out of money held by the person that belongs to, or is payable to,
the other person.
265‑45 Right of contribution if
persons are jointly liable
(1) If 2 or more persons are
jointly liable to pay an amount of a *tax‑related
liability, they are each liable for the whole of the amount.
(2) If one of the persons
has paid an amount of the liability, the person may recover in a court of
competent jurisdiction, as a debt, from another of those persons:
(a) an amount equal
to so much of the amount paid; and
(b) an amount equal
to so much of the costs of recovery under this section;
as the court considers just and
equitable.
Note: Item 15 of Schedule 6
to the Tax Laws Amendment (Repeal of Inoperative Provisions) Act 2006
has the effect that, in addition to its normal application in relation to tax‑related
liabilities arising on or after 1 July 2000, subsection (2) also
applies to such liabilities arising before that date, where amounts of the
liabilities are paid after the commencement of that item.
Subdivision 265‑B—Application of laws
Table of sections
265‑65 Non‑application of
certain taxation laws
265‑65 Non‑application of certain
taxation laws
This Part does not
apply in relation to a *taxation law, or a
provision of a taxation law, that is prescribed by the regulations.
Division 268—Estimates and recovery of PAYG withholding
liabilities and superannuation guarantee charge
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 268
268‑A Object
268‑B Making estimates
268‑C Liability to pay estimates
268‑D Reducing and revoking
estimates
268‑E Late payment of estimates
268‑F Miscellaneous
Guide to Division 268
268‑1 What this Division is about
This Division enables
the Commissioner to make an estimate of:
(a) amounts
not paid as required by Part 2‑5 of this Act (Pay as you go (PAYG)
withholding); or
(b) unpaid
superannuation guarantee charge;
and to recover the
amount of the estimate.
If you are given an
estimate, you are liable to pay the amount of the estimate. That liability is
distinct from your liability to pay the amounts required by Part 2‑5 or
the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992. However, you can
ensure that the Commissioner does not require you to pay more than the amounts
not paid under that Part or Act.
Other Divisions of
this Part provide for the recovery of amounts payable under this Division.
Subdivision 268‑A—Object
Table of sections
268‑5 Object of Division
268‑5 Object of Division
The object of this
Division is to enable the Commissioner to take prompt and effective action to
recover:
(a) amounts not paid
as required by Part 2‑5 (Pay as you go (PAYG) withholding); or
(b) unpaid
superannuation guarantee charge that has not been assessed.
Subdivision 268‑B—Making estimates
Table of sections
268‑10 Commissioner may make
estimate
268‑15 Notice of estimate
268‑10 Commissioner may make
estimate
Estimate
(1) The Commissioner may
estimate the unpaid and overdue amount of a liability (the underlying
liability) of yours:
(a) under section 16‑70
in this Schedule (requirement to pay to the Commissioner amounts you have
withheld under the Pay as you go withholding rules); or
(b) to pay
superannuation guarantee charge for a *quarter under
section 16 of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992,
to the extent the superannuation guarantee charge has not been assessed before
the Commissioner makes the estimate.
(1A) For the purposes of this
Division, your superannuation guarantee charge for a *quarter
is treated as being payable on the day by which you must lodge a superannuation
guarantee statement for the quarter under section 33 of the Superannuation
Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992, even if, on that day, the charge has
not been assessed under that Act.
Amount of estimate
(2) The amount of the
estimate must be what the Commissioner thinks is reasonable.
(3) In making the estimate,
the Commissioner may have regard to anything he or she thinks relevant.
Example 1: In the case of an underlying
liability under section 16‑70 (requirement to pay to the Commissioner
amounts you have withheld under the Pay as you go withholding rules), the
Commissioner may have regard to information about amounts you withheld under
the Pay as you go rules before the period in relation to which the underlying
liability arose.
Example 2: In the case of an underlying
liability to pay superannuation guarantee charge for a quarter, the
Commissioner may have regard to information about your contributions to RSAs
and complying superannuation funds for earlier quarters.
Only one estimate for each liability
(4) While the estimate is in
force, the Commissioner cannot make another estimate relating to the underlying
liability.
(5) For the purposes of subsection (4),
the estimate is in force if:
(a) the Commissioner
has given you notice of the estimate; and
(b) the estimate has
not been revoked; and
(c) your liability to
pay the estimate has not been discharged.
268‑15 Notice of estimate
Commissioner must give notice of
estimate
(1) The Commissioner must
give you written notice of the estimate.
Content of notice
(2) The notice must:
(a) identify the
underlying liability; and
(b) specify the date
of the estimate; and
(c) set out the
amount of the estimate; and
(d) state that the
amount of the estimate is due and payable; and
(e) explain how you
may have the amount of the estimate reduced or the estimate revoked.
(3) To avoid doubt, a single
notice may relate to 2 or more estimates, but must comply with subsection (2)
in relation to each of them.
When notice is given
(4) Despite section 29
of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901, a notice under subsection (1)
is taken to be given at the time the Commissioner leaves or posts it.
Note: Section 28A of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 may be relevant to giving a notice under subsection (1).
Subdivision 268‑C—Liability to pay estimates
Table of sections
268‑20 Nature of liability to
pay estimate
268‑25 Accuracy of estimate
irrelevant to liability to pay
268‑30 Estimate provable in
bankruptcy or winding up
268‑20 Nature of liability to pay
estimate
Liability to pay amount of estimate
(1) You must pay to the
Commissioner the amount of the estimate if the Commissioner gives you notice of
the estimate in accordance with section 268‑15. The amount is due and
payable when the Commissioner gives you the notice.
Note: The amount of the estimate
may be reduced, or the estimate revoked, under Subdivision 268‑D.
Liability to pay amount of estimate is
distinct from underlying liability
(2) Your liability to pay
the amount of the estimate is separate and distinct from the underlying
liability. It is separate and distinct for all purposes.
Example: The
Commissioner may take:
(a) proceedings to recover the unpaid
amount of the estimate; or
(b) proceedings to recover the unpaid
amount of the underlying liability; or
(c) proceedings of both kinds.
Discharging one liability discharges
other liabilities
(3) Despite subsection (2),
if, at a particular time, one of the liabilities to which this subsection
applies is discharged, to the extent of an amount, for either of the following
reasons, each of the other liabilities to which this subsection applies is
discharged to the extent of the same amount:
(a) an amount is paid
or applied towards discharging the liability;
(b) the
liability is discharged because of section 269‑40 (Effect of director
paying penalty or company discharging liability).
(4) Subsection (3)
applies to whichever of the following liabilities are in existence at the
particular time:
(a) your liability to
pay the amount of the estimate;
(b) the underlying
liability;
(c) a liability of
yours under a judgment, to the extent that it is based on a liability referred
to in paragraph (a) or (b).
(5) Subsection (3) does
not discharge a liability to a greater extent than the amount of the liability.
268‑25 Accuracy of estimate
irrelevant to liability to pay
You
are liable to pay the unpaid amount of the estimate even if:
(a) the underlying
liability never existed or has been discharged in full; or
(b) the unpaid amount
of the underlying liability is less than the unpaid amount of the estimate.
Note 1: Section 268‑40 revokes
the estimate if you give the Commissioner a statutory declaration, or file an
affidavit, to the effect that the underlying liability never existed.
Note 2: Subdivision 268‑D
provides ways in which you can challenge the estimate or its amount.
268‑30 Estimate provable in
bankruptcy or winding up
(1) Your liability (the estimate liability)
to pay the unpaid amount of the estimate is provable in a bankruptcy or winding
up, even if the estimate was made after:
(a) the date of the
bankruptcy; or
(b) the relevant date
(within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001).
(2) However,
the estimate liability is provable only to the extent that the underlying
liability would be provable if the unpaid amount of the underlying liability
were the same as the unpaid amount of the estimate.
Example: Subsection (2) prevents
proof of the estimate liability if the underlying liability could not be proved
because, for example, of when it arose.
(3) Subsections (1) and
(2) do not apply if:
(a) the underlying
liability has already been admitted to proof; and
(b) the proof has not
been set aside.
(4) If the estimate
liability has been admitted to proof at a particular amount, the underlying
liability is provable only to the extent the unpaid amount of the underlying
liability exceeds that particular amount.
(5) To the extent that a
liability is provable because of this section, it is taken, for the purposes of
the Bankruptcy Act 1966, to be provable in bankruptcy under that
Act.
Subdivision 268‑D—Reducing and revoking estimates
Table of sections
268‑35 How estimate may be
reduced or revoked—Commissioner’s powers
268‑40 How estimate may be
reduced or revoked—statutory declaration or affidavit
268‑45 How estimate may be
reduced or revoked—rejection of proof of debt
268‑50 How estimate may be
reduced—amount paid or applied
268‑55 When reduction or
revocation takes effect
268‑60 Consequences of reduction
or revocation—refund
268‑65 Consequences of reduction
or revocation—statutory demand changed or set aside
268‑70 Consequences of reduction
or revocation—underlying liability
268‑35 How estimate may be reduced
or revoked—Commissioner’s powers
Reduction
(1) The Commissioner may at
any time reduce the amount of the estimate, but is not obliged to consider
whether or not to do so.
(2) If the Commissioner
reduces the amount of the estimate under subsection (1), he or she must
give you a written notice that:
(a) identifies the
underlying liability; and
(b) sets
out the reduced amount of the estimate.
Note: The estimate is taken always
to have had effect as reduced: see section 268‑55.
Revocation
(3) The Commissioner may at
any time revoke the estimate, but is not obliged to consider whether or not to
do so.
(4) If the Commissioner
revokes the estimate under subsection (3), he or she must give you a
written notice that:
(a) identifies the
underlying liability; and
(b) states
that the estimate has been revoked.
Note: The estimate is taken never
to have been made: see section 268‑55.
Matters for Commissioner to consider
(5) In exercising his or her
power under this section to reduce the amount of the estimate, or to revoke the
estimate, the Commissioner must have regard to:
(a) the following
principles:
(i) the
estimate is of the unpaid amount of the underlying liability as at a particular
time;
(ii) the
purpose of reducing the amount of the estimate is to bring it closer to the
unpaid amount of the underlying liability as at the time the estimate was made;
(iii) reductions
of the unpaid amount of the underlying liability that happen after the time the
estimate was made are dealt with by section 268‑20 (Nature of liability to
pay estimate) and so should not be taken into account in exercising such a
power; and
(b) the effects of
sections 268‑55 and 268‑70 (effect of reduction or revocation on
liabilities).
268‑40 How estimate may be reduced
or revoked—statutory declaration or affidavit
Scope
(1) This section applies as
set out in the following table:
|
Statutory
declaration or affidavit
|
|
Item
|
This
section applies if ...
|
and
...
|
within
...
|
|
1
|
the Commissioner gives you notice of the
estimate
|
you give the Commissioner a statutory
declaration for the purposes of this section
|
(a) 7 days after the Commissioner gives you
the notice; or
(b) a longer period allowed by the
Commissioner.
|
|
2
|
you are a party to proceedings before a
court that relate to the recovery of the unpaid amount of the estimate
|
you:
(a) file an affidavit for the purposes of
this section; and
(b) serve a copy on the Commissioner
|
(a) 14 days after you first take a
procedural step as a party to the proceedings; or
(b) a longer period allowed by the court.
|
|
3
|
(a) the
estimate is of the unpaid amount of a liability of a company; and
(b) the
Commissioner serves on the company a *statutory demand relating to the company’s liability to pay the
unpaid amount of the estimate; and
(c) an
application is made to a court under section 234, 459P, 462 or 464 of
the Corporations Act 2001 for the company to be wound up
|
the
company:
(a) files an
affidavit for the purposes of this section; and
(b) serves a
copy on the applicant
|
(a) 14 days
after notice of the application was served on the company; or
(b) a longer
period allowed by the court.
|
Example: For the purposes of item 2
of the table, taking a procedural step as a party to proceedings includes
entering an appearance, filing a notice of intention to defend, or applying to
set aside judgment entered in default of appearance.
Note 1: Section 459C of the Corporations
Act 2001 creates a presumption that a company is insolvent, and may be
wound up, if the company fails to comply with a statutory demand.
Note 2: See section 268‑90 for
what the statutory declaration or affidavit must contain and who must make,
swear or affirm it.
Reduction
(2) The amount of the
estimate is reduced if the statutory declaration is to the effect, or the
affidavit verifies facts sufficient to prove, that a specified lesser amount is
the unpaid amount of the underlying liability.
Example: Subsection (2) will apply
if the statutory declaration etc. is to the effect that the underlying
liability has been discharged in full (and therefore the unpaid amount of the
liability is nil).
(3) The
amount of the reduction is the amount by which the unpaid amount of the
estimate (just before the reduction) exceeds the amount specified.
Note: The effect of subsection (3)
is to reduce the unpaid amount of the estimate to the amount specified.
Revocation
(4) The estimate is revoked
if the statutory declaration is to the effect, or the affidavit verifies facts
sufficient to prove, that the underlying liability never existed.
268‑45 How estimate may be reduced
or revoked—rejection of proof of debt
Scope
(1) This section applies if:
(a) the Commissioner
lodges a proof of debt relating to the unpaid amount of the estimate; and
(b) section 268‑95
applies to an entity (your supervising entity) in relation to
you.
Rejection of proof of debt
(2) Your supervising entity
may give the Commissioner a statutory declaration to the effect that:
(a) the underlying
liability has been discharged in full; or
(b) the unpaid amount
of the underlying liability is a specified, lesser amount; or
(c) the underlying
liability never existed.
Note: See section 268‑90 for
what the statutory declaration must contain and who must make it.
(3) If your supervising
entity does so, he or she may reject the proof of debt (in whole or in part) on
the ground made out in the statutory declaration.
(4) If
the Commissioner appeals, or applies for review of, your supervising entity’s
decision to reject the proof of debt, nothing in subsection (2) or (3)
prevents evidence being adduced to contradict statements in the declaration.
Note: Such evidence might also be relevant
to a prosecution for an offence, such as an offence against section 11 of
the Statutory Declarations Act 1959 (False declarations).
Revocation or reduction of estimate
(5) The following table
applies in relation to the outcome following all (if any) appeals from, and
applications for review of, your supervising entity’s decision to reject the
proof of debt. (If there are no appeals or applications for review, the outcome
is your supervising entity’s decision as originally made.)
|
Rejecting
proof of debt
|
|
Item
|
If the
outcome is that ...
|
then
...
|
|
1
|
the proof is rejected in whole on the
ground that the estimate has been discharged in full
|
the amount of the estimate is reduced by
the unpaid amount of the estimate (just before the reduction).
|
|
2
|
the proof is rejected in part
|
the amount of the estimate is reduced by
so much of the unpaid amount of the estimate (just before the reduction) as
is rejected.
|
|
3
|
the proof is rejected in whole on the
ground that the underlying liability never existed
|
the estimate is revoked.
|
Note 1: The effect of item 1 of
the table is to reduce the unpaid amount of the estimate to nil.
Note 2: The effect of item 2 of
the table is to reduce the unpaid amount of the estimate to the amount admitted
to proof.
268‑50 How estimate may be
reduced—amount paid or applied
(1) This section applies if:
(a) an amount is paid
or applied towards discharging your liability to pay the amount of the
estimate; and
(b) the
amount paid or applied exceeds the unpaid amount of the underlying liability as
at the time just before the payment or application.
(2) The amount of the
estimate is reduced so that it does not exceed the unpaid amount, at the time
mentioned in paragraph (1)(b), of the underlying liability.
268‑55 When reduction or revocation
takes effect
Scope
(1) This section applies for
the purposes of the following:
(a) Subdivision 268‑C
(Liability to pay estimates);
(b) section 268‑60
(refund of overpayments);
(c) Subdivision 268‑E
(Late payment of estimates);
(d) Division 269
(Penalties for directors of non‑complying companies).
When reduction or revocation takes
effect
(2) If the amount of the
estimate is reduced, the estimate has effect, and is taken always to have had
effect, as if the original amount of the estimate had been the reduced amount.
(3) If the estimate is
revoked, the estimate is taken never to have been made.
268‑60 Consequences of reduction or
revocation—refund
(1) This section applies if:
(a) an amount is paid
or applied towards discharging your liability to pay the amount of the
estimate; and
(b) the
amount paid or applied exceeds the unpaid amount of the estimate as at the time
just before the payment or application.
Example: You pay an amount towards
discharging the estimate and the estimate is later reduced to a lesser amount.
Note: Section 268‑50 provides
for the reduction of the amount of the estimate in the case of overpayment.
(2) The
Commissioner must pay you the excess.
Note: See Division 3A of
Part IIB of this Act for the rules about how the Commissioner must pay
you. Division 3 of that Part allows the Commissioner to apply the amount
owing as a credit against tax debts that you owe the Commonwealth.
268‑65 Consequences of reduction or
revocation—statutory demand changed or set aside
Scope
(1) This
section applies if:
(a) the estimate is
of the unpaid amount of a liability of a company; and
(b) the Commissioner
has served a *statutory demand on the company relating
to the company’s liability to pay the unpaid amount of the estimate; and
(c) the amount of the
estimate is later reduced, or the estimate is revoked.
Statutory demand changed
(2) The *statutory demand is changed accordingly.
(3) The *statutory demand is taken to have had effect (as so changed) from
the time the Commissioner served it on the company.
Statutory demand set aside
(4) The *statutory demand is set aside if subsection (2) reduces the
amount of the debt (or the total of the amounts of the debts) below the
statutory minimum (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001).
268‑70 Consequences of reduction or
revocation—underlying liability
Reduction of the amount
of the estimate, or revocation of the estimate, does not affect the
Commissioner’s rights or remedies in relation to the underlying liability
(except to the extent that this Division expressly provides otherwise).
Subdivision 268‑E—Late payment of estimates
Table of sections
268‑75 Liability to pay the
general interest charge
268‑80 Effect of paying the
general interest charge
268‑75 Liability to pay the general
interest charge
(1) This section applies if:
(a) your liability to
pay the amount of the estimate remains undischarged at the end of 7 days after
the Commissioner gives you notice of the estimate; and
(b) the underlying liability
is not a liability to pay superannuation guarantee charge.
(2) You are liable to pay
the *general interest charge on the unpaid
amount of the estimate for each day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the underlying liability was due to be paid; and
(b) finishes
at the end of the last day on which, at the end of the day, any of the
following remains unpaid:
(i) the
amount of the estimate;
(ii) general
interest charge on any of the amount of the estimate.
Note: The general interest charge
is worked out under Part IIA of this Act.
268‑80 Effect of paying the general
interest charge
Scope
(1) If you are liable to pay
the *general interest charge under section 268‑75
in relation to the estimate, this section applies to the following liabilities:
(a) your liability to
pay the general interest charge;
(b) a liability of
yours to pay a general interest charge, under a corresponding provision of
Subdivision 16‑B, because the underlying liability remains undischarged;
(c) liability under a
judgment, to the extent that it is based on a liability referred to in paragraph (a)
or (b);
(d) a liability of
yours to pay interest carried by a judgment debt, to the extent that the
judgment debt is based on:
(i) the
liability to pay the estimate; or
(ii) the
liability to pay the general interest charge under section 268‑75 on an
unpaid amount of the estimate.
Discharging one liability discharges
other liabilities
(2) If, at a particular
time, an amount is paid or applied towards discharging one of the liabilities,
each of the other liabilities that is in existence at that time is discharged
to the extent of the same amount.
(3) However, this section
does not discharge a liability to a greater extent than the amount of the liability.
(4) If, because a judgment
debt carries interest, section 8AAH of this Act reduces the amount of a *general interest charge payable as mentioned in paragraph (1)(b)
of this section, the amount of the reduction is taken, for the purposes of subsection (2)
of this section, to have been applied towards discharging your liability to the
charge.
Subdivision 268‑F—Miscellaneous
Table
of sections
268‑85 Effect of judgment on
liability on which it is based
268‑90 Requirements for
statutory declaration or affidavit
268‑95 Liquidators, receivers
and trustees in bankruptcy
268‑100 Division not to limit or
exclude Corporations or Bankruptcy Act
268‑85 Effect of judgment on
liability on which it is based
Estimate payable despite judgment
(1) The unpaid amount of the
estimate, or of the underlying liability, does not stop being payable merely
because a judgment has been given by, or entered in, a court.
Division applies to liability under
judgment
(2) This Division applies in
relation to liability under a judgment, to the extent that it is based on your
liability to pay the amount of the estimate, in the same way as this Division
applies to that estimate liability.
(3) This Division applies in
relation to liability under a judgment, to the extent that it is based on the
underlying liability, in the same way as this Division applies to the
underlying liability.
(4) Subsections (2) and
(3) do not apply for the purposes of the following:
(a) section 268‑20
(Nature of liability to pay estimate);
(b) section 268‑30
(Estimate provable in bankruptcy or winding up);
(c) section 268‑45
(rejection of proof of debt).
Judgment conclusive as to amount of
liability
(5) Nothing in this Division
affects the conclusiveness of a judgment as to the amount of a liability on which
it is based.
268‑90 Requirements for statutory
declaration or affidavit
Scope
(1) This section applies to
a statutory declaration given, or an affidavit filed, for the purposes of
section 268‑40 or 268‑45 in relation to the estimate.
Content
(2) In a case covered by
paragraph 268‑10(1)(a) (estimate of liability under requirement to pay to
the Commissioner amounts you have withheld under the Pay as you go withholding
rules), the statutory declaration or affidavit must verify the following facts:
(a) whichever of the
following are applicable:
(i) the
sum of all amounts you withheld under Division 12 during the relevant
period, or the fact that you did not withhold any such amounts during the
period;
(ii) the
sum of all amounts you were required to pay under Division 13 (Alienated
personal services payments) during the relevant period, or the fact that you
were not required to pay any such amounts during the period;
(iii) the
sum of all amounts you were required to pay under Division 14 (non‑cash benefits
and accruing gains) during the relevant period, or the fact that you were not
required to pay any such amounts during the period;
(b) what has been
done to comply with Division 16 (Payer’s obligations and rights) in
relation to the amounts referred to in paragraph (a).
(2A) In a case covered by
paragraph 268‑10(1)(b) (estimate of liability to pay superannuation
guarantee charge), the statutory declaration or affidavit must verify the
following facts:
(a) your name and
address;
(b) for each employee
for whom you have an *individual superannuation
guarantee shortfall for the relevant *quarter:
(i) the
employee’s name and postal address and, if the employee has *quoted the employee’s *tax file number to you,
the employee’s tax file number; and
(ii) the
amount of the shortfall;
(c) what has been
done to comply with your obligation to pay the relevant superannuation
guarantee charge to the Commissioner.
Note: The amount of the individual
superannuation guarantee shortfall mentioned in paragraph (b) is a factor
in determining the amount of the superannuation guarantee charge mentioned in
paragraph 268‑10(1)(b). The lesser amount mentioned in subsection 268‑40(2)
may therefore differ from the amount of that shortfall.
Maker or deponent
(3) The statutory
declaration or affidavit must be made, sworn or affirmed by:
(a) an individual
specified in the following table; or
(b) your liquidator,
receiver or trustee in bankruptcy (if and as applicable).
|
Who
must make the statutory declaration or swear or affirm the affidavit
|
|
Item
|
A
statutory declaration or affidavit in relation to an estimate of a liability
of ...
|
must
be made, sworn or affirmed by ...
|
|
1
|
an individual
|
that individual.
|
|
2
|
a body corporate
|
(a) in the case of a company that has a
director or a company secretary (within the meaning of the Corporations
Act 2001)—a director of the company or the company secretary; or
(b) in the case of an *Australian government agency—an individual prescribed by the
regulations; or
|
|
|
|
(c) in any
case—the public officer of the body corporate (for the purposes of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936).
|
|
3
|
a body politic
|
an individual prescribed by the
regulations.
|
|
4
|
a partnership
|
a partner of the partnership.
|
|
5
|
any other unincorporated association or
body of persons
|
(a) a member of the association’s or body’s
committee of management; or
(b) the public officer of the association or
body (for the purposes of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936).
|
|
6
|
a trust
|
(a) the trustee of the trust; or
(b) the public officer of the trust (for the
purposes of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936).
|
|
7
|
a *superannuation fund or an *approved deposit fund
|
(a) the trustee of the fund; or
(b) if the fund does not have a trustee—the
entity managing the fund.
|
(4) If the entity specified
in the table in subsection (3) is not an individual, the table is taken to
specify the individual who, under that subsection, would be eligible to make a
statutory declaration in relation to an estimate of a liability of that entity.
268‑95 Liquidators, receivers and
trustees in bankruptcy
Scope
(1) This
section applies to an entity (your supervising entity), in
relation to you, if:
(a) the entity is
your liquidator, receiver, trustee in bankruptcy or administrator, or the
administrator of a deed of company arrangement executed by you; or
(b) your property is
vested in the entity, or the entity has control of your property.
(2) For the purposes of this
Division, this section applies to an entity in relation to a partnership if it
applies to the entity in relation to a partner of the partnership.
Notices from the Commissioner
(3) For the purposes of this
Division, a notice given by the Commissioner to your supervising entity is
taken to have been given to you.
(4) You must give your
supervising entity a copy of any notice given to you by the Commissioner under
this Division. You must do so as soon as practicable, and in any event within 7
days, after:
(a) if the
Commissioner gave you the notice before the day when your property vested in,
or control of your property passed to, the supervising entity—that day; or
(b) if subsection (2)
applies and the Commissioner gave you the notice before the day when the
relevant partner’s property vested in, or control of the relevant partner’s
property passed to, the supervising entity—that day; or
(c) otherwise—the day
when the Commissioner gave you the notice.
(5) If the Commissioner
gives you and your supervising entity a notice at different times, each notice
is taken to have been given at the later of those times.
Action taken by your supervising
entity
(6) For the purposes of this
Division, a statutory declaration given to the Commissioner by your supervising
entity is taken to have been given by you.
(7) For the purposes of this
Division, an affidavit filed by your supervising entity is taken to have been
filed by you.
(8) For the purposes of item 2
in the table in subsection 268‑40(1) (recovery proceedings), a procedural
step taken by your supervising entity is taken to have been taken by you.
Multiple supervising entities
(9) If you have 2 or more
supervising entities, anything this Division provides for to be done by or in
relation to your supervising entity may be done by or in relation to any of
them.
268‑100 Division not to limit or
exclude Corporations or Bankruptcy Act
This Division is not
intended to limit or exclude the operation of Chapter 5 of the Corporations
Act 2001 (External administration), or the Bankruptcy Act 1966, to
the extent that Chapter or Act can operate concurrently with this Division.
Note: Section 268‑30 and
Subdivision 268‑D affect the operation of Chapter 5 of the Corporations
Act 2001 and the Bankruptcy Act 1966.
Division 269—Penalties for directors of non‑complying
companies
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 269
269‑A Object and scope
269‑B Obligations and penalties
269‑C Discharging liabilities
269‑D Miscellaneous
Guide to Division 269
269‑1 What this Division is about
The directors of a
company have a duty to ensure that the company either:
(a) meets
its obligations under Subdivision 16‑B (obligation to pay withheld amounts
to the Commissioner) and Division 268 in this Schedule and Part 3 of
the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 (obligation to
pay superannuation guarantee charge); or
(b) goes
promptly into voluntary administration under the Corporations Act 2001
or into liquidation.
The directors’ duties
are enforced by penalties.
Note: The
duties this Division imposes on the directors of the company are in addition to
the similar duties imposed on the public officer of the company. See subsection 252(1)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.
Subdivision 269‑A—Object and scope
Table
of sections
269‑5 Object
of Division
269‑10 Scope of Division
269‑5 Object of Division
The object of this
Division is to ensure that a company either:
(a) meets its
obligations under:
(i) Subdivision 16‑B
(obligation to pay withheld amounts to the Commissioner); and
(ii) Division 268
(estimates of PAYG withholding liabilities and superannuation guarantee
charge); and
(iii) Part 3
of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 (obligation to
pay superannuation guarantee charge); or
(b) goes promptly
into voluntary administration under the Corporations Act 2001 or into
liquidation.
Note: The directors’ duties are
enforced by penalties on the directors. A penalty recovered under this Division
is applied towards meeting the company’s obligation.
269‑10 Scope of Division
(1) This Division applies as
set out in the following table:
|
Obligations
that directors must cause company to comply with
|
|
Item
|
Column
1
This
Division applies if, on a particular day (the initial day), a company
is a company registered under the Corporations Act 2001, and on the
initial day …
|
Column
2
and
the company is obliged to pay to the Commissioner on or before a particular
day (the due day) …
|
|
1
|
the company withholds an amount under
Division 12
|
that amount in accordance with
Subdivision 16‑B.
|
|
2
|
the
company receives an *alienated personal
services payment
|
an amount
in respect of that alienated personal services payment in accordance with
Division 13 and Subdivision 16‑B.
|
|
3
|
the company provides a *non‑cash benefit
|
an amount in respect of that benefit in
accordance with Subdivision 16‑B.
|
|
4
|
the company is given notice of an
estimate under Division 268
|
the amount of the estimate.
|
|
5
|
a *quarter ends
|
superannuation guarantee charge for the
quarter in accordance with the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration)
Act 1992.
|
Note: In a case covered by item 2,
3 or 4 of the table, the due day is the same as the initial day.
(2) This Division applies in
relation to an amount that the company purports to withhold under Division 12,
but is not required to withhold, as if the company were required to withhold
the amount.
Superannuation guarantee charge
(3) For the purposes of this
Division, the company’s superannuation guarantee charge for a *quarter under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act
1992 is treated as being payable on the day by which the company must lodge
a superannuation guarantee statement for the quarter under section 33 of
that Act, even if the charge is not assessed under that Act on or before that
day.
Subdivision 269‑B—Obligations and penalties
Table
of sections
269‑15 Directors’ obligations
269‑20 Penalty
269‑25 Notice
269‑30 Effect on penalty of
directors’ obligation ending before end of notice period
269‑35 Defences
269‑15 Directors’ obligations
Directors’ obligations
(1) The directors (within
the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) of the company (from time to
time) on or after the initial day must cause the company to comply with its
obligation.
(2) The directors of the
company (from time to time) continue to be under their obligation until:
(a) the company
complies with its obligation; or
(b) an administrator
of the company is appointed under section 436A, 436B or 436C of the Corporations
Act 2001; or
(c) the
company begins to be wound up (within the meaning of that Act).
Instalment arrangements
(3) The Commissioner must
not commence, or take a procedural step as a party to, proceedings to enforce
an obligation, or to recover a penalty, of a director under this Division if an
*arrangement that covers the company’s obligation is in force under
section 255‑15 (Commissioner’s power to permit payments by instalments).
Note 1: The arrangement may also cover
other obligations of the company.
Note 2: Subsection (3) does not
prevent the Commissioner from giving a director a notice about a penalty under
section 269‑25.
269‑20 Penalty
Penalty for director on or before due
day
(1) You are liable to pay to
the Commissioner a penalty if:
(a) at the end of the
due day, the directors of the company are still under an obligation under
section 269‑15; and
(b) you were under
that obligation at or before that time (because you were a director).
Note: Paragraph (1)(b) applies
even if you stopped being a director before the end of the due day: see
subsection 269‑15(2).
(2) The penalty is due and
payable at the end of the due day.
Note: The Commissioner must not
commence proceedings to recover the penalty until the end of 21 days after the
Commissioner gives you notice of the penalty under section 269‑25.
Penalty for new director
(3) You are also liable to
pay to the Commissioner a penalty if:
(a) after the due
day, you became a director of the company and began to be under an obligation
under section 269‑15; and
(b) 30 days later,
you are still under that obligation.
(4) The penalty is due and
payable at the end of that 30th day.
Note: The Commissioner must not
commence proceedings to recover the penalty until the end of 21 days after the
Commissioner gives you notice of the penalty under section 269‑25.
Amount of penalty
(5) The amount of a penalty
under this section is equal to the unpaid amount of the company’s liability
under its obligation.
Note 1: See section 269‑40 for
the effect on your penalty of the company discharging its obligation, or of
another director paying his or her penalty.
Note 2: See section 269‑45 for
your rights of indemnity and contribution.
269‑25 Notice
Commissioner must give notice of
penalty
(1) The Commissioner must
not commence proceedings to recover from you a penalty payable under this
Subdivision until the end of 21 days after the Commissioner gives you a written
notice under this section.
Content of notice
(2) The notice must:
(a) set out what the
Commissioner thinks is the unpaid amount of the company’s liability under its
obligation; and
(b) state that you
are liable to pay to the Commissioner, by way of penalty, an amount equal to
that unpaid amount because of an obligation you have or had under this
Division; and
(c) explain the main
circumstances in which the penalty will be remitted.
(3) To avoid doubt, a single
notice may relate to 2 or more penalties, but must comply with subsection (2)
in relation to each of them.
When notice is given
(4) Despite section 29
of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901, a notice under subsection (1)
is taken to be given at the time the Commissioner leaves or posts it.
Note 1: Section 28A of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 may be relevant to giving a notice under subsection (1).
Note 2: Section 269‑50 of this
Act is also relevant to giving a notice under subsection (1).
269‑30 Effect on penalty of
directors’ obligation ending before end of notice period
(1) Subject to subsection (2),
a penalty of yours under this Division is remitted if the directors of the
company stop being under the relevant obligation under section 269‑15:
(a) before the Commissioner
gives you notice of the penalty under section 269‑25; or
(b) within 21 days
after the Commissioner gives you notice of the penalty under that section.
(2) The following table has
effect:
|
When
appointing administrator or winding up company does not affect penalty
|
|
Item
|
Column
1
If the
company’s obligation is to pay to the Commissioner, on or before the due day
…
|
Column
2
and,
because of paragraph 269‑15(2)(b) or (c) (an administrator is appointed
or the company begins to be wound up), the directors stop being under the
relevant obligation after the last day of the 3 months after …
|
Column
3
subsection (1)
does not apply …
|
|
1
|
an amount in accordance with Subdivision 16‑B
(obligation to pay withheld amounts to the Commissioner),
|
the due day,
|
to the extent the company does not, on or
before the last day mentioned in column 2, notify the Commissioner under
section 16‑150 of the amount the company is obliged to pay.
|
|
2
|
the amount of an estimate under Division 268
(estimates of PAYG withholding liabilities and superannuation guarantee
charge),
|
the day by which the company was obliged
to pay the underlying liability to which the estimate relates,
|
to any extent.
|
|
3
|
superannuation guarantee charge for a *quarter,
|
the due day,
|
(a) if the company, on or before the last
day mentioned in column 2, lodges under section 33 of the Superannuation
Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 a superannuation guarantee statement
for the quarter—the extent (if any) to which the sum mentioned in paragraph 35(1)(e)
of that Act is less than the amount of the superannuation guarantee charge
the company is obliged to pay for the quarter; or
(b) otherwise—to any extent.
|
Note 1: An
administrator of the company being appointed, or the company beginning to be
wound up, after the last day mentioned in column 2 will, to the extent
mentioned in column 3, have no effect on the penalty.
Note 2: The sum mentioned in paragraph 35(1)(e)
of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 is the sum of:
(a) the total
of the company’s individual superannuation guarantee shortfalls; and
(b) the
company’s nominal interest component; and
(c) the
company’s administration component;
specified in the
superannuation guarantee statement.
(3) If you become a director
of the company during or after the 3 months mentioned in column 2, treat the
reference in the column to the 3 months as being a reference to the 3 months
after the day you become a director of the company.
269‑35 Defences
Illness
(1) You are not liable to a
penalty under this Division if, because of illness or for some other good
reason, it would have been unreasonable to expect you to take part, and you did
not take part, in the management of the company at any time when:
(a) you were a
director of the company; and
(b) the directors
were under the relevant obligations under subsection 269‑15(1).
All reasonable steps
(2) You are not liable to a
penalty under this Division if:
(a) you took all
reasonable steps to ensure that one of the following happened:
(i) the
directors caused the company to comply with its obligation;
(ii) the
directors caused an administrator of the company to be appointed under section 436A,
436B or 436C of the Corporations Act 2001;
(iii) the
directors caused the company to begin to be wound up (within the meaning of
that Act); or
(b) there were no
reasonable steps you could have taken to ensure that any of those things
happened.
(3) In determining what are
reasonable steps for the purposes of subsection (2), have regard to:
(a) when, and for how
long, you were a director and took part in the management of the company; and
(b) all other
relevant circumstances.
Superannuation guarantee
charge—reasonably arguable position
(3A) You are not liable to a
penalty under this Division to the extent that the penalty resulted from the
company treating the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992
as applying to a matter or identical matters in a particular way that was *reasonably arguable, if the company took reasonable care in
connection with applying that Act to the matter or matters.
When you can rely on this section
(4) For the purposes of:
(a) proceedings in a
court to recover from you a penalty payable under this Division; or
(b) proceedings in a
court against you in relation to a right referred to in paragraph 269‑45(2)(b)
(directors jointly and severally liable as guarantors);
subsection (1) or (2) of this
section does not apply unless you prove the matters mentioned in that
subsection.
(4A) For the purpose of the
Commissioner recovering from you a penalty payable under this Division (other
than as mentioned in subsection (4)), subsection (1) or (2) does not
apply unless:
(a) you provide
information to the Commissioner during the period of 60 days starting on the
day the Commissioner:
(i) in
the case of the Commissioner recovering the penalty under section 260‑5
(Commissioner may collect amounts from third party)—gives you a notice under
subsection 260‑5(6) in relation to the penalty; or
(ii) otherwise—notifies
you in writing that he or she has recovered any of the penalty; and
(b) the Commissioner
is satisfied of the matters mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) of this
section on the basis of that information.
Power of courts to grant relief
(5) Section 1318 of the
Corporations Act 2001 does not apply to an obligation or liability of a
director under this Division.
Subdivision 269‑C—Discharging liabilities
Table of sections
269‑40 Effect of director paying
penalty or company discharging liability
269‑45 Directors’ rights of
indemnity and contribution
269‑40 Effect of director paying
penalty or company discharging liability
Liabilities
(1) This section applies to
the following liabilities:
(a) the liability of
the company under its obligation referred to in section 269‑10;
(b) the liability of
each director (or former director) to pay a penalty under this Division in
relation to the liability of the company referred to in paragraph (a);
(c) a liability under
a judgment, to the extent that it is based on a liability referred to in paragraph (a)
or (b).
Discharging one liability discharges
other liabilities
(2) If an amount is paid or
applied at a particular time towards discharging one of the liabilities, each
of the other liabilities in existence at that time is discharged to the extent
of the same amount.
(3) If,
because of section 268‑20 (Nature of liability to pay estimate), one of
the liabilities is discharged at a particular time to the extent of a
particular amount, each of the other liabilities in existence at that time is discharged
to the extent of the same amount.
(4) This section does not
discharge a liability to a greater extent than the amount of the liability.
269‑45 Directors’ rights of
indemnity and contribution
(1) This section applies if
you pay a penalty under this Division in relation to a liability of the company
under an obligation referred to in section 269‑10.
(2) You have the same rights
(whether by way of indemnity, subrogation, contribution or otherwise) against
the company or anyone else as if:
(a) you made the
payment under a guarantee of the liability of the company; and
(b) under the
guarantee you and every other person who has paid, or from whom the
Commissioner is entitled to recover, a penalty under this Division in relation
to the company’s obligation were jointly and severally liable as guarantors.
Subdivision 269‑D—Miscellaneous
Table of sections
269‑50 How notice may be given
269‑52 Copies of notices
269‑55 Division not to limit or
exclude Corporations Act
269‑50 How notice may be given
The Commissioner may
give you a notice under section 269‑25 by leaving it at, or posting it to,
an address that appears, from information held by the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission, to be, or to have been within the last 7 days, your
place of residence or *business.
269‑52 Copies of notices
(1) If:
(a) the Commissioner
gives you a notice under section 269‑25 in accordance with section 269‑50;
and
(b) you have given
the address of a *registered tax agent to the Commissioner
as your address for service for the purposes of any *taxation
law;
the Commissioner may also give you a copy
of the notice.
(2) The Commissioner may do
so by leaving the copy at, or posting the copy to, the address of the *registered tax agent.
(3) To avoid doubt, this
section does not affect:
(a) whether the
Commissioner has given you the actual notice; or
(b) how the
Commissioner may give you the actual notice.
269‑55 Division not to limit or
exclude Corporations Act
To avoid doubt, this
Division is not intended to limit or exclude the operation of Chapter 5 of
the Corporations Act 2001 (External administration), to the extent that
Chapter can operate concurrently with this Division.
Part 4‑25—Charges and penalties
Division 280—Shortfall interest charge
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 280
280‑A Object of Division
280‑B Shortfall interest charge
280‑C Remitting shortfall interest
charge
Guide to Division 280
280‑1 Guide to Division 280
The shortfall
interest charge applies to shortfalls of income tax, petroleum resource rent
tax, excess non‑concessional contributions tax or Division 293 tax that
are revealed when the Commissioner amends your assessment.
The charge is applied
at a uniform rate that is lower than the general interest charge rate.
The Commissioner has
a discretion to remit shortfall interest charge.
Subdivision 280‑A—Object of Division
Table of sections
280‑50 Object of Division
280‑50 Object of Division
The object of this
Division is to neutralise benefits that taxpayers could otherwise receive from
shortfalls of income tax, *petroleum resource rent
tax, *excess non‑concessional contributions tax
or *Division 293 tax, so that they do not receive an advantage in
the form of a free loan over those who assess correctly.
Subdivision 280‑B—Shortfall interest charge
Table of sections
280‑100 Liability to shortfall interest charge—income tax
280‑101 Liability to shortfall interest charge—excess
exploration credit tax
280‑102 Liability to shortfall interest charge—petroleum
resource rent tax
280‑102A Liability to shortfall interest charge—excess non‑concessional
contributions tax
280‑102B Liability to shortfall interest charge—Division 293
tax
280‑103 Liability to shortfall interest charge—general
280‑105 Amount of shortfall interest charge
280‑110 Notification by Commissioner
280‑100 Liability to shortfall
interest charge—income tax
(1) You are liable to pay *shortfall interest charge on an additional amount of income tax that
you are liable to pay because the Commissioner amends your assessment for an
income year.
(2) The liability is for
each day in the period:
(a) beginning at the
start of the day on which income tax under your first assessment for that
income year was due to be paid, or would have been due to be paid if there had
been any; and
(b) ending at the end
of the day before the day on which the Commissioner gave you notice of the
amended assessment.
(3) However, if an amended
assessment reinstates all or part of a liability in relation to a particular
that had been reduced by an earlier amended assessment, the period for the
reinstated liability begins at the start of the day on which income tax under
the earlier amended assessment was due to be paid, or would have been due to be
paid if there had been any.
Note: See Division 5 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 for when the amount of income tax and shortfall
interest charge becomes due and payable. That Division also provides for
general interest charge on any part of the additional amount (plus any
shortfall interest charge) that remains unpaid after the additional amount is
due and payable.
Liability to shortfall interest
charge—excess concessional contributions charge
(4) Despite subsection (1),
if:
(a) you are liable
under that subsection to pay *shortfall interest charge
on an additional amount of income tax; and
(b) that additional
amount includes an amount of income tax on which you are liable to pay an
amount of *excess concessional contributions charge;
the additional amount of income tax on
which you are liable to pay shortfall interest charge is taken to be increased
by the amount of excess concessional contributions charge mentioned in paragraph (b).
280‑101 Liability to shortfall
interest charge—excess exploration credit tax
(1) You are liable to pay *shortfall interest charge on an additional amount of *excess exploration credit tax that you are liable to pay because the
Commissioner amends your assessment for an income year.
(2) The liability is for
each day in the period:
(a) beginning at the
start of the day on which *excess exploration
credit tax under your first assessment for that income year was due to be paid,
or would have been due to be paid if there had been any; and
(b) ending at the end
of the day before the day on which the Commissioner gave you notice of the
amended assessment.
(3) However, if an amended
assessment reinstates all or part of a liability in relation to a particular
that had been reduced by an earlier amended assessment, the period for the
reinstated liability begins at the start of the day on which *excess exploration credit tax under the earlier amended assessment
was due to be paid, or would have been due to be paid if there had been any.
Note: See Subdivision 418‑F of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 for when the amount of excess
exploration credit tax and shortfall interest charge becomes due and payable.
That Subdivision also provides for general interest charge on any part of the
additional amount (plus any shortfall interest charge) that remains unpaid
after the additional amount is due and payable.
280‑102 Liability to shortfall
interest charge—petroleum resource rent tax
(1) You are liable to pay *shortfall interest charge on an additional amount of *petroleum resource rent tax that you are liable to pay because the
Commissioner amends your assessment under the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax
Assessment Act 1987 for a year of tax (within the meaning of that Act).
(2) The liability is for
each day in the period:
(a) beginning at the
start of the day on which *petroleum resource rent
tax under your first assessment for that year of tax was due to be paid, or
would have been due to be paid if there had been any; and
(b) ending at the end
of the day before the day on which the Commissioner gave you notice of the
amended assessment.
(3) However, if an amended
assessment reinstates all or part of a liability in relation to a particular
that had been reduced by an earlier amended assessment, the period for the
reinstated liability begins at the start of the day on which *petroleum resource rent tax under the earlier amended assessment was
due to be paid, or would have been due to be paid if there had been any.
Note: See section 82 of the Petroleum
Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987 for when the amount of petroleum
resource rent tax and shortfall interest charge becomes due and payable.
Section 85 of that Act provides for general interest charge on any part of
the additional amount (plus any shortfall interest charge) that remains unpaid
after the additional amount is due and payable.
280‑102A Liability to shortfall
interest charge—excess non‑concessional contributions tax
(1) You are liable to pay *shortfall interest charge on an additional amount of *excess non‑concessional contributions tax that you are liable to pay
because the Commissioner amends your *excess non‑concessional
contributions tax assessment for a financial year.
(2) The
liability is for each day in the period:
(a) beginning at the
start of the day on which *excess non‑concessional contributions
tax under your first *excess non‑concessional contributions
tax assessment for that year was due to be paid; and
(b) ending at the end
of the day before the day on which the Commissioner gave you notice of the
amended assessment.
(3) However, if an amended
assessment reinstates all or part of a liability in relation to a particular
that had been reduced by an earlier amended assessment, the period for the
reinstated liability begins at the start of the day on which *excess non‑concessional contributions tax under the earlier amended
assessment was due to be paid.
Note: See section 292‑385 of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 for when the amount of excess non‑concessional
contributions tax becomes due and payable. See section 5‑10 of that Act
for when the amount of shortfall interest charge becomes due and payable.
Section 292‑390 of that Act provides for general interest charge on any
part of the additional amount (plus any shortfall interest charge) that remains
unpaid after the additional amount is due and payable.
280‑102B Liability to shortfall
interest charge—Division 293 tax
(1) You are liable to pay *shortfall interest charge on an additional amount of *Division 293 tax that you are liable to pay because the
Commissioner amends your assessment of an amount of Division 293 tax
payable in relation to an income year.
(2) However, subsection (1)
does not apply to the extent the additional amount of *Division 293
tax is *deferred to a debt account for a *superannuation interest.
(3) The
liability is for each day in the period:
(a) beginning on the
day on which *Division 293 tax under your first
assessment of Division 293 tax for that income year was due to be paid;
and
(b) ending on the day
before the day on which the Commissioner gave you notice of the amended
assessment.
(4) However, if an amended
assessment reinstates all or part of a liability in relation to a particular
that had been reduced by an earlier amended assessment, the period for the
reinstated liability begins at the start of the day on which *Division 293 tax under the earlier amended assessment was due
to be paid.
Note 1: See section 5‑10 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 for when the amount of shortfall interest charge
becomes due and payable.
Note 2: See Subdivision 293‑C of
that Act for when the amount of assessed Division 293 tax becomes due and
payable. That Subdivision also provides for general interest charge on any part
of the additional amount (plus any shortfall interest charge) that remains
unpaid after the additional amount is due and payable.
280‑103 Liability to shortfall
interest charge—general
(1) Your liability to pay *shortfall interest charge exists whether or not you are liable to
any penalty under this Act.
(2) Neither the Commonwealth
nor an authority of the Commonwealth is liable to pay *shortfall
interest charge.
280‑105 Amount of shortfall interest
charge
(1) The *shortfall interest charge for a day is worked out by multiplying the
rate worked out under subsection (2) for that day by the sum of these
amounts:
(a) the additional
amount of income tax, *excess exploration
credit tax, *petroleum resource rent tax, *excess non‑concessional contributions tax or *Division 293 tax,; and
(b) the shortfall
interest charge on that amount from previous days.
(2) The
rate is:

280‑110 Notification by Commissioner
(1) The Commissioner must
give you a notice stating the amount of the *shortfall
interest charge you are liable to pay for the period applicable under section 280‑100,
280‑101, 280‑102, 280‑102A or 280‑102B.
(2) The notice may be
included in any other notice given to you by the Commissioner.
(3) A notice given by the
Commissioner under this section is prima facie evidence of the matters stated
in the notice.
Subdivision 280‑C—Remitting shortfall interest charge
Table of sections
280‑160 Remitting shortfall
interest charge
280‑165 Commissioner must give
reasons for not remitting in certain cases
280‑170 Objecting against
remission decision
280‑160 Remitting shortfall interest
charge
(1) The Commissioner may
remit all or a part of an amount of *shortfall interest
charge you are liable to pay if the Commissioner considers it fair and
reasonable to do so.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1),
in deciding whether to remit, the Commissioner must have regard to:
(a) the principle
that remission should not occur just because the benefit you received from the
temporary use of the shortfall amount is less than the *shortfall
interest charge; and
(b) the principle
that remission should occur where the circumstances justify the Commonwealth
bearing part or all of the cost of delayed payments.
280‑165 Commissioner must give
reasons for not remitting in certain cases
The Commissioner must
give you a written statement of the reasons for a decision not to remit an
amount of *shortfall interest charge you are liable
to pay if you requested the Commissioner, in the *approved
form, to remit the amount.
Note: Section 25D of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 sets out rules about the contents of a statement of
reasons.
280‑170 Objecting against remission
decision
You may object, in the
manner set out in Part IVC, against a decision of the Commissioner not to
remit an amount of *shortfall interest charge you are
liable to pay on an additional amount of income tax, *petroleum
resource rent tax, *excess non‑concessional contributions
tax or *Division 293 tax, if the amount of
the charge that was not remitted is more than 20% of the additional amount.
Division 284—Administrative penalties for statements,
unarguable positions and schemes
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 284
284‑A General
provisions
284‑B Penalties
relating to statements
284‑C Penalties relating to schemes
284‑D Provisions common to
Subdivisions 284‑B and 284‑C
Guide to Division 284
284‑5 What this Division is about
This Division sets
out the circumstances in which administrative penalties apply for:
(a) making
false or misleading statements; and
(b) taking
a position that is not reasonably arguable; and
(c) entering
into schemes.
It also sets out the
amounts of those penalties.
Subdivision 284‑A—General provisions
Table of sections
284‑10 Object of Division
284‑15 When
a matter is reasonably arguable
284‑20 Which
statements this Division applies to
284‑25 Statements by agents
284‑30 Application
of Division to trusts
284‑35 Application of Division
to partnerships
284‑10 Object of Division
The object of this
Division is to provide a uniform administrative penalty regime for all *taxation laws to enable administrative penalties to apply to
entities that fail to meet their obligations under those laws in relation to:
(a) making false or
misleading statements; and
(b) taking a position
that is not reasonably arguable; and
(c) entering into *schemes; and
(d) refusing to
provide documents to the Commissioner.
284‑15 When a matter is reasonably
arguable
(1) A matter is reasonably
arguable if it would be concluded in the circumstances, having regard
to relevant authorities, that what is argued for is about as likely to be
correct as incorrect, or is more likely to be correct than incorrect.
Note: For the effect of transfer
pricing documentation on when a matter is reasonably arguable, see Subdivision 284‑E.
(2) To the extent that a
matter involves an assumption about the way in which the Commissioner will
exercise a discretion, the matter is only reasonably arguable if,
had the Commissioner exercised the discretion in the way assumed, a court would
be about as likely as not to decide that the exercise of the discretion was in
accordance with law.
(3) Without limiting subsection (1),
these authorities are relevant:
(a) a
*taxation law;
(b) material for the
purposes of subsection 15AB(1) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901;
(c) a decision of a
court (whether or not an Australian court), the *AAT
or a Board of Review;
(d) a *public ruling.
284‑20 Which statements this
Division applies to
This Division applies
to a statement made orally, in a document or in any other way (including
electronically) for a purpose connected with a *taxation
law.
284‑25 Statements by agents
This Division applies
to a statement made by your agent as if it had been made by you.
284‑30 Application of Division to
trusts
If you are a trustee of
a trust and:
(a) you make a
statement to the Commissioner or to an officer who is exercising powers or
performing functions under a *taxation law about the
trust; and
(b) the statement:
(i) is
false or misleading in a material particular, whether because of things in it
or omitted from it; or
(ii) treated
an *income tax law as applying to a matter or identical matters in a
particular way that was not *reasonably arguable; or
(iii) treated
a taxation law as applying in a particular way to a *scheme;
this Division applies to you as if any *shortfall amount or *scheme shortfall amount
of a beneficiary of the trust as a result of the statement were your shortfall
amount or scheme shortfall amount.
284‑35 Application of Division to
partnerships
(1) If you are a partner in
a partnership and:
(a) a statement about
the partnership net income or partnership loss is made by a partner or the
partnership’s agent to the Commissioner or to an entity who is exercising
powers or performing functions under a *taxation
law about the partnership; and
(b) the statement:
(i) is
false or misleading in a material particular, whether because of things in it
or omitted from it; or
(ii) treated
an *income tax law as applying to a matter or identical matters in a
particular way that was not *reasonably arguable;
this Division applies to you as if you
had made the statement.
(2) If
you are a partner in a partnership and:
(a) the partnership
participated in a *scheme; and
(b) the partnership
net income would have been greater, or the partnership loss would have been
smaller, apart from the scheme;
this Division applies to you as if the
proportion of the *scheme benefit that is the same as your
share of the partnership net income or partnership loss were your scheme
benefit.
Subdivision 284‑B—Penalties relating to statements
Guide to Subdivision 284‑B
284‑70 What this Subdivision is
about
You are liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) you
make a false or misleading statement about a tax‑related matter; or
(b) you
take a position that is not reasonably arguable about a tax‑related matter; or
(c) the
Commissioner determines a tax‑related liability of yours without documents you
were required to provide.
This Subdivision sets
out when the penalties apply and how the amounts of the penalties are
calculated.
Table
of sections
Operative
provisions
284‑75 Liability
to penalty
284‑80 Shortfall amounts
284‑85 Amount of penalty
284‑90 Base penalty amount
284‑95 Joint and several
liability of directors of corporate trustee that makes a false or misleading
statement
Operative provisions
284‑75 Liability to penalty
(1) You are liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) you make a
statement to the Commissioner or to an entity that is exercising powers or
performing functions under a *taxation law (other than
the *Excise Acts); and
(b) the statement is
false or misleading in a material particular, whether because of things in it
or omitted from it.
Note: This section applies to a
statement made by your agent as if it had been made by you: see section 284‑25.
(2) You are liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) you make a
statement to the Commissioner or to an entity that is exercising powers or
performing functions under an *income tax law or the *petroleum resource rent tax law; and
(b) in the statement,
you treated an income tax law, or the petroleum resource rent tax law, as
applying to a matter or identical matters in a particular way that was not *reasonably arguable; and
(d) item 4, 5 or
6 of the table in subsection 284‑90(1) applies to you.
(3) You are liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) you fail to give
a return, notice or other document to the Commissioner by the day it is
required to be given; and
(b) that document is
necessary for the Commissioner to determine a *tax‑related
liability (other than one arising under the *Excise
Acts) of yours accurately; and
(c) the Commissioner
determines the tax‑related liability without the assistance of that document.
Note: You are also liable to an
administrative penalty for failing to give the document on time: see
Subdivision 286‑C.
(4) You
are liable to an administrative penalty if:
(a) you
make a statement to an entity other than:
(i) the Commissioner;
and
(ii) an
entity exercising powers or performing functions under a *taxation law (other than the *Excise
Acts); and
(b) the statement is,
or purports to be, one required or permitted by a taxation law (other than the
Excise Acts); and
(c) the statement is
false or misleading in a material particular, whether because of things in it
or omitted from it.
Exceptions to subsections (1) and
(4)
(5) You are not liable to an
administrative penalty under subsection (1) or (4) for a statement that is
false or misleading in a material particular if you, and your *agent (if relevant), took reasonable care in connection with the
making of the statement.
(6) You are not liable to an
administrative penalty under subsection (1) or (4) if:
(a) you engage a *registered tax agent or BAS agent; and
(b) you give the
registered tax agent or BAS agent all relevant taxation information; and
(c) the registered
tax agent or BAS agent makes the statement; and
(d) the false or
misleading nature of the statement did not result from:
(i) intentional
disregard by the registered tax agent or BAS agent of a *taxation law (other than the *Excise
Acts); or
(ii) recklessness
by the agent as to the operation of a taxation law (other than the Excise Acts).
(7) If you wish to rely on subsection (6),
you bear an evidential burden in relation to paragraph (6)(b).
284‑80 Shortfall amounts
(1) You have a shortfall
amount if an item in this table applies to you. That amount is the
amount by which the relevant liability, or the payment or credit, is less than
or more than it would otherwise have been.
|
Shortfall
amounts
|
|
Item
|
You
have a shortfall amount in this situation:
|
|
1
|
A *tax‑related liability of yours for an accounting period, or for a *taxable importation, or under the Superannuation (Unclaimed
Money and Lost Members) Act 1999, worked out on the basis of the
statement is less than it would be if the statement were not false or
misleading
|
|
2
|
An amount that the Commissioner must pay
or credit to you under a *taxation law (other
than the *Excise Acts) for an accounting period,
or under a tourist refund scheme under Division 168 of the *GST Act or Division 25 of the A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation
Tax) Act 1999, worked out on the basis of the statement is more than it
would be if the statement were not false or misleading
|
|
3
|
A *tax‑related liability of yours for an accounting period worked out
on the basis of the statement is less than it would be if the statement did
not treat an *income tax law or the *petroleum resource rent tax law as applying in a way that was not *reasonably arguable
|
|
4
|
An amount that the Commissioner must pay
or credit to you under an *income tax law or the *petroleum resource rent tax law for an accounting period worked
out on the basis of the statement is more than it would be if the statement
did not treat an income tax law or the petroleum resource rent tax law as
applying in a way that was not *reasonably arguable
|
|
5
|
You are liable to pay to the Commissioner
an amount of *excess exploration credit tax
|
(2) However, if:
(a) your shortfall
amount arises in the situation covered by both item 1 in the table and
item 1, 2 or 3 in the table in subsection 284‑90(1); and
(b) the statement is
false or misleading because of errors mentioned in section 705‑315 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 that were made in it and it was made before the
Commissioner became aware of the errors, your shortfall amount is
instead the amount worked out using the formula:

where:
adjusted
reset cost base asset setting amount means:
(a) the
*tax cost setting amount, worked out under Division 705 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997, for all assets of a kind referred to in section 705‑35
of that Act as reset cost base assets that the *head
company of the relevant group held continuously from the time when the *subsidiary member referred to in subsection 705‑315(2) of that
Act joined the group until the start of the head company’s income year in which
the Commissioner became aware of the errors mentioned in section 705‑315
of that Act;
less:
(b) the head
company’s deductions under Division 40 (except under Subdivision 40‑F,
40‑G, 40‑H or 40‑I) or Subdivision 328‑D of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997 for those assets for all income years before the income year in
which the Commissioner became aware of the errors.
original reset cost base asset
setting amount means the *tax cost setting amount, worked out under Division 705 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997, for all reset cost base assets that the *subsidiary member held at the time it joined the group, other than
assets that the *head company no longer held at the start
of the earliest income year for which the Commissioner could amend the head
company’s assessment to correct any of the errors.
tax on capital gain means the product of:
(a) the *capital gain that the *head company makes as a
result of *CGT event L6 happening as mentioned in
section 104‑525 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; and
(b) the *corporate tax rate in respect of taxable income for the income year
in which that CGT event happens.
284‑85 Amount of penalty
(1) Work out the *base penalty amount under section 284‑90. If the base penalty
amount is not increased under section 284‑220 or reduced under section 284‑225,
this is the amount of the penalty.
(2) Otherwise,
use this formula:

where:
BPA
is the *base penalty amount.
increase % is the percentage increase (if any) under section 284‑220.
reduction % is the percentage reduction (if any) under section 284‑225.
284‑90 Base penalty amount
(1) The
base penalty amount under this Subdivision is worked out using
this table and section 284‑224 if relevant:
|
Base penalty amount
|
|
Item
|
In this situation:
|
The base penalty amount is:
|
|
1
|
You have a *shortfall amount as a result of a statement described in
subsection 284‑75(1) or (4) and the amount, or part of the amount,
resulted from intentional disregard of a *taxation law (other than the *Excise Acts) by you or your agent
|
75% of your *shortfall amount or part
|
|
2
|
You have a *shortfall amount as a result of a statement described in
subsection 284‑75(1) or (4) and the amount, or part of the amount,
resulted from recklessness by you or your agent as to the operation of a *taxation law (other than the *Excise Acts)
|
50% of your *shortfall amount or part
|
|
3
|
You have a *shortfall amount as a result of a statement described in
subsection 284‑75(1) or (4) and the amount, or part of the amount,
resulted from a failure by you or your agent to take reasonable care to
comply with a *taxation law (other than the *Excise Acts)
|
25% of your *shortfall amount or part
|
|
3A
|
A statement described in subsection 284‑75(1)
or (4) was false or misleading because of intentional disregard of a *taxation law (other than the *Excise Acts) by you or your *agent but did not result in you having a *shortfall amount
|
60 penalty units
|
|
3B
|
A statement described in subsection 284‑75(1)
or (4) was false or misleading because of recklessness by you or your *agent as to the operation of a *taxation law (other than the *Excise Acts) but did not result in you having a *shortfall amount
|
40 penalty units
|
|
3C
|
A statement described in subsection 284‑75(1)
or (4) was false or misleading because of a failure by you or your *agent to take reasonable care to comply with a *taxation law (other than the *Excise Acts) but did not result in you having a *shortfall amount
|
20 penalty units
|
|
4
|
You have a *shortfall amount, all or part of which resulted from you or your
agent treating an *income tax law or the *petroleum resource rent tax law as applying to a matter or
identical matters in a particular way that was not *reasonably arguable, and that amount is more than your *reasonably arguable threshold.
|
25% of your *shortfall amount or part
|
|
5
|
You have a *shortfall amount because of section 284‑30 (about trusts)
and:
(a) your shortfall amount or part of it
resulted from you or your agent treating an *income tax law as applying to a matter or identical matters in a
particular way that was not *reasonably arguable;
and
(b) because of that treatment, the trust’s
net income would have been reduced, or the trust’s *tax loss would have been increased, for the income year by more
than the trust’s *reasonably arguable threshold
|
25% of your *shortfall amount or part
|
|
6
|
You have a *shortfall amount because of section 284‑35 (about
partnerships) and:
(a) your shortfall amount or part of it
resulted from you or your agent treating an *income tax law as applying to a matter or identical matters in a
particular way that was not *reasonably arguable;
and
(b) because of that treatment, the
partnership net income would have been reduced, or the partnership loss would
have been increased, for the income year by more than the partnership’s *reasonably arguable threshold
|
25% of your *shortfall amount or part
|
|
7
|
You are liable to an administrative
penalty under subsection 284‑75(3)
|
75% of the tax‑related liability
concerned
|
(2) If 2 or more items in
that table apply and one of them produces a greater *base
penalty amount than any of the others, use that item.
(3) An entity’s reasonably
arguable threshold for an income year is:
(a) unless paragraph (b)
applies—the greater of $10,000 or 1% of whichever of the following applies:
(i) the
income tax payable by the entity for the income year, worked out on the basis
of the entity’s *income tax return;
(ii) the *petroleum resource rent tax payable by the entity for the year of
tax (within the meaning of the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act
1987) most closely corresponding to the income year, worked out on the
basis of the entity’s return under Division 1 of Part VI of that Act;
or
(b) if the entity is
a trust or partnership—the greater of the following amounts:
(i) $20,000;
(ii) 2% of
the entity’s *net income (if any) for the income year
worked out on the basis of the entity’s *income
tax return.
284‑95 Joint and several liability
of directors of corporate trustee that makes a false or misleading statement
(1) This section applies if
a trustee of a *self managed superannuation fund, or of a
fund that is treated as a self managed superannuation fund under subsection 10(4)
of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993:
(a) is liable to an
administrative penalty under subsection 284‑75(1) or (4); and
(b) is a body
corporate.
(2) The directors of the
body corporate at the time it becomes liable to the penalty are jointly and
severally liable to pay the amount of the *tax‑related
liability in respect of the penalty.
Note: See section 265‑45 for
rules on joint liability.
Subdivision 284‑C—Penalties relating to schemes
Guide to Subdivision 284‑C
284‑140 What this Subdivision is
about
You are liable to an administrative penalty if you attempt to reduce
your tax‑related liabilities or increase your credits through a scheme.
This Subdivision sets
out when the penalties apply and how the amounts of the penalties are
calculated.
Table
of sections
Operative provisions
284‑145 Liability to penalty
284‑150 Scheme benefits and
scheme shortfall amounts
284‑155 Amount of penalty
284‑160 Base penalty amount:
schemes
Operative provisions
284‑145 Liability to penalty
(1) You are liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) you would, apart
from a provision of a *taxation law or action
taken under such a provision (the adjustment provision), get a *scheme benefit from a *scheme; and
(b) having regard to
any relevant matters, it is reasonable to conclude that:
(i) an
entity that (alone or with others) entered into or carried out the scheme, or
part of it, did so with the sole or dominant purpose of that entity or another
entity getting a scheme benefit from the scheme; or
(ii) for a
scheme referred to in Division 165 of the *GST
Act or Division 75 of the Fuel Tax Act 2006—the principal effect of
the scheme, or of part of the scheme, is that you would, apart from the
adjustment provision, get the scheme benefit from the scheme directly or
indirectly.
(2A) You are also liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) you would, apart
from a determination under section 815‑30 of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997 (also the adjustment provision), get a *scheme benefit from a *scheme; and
(b) subparagraph (1)(b)(i)
is not satisfied for the scheme.
(2B) You are also liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) to give effect to
Subdivision 815‑B or 815‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (also
the adjustment provision) in relation to a *scheme, the Commissioner:
(i) amends
your assessment for an income year; or
(ii) serves
you with one or more notices under subsection 128C(7) of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936 in respect of income that is taken because of the
application of the adjustment provision to have been derived in the income
year; and
(b) as
a result, you are liable to pay an additional amount of income tax or *withholding tax (as the case requires).
Note: Subdivisions 815‑B and
815‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 apply the arm’s length
principle (about transfer pricing) to entities and permanent establishments
respectively.
(3) It does not matter
whether the *scheme, or any part of the scheme, was
entered into or carried out inside or outside Australia.
284‑150 Scheme benefits and scheme
shortfall amounts
(1) An entity gets a scheme
benefit from a *scheme if:
(a) a *tax‑related liability of the entity for an accounting period is, or
could reasonably be expected to be, less than it would be apart from the scheme
or a part of the scheme; or
(b) an amount that
the Commissioner must pay or credit to the entity under a *taxation law for an accounting period is, or could reasonably be
expected to be, more than it would be apart from the scheme or a part of the
scheme.
(2) The amount of the *scheme benefit that you would, apart from the adjustment provision,
have got from the *scheme is called your scheme
shortfall amount.
(3) However, to the extent
that your scheme shortfall amount is due to errors mentioned in section 705‑315
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 that were made in a statement that
was made before the Commissioner became aware of the errors, your scheme
shortfall amount is instead the amount worked out using the formula:

where:
adjusted reset cost base asset
setting amount means:
(a) the *tax cost setting amount, worked out under Division 705 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997, for all assets of a kind referred to in section 705‑35
of that Act as reset cost base assets that the *head
company of the relevant group held continuously from the time when the *subsidiary member referred to in subsection 705‑315(2) of that
Act joined the group until the start of the head company’s income year in which
the Commissioner became aware of the errors mentioned in section 705‑315
of that Act;
less:
(b) the head
company’s deductions under Division 40 (except under Subdivision 40‑F,
40‑G, 40‑H or 40‑I) or Subdivision 328‑D of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997 for those assets for all income years before the income year in
which the Commissioner became aware of the errors.
original reset cost base asset
setting amount means the *tax cost setting amount, worked out under Division 705 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997, for all reset cost base assets that the *subsidiary member held at the joining time, other than assets that
the *head company no longer held at the start
of the earliest income year for which the Commissioner could amend the head
company’s assessment to correct any of the errors.
tax on capital gain means the product of:
(a) the *capital gain that the *head company makes as a
result of *CGT event L6 happening as mentioned in section 104‑525
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; and
(b) the *corporate tax rate in respect of taxable income for the income year
in which that CGT event happens.
Scheme shortfall amount for cross‑border
transfer pricing
(4) Despite subsection (2),
your scheme shortfall amount for a *scheme
to which subsection 284‑145(2B) applies is the total amount of additional
income tax and *withholding tax you are liable to pay as
mentioned in that subsection.
(5) Disregard your *scheme shortfall amount for a *scheme
to which subsection 284‑145(1) applies to the extent that scheme shortfall
amount is attributable to additional tax that is, or is part of, your scheme
shortfall amount for a scheme to which subsection 284‑145(2B) applies.
284‑155 Amount of penalty
(1) Work out the *base penalty amount under section 284‑160. If the base penalty
amount is not increased under section 284‑220 or reduced under section 284‑225,
this is the amount of the penalty.
(2) Otherwise, use this
formula:

where:
BPA
is the *base penalty amount.
increase % is the percentage increase (if any) under section 284‑220.
reduction % is the percentage reduction (if any) under section 284‑225.
284‑160 Base penalty amount:
schemes
(1) The base penalty
amount for a *scheme to which subsection 284‑145(1)
applies is, subject to section 284‑224:
(a) 50% of your *scheme shortfall amount; or
(b) 25% of your
scheme shortfall amount if it is *reasonably arguable that
the adjustment provision does not apply.
(2) The base penalty
amount for a *scheme to which subsection 284‑145(2A)
applies is, subject to section 284‑224:
(a) 25% of your *scheme shortfall amount; or
(b) 10% of your
scheme shortfall amount if it is *reasonably arguable that
the adjustment provision does not apply.
(3) The base penalty
amount for a *scheme to which subsection 284‑145(2B)
applies is worked out using this table and section 284‑224 if relevant:
|
Base
penalty amount
|
|
Item
|
Column
1
In
this situation:
|
Column
2
The base
penalty amount is:
|
|
1
|
having
regard to any relevant matters, it is reasonable to conclude that an entity
that (alone or with others) entered into or carried out the *scheme, or part of it, did so with the sole or dominant purpose of
that entity or another entity getting a *transfer pricing benefit from the scheme
|
the sum
of:
(a) 50% of
your *scheme shortfall amount, to the extent
that it is not attributable as mentioned in paragraph (b); and
(b) 25% of
your scheme shortfall amount, to the extent (if any) that it is attributable to
the entity, or the entity’s agent, treating the adjustment provision as
applying (including not applying) to a matter (or identical matters) in a
particular way that is *reasonably arguable
|
|
2
|
item 1 does not apply
|
the sum of:
(a) 25% of your *scheme shortfall amount, to the extent that it is not attributable
as mentioned in paragraph (b); and
|
|
|
|
(b) 10% of your scheme shortfall amount, to
the extent (if any) that it is attributable to the entity, or the entity’s
agent, treating the adjustment provision as applying (including not applying)
to a matter (or identical matters) in a particular way that is *reasonably arguable
|
Note: For special rules about when
transfer pricing treatment is not reasonably arguable, see Subdivision 284‑E.
284‑165 Exception—threshold for
penalty arising from cross‑border transfer pricing
(1) You are not liable to an
administrative penalty under subsection 284‑145(2B) if your *scheme shortfall amount is equal to or less than your *reasonably arguable threshold.
(2) You are also not liable
to an administrative penalty under that subsection if:
(a) you have the *scheme shortfall amount because of section 284‑30 (about
trusts); and
(b) the amount by
which the trust would, apart from the application of Subdivision 815‑B or
815‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997, have had a greater *net income, or a lesser *tax loss, is equal
to or less than the trust’s *reasonably arguable
threshold.
(3) You are also not liable
to an administrative penalty under that subsection if:
(a) you have the *scheme shortfall amount because you are a partner in a partnership
that participated in the *scheme; and
(b) the amount by
which the partnership would, apart from the application of Subdivision 815‑B
or 815‑C of that Act, have had a greater *net
income, or a lesser *partnership loss, is equal to or
less than the partnership’s *reasonably arguable
threshold.
Nil amounts
(4) For the purposes of this
section:
(a) treat a trust or
a partnership that has no *net income for an income
year as having a net income for the year of a nil amount; and
(b) treat a trust
that has no *tax loss for an income year as having a
tax loss for the year of a nil amount; and
(c) treat a
partnership that has no *partnership loss for an
income year as having a partnership loss for the year of a nil amount.
Subdivision 284‑D—Provisions common to Subdivisions 284‑B and 284‑C
Table
of sections
284‑220 Increase
in base penalty amount
284‑224 Reduction
of base penalty amount if law was applied in an accepted way
284‑225 Reduction of base penalty
amount if you voluntarily tell the Commissioner
284‑220 Increase in base penalty
amount
(1) The
*base penalty amount is increased by 20% if:
(a) you took steps to
prevent or obstruct the Commissioner from finding out about a *shortfall amount, or the false or misleading nature of a statement,
in relation to which the base penalty amount was calculated; or
(b) you:
(i) became
aware of such a shortfall amount after a statement had been made to the
Commissioner about the relevant *tax‑related liability;
or
(ii) became
aware of the false or misleading nature of a statement made to the Commissioner
or another entity after the statement had been made;
and you did not
tell the Commissioner or other entity about it within a reasonable time; or
(c) the base penalty
amount was worked out using item 1, 2 or 3 of the table in subsection 284‑90(1)
and a base penalty amount for you was worked out under one of those items previously;
or
(ca) the base penalty
amount was worked out using item 3A, 3B or 3C of the table in subsection 284‑90(1)
and a base penalty amount for you was worked out under one of those items
previously; or
(d) the base penalty
amount was worked out using item 4, 5 or 6 of that table and a base
penalty amount for you was worked out under that item previously; or
(e) your liability to
a penalty arises under subsection 284‑75(3) and you were previously liable
to a penalty under that subsection.
(2) The *base penalty amount for your *scheme
shortfall amount, or for part of it, for an accounting period is increased by
20% if:
(a) you took steps to
prevent or obstruct the Commissioner from finding out about the scheme
shortfall amount or the part; or
(b) a base penalty
amount for you was worked out under section 284‑160 for a previous
accounting period.
284‑224 Reduction of base penalty
amount if law was applied in an accepted way
(1) If,
apart from this section, you would have a *base
penalty amount because you or your *agent treated a *taxation law as applying in a particular way, and that way agreed
with:
(a) advice
given to you or your agent by or on behalf of the Commissioner; or
(b) general
administrative practice under that law; or
(c) a
statement in a publication approved in writing by the Commissioner;
your base
penalty amount is reduced to the extent that it was caused by that treatment.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1)
it does not matter whether the *base penalty amount also
relates to:
(a) a statement; or
(b) a failure to give
the Commissioner a return, notice or other document when required; or
(c) a *scheme.
284‑225 Reduction of base penalty
amount if you voluntarily tell the Commissioner
(1) The *base penalty amount for your *shortfall
amount or *scheme shortfall amount, for part of it or
for your false or misleading statement is reduced by 20% if:
(a) the Commissioner
tells you that an examination is to be made of your affairs relating to a *taxation law for a relevant period; and
(b) after that
time, you voluntarily tell the Commissioner, in the *approved
form, about the shortfall, the part of it or the false or misleading nature of
the statement; and
(c) telling the
Commissioner can reasonably be estimated to have saved the Commissioner a
significant amount of time or significant resources in the examination.
(2) The
*base penalty amount for your *shortfall
amount or *scheme shortfall amount, for part of it or
for your false or misleading statement is reduced under subsection (3),
(4) or (4A) if you voluntarily tell the Commissioner, in the *approved form, about the shortfall amount, the part of it or the
false or misleading nature of the statement before:
(a) the day the
Commissioner tells you that an examination is to be made of your affairs
relating to a *taxation law for a relevant period; or
(b) if the
Commissioner makes a public statement requesting entities to make a voluntary
disclosure by a particular earlier day about a *scheme
or transaction that applies to your affairs—that earlier day.
(3) The *base penalty amount for your *shortfall
amount, or for part of it, is:
(a) reduced by 80% if
the shortfall amount, or the part of it, is $1,000 or more; or
(b) reduced to nil if
the shortfall amount, or the part of it, is less than $1,000.
(4) The *base penalty amount for your *scheme
shortfall amount, or for part of it, is reduced by 80%.
(4A) The *base penalty amount for your false or misleading statement that does
not result in you having a *shortfall amount is
reduced to nil.
(5) If you voluntarily tell
the Commissioner, in the *approved form, about
your *shortfall amount or *scheme shortfall amount, part of it or the false or misleading
nature of the statement after the Commissioner tells you that an
examination is to be conducted of your affairs relating to a *taxation law for a relevant period, the Commissioner may treat you
as having done so before being told about the examination if the
Commissioner considers it appropriate to do so in the circumstances.
Subdivision 284‑E—Special rules about unarguable positions for cross‑border
transfer pricing
Table
of sections
284‑250 Undocumented transfer pricing
treatment not reasonably arguable
284‑255 Documentation requirements
284‑250 Undocumented transfer
pricing treatment not reasonably arguable
This Division has
effect in relation to an entity as if a matter was not *reasonably
arguable if:
(a) the matter is a
particular way of applying (including not applying) Subdivision 815‑B or
815‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to a matter (or identical
matters); and
(b) the entity does
not have records that meet the requirements in this Subdivision for the
application of the Subdivision mentioned in paragraph (a) to that matter
(or those matters) in that way.
Note: For the Commissioner’s power
to remit an administrative penalty imposed by this Part, see section 298‑20.
284‑255 Documentation requirements
(1) Records kept by an
entity meet the requirements in this Subdivision for the application (or non‑application)
of Subdivision 815‑B or 815‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to
a matter (or identical matters) in a particular way if the records:
(a) are prepared
before the time by which the entity lodges its *income
tax return for the income year relevant to the matter (or matters); and
(b) are in English,
or readily accessible and convertible into English; and
(c) explain the
particular way in which the Subdivision applies (or does not apply) to the
matter (or matters); and
(d) explain
why the application of the Subdivision to the matter (or matters) in that way
best achieves the consistency mentioned in section 815‑135 or 815‑235
of that Act (as the case requires) (about guidance material).
(2) Without limiting subsection (1),
the records must allow each of the following to be readily ascertained:
(a) the *arm’s length conditions relevant to the matter (or matters);
(b) the particulars of
the method used and comparable circumstances relevant to identifying those
arm’s length conditions;
(c) unless the
records are for the non‑application of the Subdivision to a matter (or
matters)—the result that the application of the Subdivision in that particular
way, as compared to the non‑application of the Subdivision, has for the
operation of this Act in relation to the entity;
(d) for Subdivision 815‑B—the
actual conditions relevant to the matter (or matters);
(e) for Subdivision 815‑C:
(i) the actual
profits mentioned in paragraph 815‑220(1)(a) of that Act and the *arm’s length profits, to the extent that they are relevant to the
matter (or matters); and
(ii) the
particulars of the activities and circumstances mentioned in subsection 815‑225(1)
of that Act, to the extent they are relevant to the matter (or matters).
Division 286—Penalties for failing to lodge documents
on time
Table of Subdivisions
286‑A Guide to Division 286
286‑B Object of Division
286‑C Penalties for failing to
lodge documents on time
Subdivision 286‑A—Guide to Division 286
286‑1 What this Division is about
You are liable to an
administrative penalty if you are required to give a return, statement, notice
or other document by a particular time and you do not do so.
This Division sets
out when the penalty applies and how the amounts of the penalty are calculated.
Subdivision 286‑B—Object of Division
Table of sections
286‑25 Object of Division
286‑25 Object of Division
The object of this
Division is to provide a uniform administrative penalty regime for all *taxation laws to enable administrative penalties to apply for
failure to give returns, notices, statements or other documents on time.
Subdivision 286‑C—Penalties for failing to lodge documents on
time
Table
of sections
286‑75 Liability to penalty
286‑80 Amount
of penalty
286‑75 Liability to penalty
(1) You are liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) you are required
under a *taxation law to give a return, notice,
statement or other document to the Commissioner in the *approved
form by a particular day; and
(b) you do not give
the return, notice, statement or document to the Commissioner in the approved
form by that day.
(1A) However, you are not
liable to an administrative penalty under subsection (1) if:
(a) you engage a *registered tax agent or BAS agent; and
(b) you give the
registered tax agent or BAS agent all relevant taxation information to enable
the agent to give a return, notice, statement or other document to the
Commissioner in the *approved form by a particular
day; and
(c) the registered
tax agent or BAS agent does not give the return, notice, statement or other
document to the Commissioner in the approved form by that day; and
(d) the failure to
give the return, notice, statement or other document to the Commissioner did
not result from:
(i) intentional
disregard by the registered tax agent or BAS agent of a *taxation law; or
(ii) recklessness
by the agent as to the operation of a taxation law.
(1B) If you wish to rely on subsection (1A),
you bear an evidential burden in relation to paragraph (1A)(b).
(2) Subsection (1)
does not apply to a return, notice, statement or other document under any of
these Acts:
(a) the Superannuation
Contributions Tax (Assessment and Collection) Act 1997;
(b) the Superannuation
Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992; or
(c) the Superannuation
(Self Managed Superannuation Funds) Supervisory Levy Imposition Act 1991.
(2AA) You
are also liable to an administrative penalty if:
(a) you are required
under section 96‑42 (releasing superannuation) to give a notice to an
entity (other than the Commissioner) in the *approved
form by a particular day; and
(b) you do not give
the notice in the approved form to the entity by that day.
(2A) You
are also liable to an administrative penalty if:
(a) you are required
under Division 390 to give a statement to an entity (other than the
Commissioner) in the *approved form by a particular
day; and
(b) you do not give
the statement in the approved form to the other entity by that day.
(2B) You are also liable to an
administrative penalty if:
(a) you are required
under Division 391 to give a statement to an entity (other than the
Commissioner) in the *approved form by a particular
day; and
(b) you do not give
the statement in the approved form to the entity by that day.
(2BA) You
are also liable to an administrative penalty if:
(a) you are required
under Division 392 (Employee share scheme reporting) to give a statement
to an entity (other than the Commissioner) in the *approved
form by a particular day; and
(b) you do not give
the statement in the approved form to the entity by that day.
(2C) You
are also liable to an administrative penalty if:
(a) you
are required under section 20 of the First Home Saver Accounts Act 2008
to give a notice to an entity in the *approved form by a
particular day; and
(b) you do not give
the notice in the approved form to the entity by that day.
(4) You
are also liable to an administrative penalty if:
(a) you are required
under section 713‑540 of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act
1997 to notify another entity of the happening of an event by a particular
day; and
(b) you do not notify
the other entity of the happening of that event by that day.
(5) Subsection (6)
applies if:
(a) an entity is
liable to an administrative penalty under subsection (1) or (2A) as the *superannuation provider in relation to a *self
managed superannuation fund; and
(b) the entity is a
body corporate.
(6) The directors of the
body corporate at the time it becomes liable to the penalty are jointly and
severally liable to pay the amount of the *tax‑related
liability in respect of the penalty.
Note: See section 265‑45 for
rules on joint liability.
286‑80 Amount of penalty
(1) The amount of the
penalty is worked out in this way:
(a) work out the *base penalty amount under subsection (2); and
(b) work out whether
the base penalty amount is increased under subsection (3) or (4).
(2) The
base penalty amount is:
(a) for failing to
give a return, notice or other document on time or in the *approved form, as mentioned in subsection 286‑75(1), (2A), (2B),
(2BA) or (2C)—1 penalty unit for each period of 28 days or part of a period of
28 days starting on the day when the document is due and ending when you give
it (up to a maximum of 5 penalty units); or
(c) for failing to
notify the happening of an event as mentioned in subsection 286‑75(4)—1
penalty unit for each period of 28 days or part of a period of 28 days starting
on the day when the notification is due and ending when you notify the
happening of the event (up to a maximum of 5 penalty units).
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Example: An entity lodges a return 31
days late. The base penalty amount under subsection (2) is 2 penalty
units.
(3) The *base penalty amount is multiplied by 2 if:
(a) the entity concerned
is a *medium withholder for the month in which
the return, notice or other document was required to be given; or
(b) the entity’s
assessable income for the income year in which the return, notice or other
document is required to be given is more than $1 million but less than $20
million; or
(c) the entity’s *current GST turnover worked out at a time in the month in which the
return, notice or other document was required to be given is more than $1
million but less than $20 million.
(4) The *base penalty amount is multiplied by 5 if:
(a) the entity
concerned is a *large withholder for the month when the
return, notice or other document was required to be given; or
(b) the entity’s
assessable income for the income year in which the return, notice or other
document is required to be given is $20 million or more; or
(c) the entity’s *current GST turnover worked out at a time in the month in which the
return, notice or other document was required to be given is $20 million or
more.
(5) In working out the *base penalty amount, the amount of a penalty unit is the amount
applying at the start of the relevant 28 day period.
(6) The fact that you have
not yet given the relevant return, notice or other document does not prevent
the Commissioner notifying you that you are liable to an administrative penalty
under this Subdivision. That penalty may be later increased under this section.
Note: The Commissioner is required
to notify you of an administrative penalty: see section 298‑10.
Division 288—Miscellaneous administrative penalties
Table of sections
288‑10 Penalty for non‑electronic
notification
288‑20 Penalty for non‑electronic
payment
288‑25 Penalty for failure to
keep or retain records
288‑30 Penalty for failure to
retain or produce declarations
288‑35 Penalty for preventing
access etc.
288‑40 Penalty for failing to
register or cancel registration
288‑45 Penalty for failing to
issue tax invoice etc.
288‑50 Penalty for both
principal and agent issuing certain documents
288‑70 Administrative penalties
for life insurance companies
288‑75 Administrative penalty
for a copyright or resale royalty collecting society
288‑80 Administrative penalty
for over declaring conduit foreign income
288‑90 Failing to give release
authority for excess non‑concessional contributions tax
288‑95 Failing to comply etc.
with release authority
288‑100 Excess money paid under
release authority
288‑105 Superannuation provider to
calculate crystallised pre‑July 83 amount of superannuation interest by 30 June
2008
288‑110 Contravention of
superannuation data and payment regulation or standard
288‑10 Penalty for non‑electronic
notification
An entity that:
(a) under subsection 31‑25(2)
of the *GST Act, is required to *lodge a *GST return electronically; or
(aa) under subsection 45‑20(2A)
in this Schedule, is required to give a notification electronically; or
(b) under section 388‑80
in this Schedule, is required to notify another *BAS
amount electronically;
but lodges, gives or notifies it in
another way, is liable to an administrative penalty of 5 penalty units.
Note 1: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 2: Division 298 contains
machinery provisions for administrative and civil penalties.
288‑20 Penalty for non‑electronic
payment
An
entity that:
(a) under subsection 33‑10(2)
of the *GST Act, is required to pay an *assessed net amount for a tax period electronically; or
(b) under section 8AAZMA,
or section 45‑72 in this Schedule, is required to pay an amount
electronically;
but pays it another way, is liable
to an administrative penalty of 5 penalty units for each payment of one
or more such amounts.
Note 1: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 2: Division 298 contains
machinery provisions for administrative and civil penalties.
288‑25 Penalty for failure to keep
or retain records
(1) You are liable to an
administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if:
(a) a provision of a *taxation law requires you to keep or retain a record; and
(b) you do not keep
or retain that record in the manner required by that law.
(2) Subsection (1) does
not apply to:
(a) documents
required to be retained under Part X of the Fringe Benefits Tax
Assessment Act 1986 (about statutory evidentiary documents); or
(b) documents
required to be kept or retained under Division 900 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 (about substantiation of expenses).
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
288‑30 Penalty for failure to retain
or produce declarations
You are liable to an
administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if:
(a) a provision of a *taxation law requires you to retain or produce a declaration you
made about an agent giving an *approved form to the
Commissioner on your behalf; and
(b) you
do not retain or produce that declaration in the manner required by that law.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
288‑35 Penalty for preventing access
etc.
You are liable to an
administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if:
(a) a provision of a *taxation law confers a power on an officer authorised under that
law:
(i) to
enter or remain on land, premises or a place that you occupy; or
(ii) to
have access to documents, goods or other property in your possession; or
(iii) to
inspect, copy or take extracts from documents in your possession; or
(iv) to
inspect, examine, count, measure, weigh, gauge, test or analyse any goods or
other property in your possession and, to that end, take samples; and
(b) you refuse to
provide the officer with all reasonable facilities for the officer effectively
to exercise that power in accordance with that law.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
288‑40 Penalty for failing to
register or cancel registration
You are liable to an
administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if you fail to apply for
registration, or to apply for cancellation of registration, as required by the *GST Act.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
288‑45 Penalty for failing to issue
tax invoice etc.
(1) You are liable to an
administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if you fail to issue a tax invoice
as required by section 29‑70 of the *GST
Act.
(2) You are liable to an
administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if you fail to issue an adjustment
note as required by section 29‑75 of the *GST
Act.
(3) You are liable to an
administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if you fail to issue a third party
adjustment note as required by section 134‑20 of the *GST Act.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
288‑50 Penalty for both principal
and agent issuing certain documents
An entity is liable to
an administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if both the entity and its agent
issue:
(a) separate tax
invoices relating to the same taxable supply, contrary to subsection 153‑15(2)
of the *GST Act; or
(b) separate
adjustment notes, or third party adjustment notes, for the same decreasing
adjustment, contrary to subsection 153‑20(2) of that Act.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
288‑70 Administrative penalties for
life insurance companies
Complying superannuation/FHSA asset
pool—calculation of an amount
(1) A *life insurance company is liable to an administrative penalty if the
company:
(a) is required to
calculate a particular amount under section 320‑175 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997; but
(b) fails to do so
within the period of 60 days that is required by that section.
Complying superannuation/FHSA asset
pool—transfer following valuation
(2) A *life insurance company is liable to an administrative penalty if the
company:
(a) is required to
transfer assets having a particular *transfer value
from its *complying superannuation/FHSA assets under
subsection 320‑180(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; but
(b) fails to do so
within the period of 30 days that is required by subsection 320‑180(2) of
that Act.
Segregated exempt assets—calculation
of an amount
(3) A *life insurance company is liable to an administrative penalty if the
company:
(a) is required to
calculate a particular amount under section 320‑230 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997; but
(b) fails to do so
within the period of 60 days that is required by that section.
Segregated exempt assets—transfer
following valuation
(4) A *life insurance company is liable to an administrative penalty if the
company:
(a) is required to
transfer assets having a particular *transfer value
from its *segregated exempt assets under subsection 320‑235(1)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; but
(b) fails to do so
within the period of 30 days that is required by subsection 320‑235(2) of
that Act.
How to work out the administrative
penalty
(5) The administrative
penalty under subsection (1), (2), (3) or (4) for a failure to make a
calculation or transfer is equal to 5 penalty units for each period of 28 days
or part of a period of 28 days:
(a) starting
immediately after the end of the period mentioned in paragraph (b) of that
subsection; and
(b) ending at the end
of the day on which the calculation or transfer is made.
However, the maximum penalty for that
failure must not exceed 25 penalty units.
Note 1: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 2: Division 298 contains
machinery provisions for the penalties provided by this section.
288‑75 Administrative penalty
for a copyright or resale royalty collecting society
(1) A *copyright collecting society is liable to an administrative penalty
of 20 penalty units if the society fails to give a notice as required by
section 410‑5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(2) The *resale royalty collecting society is liable to an administrative
penalty of 20 penalty units if the society fails to give a notice as required
by section 410‑50 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
288‑80 Administrative penalty for
over declaring conduit foreign income
(1) An *Australian corporate tax entity is liable to an administrative
penalty if:
(a) the entity makes
a *frankable distribution that has an *unfranked
part; and
(b) the entity
declares an amount of the unfranked part to be *conduit
foreign income; and
(c) the sum of the
amounts declared exceeds the amount of the entity’s conduit foreign income at:
(i) if
the entity declares the distribution before making the distribution—the time of
the declaration; or
(ii) otherwise—the
time the distribution is made.
(2) The amount of the
penalty is the sum of the amounts worked out under subsections (3) and
(4).
(3) The
amount is:

where:
Australian membership interests means the number of *membership interests or *non‑share equity interests in the entity that are not covered by the
definition of foreign membership interests in subsection (4).
total membership interests means the number of *membership interests or *non‑share equity interests in the entity held by entities that are
entitled to receive the *distribution.
(4) The amount is:

where:
applicable withholding tax rate means 50% of the rate of tax set out in paragraph 7(a) of the Income
Tax (Dividends, Interest and Royalties Withholding Tax) Act 1974.
foreign membership interests means the number of *membership interests or *non‑share equity interests in the entity held by entities that are
entitled to receive the *distribution and in
relation to whom the entity is required to withhold amounts under section 12‑210
disregarding the operation of section 12‑300 (about limits on the amount
withheld).
total membership interests means the number of *membership interests or *non‑share equity interests in the entity held by entities that are
entitled to receive the *distribution.
288‑90 Failing to give release
authority for excess non‑concessional contributions tax
A person to whom the
Commissioner has given a release authority in accordance with subsection 292‑405(1)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 and who fails to comply with
subsection 292‑410(2) of that Act in relation to the release authority is
liable to an administrative penalty of 20 penalty units.
288‑95 Failing to comply etc. with
release authority
(1) A *superannuation provider that has been given a release authority in
accordance with section 292‑410 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 and
that fails to comply with subsection 292‑415(1) of that Act is liable to
an administrative penalty of 20 penalty units.
(2) A *superannuation provider that has been given a transitional release
authority in accordance with section 292‑80B of the Income Tax (Transitional
Provisions) Act 1997 and that fails to comply with subsection 292‑80C(1)
of that Act is liable to an administrative penalty of 20 penalty units.
(3) A *superannuation provider that fails to comply with section 96‑20
(about release authority for excess superannuation contributions) is liable to
an administrative penalty of 20 penalty units.
(4) A *superannuation provider that fails to comply with section 135‑75
(about release authorities for Division 293 tax) is liable to an
administrative penalty of 20 penalty units.
288‑100 Excess money paid under
release authority
(1) A
person is liable for an administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if:
(a) the
person gives one or more *superannuation providers
a release authority in accordance with:
(i) section 292‑410
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; or
(ii) section 292‑80B
of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997; and
(b) the total of the
amounts paid by the superannuation provider or providers to the person and the
Commissioner as a result of being given the release authority exceeds
the amount required to be paid in respect of the release authority under:
(i) if subparagraph (a)(i)
applies—subsection 292‑415(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997;
or
(ii) if subparagraph (a)(ii)
applies—section 292‑80C of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act
1997.
(2) An individual is liable
to an administrative penalty of 20 penalty units if one or more *superannuation benefits that the individual receives (or is taken to
receive), paid in relation to a release authority issued in accordance with
Subdivision 135‑A in this Schedule, is assessable income to any
extent.
288‑105 Superannuation provider to
calculate crystallised pre‑July 83 amount of superannuation interest by 30 June
2008
(1) An entity is liable to
an administrative penalty of 5 penalty units if:
(a) the entity is the
*superannuation provider in relation to a *superannuation
plan (other than a *constitutionally protected fund)
on 30 June 2008; and
(b) the entity has
not ensured that the crystallised pre‑July 83 amount in relation to each
superannuation interest in the plan has been calculated on or before that day.
(2) For the purpose of paragraph (1)(b),
disregard a *superannuation interest unless the *element taxed in the fund of the *taxable
component of the interest exceeds nil just before 1 July 2007.
(3) For the purpose of paragraph (1)(b),
disregard a *superannuation interest that supported a *superannuation income stream just before 1 July 2007.
288‑110 Contravention of
superannuation data and payment regulation or standard
Liability to penalty—RSA providers and
trustees of eligible superannuation entities
(1) An entity is liable to
an administrative penalty if the entity contravenes:
(a) subsection 34M(1)
of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993; or
(b) subsection 45D(1)
of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997.
(2) An entity is liable to
an administrative penalty if the entity contravenes:
(a) subsection 34P(6)
of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993; or
(b) subsection 45F(6)
of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997.
Liability to penalty—employers
(3) An entity is liable to
an administrative penalty if the entity contravenes:
(a) subsection 34N(1)
of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993; or
(b) subsection 45E(1)
of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997.
(4) An entity is liable to
an administrative penalty if the entity contravenes:
(a) subsection 34Q(6)
of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993; or
(b) subsection 45G(6)
of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997.
Amount of the penalty
(5) The
amount of the penalty is:
(a) for an
administrative penalty under subsection (1) or (3)—4 penalty units;
or
(b) for an administrative
penalty under subsection (2) or (4)—10 penalty units.
Note: The Commissioner is required
to notify you of an administrative penalty: see section 298‑10.
Division 290—Promotion and implementation of schemes
Table of Subdivisions
290‑A Preliminary
290‑B Civil penalties
290‑C Injunctions
290‑D Voluntary undertakings
Subdivision 290‑A—Preliminary
Table
of sections
290‑5 Objects of this Division
290‑10 Extra‑territorial application
290‑5 Objects of this Division
The objects of this
Division are:
(a) to deter the
promotion of tax avoidance *schemes and tax evasion
schemes; and
(b) to deter the
implementation of schemes that have been promoted on the basis of conformity
with a *product ruling in a way that is materially
different from that described in the product ruling.
290‑10 Extra‑territorial application
This Division extends
to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.
Subdivision 290‑B—Civil penalties
Table of sections
290‑50 Civil penalties
290‑55 Exceptions
290‑60 Meaning
of promoter
290‑65 Meaning of tax
exploitation scheme
290‑50 Civil penalties
Promoter of tax exploitation scheme
(1) An entity must not
engage in conduct that results in that or another entity being a *promoter of a *tax exploitation scheme.
Implementing scheme otherwise than in
accordance with ruling
(2) An entity must not
engage in conduct that results in a *scheme that has
been promoted on the basis of conformity with a *product
ruling being implemented in a way that is materially different from that described
in the product ruling.
Note: A scheme will not have been
implemented in a way that is materially different from that described in a
product ruling if the tax outcome for participants in the scheme is the same as
that described in the ruling.
(2A) For the purposes of subsection (2),
disregard:
(a) subsection 82KZMGA(1A)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936; and
(b) subsection 394‑10(5A)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Note 1: Those 2 subsections relate to
forestry managed investment schemes.
Note 2: The effect of this subsection
is that a scheme will have been implemented in a way that is materially
different from that described in a product ruling if the tax outcome for
participants in the scheme is the same as that described in the ruling only
because of the operation of the subsections mentioned in paragraphs (a)
and (b).
Civil penalty
(3) If the Federal Court of
Australia is satisfied, on application by the Commissioner, that an entity has
contravened subsection (1) or (2), the Court may order the entity to pay a
civil penalty to the Commonwealth.
Amount of penalty
(4) The maximum amount of
the penalty is the greater of:
(a) 5,000 penalty
units (for an individual) or 25,000 penalty units (for a body corporate); and
(b) twice the
consideration received or receivable (directly or indirectly) by the entity and
*associates of the entity in respect of the *scheme.
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Principles relating to penalties
(5) In deciding what penalty
is appropriate for a contravention of subsection (1) or (2) by an entity,
the Federal Court of Australia may have regard to all matters it considers
relevant, including:
(a) the amount of the
consideration received or receivable (directly or indirectly) by the entity and
*associates of the entity in respect of the *scheme;
and
(b) the deterrent
effect that any penalty may have; and
(c) the amount of
loss or damage incurred by scheme participants; and
(d) the nature and
extent of the contravention; and
(e) the circumstances
in which the contravention took place, including the deliberateness of the
entity’s conduct and whether there was an honest and reasonable mistake of law;
and
(f) the period over
which the conduct extended; and
(g) whether the
entity took any steps to avoid the contravention; and
(h) whether the
entity has previously been found by the Court to have engaged in the same or
similar conduct; and
(i) the degree of
the entity’s cooperation with the Commissioner.
Recovery of penalty
(6) The penalty is a civil
debt payable to the Commonwealth, and the Commissioner may, on behalf of the
Commonwealth, enforce an order for an entity to pay the penalty as if it were
an order made in civil proceedings against the entity to recover a debt due by
the entity. The debt arising from the order is taken to be a judgment debt.
290‑55 Exceptions
Reasonable mistake or reasonable
precautions
(1) The Federal Court of
Australia must not order the entity to pay a civil penalty if the entity
satisfies the Court:
(a) that the conduct
in respect of which the proceedings were instituted was due to a reasonable
mistake of fact; or
(b) that:
(i) the
conduct in respect of which the proceedings were instituted was due to the act
or default of another entity, to an accident or to some other cause beyond the
entity’s control; and
(ii) the
entity took reasonable precautions and exercised due diligence to avoid the
conduct.
(2) The other entity
referred to in paragraph (1)(b) does not include someone who was an
employee or agent of the entity when the alleged conduct occurred.
Reliance on advice from the
Commissioner
(3) The Commissioner must
not make an application under section 290‑50 for conduct referred to in
subsection 290‑50(1) in relation to an entity’s involvement in a *scheme if:
(a) the scheme is
based on treating a *taxation law as applying in a
particular way; and
(b) that way agrees
with:
(i) advice
given to the entity or the entity’s agent by or on behalf of the Commissioner;
or
(ii) a
statement in a publication approved in writing by the Commissioner.
Time limitation
(4) The Commissioner must
not make an application under section 290‑50 in relation to an entity’s
involvement in a *tax exploitation scheme more than 4 years
after the entity last engaged in conduct that resulted in the entity or another
entity being a *promoter of the tax exploitation scheme.
(5) The Commissioner must
not make an application under section 290‑50 in relation to an entity’s
involvement in a *scheme that has been promoted on the basis
of conformity with a *product ruling more than 4 years
after the entity last engaged in conduct in relation to implementation of the
scheme.
(6) However, the limitation
in subsection (4) or (5) does not apply to a *scheme
involving tax evasion.
Exception where entity does not know
result of conduct
(7) The Federal Court of
Australia must not order an entity to pay a civil penalty in relation to the
entity’s engaging in conduct:
(a) that results in
another entity being a *promoter of a *tax exploitation scheme; or
(b) that results in a
*scheme that has been promoted on the basis of conformity with a *product ruling being implemented in a way that is materially
different from that described in the product ruling;
if the entity satisfies the Court that
the entity did not know, and could not reasonably be expected to have known,
that the entity’s conduct would produce that result.
Employees
(8) The Commissioner must
not make an application under section 290‑50 in relation to an
individual’s involvement in a *scheme as an employee if
the Federal Court of Australia has ordered the individual’s employer to pay a
civil penalty under this Division in relation to the same scheme.
290‑60 Meaning of promoter
(1) An entity is a promoter
of a *tax exploitation scheme if:
(a) the entity
markets the scheme or otherwise encourages the growth of the scheme or interest
in it; and
(b) the entity or an *associate of the entity receives (directly or indirectly)
consideration in respect of that marketing or encouragement; and
(c) having regard to
all relevant matters, it is reasonable to conclude that the entity has had a
substantial role in respect of that marketing or encouragement.
(2) However, an entity is
not a promoter of a *tax exploitation
scheme merely because the entity provides advice about the *scheme.
(3) An employee is not to be
taken to have had a substantial role in respect of that marketing or
encouragement merely because the employee distributes information or material
prepared by another entity.
290‑65 Meaning of tax
exploitation scheme
(1) A *scheme is a tax exploitation scheme if, at the time of
the conduct mentioned in subsection 290‑50(1):
(a) one of these
conditions is satisfied:
(i) if
the scheme has been implemented—it is reasonable to conclude that an entity
that (alone or with others) entered into or carried out the scheme did so with
the sole or dominant purpose of that entity or another entity getting a *scheme benefit from the scheme;
(ii) if
the scheme has not been implemented—it is reasonable to conclude that, if an
entity (alone or with others) had entered into or carried out the scheme, it
would have done so with the sole or dominant purpose of that entity or another
entity getting a scheme benefit from the scheme; and
(b) one of these
conditions is satisfied:
(i) if
the scheme has been implemented—it is not *reasonably
arguable that the scheme benefit is available at law;
(ii) if
the scheme has not been implemented—it is not reasonably arguable that the
scheme benefit would be available at law if the scheme were implemented.
Note: The condition in paragraph (b)
would not be satisfied if the implementation of the scheme for all participants
were in accordance with binding advice given by or on behalf of the
Commissioner of Taxation (for example, if that implementation were in
accordance with a public ruling under this Act, or all participants had private
rulings under this Act and that implementation were in accordance with those
rulings).
(2) In deciding whether it
is *reasonably arguable that a *scheme benefit
would be available at law, take into account any thing that the Commissioner
can do under a *taxation law.
Example: The Commissioner may cancel a
tax benefit obtained by a taxpayer in connection with a scheme under section 177F
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.
Subdivision 290‑C—Injunctions
Table
of sections
290‑120 Conduct to which this Subdivision applies
290‑125 Injunctions
290‑130 Interim
injunctions
290‑135 Delay in making ruling
290‑140 Discharge etc. of injunctions
290‑145 Certain limits on granting injunctions not to apply
290‑150 Other powers of the Federal Court unaffected
290‑120 Conduct to which this
Subdivision applies
This Subdivision
applies to conduct of the kind referred to in subsection 290‑50(1) or (2).
290‑125 Injunctions
If an entity has
engaged, is engaging or is proposing to engage in conduct to which this
Subdivision applies or would apply, the Federal Court of Australia may, on the
application of the Commissioner, grant an injunction:
(a) restraining the
entity from engaging in the conduct; and
(b) if, in the
Court’s opinion, it is desirable to do so—requiring the entity to do something.
290‑130 Interim injunctions
The
Federal Court of Australia may, before considering an application for an
injunction under section 290‑125, grant an interim injunction restraining
an entity from engaging in conduct to which this Subdivision applies.
290‑135 Delay in making ruling
If:
(a) an entity applied
in writing to the Commissioner for a *product ruling in
relation to a *scheme; and
(b) the Commissioner
has neither made the ruling nor told the entity in writing that the
Commissioner has declined to make the ruling;
the Commissioner must not make an
application under section 290‑125 in relation to conduct or proposed
conduct by an entity in relation to the scheme until the Commissioner makes the
ruling or tells the entity in writing that the Commissioner has declined to
make the ruling.
290‑140 Discharge etc. of
injunctions
The Federal Court of
Australia may discharge or vary an injunction granted under this Subdivision.
290‑145 Certain limits on granting
injunctions not to apply
Restraining injunctions
(1) The power of the Federal
Court of Australia under this Subdivision to grant an injunction restraining an
entity from engaging in conduct of a particular kind may be exercised:
(a) if the Court is
satisfied that the entity has engaged in conduct of that kind—whether or not it
appears to the Court that the entity intends to engage again, or to continue to
engage, in conduct of that kind; or
(b) if
it appears to the Court that, if an injunction is not granted, it is likely
that the entity will engage in conduct of that kind—whether or not the entity
has previously engaged in conduct of that kind and whether or not there is an
imminent danger of substantial damage to anyone if the entity engages in
conduct of that kind.
Performance injunctions
(2) The power of the Federal
Court of Australia under this Subdivision to grant an injunction requiring an
entity to do something may be exercised:
(a) if the Court is
satisfied that the entity has refused or failed to do that thing—whether or not
it appears to the Court that the entity intends to refuse or fail again, or to
continue to refuse or fail, to do that thing; or
(b) if it appears to
the Court that, if an injunction is not granted, it is likely that the entity
will refuse or fail to do that thing—whether or not the entity has previously refused
or failed to do that act or thing and whether or not there is an imminent
danger of substantial damage to anyone if the entity refuses or fails to do
that act or thing.
290‑150 Other powers of the Federal
Court unaffected
The powers conferred on
the Federal Court of Australia under this Subdivision are in addition to, and
not instead of, any other powers of the Court, however conferred.
Subdivision 290‑D—Voluntary undertakings
Table
of sections
290‑200 Voluntary undertakings
290‑200 Voluntary undertakings
(1) The Commissioner may
accept a written undertaking given by an entity for the purposes of this
section in connection with furthering the objects of this Division.
(2) The entity may withdraw
or vary the undertaking at any time, but only with the consent of the
Commissioner.
(3) If the Commissioner
considers that the entity that gave the undertaking has breached any of its
terms, the Commissioner may apply to the Federal Court of Australia for an
order under subsection (4).
(4) If the Court is
satisfied that the entity has breached a term of the undertaking, the Court may
make one or both of the following orders:
(a) an order
directing the entity to comply with that term of the undertaking;
(b) any other order
that the Court considers appropriate.
Division 298—Machinery provisions for penalties
Subdivision 298‑A—Administrative penalties
Table of sections
298‑5 Scope of Subdivision
298‑10 Notification
of liability
298‑15 Due
date for penalty
298‑20 Remission of penalty
298‑25 General interest charge
on unpaid penalty
298‑30 Assessment of penalties
under Division 284
298‑5 Scope of Subdivision
This Subdivision
applies if:
(a) an administrative
penalty is imposed on an entity by another Division in this Part; or
(b) a penalty is
imposed on an entity by Subdivision 162‑D of the *GST
Act; or
(c) an administrative
penalty is imposed on an entity by a provision of Subdivision 12‑H,
Division 16 or section 420‑5 or 426‑120 in this Schedule; or
(d) an administrative
penalty is imposed on an entity by section 166 of the Superannuation
Industry (Supervision) Act 1993.
298‑10 Notification of liability
The Commissioner must
give written notice to the entity of the entity’s liability to pay the penalty
and of the reasons why the entity is liable to pay the penalty. The
Commissioner may do so in any other notice he or she gives to the entity. The
Commissioner is not required to give reasons if he or she decides to remit all
of the penalty.
Note: Section 25D of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 sets out rules about the contents of a statement of
reasons.
298‑15 Due date for penalty
The penalty becomes due for payment on the day specified in the
notice, which must be at least 14 days after the notice is given to the entity.
Note: For provisions about
collection and recovery of the penalty, see Part 4‑15.
298‑20 Remission of penalty
(1) The Commissioner may
remit all or a part of the penalty.
(2) If the Commissioner
decides:
(a) not to remit the
penalty; or
(b) to remit only
part of the penalty;
the Commissioner must give written notice
of the decision and the reasons for the decision to the entity.
Note: Section 25D of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 sets out rules about the contents of a statement of
reasons.
(3) If:
(a) the Commissioner
refuses to any extent to remit an amount of penalty; and
(b) the amount of
penalty payable after the refusal is more than 2 penalty units; and
Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
(c) the entity is
dissatisfied with the decision;
the entity may object against the
decision in the manner set out in Part IVC.
298‑25 General interest charge on
unpaid penalty
If any of the penalty
remains unpaid after it is due, the entity is liable to pay the *general interest charge on the unpaid amount of the penalty for each
day in the period that:
(a) started at the
beginning of the day by which the amount was due to be paid; and
(b) finishes at the
end of the last day, at the end of which, any of the following remains unpaid:
(i) the
amount;
(ii) general
interest charge on any of the amount.
Note: The general interest charge
is worked out under Part IIA.
298‑30 Assessment of penalties under
Division 284
(1) The Commissioner must
make an assessment of the amount of an administrative penalty under Division 284.
(2) An entity that is
dissatisfied with such an assessment made about the entity may object against
it in the manner set out in Part IVC of the Taxation Administration Act
1953.
(3) The production of a
notice of such an assessment, or of a copy of it certified by or on behalf of
the Commissioner, is conclusive evidence of the making of the assessment and of
the particulars in it.
(4) Subsection (3) does
not apply to proceedings under Part IVC of the Taxation Administration
Act 1953 on a review or appeal relating to the assessment.
Subdivision 298‑B—Civil penalties
Table of sections
298‑80 Application of
Subdivision
298‑85 Civil evidence and
procedure rules for civil penalty orders
298‑90 Civil proceedings after
criminal proceedings
298‑95 Criminal proceedings
during civil proceedings
298‑100 Criminal proceedings after
civil proceedings
298‑105 Evidence given in
proceedings for penalty not admissible in criminal proceedings
298‑110 Civil double jeopardy
298‑80 Application of Subdivision
This
Subdivision applies for the purposes of the following provisions (the civil
penalty provisions):
(a) Division 290
of this Schedule (civil penalties for the promotion and implementation of
schemes);
(b) Part 5 of
the Tax Agent Services Act 2009 (civil penalties for providing tax agent
services while unregistered and for certain conduct when providing tax agent
services).
298‑85 Civil evidence and procedure
rules for civil penalty orders
The Federal Court of
Australia must apply the rules of evidence and procedure for civil matters when
hearing proceedings for a civil penalty order under the civil penalty
provisions.
298‑90 Civil proceedings after
criminal proceedings
The Court must not make
a civil penalty order under the civil penalty provisions against an entity if
the entity has been convicted of an offence constituted by conduct that is
substantially the same as the conduct in relation to which the civil penalty
order would be made.
298‑95 Criminal proceedings during
civil proceedings
(1) Proceedings for a civil
penalty order under the civil penalty provisions against an entity are stayed
if:
(a) criminal
proceedings are started or have already been started against the entity for an
offence; and
(b) the offence is
constituted by conduct that is substantially the same as the conduct in
relation to which the civil penalty order would be made.
(2) The proceedings for the
order may be resumed if the entity is not convicted of the offence. Otherwise,
the proceedings for the order are dismissed.
298‑100 Criminal proceedings after
civil proceedings
Criminal proceedings
may be started against an entity for conduct that is substantially the same as
conduct in relation to which a civil penalty order under the civil penalty
provisions could be made regardless of whether a civil penalty order has been
made against the entity.
298‑105 Evidence given in
proceedings for penalty not admissible in criminal proceedings
Evidence of information
given or evidence of production of documents by an entity is not admissible in
criminal proceedings against the entity if:
(a) the entity
previously gave the evidence or produced the documents in proceedings for a
civil penalty order under the civil penalty provisions against the entity
(whether or not the order was made); and
(b) the conduct
alleged to constitute the offence is substantially the same as the conduct in
relation to which the civil penalty order was sought.
However, this does not apply to a
criminal proceeding in respect of the falsity of the evidence given by the
entity in the proceedings for the civil penalty order.
298‑110 Civil double jeopardy
If an entity is ordered
to pay a civil penalty under the civil penalty provisions in respect of
particular conduct, the entity is not liable to a civil penalty under some
other provision of a *Commonwealth law in respect of
that conduct.
Part 4‑50—Release from particular liabilities
Division 340—Commissioner’s power in cases of hardship
Guide to Division 340
340‑1 What this Division is about
The Commissioner may
release you from a particular liability that you have incurred if you are an
individual, or a trustee of the estate of a deceased person, and satisfying the
liability would cause serious hardship.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
340‑5 Release from particular
liabilities in cases of serious hardship
340‑10 Liabilities to which this
section applies
340‑15 Commissioner may take
action to give effect to a release decision
340‑20 Extinguishing your
liability to pay a fringe benefits tax instalment if you are released
340‑25 Extinguishing your
liability to pay a PAYG instalment if you are released
Operative provisions
340‑5 Release from particular
liabilities in cases of serious hardship
Applying for release
(1) You may apply to the
Commissioner to release you, in whole or in part, from a liability of yours if
section 340‑10 applies to the liability.
(2) The application must be
in the *approved form.
(3) The Commissioner may
release you, in whole or in part, from the liability if you are an entity
specified in the column headed “Entity” of the following table and the
condition specified in the column headed “Condition” of the table is satisfied.
|
Entity
and condition
|
|
Item
|
Entity
|
Condition
|
|
1
|
an individual
|
you would suffer serious hardship if you
were required to satisfy the liability
|
|
2
|
a trustee of the estate of a deceased
individual
|
the dependants of the deceased individual
would suffer serious hardship if you were required to satisfy the liability
|
Effect of the Commissioner’s decision
(4) If the Commissioner:
(a) refuses to
release you in whole from the liability; or
(b) releases you in
part from the liability;
nothing in this section prevents you from
making a further application or applications under subsection (1) in
relation to the liability.
Notification of the Commissioner’s
decision
(5) The Commissioner must
notify you in writing of the Commissioner’s decision within 28 days after
making the decision.
(6) A failure to comply with
subsection (5) does not affect the validity of the Commissioner’s
decision.
Objections against the Commissioner’s
decision
(7) If you are dissatisfied
with the Commissioner’s decision, you may object against the decision in the
manner set out in Part IVC.
340‑10 Liabilities to which this
section applies
(1) This
section applies to a liability if it is a liability of the following kind:
(a) fringe
benefits tax;
(b) an
instalment of fringe benefits tax;
(c) *Medicare levy;
(d) *Medicare levy (fringe benefits) surcharge;
(e) a
*PAYG instalment.
(2) This
section also applies to a liability if it is a liability that is specified in
the column headed “Liabilities” of the following table and the liability is a
liability under a provision or provisions of an Act specified in the column
headed “Provision(s)” of the table:
|
Liabilities
and provision(s)
|
|
Item
|
Liabilities
|
Provision(s)
|
|
1
|
additional tax
|
(a) section 93 or 112B of the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986; or
(b) section 163B or subsection 221YDB(1),
(1AAA), (1AA) or (1ABA) or Part VII of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1936
|
|
2
|
administrative penalty in relation to
fringe benefits tax or *tax
|
Part 4‑25 in this Schedule
|
|
3
|
general interest charge
|
(a) section 163AA, former section 170AA,
former subsection 204(3) or former subsection 221AZMAA(1),
221AZP(1), 221YD(3) or 221YDB(3) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936;
or
(aa) section 5‑15 in the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997; or
(b) section 45‑80 or 45‑620 or
subsection 45‑230(2), 45‑232(2), 45‑235(2) or 45‑235(3) in this Schedule
|
|
3A
|
shortfall interest charge
|
Division 280 in this Schedule
|
|
4
|
interest
|
section 102AAM of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936
|
|
5
|
penalty
|
section 163A of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936
|
|
6
|
*tax
|
(a) section 128B of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936; or
(b) section 128V of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936; or
(c) section 4‑1 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997; or
(d) section 840‑805 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997; or
(da) section 840‑905 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997; or
(e) section 840‑805 of the Income
Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997
|
340‑15 Commissioner may take action
to give effect to a release decision
(1) If
the Commissioner decides to release you from a liability to which section 340‑10
applies, the Commissioner may take such action as is necessary to give effect
to the decision.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1),
the Commissioner may amend an assessment within the meaning of the following
provisions:
(a) subsection 6(1)
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936;
(b) subsection 136(1)
of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986;
by making such alterations or additions
to the assessment as the Commissioner thinks necessary.
(3) Subsection (2) does
not limit the power of the Commissioner to amend the assessment in accordance
with any other provision of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 or the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986.
340‑20 Extinguishing your liability
to pay a fringe benefits tax instalment if you are released
(1) This section applies if
the Commissioner releases you from a liability to pay an instalment of fringe
benefits tax.
(2) If your liability to pay
the instalment is released in whole, you are taken, for the purposes of
Division 2 of Part VII of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act
1986, not to be liable to pay the instalment.
Note: This means that for the
purposes of section 105 of that Act you are not entitled to a credit for
the instalment.
(3) If your liability to pay
the instalment is released in part, you are taken, for the purposes of Division 2
of Part VII of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986, to be
liable to pay the instalment to the extent to which your liability has not been
released.
Note: This means that for the
purposes of section 105 of that Act you are entitled to a credit for the
instalment to the extent to which your liability to pay the instalment has not
been released.
340‑25 Extinguishing your liability
to pay a PAYG instalment if you are released
(1) This section applies if
the Commissioner releases you from a liability to pay a *PAYG instalment.
(2) If your liability to pay
the instalment is released in whole, you are taken, for the purposes of
Division 45 of Part 2‑10, not to be liable to pay the instalment.
Note: This means that for the
purposes of section 45‑30 you are not entitled to a credit for the
instalment.
(3) If your liability to pay
the instalment is released in part, you are taken, for the purposes of Division 45
of Part 2‑10, to be liable to pay the instalment to the extent to which
your liability has not been released.
Note: This means that for the
purposes of section 45‑30 you are entitled to a credit for the instalment
to the extent to which your liability to pay the instalment has not been
released.
Division 342—Commissioner’s power relating to proceeds
of crime proceedings
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 342
342‑A Power to waive right to payment
of tax‑related liabilities
Guide to Division 342
342‑1 What this Division is about
To facilitate the
starting, conduct and ending of proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime Act
2002, the Commissioner may waive the right to payment of certain tax‑related
liabilities.
Subdivision 342‑A—Power to waive right to payment of tax‑related liabilities
Table of sections
342‑5 Object of this
Subdivision
342‑10 Power to waive right to
payment of tax‑related liability
342‑5 Object of this Subdivision
The object of this
Subdivision is to facilitate the starting, conduct and ending of proceedings
under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 by allowing the Commissioner to
waive the right to payment of certain liabilities to the Commonwealth arising
under *taxation laws.
Note: The Commissioner may also
exercise other powers so as to facilitate the starting, conduct and ending of
proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. Examples of those
other powers include:
(a) the power under section 255‑10
to defer the time a tax‑related liability is due and payable; and
(b) the power under section 8AAG to
remit general interest charge.
342‑10 Power to waive right to
payment of tax‑related liability
(1) The
Commissioner may waive the Commonwealth’s right to payment of all or part of a *tax‑related liability if the Commissioner is satisfied that:
(a) the waiver will
facilitate the starting, conduct or ending (by settlement or otherwise) of
proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002; and
(b) the liability is
connected with circumstances associated with the proceedings.
Note: The Commissioner may waive
the right to payment only after the liability has arisen, but may do so whether
or not the liability is due and payable.
Example: A liability is connected with
circumstances associated with the proceedings if the liability arose because of
activities constituting an offence to which the proceedings relate.
(2) In deciding whether to
waive the right, the Commissioner must consider:
(a) the amount the
Commonwealth will forgo as a result of the waiver and the time the Commonwealth
could reasonably be expected to receive that amount apart from the waiver; and
(b) the amount the
Commonwealth could reasonably be expected to receive as a result of the
proceedings and the time the Commonwealth could reasonably be expected to
receive that amount.
(3) Subsection (2) does
not limit the matters that the Commissioner may consider in making the
decision.
Extended operation of this section
(4) This section (except
this subsection) applies in relation to a pecuniary liability to the
Commonwealth that arises directly under a *taxation
law, but is not a *tax‑related liability, in the same way as
this section applies in relation to a tax‑related liability.
Example: This section applies to a civil
penalty under Division 290 (which penalises certain conduct involving
promotion of schemes) in the same way as this section applies to a tax‑related
liability.
Part 4‑90—Evidence
Division 350—Evidence
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 350
350‑A Evidence
Guide to Division 350
350‑1 What this Division is about
The rules in this
Division deal with the evidentiary effect of official tax documents for the
purposes of taxation laws.
Subdivision 350‑A—Evidence
Table of sections
350‑5 Application of
Subdivision
350‑10 Evidence
350‑15 Judicial notice of
signature
350‑5 Application of Subdivision
This Subdivision
applies in relation to all *taxation laws.
350‑10 Evidence
Conclusive evidence
(1) The following table has
effect:
|
Conclusive
evidence
|
|
Item
|
Column
1
The
production of …
|
Column
2
is
conclusive evidence that …
|
|
1
|
(a) a Gazette containing a notice
purporting to be issued by the Commissioner for the purposes of a *taxation law; or
(b) a document that:
(i) is under the hand of the Commissioner, a
*Second Commissioner, a *Deputy
Commissioner or a delegate of the Commissioner; and
(ii) purports to be a copy of, or extract
from, a document issued by the Commissioner, a Second Commissioner, a Deputy
Commissioner or a delegate of the Commissioner for the purposes of a taxation
law;
|
the notice or document was so issued.
|
|
2
|
(a) a notice of *assessment under a *taxation law; or
(b) a declaration under:
(i) subsection 165‑40(1) or 165‑45(3)
of the *GST Act; or
(ii) subsection 75‑40(1) or 75‑45(3) of
the Fuel Tax Act 2006; or
(c) a notice under section 18‑140 in
this Schedule, or under section 102UR, 177EA or 177EB of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936;
|
(a) the assessment or declaration was
properly made, or the notice was properly given; and
(b) except in proceedings under
Part IVC of this Act on a review or appeal relating to the assessment,
declaration or notice—the amounts and particulars of the assessment,
declaration or notice are correct.
|
(2) Paragraph (b) of
column 1 of item 2 of the table in subsection (1) applies to:
(a) a declaration
under subsection 165‑40(1) or 165‑45(3) of the *GST
Act that states:
(i) the
amount that is (and has been at all times) a *net
amount for a *tax period that started before 1 July
2012; or
(ii) the
amount that is (and has been at all times) the amount of *GST on a *taxable importation, if the GST
was payable before 1 July 2012; or
(b) a declaration
under subsection 75‑40(1) or 75‑45(3) of the Fuel Tax Act 2006 that
states the amount that is (and has been at all times) a *net fuel amount for a tax period, or *fuel
tax return period, that started before 1 July 2012.
Note: Division 165 of the GST
Act and Division 75 of the Fuel Tax Act 2006 are anti‑avoidance
provisions.
Prima facie evidence
(3) The production of a
certificate that:
(a) is signed by the
Commissioner, a *Second Commissioner, a *Deputy Commissioner or a delegate of the Commissioner; and
(b) states that, from
the time specified in the certificate, an amount was payable under a *taxation law (whether to or by the Commissioner);
is prima facie evidence that:
(c) the amount is
payable from that time; and
(d) the particulars
stated in the certificate are correct.
(3A) A document that is
provided to the Commissioner under a *taxation law, and
that purports to be made or signed by or on behalf of an entity, is prima facie
evidence that the document was made by the entity or with the authority of the
entity.
Signed copies are evidence
(4) The
production of a document that:
(a) appears to be a
copy of, or extract from, any document (the original document)
made or given by or to an entity for the purposes of a *taxation
law; and
(b) is signed by the
Commissioner, a *Second Commissioner, a *Deputy Commissioner or a delegate of the Commissioner;
is evidence of the matters set out in the
document to the same extent as the original document would have been evidence
of those matters.
350‑15 Judicial notice of signature
All courts, and all
persons having by law or consent of parties authority to hear, receive and
examine evidence, must take judicial notice of the signature of every person
who is or has been:
(a) the Commissioner;
or
(b) a *Second Commissioner; or
(c) a *Deputy Commissioner; or
(d) a delegate of the
Commissioner;
if the signature is attached or appended
to an official document for the purposes of a *taxation
law.
Chapter 5—Administration
Part 5‑1—The Australian Taxation Office
Division 352—Accountability of the Commissioner
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 352
352‑A Accountability of the
Commissioner in respect of indirect tax laws
Guide to Division 352
352‑1 What this Division is about
This Division requires the Commissioner to prepare an annual report
on the working of the indirect tax laws.
Subdivision 352‑A—Accountability of the Commissioner in respect of indirect
tax laws
Table of sections
352‑5 Commissioner must
prepare annual report on indirect tax laws
352‑5 Commissioner must prepare
annual report on indirect tax laws
(1) As soon as practicable
after 30 June in each year, the Commissioner must prepare and give to the
Minister a report on the working of the *indirect
tax laws during the year ending on that 30 June.
(2) The report must include
a report on any breaches or evasions of the *indirect
tax laws that the Commissioner knows about.
(3) The Minister must cause
a copy of the report to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15
sitting days of that House after the day on which the Minister receives the
report.
Division 353—Powers to obtain information and evidence
353‑10 Commissioner’s power
(1) The Commissioner may by
notice in writing require you to do all or any of the following:
(a) to give the
Commissioner any information that the Commissioner requires for the purpose of
the administration or operation of a *taxation law;
(b) to attend and
give evidence before the Commissioner, or an individual authorised by the
Commissioner, for the purpose of the administration or operation of a taxation
law;
(c) to produce to the
Commissioner any documents in your custody or under your control for the
purpose of the administration or operation of a taxation law.
Note: Failing to comply with a requirement
can be an offence under section 8C or 8D.
(2) The Commissioner may
require the information or evidence:
(a) to be given on
oath or affirmation; and
(b) to be given
orally or in writing.
For that purpose, the Commissioner or the
officer may administer an oath or affirmation.
(3) The regulations may
prescribe scales of expenses to be allowed to entities required to attend
before the Commissioner or the officer.
353‑15 Access to premises, documents
etc.
(1) For the purposes of a *taxation law, the Commissioner, or an individual authorised by the
Commissioner for the purposes of this section:
(a) may at all
reasonable times enter and remain on any land, premises or place; and
(b) is entitled to
full and free access at all reasonable times to any documents, goods or other
property; and
(c) may inspect,
examine, make copies of, or take extracts from, any documents; and
(d) may inspect,
examine, count, measure, weigh, gauge, test or analyse any goods or other
property and, to that end, take samples.
(2) An individual authorised
by the Commissioner for the purposes of this section is not entitled to enter
or remain on any land, premises or place if, after having been requested by the
occupier to produce proof of his or her authority, the individual does not
produce an authority signed by the Commissioner stating that the individual is
authorised to exercise powers under this section.
(3) You commit an offence
if:
(a) you are the
occupier of land, premises or a place; and
(b) an individual
enters, or proposes to enter, the land, premises or place under this section;
and
(c) the individual is
the Commissioner or authorised by the Commissioner for the purposes of this
section; and
(d) you do not
provide the individual with all reasonable facilities and assistance for the
effective exercise of powers under this section.
Penalty: 30 penalty units.
Note 1: Chapter 2 of the Criminal
Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 2: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
(4) Strict
liability applies to paragraphs (3)(a) and (c).
Note: For strict liability, see
section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
353‑20 Checking status of
specifically listed deductible gift recipients
(1) The
Commissioner may require a *deductible gift
recipient covered by this section to give the Commissioner information or a
document that is relevant to the deductible gift recipient’s status as a
deductible gift recipient. The deductible gift recipient must comply with the requirement.
Note: Failure to comply with this
subsection is an offence against section 8C.
(2) If the Commissioner is
satisfied of any of the matters set out in subsection (4) in relation to a
*deductible gift recipient covered by this section, the Commissioner
must, within 28 days, give written notice to the Minister about that fact.
(3) The Minister may only
disclose information provided under subsection (2) for a purpose relating
to the removal of the name of the *deductible gift
recipient from Division 30 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(4) The matters are as
follows:
(a) the *deductible gift recipient fails or ceases to use gifts,
contributions or money received solely for the principal purpose of the
relevant fund, authority or institution;
(b) there is a change
in the principal purpose of the relevant fund, authority or institution;
(c) the deductible
gift recipient fails or ceases to comply with any rules or conditions made by
the Prime Minister or any other Minister relating to the recipient being or
becoming a deductible gift recipient.
(5) The requirement in subsection (1):
(a) is to be made by
notice in writing to the *deductible gift
recipient; and
(b) may ask the
deductible gift recipient to give the information in writing; and
(c) must
specify:
(i) the
information or document the deductible gift recipient is to give; and
(ii) the
period within which the deductible gift recipient is to give the information or
document.
The period specified under subparagraph (c)(ii)
must end at least 28 days after the notice is given.
(6) This section covers *deductible gift recipients, other than:
(a) an entity or *government entity that is endorsed under Subdivision 30‑BA of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 as a deductible gift recipient; and
(b) an entity or
government entity that is endorsed under that Subdivision as a deductible gift
recipient for the operation of a fund, authority or institution.
(7) In a prosecution of a
person for an offence against section 8C of this Act because of this
section as it applies because of Division 444, it is a defence if the
person proves that the person:
(a) did not aid,
abet, counsel or procure the act or omission because of which the offence is
taken to have been committed; and
(b) was not in any
way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in, or
party to, the act or omission because of which the offence is taken to have
been committed.
Division 355—Confidentiality of taxpayer information
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 355
355‑A Objects and application of
Division
355‑B Disclosure of protected
information by taxation officers
355‑C On‑disclosure of protected
information by other people
355‑D Disclosure of protected
information that has been unlawfully acquired
355‑E Other matters
Guide to Division 355
355‑1 What this Division is about
The disclosure of
information about the tax affairs of a particular entity is prohibited, except
in certain specified circumstances.
Those exceptions are
designed having regard to the principle that disclosure of information should
be permitted only if the public benefit derived from the disclosure outweighs
the entity’s privacy.
Note: This Division contains the
main circumstances in which protected tax information can be disclosed. A
number of other Commonwealth laws also allow for the disclosure of, or access
to, such information in limited circumstances. Some of these other laws are as
follows:
·
sections 32 and 33 of the Auditor‑General
Act 1997;
·
section 15 of the Inspector‑General of
Taxation Act 2003;
·
section 9 of the Ombudsman Act 1976;
·
section 44 of the Privacy Act 1988.
Subdivision 355‑A—Objects and application of Division
Table of sections
355‑10 Objects of Division
355‑15 Application of Division
355‑10 Objects of Division
The
objects of this Division are:
(a) to
protect the confidentiality of taxpayers’ affairs by imposing strict
obligations on *taxation officers (and others who acquire
protected tax information), and so encourage taxpayers to provide correct information
to the Commissioner; and
(b) to facilitate
efficient and effective government administration and law enforcement by
allowing disclosures of protected tax information for specific, appropriate
purposes.
355‑15 Application of Division
This Division applies
in relation to the following entities in the same way as it applies in relation
to *taxation officers:
(a) an entity engaged
to provide services relating to the Australian Taxation Office;
(b) an individual
employed by, or otherwise performing services for, an entity referred to in paragraph (a);
(c) an individual:
(i) appointed
or employed by, or performing services for, the Commonwealth or an authority of
the Commonwealth; and
(ii) performing
functions or exercising powers under or for the purposes of a *taxation law.
Subdivision 355‑B—Disclosure of protected information by taxation officers
Guide to Subdivision 355‑B
355‑20 What this Subdivision is
about
The main protection for taxpayer confidentiality is in this
Subdivision. It is an offence for taxation officers to disclose tax information
that identifies an entity, or is reasonably capable of being used to identify
an entity, except in certain specified circumstances.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
355‑25 Offence—disclosure of
protected information by taxation officers
355‑30 Meaning of protected information and taxation officer
355‑35 Consent is not a defence
355‑40 Generality of Subdivision
not limited
355‑45 Exception—disclosure of
publicly available information
355‑47 Exception—disclosure of
periodic aggregate tax information
355‑50 Exception—disclosure in
performing duties
355‑55 Exception—disclosure to
Ministers
355‑60 Limits on disclosure to
Ministers
355‑65 Exception—disclosure for
other government purposes
355‑70 Exception—disclosure for
law enforcement and related purposes
355‑75 Limits on disclosure to
courts and tribunals
Operative provisions
355‑25 Offence—disclosure of
protected information by taxation officers
(1) An entity commits an
offence if:
(a) the entity is or
was a *taxation officer; and
(b) the entity:
(i) makes
a record of information; or
(ii) discloses
information to another entity (other than the entity to whom the information
relates or an entity covered by subsection (2)) or to a court or tribunal;
and
(c) the information
is *protected information; and
(d) the information
was acquired by the first‑mentioned entity as a taxation officer.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
(2) An entity (the covered
entity) is covered by this subsection in relation to *protected information that relates to another entity (the primary
entity) if:
(a) the covered
entity is the primary entity’s *registered tax agent or
BAS agent; or
(b) the covered
entity is a *legal practitioner representing the
primary entity in relation to the primary entity’s affairs relating to one or
more *taxation laws; or
(ba) the covered entity
is a public officer (within the meaning of section 252 or 252A of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936) of the primary entity; or
(c) the primary
entity is an *incapacitated entity and the covered
entity is a *representative of the incapacitated
entity; or
(d) the covered
entity is the primary entity’s *legal personal
representative; or
(e) the covered
entity is the primary entity’s guardian where the primary entity is a minor or
suffers from mental incapacity; or
(f) the covered
entity and the primary entity are members of the same *consolidated
group or *MEC group; or
(g) the covered
entity is a representative of the primary entity who has been nominated by the
primary entity in the *approved form to act on
that entity’s behalf with respect to protected information.
355‑30 Meaning of protected
information and taxation officer
(1) Protected
information means information that:
(a) was disclosed or
obtained under or for the purposes of a law that was a *taxation
law (other than the Tax Agent Services Act 2009) when the information
was disclosed or obtained; and
(b) relates to the
affairs of an entity; and
(c) identifies, or is
reasonably capable of being used to identify, the entity.
Note: Tax file numbers do not
constitute protected information because they are not, by themselves,
reasonably capable of being used to identify an entity. For offences relating
to tax file numbers, see Subdivision BA of Division 2 of Part III.
(2) Taxation officer
means:
(a) the Commissioner
or a *Second Commissioner; or
(b) an individual
appointed or engaged under the Public Service Act 1999 and performing
duties in the Australian Taxation Office.
Note: This Division applies to
certain other entities as if they were taxation officers: see section 355‑15.
355‑35 Consent is not a defence
It is not a defence to
a prosecution for an offence against section 355‑25 that the entity to
whom the information relates has consented to:
(a) the making of the
record; or
(b) the disclosure of
the information.
355‑40 Generality of Subdivision not
limited
Except as provided by
section 355‑60, nothing in this Subdivision limits the generality of
anything else in it.
Note: This means that each
provision in this Subdivision (other than section 355‑60) has an
independent operation and is not to be interpreted by reference to any other
provision within the Subdivision.
355‑45 Exception—disclosure of
publicly available information
Section 355‑25
does not apply if the information was already available to the public
(otherwise than as a result of a contravention of section 355‑25, 355‑155
or 355‑265).
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this section: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑47 Exception—disclosure of
periodic aggregate tax information
(1) Section 355‑25 does
not apply if the information is *periodic aggregate tax
information.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
(2) Periodic aggregate
tax information is information that:
(a) specifies the
total amount collected or assessed by the Commissioner during a period, or
predicted by the Commissioner to be collected or assessed by the Commissioner
during a period, in respect of:
(i) tax
imposed under a particular Act or particular Acts; or
(ii) if an
Act imposes duties of excise—a type of duty of excise imposed under that Act;
or
(iii) if an
Act imposes duties of customs—a type of duty of customs imposed under that Act;
and
(b) does not
identify, nor is reasonably capable of being used to identify, an individual.
355‑50 Exception—disclosure in
performing duties
(1) Section 355‑25 does
not apply if:
(a) the entity is a *taxation officer; and
(b) the record or
disclosure is made in performing the entity’s duties as a taxation officer.
Note 1: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: An example of a duty mentioned
in paragraph (b) is the duty to make available information under sections 3C
and 3E.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1),
records or disclosures made in performing duties as a *taxation
officer include those mentioned in the following table:
|
Records or disclosures in performing
duties
|
|
Item
|
The record is made for or the
disclosure is to ...
|
and the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
any entity, court or tribunal
|
is for the purpose of administering any *taxation law.
|
|
2
|
any entity, court or tribunal
|
is for the purpose of the making, or
proposed or possible making, of an order under the Proceeds of Crime Act
2002 that is related to a *taxation law.
|
|
3
|
any entity, court or tribunal
|
is for the purpose of criminal, civil or
administrative proceedings (including merits review or judicial review) that
are related to a *taxation law.
|
|
4
|
any entity
|
is for the purpose of responding to a
request for a statement of reasons under the Administrative Decisions
(Judicial Review) Act 1977 in relation to a decision made under a *taxation law.
|
|
5
|
any entity
|
is for the purpose of:
(a) determining whether to make an ex gratia
payment; or
(b) administering such a payment;
in connection with administering a *taxation law.
|
|
6
|
any entity
|
is for the purpose of enabling the entity
to understand or comply with its obligations under a *taxation law.
|
|
7
|
the Secretary of the Department
|
(a) is of information that does not include
the name, contact details or *ABN of any entity; and
(b) is for the purpose of:
(i) the design of a *taxation law; or
(ii) the amendment of a taxation law.
|
|
8
|
any board or member of a board performing
a function or exercising a power under a *taxation law
|
is for the purpose of performing that
function or exercising that power.
|
|
9
|
a competent authority referred to in an
international agreement (within the meaning of section 23 of the International
Tax Agreements Act 1953)
|
is for the purpose of exchanging
information under such an international agreement.
|
355‑55 Exception—disclosure to
Ministers
(1) Section 355‑25
does not apply if:
(a) the entity is a *taxation officer; and
(b) an item in the
table in this subsection covers the making of the record or the disclosure; and
(c) if the entity is
not the Commissioner, a *Second Commissioner or
an SES employee or acting SES employee of the Australian Taxation Office—one of
the following has agreed that the record or disclosure is covered by the item:
(i) the
Commissioner;
(ii) a
Second Commissioner;
(iii) an
SES employee or acting SES employee of the Australian Taxation Office who is
not a direct supervisor of the taxation officer.
|
Records
or disclosures to Ministers
|
|
Item
|
The
record is made for or the disclosure is to ...
|
and
the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
any Minister
|
is for the purpose of enabling the
Minister to exercise a power or perform a function under a *taxation law.
|
|
2
|
the Minister
|
(a) is about an entity; and
(b) is for the purpose of enabling the
Minister to respond directly to the entity in relation to a representation
made by the entity to:
(i) the Minister; or
(ii) another member of a House of the
Parliament.
|
|
3
|
the Minister
|
is for the purpose of informing decisions
made under the scheme known as the Compensation for Detriment Caused by
Defective Administration Scheme.
|
|
4
|
the *Finance Minister
|
is for the purpose of:
(a) the waiver, or possible waiver, of a *tax debt under section 63 of the Public Governance,
Performance and Accountability Act 2013; or
(b) the making, or possible making, of a
payment referred to in section 65 of that Act (about act of grace
payments) in connection with administering a *taxation law.
|
|
5
|
any Minister
|
is for the purpose of:
(a) determining whether to make an ex gratia
payment; or
(b) administering such a payment.
|
Note 1: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection:
see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Section 19A of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 provides that the expression “the Minister”, as
used in table items 2 and 3, refers to the Minister or Ministers
administering the relevant provision.
(2) The *taxation officer is entitled to rely on the exception in subsection (1)
even if the agreement referred to in paragraph (1)(c) has not been
obtained in relation to the record or disclosure.
355‑60 Limits on disclosure to
Ministers
(1) Sections 355‑45
and 355‑55 are the only exceptions to the prohibition in section 355‑25 on
which an entity who has acquired *protected information as
a *taxation officer can rely in making a record of the information for,
or disclosing the information to, a Minister, whether or not provided to a
Minister in the course of, or for the purposes of or incidental to, the
transacting of the business of a House of the Parliament or of a committee of
one or both Houses of the Parliament.
Note: Disclosures that are not
prohibited by section 355‑25 are not affected by this subsection. For
example, a taxation officer may disclose information to a Minister if the
Minister is the entity to whom the information relates, or is an entity covered
by subsection 355‑25(2) in relation to the information.
(2) Subsection (1) has
effect despite section 16 of the Parliamentary Privileges Act 1987,
and that section does not operate to the extent that it would otherwise apply
to a disclosure of *protected information by a *taxation officer to a Minister.
Note: This subsection does not
limit the operation of section 16 of the Parliamentary Privileges Act
1987 in any other respect. That section continues to operate, for example,
to enable taxation officers to disclose protected information to a committee of
one or both Houses of the Parliament.
355‑65 Exception—disclosure for
other government purposes
(1) Section 355‑25 does
not apply if:
(a) the entity is a *taxation officer; and
(b) an item in a
table in this section covers the making of the record or the disclosure.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential
burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
Table 1—Records or disclosures
relating to social welfare, health or safety
(2) Table 1 is as follows:
|
Table
1: Records or disclosures relating to social welfare, health or safety
|
|
Item
|
The
record is made for or the disclosure is to ...
|
and
the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
an Agency
Head (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999) of an agency
(within the meaning of that Act) dealing with matters relating to the social
security law (within the meaning of subsection 23(17) of the Social
Security Act 1991)
|
is for the
purpose of administering that law.
|
|
2
|
the *Health Secretary
|
is for the purpose of administering any
law of the Australian Capital Territory or of the Northern Territory which is
administered by the *Health Minister.
|
|
3
|
the Repatriation Commission
|
is for the purpose of administering any *Commonwealth law relating to pensions.
|
|
4
|
the *Education Secretary or the *Employment Secretary
|
is for the purpose of administering any *Commonwealth law relating to pensions, allowances or benefits.
|
|
5
|
the *Education Secretary
|
is for the purpose of administering any *Commonwealth law relating to financial assistance to students.
|
|
5AA
|
the *Industry Secretary
|
is for the purpose of administering the Trade
Support Loans Act 2014.
|
|
5A
|
the *Families Secretary or the Chief Executive Centrelink (within the
meaning of the Human Services (Centrelink) Act 1997)
|
is for the purpose of administering the Paid
Parental Leave Act 2010.
|
|
6
|
the *Families Secretary or the Chief Executive Centrelink (within the
meaning of the Human Services (Centrelink) Act 1997)
|
is for the purpose of administering the A
New Tax System (Family Assistance) (Administration) Act 1999.
|
|
7
|
the Child Support Registrar
|
is for the purpose of administering the Child
Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988 or the Child Support
(Assessment) Act 1989.
|
|
8
|
the Chief Executive Medicare (within the
meaning of the Human Services (Medicare) Act 1973)
|
is for the purpose of administering Part 2‑2
(about premiums reduction scheme) or 6‑4 (about administration of that
scheme) of the Private Health Insurance Act 2007.
|
|
9
|
an *Australian government agency
|
is necessary for the purpose of
preventing or lessening:
(a) a serious threat to an individual’s
life, health or safety; or
(b) a serious threat to public health or
public safety.
|
Table
2—Records or disclosures relating to superannuation or finance
(3) Table 2 is as follows:
|
Table 2: Records or disclosures
relating to superannuation or finance
|
|
Item
|
The record is made for or the
disclosure is to ...
|
and the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
a financial sector supervisory agency
(within the meaning of section 3 of the Australian Prudential
Regulation Authority Act 1998)
|
(a) is of information that was obtained
under or in relation to the Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and Lost
Members) Act 1999; and
(b) is for the purpose of the agency
performing any of its functions or exercising any of its powers.
|
|
2
|
(a) an agency having the function, in
Australia or in a foreign country, of supervising or regulating *financial institutions; or
(b) any other agency (including a foreign
agency) specified in the regulations
|
(a) is of information that was obtained
under or in relation to the Superannuation (Self Managed Superannuation
Funds) Taxation Act 1987 or the Superannuation Industry (Supervision)
Act 1993; and
(b) is for the purpose of performing any of
its functions or exercising any of its powers; and
(c) is made in accordance with the
conditions (if any) imposed by the regulations in relation to the disclosure
of information under this item.
|
|
3
|
the Superannuation Complaints Tribunal
established by section 6 of the Superannuation (Resolution of
Complaints) Act 1993
|
(a) is of information that was obtained
under or in relation to the Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and Lost
Members) Act 1999; and
(b) is for the purpose of the Tribunal
performing any of its functions or exercising any of its powers.
|
|
4
|
the
Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA)
|
is for the
purpose of administering:
(a) the Financial
Institutions Supervisory Levies Collection Act 1998; or
(b) the Superannuation
Industry (Supervision) Act 1993.
|
|
5
|
APRA
|
(a) is of information that was obtained
under or in relation to the Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and Lost
Members) Act 1999; and
(b) is for the purpose of APRA performing
any of its functions or exercising any of its powers.
|
|
6
|
APRA
|
is for the purpose of APRA performing any
of its functions or exercising any of its powers in relation to *FHSAs.
|
|
6A
|
the
Australian Securities and Investments Commission
|
is for the
purpose of administering Part 16 of the Superannuation Industry
(Supervision) Act 1993.
|
|
7
|
an individual who is or was an employee
(within the meaning of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act
1992)
|
(a) is of information that relates to the
Commissioner’s response to a complaint by the individual about a failure by
the individual’s employer or former employer to comply with the employer’s
obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992
in relation to the employee; and
(b) does not relate to the general financial
affairs of the employer.
|
|
8
|
any
entity, court or tribunal
|
is of
information that was obtained under, or for the purposes of the Superannuation
(Self Managed Superannuation Funds) Taxation Act 1987 or the Superannuation
Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 and is for the purpose of all or any of
the following:
(a)
identifying a particular *self managed
superannuation fund;
(b) enabling
members of the public to contact persons who perform functions in relation to
a particular self managed superannuation fund;
|
|
|
|
(c) enabling the Commissioner to provide an
opinion to members of the public as to whether or not a particular self
managed superannuation fund is a complying superannuation fund in relation to
a particular income year for the purposes of Division 2 of Part 5
of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993;
(d) describing activity engaged in, or
proposed to be engaged in, by the Commissioner in relation to a breach or
suspected breach by a person of a provision of the Superannuation (Self
Managed Superannuation Funds) Taxation Act 1987 or the Superannuation
Industry (Supervision) Act 1993.
|
|
9
|
an approved clearing house (within the
meaning of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992)
|
is for the purposes of that body
performing its functions in relation to superannuation contributions.
|
|
10
|
(a) a regulated superannuation fund (within
the meaning of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993); or
(b) a public sector superannuation scheme
(within the meaning of that Act); or
(c) an *approved deposit fund; or
(d) an *RSA provider; or
(e) an entity that, as an agent of such a
fund, scheme or RSA provider, provides administration services for:
(i) beneficiaries (within the meaning of
that Act) of the fund or scheme; or
(ii) holders (within the meaning of the Retirement
Savings Accounts Act 1997) of *RSAs provided by
the RSA provider
|
is for the purpose of:
(a) informing:
(i) a beneficiary (within the meaning of the
Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993) of such a fund or
scheme; or
(ii) a holder (within the meaning of the Retirement
Savings Accounts Act 1997) of an *RSA provided by the *RSA provider; or
(iii) an applicant to become such a
beneficiary or holder;
of one or more of his or her *superannuation interests (whether with that fund, scheme or RSA
provider or another fund, scheme or RSA provider); or
(b) assisting such a beneficiary, holder or
applicant to choose whether to maintain or create such a superannuation
interest; or
(c) assisting such a beneficiary, holder or
applicant to give effect to such a choice; or
|
|
|
|
(d) informing such a beneficiary, holder or
applicant of an amount that is or may become payable, or that may be paid,
credited or otherwise dealt with, in relation to the beneficiary, holder or
applicant under:
(i) the Small Superannuation Accounts Act
1995; or
|
|
|
|
(ii) the Superannuation
(Government Co‑contribution for Low Income Earners) Act 2003; or
(iii) the Superannuation
Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992; or
(iv) the Superannuation
(Unclaimed Money and Lost Members) Act 1999; or
(e) assisting
such a beneficiary, holder or applicant to give effect to a choice that he or
she may make, or undertake an action that he or she may undertake, in
relation to an amount mentioned in paragraph (d).
|
Table 3—Records or disclosures
relating to corporate regulation, business, research or policy
(4) Table 3 is as follows:
|
Table
3: Records or disclosures relating to corporate regulation, business,
research or policy
|
|
Item
|
The
record is made for or the disclosure is to ...
|
and
the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission (ASIC)
|
is for the purpose of investigation or
enforcement activities relating to a provision of a law that:
(a) is administered by ASIC; and
(b) imposes a pecuniary penalty or creates
an offence.
|
|
2
|
ASIC
|
(a) is of information that was obtained
under or in relation to the Superannuation (Unclaimed Money and Lost
Members) Act 1999; and
(b) is for the purpose of ASIC performing
any of its functions or exercising any of its powers.
|
|
3
|
ASIC
|
is of information relating to
superannuation and is for the purpose of administering:
(a) the Superannuation Industry
(Supervision) Act 1993; or
(b) Chapter 7 of the Corporations
Act 2001 (about financial services and markets); or
(c) Division 2 of Part 2 of the Australian
Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (about unconscionable
conduct and consumer protection in relation to financial services).
|
|
4
|
ASIC
|
is for the purpose of administering
Chapter 5A of the Corporations Act 2001 (relating to
deregistration, and transfer of registration, of companies).
|
|
5
|
ASIC
|
is for the purpose of ASIC performing any
of its functions or exercising any of its powers in relation to *FHSAs.
|
|
6
|
Innovation Australia established under
section 6 of the Industry Research and Development Act 1986
|
is for the purpose of administering any *Commonwealth law relating to venture capital.
|
|
6A
|
the Secretary of the Department
administered by the Minister administering the Shipping Reform (Tax
Incentives) Act 2012
|
is for the purpose of administering that
Act.
|
|
7
|
the Secretary of the Department
|
is for the purpose of:
(a) briefing the Minister in relation to a
decision that the Minister may make under the Foreign Acquisitions and
Takeovers Act 1975; or
(b) briefing the Minister in relation to a
decision that the Minister may make in accordance with the document issued by
the Minister known as Australia’s Foreign Investment Policy; or
(c) briefing an officer of the Department
who is authorised by the Minister to make a decision mentioned in paragraph (a)
or (b) in relation to the decision.
|
|
8
|
the Secretary of the Department
|
(a) is of information that does not include
the name, contact details or *ABN of any entity; and
(b) is for the purpose of the Department
estimating or analysing taxation revenue or estimating the cost of policy
proposals.
|
|
9
|
the Parliamentary Budget Officer (within
the meaning of the Parliamentary Service Act 1999)
|
(a) is of information that does not include
the name, contact details or *ABN of any entity; and
(b) is for the purpose of the Parliamentary
Budget Officer performing any of his or her functions, or exercising any of
his or her powers, under Part 7 of the Parliamentary Service Act 1999.
|
Table 4—Records or disclosures
relating to other taxation matters
(5) Table
4 is as follows:
|
Table
4: Records or disclosures relating to other taxation matters
|
|
Item
|
The
record is made for or the disclosure is to ...
|
and
the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
a State taxation officer, or a Territory taxation
officer, within the meaning of subsection 13D(1) of this Act
|
is for the purpose of administering a *State law or *Territory law relating
to taxation, if a State taxation officer or a Territory taxation officer is
authorised by law to communicate information obtained under the State law or
Territory law to the Commissioner.
|
|
2
|
a State taxation officer, or a Territory
taxation officer, within the meaning of subsection 13D(1) of this Act
|
is of:
(a) information obtained under or in
relation to the First Home Saver Accounts Act 2008; or
(b) rental
information, residential address information or spousal information;
and is for the purpose of administering
the First Home Owner Grant Act 2000 of New South Wales, or a similar *State law or *Territory law.
|
|
3
|
the
Development Allowance Authority established by section 94 of the Development
Allowance Authority Act 1992
|
is for the
purpose of:
(a)
administering that Act; or
(b)
Part III of this Act (prosecutions and offences), in so far as that Part
applies in relation to the Development Allowance Authority Act 1992.
|
|
4
|
an individual who holds an office of a
State or Territory, being an office prescribed for the purpose of this table
item
|
(a) is of information that relates to
alcoholic beverages; and
(b) is for the purpose of the individual
administering an *arrangement for the rebate,
refund or other payment or credit by a State or Territory in respect of
alcoholic beverages.
|
Table 5—Records or disclosures
relating to rehabilitation or compensation
(6) Table 5 is as follows:
|
Table
5: Records or disclosures relating to rehabilitation or compensation
|
|
Item
|
The
record is made for or the disclosure is to ...
|
and
the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
an
authority of the Commonwealth established under a *Commonwealth law relating to rehabilitation or compensation
|
is for the
purpose of performing any of its functions or exercising any of its powers
under that law.
|
|
2
|
the *Defence Secretary
|
is for the purpose of administering any *Commonwealth law relating to payments in respect of dependants of
members of the Defence Force.
|
|
3
|
an
authority of a State or Territory that administers a *workers’ compensation law
|
(a) is of
information that relates to amounts withheld under Part 2‑5 in Schedule 1
to this Act (about PAYG withholding); and
(b) is for
the purpose of ensuring that employers comply with their obligations relating
to insurance or the imposition of a levy under that law.
|
Table 6—Records or disclosures
relating to the environment
(7) Table 6 is as follows:
|
Table
6: Records or disclosures relating to the environment
|
|
Item
|
The
record is made for or the disclosure is to...
|
and
the record or disclosure...
|
|
1
|
the *Environment Secretary
|
is for the purpose of administering
cleaner fuel grants.
|
|
2
|
the *Environment Secretary
|
is for the purpose of administering
product stewardship (oil) benefits.
|
Table 7—Records or disclosures
relating to miscellaneous matters
(8) Table 7 is as follows:
|
Table
7: Records or disclosures relating to miscellaneous matters
|
|
Item
|
The
record is made for or the disclosure is to ...
|
and
the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
the Australian Statistician
|
is for the purpose of administering the Census
and Statistics Act 1905.
|
|
2
|
the Chief Executive Officer of Customs
|
is for the purpose of administering a law
of customs (within the meaning of the Customs Administration Act 1985).
|
|
2A
|
the Electoral Commissioner (within the
meaning of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918)
|
(a) is of information disclosed to, or
obtained by, the Commissioner of Taxation on or after the commencement of
this table item; and
(b) is for the purpose of administering the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 or the Referendum (Machinery Provisions) Act 1984.
|
|
3
|
the *Immigration Secretary
|
is for the purpose of assisting in
locating persons who are unlawfully in Australia.
|
|
4
|
the *Immigration Secretary
|
(a) is of information that relates to a
holder or former holder of a visa, or an approved sponsor (within the meaning
of the Migration Act 1958) or former approved sponsor of a person for
a visa, whose identity is disclosed to a *taxation officer under section 140ZH of that Act; and
(b) is for a purpose that is relevant to:
(i) the exercise of the Minister’s powers
under Division 3A of Part 2 of that Act or regulations made under
that Division; or
(ii) the exercise of the Minister’s powers
under Part 8D of that Act, to the extent that it relates to a
contravention of a civil penalty provision in Division 3A of Part 2
of that Act; or
|
|
|
|
(iii) the administration
of Division 3A of Part 2 of that Act or regulations made under that
Division.
|
|
5
|
the Fair Work Ombudsman (within the
meaning of the Fair Work Act 2009)
|
(a) is of the fact of an entity’s actual or
reasonably suspected non‑compliance with a *taxation law; and
(b) is for the purpose of ensuring the
entity’s compliance with the Fair Work Act 2009.
|
|
5A
|
the Commissioner of the Australian
Charities and Not‑for‑profits Commission
|
is for the purpose of administering the Australian
Charities and Not‑for‑profits Commission Act 2012.
|
|
6
|
(a) the Commissioner of the Australian
Charities and Not‑for‑profits Commission; or
(b) the Attorney‑General of a State or
Territory
|
(a) is of information that relates to non‑compliance
of a *ancillary fund or charity with an *Australian law; and
(b) is for the purpose of the administration
of an Australian law governing trusts and charities.
|
(9) To avoid doubt, the
exception in table item 7 in table 2 in subsection (3) has effect
even if at the time the complaint referred to in that item is made it is in
dispute or uncertain whether the individual is an employee or former employee
of the employer.
355‑70 Exception—disclosure for law
enforcement and related purposes
(1) Section 355‑25 does
not apply if:
(a) the entity is the
Commissioner or a *taxation officer authorised by the
Commissioner to make the record or disclosure; and
(b) an item in the
table in this subsection covers the making of the record or the disclosure; and
(c) if the entity is
not the Commissioner, a *Second Commissioner or
an SES employee or acting SES employee of the Australian Taxation Office—one of
the following has agreed that the record or disclosure is covered by the item:
(i) the
Commissioner;
(ii) a
Second Commissioner;
(iii) an
SES employee or acting SES employee of the Australian Taxation Office who is
not a direct supervisor of the taxation officer.
Note 1: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: The Commissioner is required
to include in an annual report information about disclosures made under this
subsection: see section 3B.
|
Records
or disclosures for law enforcement and related purposes
|
|
Item
|
The
record is made for or the disclosure is to ...
|
and
the record or disclosure ...
|
|
1
|
an *authorised law enforcement agency officer, or a court or tribunal
|
is for the purpose of:
(a) investigating a *serious offence; or
(b) enforcing a law, the contravention of
which is a serious offence; or
(c) the making, or proposed or possible
making, of a *proceeds of crime order; or
(d) supporting or enforcing a proceeds of
crime order.
|
|
2
|
an *authorised ASIO officer
|
is for the purpose of performing ASIO’s
functions under subsection 17(1) of the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation Act 1979.
|
|
3
|
a *Project Wickenby officer, or a court or tribunal
|
(a) is for or in connection with a *purpose of the Project Wickenby taskforce; and
(b) is made before 1 July 2015, or a
later prescribed day.
|
|
4
|
a *taskforce officer of a prescribed taskforce, or a court or
tribunal
|
(a) is for or in connection with a purpose
of the prescribed taskforce; and
(b) is made within the time limit, if any,
prescribed by the regulations.
|
|
5
|
a Royal Commission in respect of which
Letters Patent issued by the Governor‑General declare that the Royal
Commission is a Royal Commission to which this table item applies, or a
member of such a Royal Commission
|
is for the purpose of the Royal
Commission conducting its inquiry.
|
|
6
|
one or more of the following bodies:
(a) a Royal Commission of a State or a
Territory prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this table item;
(b) a commission of inquiry of a State or a
Territory prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this table item;
(c) a board of inquiry of a State or a
Territory prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this table item
|
is for the purpose of:
(a) investigating a *serious offence; or
(b) enforcing a law, the contravention of
which is a serious offence; or
(c) the making, or proposed or possible
making, of a *proceeds of crime order; or
(d) supporting or enforcing a proceeds of
crime order.
|
(2A) The *taxation officer is entitled to rely on the exception in subsection (1)
even if the agreement referred to in paragraph (1)(c) has not been
obtained in relation to the record or disclosure.
Meaning of various terms
(2) Authorised ASIO
officer means:
(a) the Director‑General
of Security holding office under the Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation Act 1979; or
(b) an ASIO employee
(within the meaning of that Act) or an ASIO affiliate (within the meaning of
that Act) who has been authorised in writing by the Director‑General of
Security to perform the functions of an authorised ASIO officer under this Act.
(3) Authorised
law enforcement agency officer means:
(a) the
head of a *law enforcement agency; or
(b) an officer of a
law enforcement agency, or a person engaged by, or otherwise performing
services for, a law enforcement agency, authorised in writing by the head of
the agency to perform the functions of an authorised law enforcement agency
officer under this Act.
(4) Law enforcement
agency means:
(a) the Australian
Federal Police; or
(b) the police force
of a State or Territory; or
(c) the Office of the
Director of Public Prosecutions established by section 5 of the Director
of Public Prosecutions Act 1983; or
(d) the Australian
Commission for Law Enforcement Integrity; or
(e) the Australian
Crime Commission; or
(f) the Independent
Commission Against Corruption established by the Independent Commission
Against Corruption Act 1988 of New South Wales; or
(g) the New South
Wales Crime Commission; or
(h) the Police
Integrity Commission of New South Wales; or
(i) the Independent
Broad‑based Anti‑corruption Commission of Victoria; or
(j) the Crime and Corruption Commission of Queensland; or
(k) the Corruption
and Crime Commission of Western Australia; or
(l) the Australian
Securities and Investments Commission.
(5) Proceeds of crime
order means:
(a) an order,
relating to an entity’s commission of a *serious
offence, under:
(i) Chapter 2
(about confiscation of property in relation to certain offences) or Division 1
of Part 3‑1 (about examination orders) of the Proceeds of Crime Act
2002; or
(ii) Part II
(about confiscation) or III (about control of property liable to confiscation)
of the Proceeds of Crime Act 1987; or
(iii) a *State law or *Territory law
corresponding to a law referred to in subparagraph (i) or (ii); or
(iv) Division 3
of Part XIII (about recovery of pecuniary penalties for dealings in
narcotic goods) of the Customs Act 1901; or
(b) an unexplained
wealth order (within the meaning of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002); or
(c) a court order
(including a declaration or direction):
(i) under
a State law or Territory law; and
(ii) relating
to unexplained wealth.
(6) An entity is a Project
Wickenby officer if the entity:
(a) holds an office
in, is employed in, or is performing services for:
(i) a *Project Wickenby taskforce agency; or
(ii) a *Project Wickenby taskforce supporting agency; and
(b) performs duties
that relate to a *purpose of the Project Wickenby taskforce.
(7) The following agencies
are Project Wickenby taskforce agencies:
(a) the Australian
Taxation Office;
(b) the Australian
Crime Commission;
(c) the Australian
Federal Police;
(d) the Australian
Securities and Investments Commission;
(e) the Office of the
Director of Public Prosecutions;
(f) a prescribed
agency.
(8) The following agencies
are Project Wickenby taskforce supporting agencies:
(a) the Department
administered by the Minister administering the Crimes Act 1914;
(b) the Australian
Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre;
(c) the Australian
Government Solicitor;
(d) a prescribed
agency.
(9) The purposes of
the Project Wickenby taskforce are to:
(a) detect; and
(b) deter; and
(c) investigate; and
(d) enforce
the law relating to;
the promotion of or participation in *arrangements of an international character, or purported
international character, that relate to one or more of the following:
(e) tax avoidance or
evasion;
(f) breaches of laws
regulating financial markets and corporations;
(g) criminal activity
in the nature of fraud or obtaining benefits by deception (including deceiving
investors or creditors);
(h) money laundering;
(i) concealing
income or assets.
(10) Serious offence means an offence against an *Australian law that is punishable by imprisonment for a period
exceeding 12 months.
(11) An entity is a taskforce
officer of a prescribed taskforce if:
(a) the entity holds
an office in, is employed in, or is performing services for, an agency in the
prescribed taskforce; and
(b) the entity’s
duties relate to a purpose of the prescribed taskforce.
(12) The regulations may
prescribe a taskforce for the purposes of item 4 of the table in subsection (1).
A major purpose of the taskforce must be protecting the public finances of
Australia.
(13) Without limiting subsection (12),
regulations made for the purposes of item 4 of the table in subsection (1)
may deal with the following matters:
(a) the purposes of
the taskforce;
(b) the agencies in
the taskforce.
355‑75 Limits on disclosure to
courts and tribunals
An entity who is or was
a *taxation officer is not to be required to disclose to a court or
tribunal *protected information that was acquired by
the entity as a taxation officer except where it is necessary to do so for the
purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of a *taxation
law.
Note: See also section 8ZK of
this Act (about protection of witnesses).
Subdivision 355‑C—On‑disclosure of protected information by other people
Guide to Subdivision 355‑C
355‑150 What this Subdivision is
about
Someone who is not a
taxation officer is prohibited from disclosing protected information, except in
certain specified circumstances.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
355‑155 Offence—on‑disclosure of
protected information by other people
355‑160 Consent is not a defence
355‑165 Generality of Subdivision
not limited
355‑170 Exception—on‑disclosure of
publicly available information
355‑172 Exception—disclosure of
periodic aggregate tax information
355‑175 Exception—on‑disclosure
for original purpose
355‑180 Exception—on‑disclosure to
Ministers in relation to statutory powers or functions
355‑185 Exception—on‑disclosure in
relation to IGIS
355‑190 Exception—on‑disclosure in
relation to ASIO
355‑195 Exception—on‑disclosure by
Royal Commissions
355‑200 Exception—records made in
compliance with Australian laws
355‑205 Limits on on‑disclosure to
courts or tribunals
355‑210 Limits on on‑disclosure to
Ministers
Operative provisions
355‑155 Offence—on‑disclosure of
protected information by other people
An entity commits an
offence if:
(a) the entity:
(i) makes
a record of information; or
(ii) discloses
information to another entity (other than the entity to whom the information
relates or that entity’s agent in relation to the information) or to a court or
tribunal; and
(b) the information
was acquired by the first‑mentioned entity under an exception in this
Subdivision or in Subdivision 355‑B; and
(c) the first‑mentioned
entity did not acquire the information as a *taxation
officer.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
Note: This section also covers information
acquired by an entity (other than as a taxation officer) before the
commencement of this section under certain repealed or amended provisions: see
item 124 of Schedule 2 to the Tax Laws Amendment (Confidentiality
of Taxpayer Information) Act 2010.
355‑160 Consent is not a defence
It is not a defence to
a prosecution for an offence against section 355‑155 that the entity to
whom the information relates has consented to:
(a) the making of the
record; or
(b) the disclosure of
the information.
355‑165 Generality of Subdivision
not limited
Except as provided in
section 355‑210 (about limits on disclosure to Ministers), nothing in this
Subdivision limits the generality of anything else in it.
Note: This means that each
provision in this Subdivision (other than section 355‑210) has an
independent operation and is not to be interpreted by reference to any other
provision within the Subdivision.
355‑170 Exception—on‑disclosure of
publicly available information
Section 355‑155
does not apply if the information was already available to the public
(otherwise than as a result of a contravention of section 355‑25, 355‑155
or 355‑265).
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this section: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑172 Exception—disclosure of
periodic aggregate tax information
Section 355‑155
does not apply if the information is *periodic aggregate
tax information.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this section: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑175 Exception—on‑disclosure for
original purpose
(1) Section 355‑155
does not apply if:
(a) the information
was originally disclosed under an exception in Subdivision 355‑B for a
purpose specified in that exception (the original purpose); and
(b) the information
was acquired by the entity under this section or an exception in Subdivision 355‑B;
and
(c) the record or
disclosure is made by the entity for the original purpose, or in connection
with the original purpose.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
Instances of disclosures in connection
with the original purpose
(2) Without limiting subsection (1),
a record or disclosure is made by the entity in connection with the original
purpose if:
(a) the record is
made for, or the disclosure is to, any entity, court or tribunal; and
(b) the record or
disclosure is for the purpose of criminal, civil or administrative proceedings
(including merits review or judicial review) that are related to the original
purpose.
Multiple purposes
(3) Subsection (1) has
effect as if a record or disclosure made by the entity for a purpose specified
in column 3 of the following table were made in connection with the original
purpose:
|
Records
or disclosures for purpose connected with the original purpose
|
|
Item
|
Original
purpose
|
Purpose
connected with the original purpose
|
|
1
|
a *purpose of the Project Wickenby taskforce
|
another purpose of that taskforce.
|
|
2
|
a purpose of a prescribed taskforce
|
another purpose of that taskforce.
|
|
3
|
one of the purposes specified in column 3
of item 1 of the table in subsection 355‑70(1)
|
the other of those purposes.
|
|
4
|
one of the purposes specified in column 3
of item 6 of the table in subsection 355‑70(1)
|
one of the other purposes specified in
column 3 of item 6 of that table.
|
355‑180 Exception—on‑disclosure to
Ministers in relation to statutory powers or functions
Section 355‑155
does not apply if:
(a) the information
was originally disclosed under an exception in Subdivision 355‑B for a
purpose specified in that exception (the original purpose); and
(b) the record is
made for, or the disclosure is to, a Minister who has a statutory power or
function in relation to the original purpose; and
(c) the record or
disclosure is for the purpose of enabling the Minister to:
(i) decide
whether to exercise the power or perform the function; or
(ii) exercise
the power or perform the function.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this section: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑185 Exception—on‑disclosure in
relation to IGIS
(1) Section 355‑155
does not apply if:
(a) the entity is an *authorised ASIO officer; and
(b) the
record is made for, or the disclosure is to, the Inspector‑General of
Intelligence and Security holding office under the Inspector‑General of
Intelligence and Security Act 1986 or a member of staff appointed to assist
the Inspector‑General under that Act; and
(c) the record or
disclosure is for the purpose of performing the Inspector‑General’s, or the
member of staff’s, duties in relation to ASIO or ASIO employees (within the meaning
of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979) or ASIO
affiliates (within the meaning of that Act).
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
(2) Section 355‑155
does not apply if:
(a) the entity is the
Inspector‑General of Intelligence and Security holding office under the Inspector‑General
of Intelligence and Security Act 1986 or a member of staff appointed to
assist the Inspector‑General under that Act; and
(b) the information
was acquired by the entity under subsection (1) or this paragraph; and
(c) the record or
disclosure is for the purpose of performing the Inspector‑General’s, or the
officer’s, duties in relation to ASIO or ASIO employees (within the meaning of
the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979) or ASIO
affiliates (within the meaning of that Act).
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑190 Exception—on‑disclosure in
relation to ASIO
(1) Section 355‑155
does not apply if:
(a) the entity is an *authorised ASIO officer; and
(b) the record is
made for, or the disclosure is to, an officer of a *law
enforcement agency; and
(c) the record or
disclosure is for the purpose of, or in connection with:
(i) investigating
a *serious offence; or
(ii) enforcing
a law, the contravention of which is a serious offence; or
(iii) the
making, or proposed or possible making, of a *proceeds
of crime order.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
(2) Section 355‑155
does not apply if:
(a) the entity is an
officer of a *law enforcement agency; and
(b) the information
was acquired by the entity under subsection (1) or this paragraph; and
(c) the record or
disclosure is for the purpose of, or in connection with:
(i) investigating
a *serious offence; or
(ii) enforcing
a law, the contravention of which is a serious offence; or
(iii) the
making, or proposed or possible making, of a *proceeds
of crime order.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑195 Exception—on‑disclosure by
Royal Commissions
(1) Section 355‑155
does not apply if:
(a) the entity is a
member of a Royal Commission to which column 2 of item 5 of the table in
subsection 355‑70(1) relates; and
(b) the information
was acquired by the entity under item 5 of the table in subsection 355‑70(1);
and
(c) the record or
disclosure is in accordance with section 6P of the Royal Commissions
Act 1902.
Note 1: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Section 6P of the Royal
Commissions Act 1902 sets out the circumstances in which a Royal Commission
covered by that Act may disclose information it acquires in the course of its
inquiry.
(2) Section 355‑155
does not apply to particular information if the information was disclosed under
subsection (1).
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this subsection: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑200 Exception—records made in
compliance with Australian laws
Section 355‑155
does not apply if the record is made in compliance with a requirement of an *Australian law.
Example: The Australian Taxation Office
obtains information about an entity from a credit reporting body by giving a
notice under paragraph 353‑10(1)(c). The body is not committing an offence
under section 355‑155 by making a written note of the disclosure as
required by subsection 20E(5) of the Privacy Act 1988.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this section: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑205 Limits on on‑disclosure to
courts or tribunals
An entity is not to be
required to disclose to a court or tribunal *protected
information that was acquired by the entity under Subdivision 355‑B or
this Subdivision, except where it is necessary to do so for the purpose of
carrying into effect the provisions of a *taxation
law.
Note: See also section 8ZK of
this Act (about protection of witnesses).
355‑210 Limits on on‑disclosure to
Ministers
(1) Sections 355‑170,
355‑180 and 355‑195 are the only exceptions to the prohibition in section 355‑155
on which an entity who has acquired *protected
information (otherwise than as a *taxation officer) can
rely in making a record of the information for, or disclosing the information
to, a Minister, whether or not provided to a Minister in the course of, or for
the purposes of or incidental to, the transacting of the business of a House of
the Parliament or of a committee of one or both Houses of the Parliament.
Note: Disclosures that are not
prohibited by section 355‑155 are not affected by this subsection. For
example, an entity may disclose information to a Minister if the Minister is the
entity to whom the information relates, or is another entity’s agent in
relation to the information.
(2) Subsection (1) has
effect despite section 16 of the Parliamentary Privileges Act 1987,
and that section does not operate to the extent that it would otherwise apply
to a disclosure of *protected information by the
entity to a Minister.
Note: This subsection does not
limit the operation of section 16 of the Parliamentary Privileges Act
1987 in any other respect. That section continues to operate, for example,
to enable an entity to disclose protected information to a committee of one or
both Houses of the Parliament.
Subdivision 355‑D—Disclosure of protected information that has been unlawfully
acquired
Guide to Subdivision 355‑D
355‑260 What this Subdivision is
about
The disclosure of
protected tax information that has been unlawfully acquired is prohibited.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
355‑265 Offence—disclosure of
protected information acquired in breach of a taxation law
355‑270 Exception—disclosure of
publicly available information
355‑275 Exception—disclosure in
relation to a taxation law
355‑280 Limits on disclosure to
courts and tribunals
Operative provisions
355‑265 Offence—disclosure of
protected information acquired in breach of a taxation law
An entity commits an
offence if:
(a) the entity:
(i) makes
a record of information; or
(ii) discloses
information to another entity (other than the entity to whom the information
relates or that entity’s agent in relation to the information) or to a court or
tribunal; and
(b) the information
is *protected information; and
(c) the information
was acquired by the entity in breach of a provision of a *taxation law (including this provision); and
(d) the information
was not acquired by the entity as a *taxation officer.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
355‑270 Exception—disclosure of
publicly available information
Section 355‑265
does not apply if the information was already available to the public
(otherwise than as a result of a contravention of that section, or section 355‑25
or 355‑155).
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this section: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑275 Exception—disclosure in
relation to a taxation law
Section 355‑265
does not apply:
(a) to the extent
that the entity’s actions are required or permitted by a *taxation law or reasonably necessary in order to comply with an
obligation imposed by a taxation law; or
(b) if the record was
made for or the information was disclosed:
(i) to a *taxation officer; and
(ii) for a
purpose connected with administering a *taxation
law.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in this section: see subsection 13.3(3)
of the Criminal Code.
355‑280 Limits on disclosure to
courts and tribunals
An entity is not to be
required to disclose to a court or tribunal *protected
information that was acquired by the entity under this Subdivision, except
where it is necessary to do so for the purpose of carrying into effect the
provisions of a *taxation law.
Note: See also section 8ZK of
this Act (about protection of witnesses).
Subdivision 355‑E—Other matters
Guide to Subdivision 355‑E
355‑320 What this Subdivision is
about
The Commissioner may require a taxation officer to make an oath of
affirmation to protect information.
The Federal Court has
power to grant an injunction restraining an entity from engaging in conduct
that would constitute an offence against this Division.
The Commissioner must
issue instructions relating to the disclosure of protected tax information.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
355‑325 Oath or affirmation to
protect information
355‑330 Injunctions to prevent
contravention of non‑disclosure provisions
355‑335 Procedures for disclosing
protected information
Operative provisions
355‑325 Oath or affirmation to
protect information
(1) A *taxation officer must, if and when required by the Commissioner to
do so, make an oath or affirmation to protect information in accordance with
this Division.
(2) The Commissioner may
determine, in writing:
(a) the form of the
oath or affirmation; and
(b) the manner in
which the oath or affirmation must be made.
355‑330 Injunctions to prevent
contravention of non‑disclosure provisions
Injunctions
(1) If an entity has
engaged, is engaging or is proposing to engage in any conduct that constituted,
constitutes or would constitute an offence against this Division, the Federal
Court of Australia may, on the application of the Commissioner, grant an
injunction:
(a) restraining the
entity from engaging in the conduct; and
(b) if in the court’s
opinion it is desirable to do so—requiring the entity to do any act or thing.
Interim injunctions
(2) If an application is
made to the court for an injunction under subsection (1), the court may,
before considering the application, grant an interim injunction restraining an
entity from engaging in conduct of the kind referred to in that subsection
pending the determination of the application.
Discharge or variation of injunctions
(3) The court may discharge
or vary an injunction granted under this section.
Exercise of power to grant injunctions
(4) If an application is
made to the court for the grant of an injunction restraining an entity from
engaging in conduct of a particular kind, the power of the court to grant the
injunction may be exercised:
(a) if the court is
satisfied that the entity has engaged in conduct of that kind—whether or not it
appears to the court that the entity intends to engage again, or to continue to
engage, in conduct of that kind; or
(b) if it appears to
the court that, in the event that an injunction is not granted, it is likely
that the entity will engage in conduct of that kind—whether or not the entity
has previously engaged in conduct of that kind and whether or not there is an
imminent danger of substantial damage to any other entity if the entity engages
in conduct of that kind.
(5) The power of the court
to grant an injunction requiring an entity to do a particular act or thing may
be exercised:
(a) if the court is
satisfied that the entity has refused or failed to do that act or thing—whether
or not it appears to the court that the entity intends to refuse or fail again,
or to continue to refuse or fail, to do that act or thing; or
(b) if it appears to
the court that, in the event that an injunction is not granted, it is likely
that the entity will refuse or fail to do that act or thing—whether or not the
entity has previously refused or failed to do that act or thing and whether or
not there is an imminent danger of substantial damage to any other entity if
the entity refuses or fails to do that act or thing.
No undertakings as to damages
(6) If the Commissioner
makes an application to the court for the grant of an injunction under this
section, the court must not require the Commissioner or any other entity, as a
condition of the granting of an interim injunction, to give any undertakings as
to damages.
Other powers of the court unaffected
(7) The powers conferred on
the court under this section are in addition to, and not in derogation of, any
other powers of the court, whether conferred by this Act or otherwise.
355‑335 Procedures for disclosing
protected information
(1) The Commissioner must
issue instructions in relation to the procedures to be followed by *taxation officers in disclosing *protected
information under the exceptions in sections 355‑55 (about disclosures to
Ministers), 355‑65 (about disclosures for other government purposes) and 355‑70
(about disclosures for law enforcement and related purposes).
(2) The instructions must:
(a) be issued within
6 months after the commencement of this section; and
(b) be in writing;
and
(c) provide for the
matters mentioned in subsection (3); and
(d) be published on
the Australian Taxation Office website.
(3) The matters are:
(a) the processes to
be followed before *protected information can be
disclosed by a *taxation officer under the exceptions in
sections 355‑55, 355‑65 and 355‑70; and
(b) the processes
involved in obtaining and giving the agreement mentioned in paragraphs 355‑55(1)(c)
and 355‑70(1)(c); and
(c) other matters the
Commissioner considers appropriate.
(4) Without limiting
subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901, the
Commissioner may vary or revoke the instructions.
(5) A failure to comply with
the time limit in paragraph (2)(a) does not:
(a) prevent the
Commissioner from issuing the instructions after this time; or
(b) affect the
validity of the instructions when issued.
(6) A failure to comply with
the instructions does not, of itself, mean that a *taxation
officer is not entitled to rely on the exceptions in sections 355‑55, 355‑65
and 355‑70.
(7) The instructions are not
a legislative instrument.
Division 356—General administration of tax laws
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 356
356‑A Indirect tax laws
Guide to Division 356
356‑1 What this Division is about
This Division gives
the Commissioner the general administration of the indirect tax laws.
Subdivision 356‑A—Indirect tax laws
Table of sections
356‑5 Commissioner has general
administration of indirect tax laws
356‑5 Commissioner has general
administration of indirect tax laws
The Commissioner has
the general administration of each *indirect tax law.
Part 5‑5—Rulings
Division 357—Object and common rules
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 357
357‑A Object of this Part
357‑B Common rules for rulings
Guide to Division 357
357‑1 What this Division is about
This Division sets
out the object of this Part, and common rules that apply to public, private and
oral rulings. (For the rules specific to each of those kinds of ruling, see
Divisions 358, 359 and 360.)
A ruling is an
expression of the Commissioner’s opinion of the way in which a relevant
provision applies, or would apply, to you.
A ruling binds the
Commissioner if it applies to you and you act in accordance with it. If you do
act in accordance with it and the law turns out to be less favourable to you
than the ruling provides, you are protected by the ruling from any adverse
consequences.
The Division also
sets out some other general rules for rulings.
Subdivision 357‑A—Object of this Part
Table of sections
357‑5 Object of this Part
357‑5 Object of this Part
(1) The object of this Part
is to provide a way for you to find out the Commissioner’s view about how
certain laws administered by the Commissioner apply to you so that the risks to
you of uncertainty when you are self assessing or working out your tax
obligations or entitlements are reduced.
(2) This object is achieved
by:
(a) making advice in
the form of rulings by the Commissioner available on a wide range of matters
and to many taxpayers; and
(b) ensuring that the
Commissioner provides rulings in a timely manner; and
(c) enabling the
Commissioner to obtain, and make rulings based on, relevant information; and
(d) protecting you
from increases in tax and from penalties and interest where you rely on
rulings; and
(e) protecting you
from decreases in entitlements where you rely on rulings; and
(f) limiting the
ways the Commissioner can alter rulings to your detriment; and
(g) giving you
protection from interest charges where you rely on other advice from the
Commissioner, or on the Commissioner’s general administrative practice.
Subdivision 357‑B—Common rules for rulings
Table of sections
Rules for all rulings
357‑50 Scope of Division
357‑55 The provisions that are
relevant for rulings
357‑60 When rulings are binding
on the Commissioner
357‑65 Stopping relying on a
ruling
357‑70 Commissioner may apply
the law if more favourable than the ruling
357‑75 Inconsistent rulings
357‑80 Contracts for schemes
357‑85 Effect on ruling if
relevant provision re‑enacted
357‑90 Validity of ruling not
affected by formal defect
Common rules for public and
private rulings
357‑95 Electronic communications
357‑100 Evidence
Common rules for private and
oral rulings
357‑105 Further information must
be sought
357‑110 Assumptions in making
private or oral ruling
357‑115 Additional information
provided by applicant
357‑120 Commissioner may take into
account information from third parties
357‑125 Applications and
objections not to affect obligations and powers
Rules for all rulings
357‑50 Scope of Division
This Division applies
to *public rulings, *private rulings and *oral rulings.
357‑55 The provisions that are
relevant for rulings
Provisions of Acts and
regulations of which the Commissioner has the general administration are
relevant for rulings if the provisions are about any of the following:
(a) *tax;
(b) *Medicare levy;
(c) fringe benefits
tax;
(d) *franking tax;
(e) *withholding tax;
(f) *mining withholding tax;
(fa) *petroleum resource rent tax;
(fb) *indirect tax;
(fc) *excise duty;
(g) the
administration or collection of those taxes, levies and duties;
(h) a grant or
benefit mentioned in section 8 of the Product Grants and Benefits
Administration Act 2000, or the administration or payment of such a grant
or benefit;
(i) a *net fuel amount, or the administration of a net fuel amount;
(ia) an *assessed net fuel amount, or the collection or payment of an
assessed net fuel amount;
(j) a *net amount, or the administration of a net amount;
(ja) an *assessed net amount, or the collection or payment of an assessed net
amount;
(k) a *wine tax credit, or the administration or payment of a wine tax
credit.
357‑60 When rulings are binding on
the Commissioner
(1) Subject to subsection (5),
a ruling binds the Commissioner in relation to you (whether or not you are
aware of the ruling) if:
(a) the ruling
applies to you; and
(b) you rely on the
ruling by acting (or omitting to act) in accordance with the ruling.
Example 1: A public ruling is expressed to
apply to a class of entities in relation to a particular scheme. Tim is a
member of that class of entities and he is one of a number of taxpayers who
enter into that scheme. The ruling applies to Tim.
Tim relies on the ruling
by lodging an income tax return that is in accordance with the ruling.
Under the ruling, Tim’s
deductions in relation to the scheme are worked out to be a particular amount.
Because Tim has relied on the ruling, the Commissioner must use that amount in
making Tim’s assessment (unless Tim stops relying on the ruling or the law is
more favourable to him: see sections 357‑65 and 357‑70).
Example 2: Cecelia applies for, and obtains,
a private ruling that, when she makes a payment in specified circumstances, she
would not have to withhold an amount under a relevant provision. Cecelia makes
the payment in the circumstances specified in the ruling, so the ruling applies
to her.
Cecelia relies on the
ruling by not withholding an amount from the payment. The Commissioner must not
apply the provision in relation to Cecelia in a way that is inconsistent with
the ruling (unless Cecelia stops relying on the ruling or the law is more
favourable to her: see sections 357‑65 and 357‑70).
Example 3: Cathie obtains a private ruling
that a type of supply she makes is GST‑free. She relies on the ruling by:
(a) giving her customers invoices that
show no GST payable on the supplies; and
(b) lodging
her GST return on the basis that the supplies are GST‑free.
The Commissioner must
administer the GST law in relation to Cathie on the basis that the supplies to
which the ruling relates are GST‑free. This does not apply if Cathie stops
relying on the ruling, such as by issuing tax invoices that show GST payable on
the supplies: see paragraph (1)(b).
Note 1: A ruling about the amount of
tax payable that binds the Commissioner provides protection in relation to that
amount. There is no shortfall interest charge or tax shortfall penalty payable
in respect of that amount as there can be no shortfall in tax payable.
Note 2: A ruling about the operation
of a provision would stop applying to you if the provision is repealed, or is
amended to have a different effect. However, if the provision is re‑enacted and
expresses the same ideas as the old provision, the ruling would still apply:
see section 357‑85.
(2) You may rely on the
ruling at any time unless prevented from doing so by a time limit imposed by a *taxation law. It is not necessary to do so at the first opportunity.
GST rulings
(3) The *GST payable on a *supply or importation is
the amount worked out in accordance with a ruling (if any) that:
(a) relates to the
GST payable on the supply or importation; and
(b) binds the
Commissioner in relation to the supplier or importer.
Note: The ruling will stop
affecting the GST payable if the supplier or importer stops relying on the
ruling: see paragraph (1)(b).
(4) Subsection (3) does
not apply for the purposes of an objection to the ruling under section 359‑60.
Indirect tax rulings
(5) An *indirect tax or excise ruling (except to the extent that the ruling
relates to an *excise law) binds the Commissioner in
relation to:
(a) an entity (the representative
entity) that is:
(i) the *representative member of a *GST group; or
(ii) the *joint venture operator of a *GST
joint venture; or
(iii) the *representative of an *incapacitated entity;
and
(b) an entity (the member
entity) that is:
(i) a *member of the GST group; or
(ii) a *participant in the GST joint venture; or
(iii) the
incapacitated entity;
if, and only if, both the representative
entity and the member entity rely on the ruling by acting (or omitting to act)
in accordance with the ruling.
(6) Subsection (5)
applies if:
(a) the ruling
applies to the member entity; and
(b) the ruling
relates to what would be:
(i) a
liability of the member entity to *indirect tax; or
(ii) an
entitlement of the member entity to a credit (other than a *fuel tax credit) under an *indirect tax law;
or
(iii) an *increasing adjustment, a *decreasing
adjustment, or a luxury car tax adjustment (within the meaning of the *Luxury Car Tax Act), that the member entity has;
if the rules in
the indirect tax law relating to *GST groups, *GST joint ventures or *incapacitated entities
did not apply; and
(c) because of those
rules:
(i) if
that indirect tax were payable, it would be payable by the representative
entity; or
(ii) if
there was an entitlement to that credit, it would be an entitlement of the
representative entity; or
(iii) if any
entity had that adjustment, it would be an adjustment that the representative
entity had.
357‑65 Stopping relying on a ruling
(1) You can stop relying on
a ruling. You do this by acting (or omitting to act) in a way that is not in
accordance with the ruling.
Note: There is no penalty for a
shortfall resulting from failing to follow a ruling. However, there are
penalties for shortfalls resulting from failing to take reasonable care, and
from taking a position about a large income tax item that is not reasonably
arguable: see Division 284.
(2) You may stop relying on
a ruling at any time unless prevented from doing so by a time limit imposed by
a *taxation law.
(3) Having stopped relying
on a ruling, you may rely on the ruling again unless prevented from doing so by
a time limit imposed by a *taxation law.
357‑70 Commissioner may apply the
law if more favourable than the ruling
(1) The
Commissioner may apply a relevant provision to you in the way it would apply if
you had not relied on a ruling if:
(a) doing so would
produce a more favourable result for you; and
(b) the Commissioner
is not prevented from doing so by a time limit imposed by a *taxation law.
(2) The Commissioner does
not have a duty to consider whether to apply subsection (1) to you, whether
he or she is requested to do so by you or by any other entity.
357‑75 Inconsistent rulings
(1) The rules in this table
have effect if:
(a) a ruling and a
later ruling both apply to you; and
(b) the 2 rulings are
inconsistent.
However, the rules in the table only
apply to the extent of the inconsistency, and do not apply to *indirect tax or excise rulings.
|
Inconsistent
rulings (other than indirect tax or excise rulings)
|
|
Item
|
If the
earlier ruling is:
|
And
the later inconsistent ruling is:
|
The result
is:
|
|
1
|
A *public ruling
|
Any ruling
|
You may rely on either ruling.
|
|
2
|
A *private ruling or an *oral ruling
|
A private ruling or an oral ruling
|
If you informed the Commissioner about
the existence of the earlier ruling when you applied for the later ruling,
the earlier ruling is taken not to have been made.
Otherwise, the later ruling is taken not
to have been made.
|
|
3
|
A *private ruling or an *oral ruling
|
A *public ruling
|
The earlier ruling is taken not to have
been made if, when the later ruling is made:
(a) the income year or other period to which
the rulings relate has not begun; and
(b) the *scheme to which the rulings relate has not begun to be carried
out.
Otherwise, you may rely on either ruling.
|
(1A) If:
(a) 2 inconsistent *indirect tax or excise rulings apply to you; and
(b) the rulings are
both *public rulings;
then, to the extent of the inconsistency,
you may rely on either of the rulings.
(1B) If:
(a) 2 inconsistent *indirect tax or excise rulings apply to you; and
(b) at least one of
the rulings is not a *public ruling;
then, to the extent of the inconsistency:
(c) the later ruling
is taken to apply from the later of:
(i) the
time it is made; and
(ii) the
time (if any) specified in the ruling as being the time from which it begins to
apply; and
(d) the earlier
ruling is taken to cease to apply at that later time.
(2) If 3 or more rulings
apply to you and the rulings are inconsistent, apply the rules in this section
to each combination of 2 rulings in the order in which they were made.
357‑80 Contracts for schemes
For the purposes of
this Part, if a contract requiring a *scheme has been
entered into, the scheme is taken to have begun to be carried out.
357‑85 Effect on ruling if relevant
provision re‑enacted
If:
(a) the Commissioner
makes a ruling about a relevant provision (the old provision);
and
(b) that provision is
re‑enacted or remade (with or without modifications, and whether or not the old
provision is repealed);
the ruling is taken also to be a ruling
about that provision as re‑enacted or remade (the new provision),
but only so far as the new provision expresses the same ideas as the old
provision.
Note 1: Section 357‑55 specifies
the relevant provisions.
Note 2: Ideas in taxation provisions
are not necessarily different just because different forms of words are used:
see section 15AC of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 and section 1‑3
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
357‑90 Validity of ruling not
affected by formal defect
The validity of a
ruling is not affected merely because a provision of this Part relating to the
form of the ruling or the procedure for making it has not been complied with.
Common rules for public and private rulings
357‑95 Electronic communications
A communication between
the Commissioner and another entity made for the purposes of a *public ruling or *private ruling may be
made electronically.
357‑100 Evidence
The production of:
(a) a *public ruling or *private ruling; or
(b) a document signed
by the Commissioner, a *Second Commissioner or a
*Deputy Commissioner, purporting to be a copy of the ruling or of a
notice of withdrawal of a public ruling;
is conclusive evidence of the proper
making of the ruling, or of the withdrawal of the public ruling.
Common rules for private and oral rulings
357‑105 Further information must be
sought
(1) If the Commissioner
considers that further information is required to make a *private ruling or an *oral ruling, the
Commissioner must request the applicant to give that information to him or her.
Note: The Commissioner should make
a private ruling within 60 days. However, if the Commissioner requests further
information under this section, that period is extended: see subsection 359‑50(2).
(2) The Commissioner may
decline to make the ruling if the applicant does not give the information to
the Commissioner within a reasonable time.
Note: The Commissioner must give
the applicant written reasons for declining to make a private ruling: see
section 359‑35.
357‑110 Assumptions in making
private or oral ruling
(1) If the Commissioner
considers that the correctness of a *private ruling or
an *oral ruling would depend on which assumptions were made about a
future event or other matter, the Commissioner may:
(a) decline to make
the ruling; or
(b) make such of the
assumptions as the Commissioner considers to be most appropriate.
(2) Before making the
ruling, the Commissioner must:
(a) tell the
applicant which assumptions (if any) the Commissioner proposes to make; and
(b) give the
applicant a reasonable opportunity to respond.
Note: The Commissioner should make
a private ruling within 60 days. However, if the Commissioner tells the
applicant about assumptions the Commissioner proposes to make under this
section, that period is extended: see subsection 359‑50(2).
357‑115 Additional information
provided by applicant
In considering an
application for a *private ruling or an *oral ruling, the Commissioner may take into account additional information
provided by the applicant after the application was made (whether in response
to a request under section 357‑105 or otherwise).
357‑120 Commissioner may take into
account information from third parties
In making a *private ruling or an *oral ruling, the
Commissioner may take into account any relevant information provided by an
entity other than the applicant (whenever it was provided) if the Commissioner:
(a) tells the
applicant what that information is and that the Commissioner intends to take
the information into account; and
(b) gives the
applicant a reasonable opportunity to respond before making the ruling.
Note: The Commissioner should make
a private ruling within 60 days. However, if the Commissioner tells the
applicant about third party information under this section, that period is
extended: see subsection 359‑50(2).
357‑125 Applications and objections
not to affect obligations and powers
The fact that you have
applied for a *private ruling or an *oral ruling, or have made an objection against a private ruling,
does not affect:
(a) your obligation
to lodge a return or do anything else; or
(b) the
Commissioner’s power to make or amend an assessment or do anything else.
Division 358—Public rulings
Guide to Division 358
358‑1 What this Division is about
A public ruling is an
expression of the Commissioner’s opinion of the way in which a relevant
provision applies, or would apply, to entities generally or a class of
entities.
The Commissioner must
publish the ruling.
A public ruling may
be withdrawn.
Note: Division 357 has some
rules that relate to rulings generally.
Table of sections
Making public rulings
358‑5 What is a public ruling?
358‑10 Application of public
rulings
358‑15 When a public ruling
ceases to apply
Withdrawing public rulings
358‑20 Withdrawing public
rulings
Making public rulings
358‑5 What is a public ruling?
(1) The Commissioner may
make a written ruling on the way in which the Commissioner considers a relevant
provision applies or would apply to:
(a) entities generally
or a class of entities; or
(b) entities generally,
or a class of entities, in relation to a class of *schemes;
or
(c) entities generally,
or a class of entities, in relation to a particular scheme.
Note: Section 357‑55 specifies
the relevant provisions.
(2) Such a ruling may cover
any matter involved in the application of the provision.
(3) Such a ruling is a public
ruling if it:
(a) is published; and
(b) states that it is
a public ruling.
(4) The Commissioner must
publish notice of the making of a *public ruling in
the Gazette.
Note: The validity of a ruling is
not affected merely because a provision of this Part relating to the form of
the ruling or the procedure for making it has not been complied with: see
section 357‑90.
358‑10 Application of public rulings
(1) A *public ruling applies from the time it is published or from such
earlier or later time as is specified in the ruling.
(2) A *public ruling, other than an *indirect
tax or excise ruling, that relates to a *scheme
does not apply to you if the scheme has begun to be carried out when the ruling
is published and:
(a) the ruling
changes the Commissioner’s general administrative practice; and
(b) the ruling is
less favourable to you than the practice.
358‑15 When a public ruling ceases
to apply
(1) A *public ruling may specify the time at which it ceases to apply.
(2) If a *public ruling does not do this, it applies until it is withdrawn.
Withdrawing public rulings
358‑20 Withdrawing public rulings
(1) The Commissioner may
withdraw a *public ruling, either wholly or to an
extent, by publishing notice of the withdrawal.
(2) The withdrawal takes
effect from the time specified in the notice. That time must not be before the
time the notice is published.
(3) To the extent that a *public ruling, other than an *indirect
tax or excise ruling, is withdrawn, it continues to apply to *schemes to which it applied that had begun to be carried out before
the withdrawal but does not apply to schemes that begin to be carried out after
the withdrawal.
Note: A scheme is taken to have
begun to be carried out if a contract requiring the scheme has been entered
into: see section 357‑80.
(4) The Commissioner must
publish notice of the withdrawal of a *public ruling in
the Gazette.
Division 359—Private rulings
Guide to Division 359
359‑1 What this Division is about
A private ruling is
an expression of the Commissioner’s opinion of the way in which a relevant
provision applies, or would apply, to you in relation to a specified scheme.
Private rulings are usually made on application by you, your agent or your
legal personal representative.
The Commissioner must
make the ruling applied for, except in certain cases. If you are entitled to
receive a ruling, you can object if the Commissioner takes too long to make it.
The Commissioner must
record the ruling in writing and give a copy of it to you. The ruling must
include certain details.
If you are
dissatisfied with the ruling, you may object to it.
Note: Division 357 has some
common rules that affect private rulings.
Table of sections
Private rulings
359‑5 Private rulings
359‑10 Applying for a private
ruling
359‑15 Private rulings to be
given to applicants
359‑20 Private rulings must
contain certain details
359‑25 Time of application of
private rulings
359‑30 Ruling for trustee of a
trust
359‑35 Dealing with applications
359‑40 Valuations
359‑45 Related rulings
359‑50 Delays in making private
rulings
359‑55 Revised private rulings
359‑60 Objections, reviews and
appeals relating to private rulings
359‑65 Commissioner may consider
new information on objection
359‑70 Successful objection
decision alters ruling
Private rulings
359‑5 Private rulings
(1) The Commissioner may, on
application, make a written ruling on the way in which the Commissioner
considers a relevant provision applies or would apply to you in relation to a
specified *scheme. Such a ruling is called a private
ruling.
Note: Section 357‑55 specifies
the relevant provisions.
(2) A *private ruling may cover any matter involved in the application of
the provision.
359‑10 Applying for a private ruling
(1) You, your *agent or your *legal personal
representative may apply to the Commissioner for a *private
ruling.
(2) An application for a *private ruling must be made in the *approved
form.
(3) You, your *agent or your *legal personal
representative may withdraw the application at any time before the ruling is
made. The Commissioner must confirm the withdrawal in writing.
359‑15 Private rulings to be given
to applicants
The Commissioner makes
a *private ruling by recording the ruling in writing and giving a copy
of it to the applicant. The copy may be given electronically.
359‑20 Private rulings must contain
certain details
(1) A *private ruling must state that it is a private ruling.
(2) A *private ruling must identify the entity to whom it applies and
specify the relevant *scheme and the relevant provision
to which it relates.
Note 1: The Commissioner must tell the
applicant which assumptions the Commissioner made in making the ruling: see
section 357‑110.
Note 2: Section 357‑55 specifies
the relevant provisions.
359‑25 Time of application of
private rulings
(1) A *private ruling may specify the time from which it begins to apply
and the time at which it ceases to apply.
(2) The specified start
time, or end time, may be before, when, or after the *private
ruling is made and may be determined by reference to a specified event.
(3) A *private ruling that does not specify a start time applies from the
time when it is made.
(4) A *private ruling, other than an *indirect
tax or excise ruling, that does not specify an end time ceases to apply at the
end of the income year or other accounting period in which it started to apply.
Note: A private ruling that:
(a) is an indirect tax or excise ruling;
and
(b) does not specify an end time;
continues
to apply until it is overridden by a later indirect tax or excise ruling: see
subsection 357‑75(1B).
359‑30 Ruling for trustee of a trust
A *private ruling given to or for the trustee of a trust and relating
to the affairs of the trust also applies to:
(a) if the ruling is
not an *indirect tax or excise ruling—the
beneficiaries of the trust; and
(b) in any case—another
trustee who is appointed to replace a trustee.
359‑35 Dealing with applications
(1) The Commissioner must
comply with an application for a *private ruling and make
the ruling. However, this obligation is subject to subsections (2) and
(3).
(2) The
Commissioner may decline to make a *private ruling if:
(a) the Commissioner
considers that making the ruling would prejudice or unduly restrict the
administration of a *taxation law; or
(b) the matter sought
to be ruled on is already being, or has been, considered by the Commissioner
for you.
(3) The Commissioner may
also decline to make a *private ruling if the
matter sought to be ruled on is how the Commissioner would exercise a power
under a relevant provision and the Commissioner has decided or decides whether
or not to exercise the power.
Example: Michael applies for a private
ruling on the way in which the Commissioner might exercise the Commissioner’s
discretion under section 255‑10 (deferring the payment time). Rather than
make the ruling, the Commissioner decides to defer the time at which an amount
would otherwise be payable by Michael.
Note: The Commissioner may also
decline to make a private ruling if:
(a) the
Commissioner has requested the applicant to give further information under
section 357‑105 and the applicant has not given it to the Commissioner
within a reasonable time; or
(b) the
Commissioner considers that the correctness of a private ruling would depend on
which assumptions were made about a future event or other matter (see section 357‑110).
(4) The Commissioner must
give the applicant written reasons for declining to make a *private ruling.
359‑40 Valuations
(1) If making a *private ruling would require determining the value of any thing, the
Commissioner may:
(a) refer the
valuation to a valuer; or
(b) refer a valuation
provided by the applicant to a valuer for review.
Note: The Commissioner may request
further information: see section 357‑105.
(2) If the Commissioner
refers the valuation to a valuer, the Commissioner must tell the applicant that
he or she has done so.
(3) When the valuer has
completed its work in relation to the valuation, the Commissioner must tell the
applicant that it has done so.
Note: The Commissioner should make
a private ruling within 60 days. However, if the Commissioner refers a
valuation to a valuer under this section, that period is extended: see
subsection 359‑50(2).
(4) The Commissioner may
charge the applicant an amount in accordance with the regulations for the
valuer making or reviewing the valuation.
(5) This section does not
apply to a valuation of a gift or contribution for the purposes of Division 30
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
359‑45 Related rulings
If the Commissioner is
making a *private ruling (the first ruling)
you sought on the way in which, in the Commissioner’s opinion, a relevant
provision applies or would apply to you, the Commissioner may:
(a) make the first
ruling a ruling on the way in which another relevant provision applies or would
apply to you; or
(b) make an
additional private ruling on the way in which:
(i) another
relevant provision applies or would apply; or
(ii) a
relevant provision applies or would apply to you in relation to a *scheme related to the scheme to which the first ruling applies.
Note: Section 357‑55 specifies
the relevant provisions.
359‑50 Delays in making private
rulings
(1) The applicant for a *private ruling may give the Commissioner a written notice requiring
him or her to make the ruling if, at the end of 60 days after the application
was made, the Commissioner has neither:
(a) made the ruling;
nor
(b) told the
applicant that the Commissioner has declined to make the ruling.
(2) The 60 day period
mentioned in subsection (1) is extended in a circumstance applicable under
the table by the extension period applicable to that circumstance. If 2 or more
circumstances are applicable, ignore any overlap between the periods of
extension.
|
Extending
the 60 day period
|
|
Item
|
If the
Commissioner, during the 60 day period:
|
The 60
day period is extended by the number of days in this period:
|
|
1
|
requests further information under
section 357‑105
|
the period starting on the day the
information was requested and ending on the day it is received by the Commissioner
|
|
2
|
tells the applicant about assumptions the
Commissioner proposes to make under section 357‑110
|
the period starting on the day the
Commissioner tells the applicant and ending on the day on which the
Commissioner receives the applicant’s response about the assumptions
|
|
3
|
tells the applicant about information
provided by a third party that the Commissioner proposes to take into account
under section 357‑120
|
the period starting on the day the
Commissioner tells the applicant and ending on the day on which the
Commissioner receives the applicant’s response about the information
|
|
4
|
refers a valuation to a valuer under
section 359‑40
|
the period starting on the day the
Commissioner tells the applicant about the referral and ending on the day on
which the Commissioner tells the applicant that the valuer has completed its
work in relation to the valuation
|
(3) The applicant may
object, in the manner set out in Part IVC, against the Commissioner’s
failure to make the ruling if the Commissioner:
(a) does not make the
ruling within 30 days of the notice under subsection (1) being given; and
(b) has not otherwise
declined to make the ruling by the end of that period.
(4) The applicant must lodge
with the objection a draft *private ruling.
359‑55 Revised private rulings
(1) The
Commissioner may make a revised *private ruling that
applies to you if:
(a) the Commissioner
had previously made a private ruling that applies to you; and
(b) if the ruling is
not an *indirect tax or excise ruling—when the
Commissioner makes the revised private ruling:
(i) the *scheme to which the earlier ruling relates has not begun to be
carried out; and
(ii) if
the earlier ruling relates to an income year or other accounting period—that
year or period has not begun.
Note: Your private ruling may be
affected by a later inconsistent ruling: see section 357‑75.
(2) The Commissioner must
give you a copy of the revised *private ruling. The copy
may be given electronically.
(3) The Commissioner may
make the revised *private ruling whether or not there is an
application for the revised ruling.
(4) When the revised *private ruling is made, the ruling in its initial form stops
applying to you.
(5) However, if:
(a) the *private ruling is an *indirect tax or excise
ruling; and
(b) the revised
private ruling specifies the time from which the revision begins to apply
(being a time after the time the revision is made);
the ruling in its initial form stops
applying to you at the time so specified.
359‑60 Objections, reviews and
appeals relating to private rulings
(1) You may object against a
*private ruling that applies to you in the manner set out in Part IVC
if you are dissatisfied with it.
(2) The ruling is taken to
be a taxation decision (within the meaning of that Part).
(3) However,
you cannot object against a *private ruling if:
(a) there is an
assessment for you for the income year or other accounting period to which the
ruling relates; or
(b) the ruling
relates to *withholding tax or *mining withholding tax that has become due and payable; or
(c) all
of the following subparagraphs apply:
(i) the
ruling relates to *excise duty, or another amount, payable in
relation to the goods under an *excise law;
(ii) the
Commissioner has made a decision about the excise duty, or other amount,
payable in relation to those goods;
(iii) the
decision is reviewable under an excise law.
359‑65 Commissioner may consider new
information on objection
(1) In deciding whether to
allow (wholly or in part), or to disallow, an objection under Part IVC
against a *private ruling, the Commissioner may
consider any additional information that the Commissioner did not consider when
making the ruling.
(2) For information you do
not have, the Commissioner must tell you what the information is and give you a
reasonable opportunity to respond before allowing or disallowing the objection.
(3) However, if the
Commissioner considers that the additional information is such that the *scheme to which the application related is materially different from
the scheme to which the ruling relates:
(a) the Commissioner
must request the applicant to make an application for another *private ruling; and
(b) the objection is
taken not to have been made.
359‑70 Successful objection decision
alters ruling
A *private ruling has effect as altered by an objection decision
(within the meaning of Part IVC) made by the Commissioner if:
(a) the Commissioner
made the decision allowing, wholly or in part, a taxation objection (within the
meaning of that Part) against the ruling; and
(b) the period in
which an appeal against, or an application for the review of, the decision may
be made has ended without such an appeal or application being made.
Note: See sections 14ZZC and
14ZZN for the time limits.
Division 360—Oral rulings
Guide to Division 360
360‑1 What this Division is about
An oral ruling is an
expression of the Commissioner’s opinion of the way in which a relevant
provision applies, or would apply, to you. Oral rulings are given on oral
application by you or your legal personal representative.
Oral rulings can only
be given for individuals.
The Commissioner must
give the ruling unless he or she considers that the advice you are seeking
relates to a business matter or a complex matter.
The Commissioner must
give the ruling orally and must give you a registration identifier for the
ruling.
Note: Division 357 has some
common rules that affect oral rulings.
Table of sections
Oral rulings
360‑5 Applying for and making
of oral rulings
360‑10 Withdrawing an
application for an oral ruling
360‑15 Commissioner
determinations
Oral rulings
360‑5 Applying for and making of
oral rulings
Applying for oral rulings
(1) If you are an
individual, you or your *legal personal
representative may apply to the Commissioner for advice on the way in which the
Commissioner considers a relevant provision applies or would apply to you in
relation to a specified *scheme.
Note: Section 357‑55 specifies
the relevant provisions.
(2) An application under
this section must be made orally and in the manner determined under section 360‑15.
(2A) You or your *legal personal representative must not apply for advice under this
section in relation to:
(a) an *indirect tax law (other than the *fuel
tax law); or
(b) an *excise law.
Making of oral rulings
(3) The Commissioner must
give you or your *legal personal representative that advice
unless:
(a) the Commissioner
considers that the advice sought relates to a *business
matter or a complex matter; or
(b) the matter sought
to be ruled on is already being, or has been, considered by the Commissioner
for you.
That advice is an oral ruling.
Note: The Commissioner may also
decline to make an oral ruling if:
(a) the
Commissioner has requested you to give further information under section 357‑105
and you have not given it to the Commissioner; or
(b) the
Commissioner considers that the correctness of an oral ruling would depend on
which assumptions were made about a future event or other matter (see section 357‑110).
(4) The Commissioner must
give that advice orally and in the manner determined under section 360‑15.
That advice must include a registration identifier for the ruling.
Note: The Commissioner must tell
you which assumptions the Commissioner made in making the ruling: see section 357‑110.
(5) You are not entitled to
receive a written record of that advice.
Note: However, you may be able to
apply for a private ruling on the matter under Division 359.
360‑10 Withdrawing an application
for an oral ruling
(1) You
or your *legal personal representative may withdraw
an application under section 360‑5 before the Commissioner makes the *oral ruling.
(2) The withdrawal must be
done orally and in the manner determined under section 360‑15.
360‑15 Commissioner determinations
The
Commissioner must, by writing, determine:
(a) the manner in
which oral applications are to be made under section 360‑5 or are to be
withdrawn; and
(b) the manner in
which the Commissioner is to give oral advice under that section.
Division 361—Non‑ruling advice and general
administrative practice
Table of sections
361‑5 Non‑ruling advice and
general administrative practice
361‑5 Non‑ruling advice and general
administrative practice
(1) You are not liable to
pay the *general interest charge or the *shortfall interest charge under a relevant provision to the extent
that the charge would relate to a *shortfall amount
or a *scheme shortfall amount that was caused
by:
(a) you reasonably
relying in good faith on:
(i) advice
(other than a ruling) given to you or your *agent
by the Commissioner; or
(ii) a
statement in a publication approved in writing by the Commissioner;
unless the
advice, or the statement or publication, is labelled as non‑binding; or
(b) you reasonably
relying in good faith on the Commissioner’s general administrative practice.
Note: Section 357‑55 specifies
the relevant provisions.
(2) However, subsection (1)
does not apply to any *general interest charge
accruing more than 21 days after the Commissioner notifies you of the correct
position.
Part 5‑25—Record‑keeping and other obligations of taxpayers
Division 382—Record‑keeping
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 382
382‑A Keeping records of indirect
tax transactions
382‑B Record keeping obligations of
deductible gift recipients
Guide to Division 382
382‑1 What this Division is about
You are required to
keep records of indirect tax transactions in accordance with this Division.
Deductible gift
recipients are required to keep records in accordance with this Division.
Subdivision 382‑A—Keeping records of indirect tax transactions
Table of sections
382‑5 Keeping records of
indirect tax transactions
382‑5 Keeping records of indirect
tax transactions
Records of transactions
(1) You must:
(a) keep records that
record and explain all transactions and other acts you engage in that are
relevant to a *supply, importation, acquisition, dealing,
manufacture or entitlement to which this subsection applies; and
(b) retain
those records for the longest of:
(i) 5
years after the completion of the transactions or acts to which they relate;
and
(ii) the *period of review for any assessment of an *assessable
amount to which those records, transactions or acts relate; and
(iii) if
such an assessment has been amended under Subdivision 155‑B—the period of
4 years mentioned in paragraph 155‑70(2)(a) (which provides for a
refreshed period of review) that applies to the latest such amendment.
(2) Subsection (1)
applies to:
(a) a *taxable supply, *taxable importation, *creditable acquisition or *creditable
importation made by you; or
(b) a *supply made by you that is *GST‑free or *input taxed; or
(c) a *wine taxable dealing on which you are liable for *wine tax; or
(d) any other
assessable dealing within the meaning of the *Wine
Tax Act made by you; or
(e) your entitlement
to a *wine tax credit; or
(f) a *taxable supply of a luxury car, or a *taxable
importation of a luxury car, made by you; or
(g) your entitlement
to a special credit under the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax
Transition) Act 1999 or the A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax and
Luxury Car Tax Transition) Act 1999; or
(h) if you are
entitled to a *fuel tax credit for fuel that you acquire,
manufacture or import—the acquisition, manufacture or importation; or
(i) if you are
liable, as a recipient of a taxable supply, to pay the *GST
on a taxable supply because of section 15C of the A New Tax System
(Goods and Services Tax Transition) Act 1999—the taxable supply.
(3) If you give the
Commissioner a return that takes into account:
(a) an *input tax credit that is attributable to a *tax
period under subsection 29‑10(4) of the *GST
Act; or
(b) a *fuel tax credit that is attributable to a tax period or *fuel tax return period under subsection 65‑5(4) of the Fuel
Tax Act 2006;
you must:
(c) keep records that
record and explain all transactions and other acts you engage in that are
relevant to the acquisition or importation in question; and
(d) retain those
records for at least 5 years after the return was given to the Commissioner.
Records of elections, choices,
estimates, determinations and calculations
(4) If you make any
election, choice, estimate, determination or calculation under an *indirect tax law, you must:
(a) keep records
containing particulars of:
(i) the
election, choice, estimate, determination or calculation; and
(ii) in
the case of an estimate, determination or calculation—the basis on which, and
the method by which, the estimate, determination or calculation was made; and
(b) retain those
records:
(i) if
the indirect tax law specifies circumstances in which the election, choice,
estimate, determination or calculation ceases to have effect—for at least 5
years after the election, choice, estimate, determination or calculation ceased
to have effect; or
(ii) in
any other case—for at least 5 years after the election, choice, estimate,
determination or calculation was made.
(5) This section requires a
record of an *arrangement entered into under section 153‑50
of the *GST Act to be kept and retained by the
party entering into the arrangement as principal. It does not require such a
record to be kept or retained by the party entering into the arrangement as intermediary
(within the meaning of that section).
(6) This section requires
records of a notice given under subsection 153‑65(2) of the *GST Act to be kept and retained by both the entity giving the notice
and the entity receiving it.
(7) Without limiting subsection (4),
if you choose to apply Division 63 (non‑profit sub‑entities) of the *GST Act, you must:
(a) keep records that
record:
(i) your
choice to apply that Division; and
(ii) each
branch that is treated as a separate entity for the purposes of the *GST law; and
(iii) each
branch that has ceased to be treated as a separate entity for the purposes of
the GST law; and
(b) retain those
records for at least 5 years after you revoke the choice.
Requirements of records
(8) The records must be:
(a) in English, or
readily accessible and easily convertible into English; and
(b) such as to enable
your liabilities and entitlements under an *indirect
tax law to be readily ascertained.
Offence
(9) An entity commits an
offence if:
(a) the entity is
required to keep or retain a record under this section; and
(b) the entity does
not keep or retain the record in accordance with this section.
Penalty: 30 penalty units.
Note 1: Chapter 2 of the Criminal
Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 2: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 3: Section 288‑25 imposes an
administrative penalty if an entity does not keep or retain records as required
by this section.
(10) Subsection (9)
is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see
section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Defence
(11) Subsection (9) does
not apply if:
(a) the Commissioner
notifies the entity that the entity does not need to retain the record; or
(b) the entity is a
company that has been finally dissolved.
Note: A defendant bears an
evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (10): see
subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.
(12) For the purposes of
section 288‑25, this section does not require an entity to retain a record
if:
(a) the Commissioner
notifies the entity that the entity does not need to retain the record; or
(b) the entity is a
company that has been finally dissolved.
Note: Section 288‑25 imposes
an administrative penalty if an entity does not keep or retain records as
required by this section.
Subdivision 382‑B—Record keeping obligations of deductible gift recipients
Table of sections
382‑15 Deductible gift
recipients to keep records
382‑15 Deductible gift recipients to
keep records
(1) A *deductible gift recipient must:
(a) keep records that
record and explain all transactions and other acts the deductible gift
recipient engages in that are relevant to the deductible gift recipient’s
status as a deductible gift recipient; and
(b) retain those
records for at least 5 years after the completion of the transactions or acts
to which they relate.
Note 1: Section 288‑25 imposes an
administrative penalty if an entity does not keep or retain records as required
by this section.
Note 2: The Commissioner may request
information from certain deductible gift recipients: see sections 353‑20
and 426‑40.
Requirements of records
(2) The records must be:
(a) in English, or
readily accessible and easily convertible into English; and
(b) such as to show
that the *deductible gift recipient uses each of the
following only for the principal purpose of the fund, authority or institution:
(i) gifts
of money or property for that purpose;
(ii) contributions
described in item 7 or 8 of the table in section 30‑15 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 in relation to a *fund‑raising
event held for that purpose;
(iii) money
received by the deductible gift recipient because of such gifts or
contributions.
Exception
(3) For the purposes of
section 288‑25, this section does not require a *deductible
gift recipient to retain a record if:
(a) the Commissioner
notifies the deductible gift recipient that the deductible gift recipient does
not need to retain the record; or
(b) the deductible
gift recipient is a company that has been finally dissolved.
Division 388—Requirements about giving material to the
Commissioner
Table of Subdivisions
388‑A Object of Division
388‑B General provisions
Subdivision 388‑A—Object of Division
388‑5 Object of Division
The object of this
Division is to set out requirements to ensure the integrity and efficiency of
giving material to the Commissioner.
Subdivision 388‑B—General provisions
Table of sections
388‑50 Approved forms
388‑52 Saturdays, Sundays and
public holidays
388‑55 Commissioner may defer
time for lodgment
388‑60 Declaration by entity
388‑65 Declaration by entity
where agent gives document
388‑70 Declaration by agent
388‑75 Signing declarations
388‑80 Electronic notification
of BAS amounts
388‑85 Truncating amounts
388‑50 Approved forms
(1) A return, notice, statement,
application or other document under a *taxation law is in
the approved form if, and only if:
(a) it is in the form
approved in writing by the Commissioner for that kind of return, notice,
statement, application or other document; and
(b) it contains a
declaration signed by a person or persons as the form requires (see section 388‑75);
and
(c) it
contains the information that the form requires, and any further information,
statement or document as the Commissioner requires, whether in the form or
otherwise; and
(d) for a return,
notice, statement, application or document that is required to be given to the
Commissioner—it is given in the manner that the Commissioner requires (which
may include electronically).
(1A) Despite subsection (1),
a document that satisfies paragraphs (1)(a), (b) and (d) but not paragraph (1)(c)
is also in the approved form if it contains the information
required by the Commissioner. The Commissioner must specify the requirement in
writing.
(2) The Commissioner may combine
in the same *approved form more than one return,
notice, statement, application or other document.
(3) The Commissioner may
approve a different *approved form for different
entities.
Example: The Commissioner may require
high wealth individuals to lodge a different income tax return to that required
to be lodged by an individual whose only income is a salary.
388‑52 Saturdays, Sundays and public
holidays
Where an *approved form is required to be given to the Commissioner or to
another entity by, or on, a day (the lodgment day) that is not a *business day, the approved form may be given on the first business
day after the lodgment day.
388‑55 Commissioner may defer time
for lodgment
(1) The Commissioner may
defer the time within which an *approved form is
required to be given to the Commissioner or to another entity.
(2) A deferral under subsection (1)
does not defer the time for payment of any amount to the Commissioner.
Note: Section 255‑10 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for payment of an amount of a tax‑related
liability.
388‑60 Declaration by entity
If
you give a return, notice, statement, application or other document to the
Commissioner in the *approved form, you must make a
declaration in the approved form that any information in the document is true
and correct.
388‑65 Declaration by entity where
agent gives document
(1) If a return, notice,
statement, application or other document of yours is to be given to the
Commissioner in the *approved form by an agent on your
behalf, you must make a declaration in writing:
(a) stating that you
have authorised the agent to give the document to the Commissioner; and
(b) declaring that
any information you provided to the agent for the preparation of the document
is true and correct.
(2) You must give the
declaration to the agent.
(3) You must retain the
declaration or a copy of it for:
(a) 5 years after it
is made; or
(b) a shorter period
determined by the Commissioner in writing for you; or
(c) a shorter period
determined by the Commissioner by legislative instrument for a class of
entities that includes you.
(3A) A determination under paragraph (3)(c)
may specify different periods for different classes of entities.
(4) You must produce the
declaration or copy if requested to do so within that period by the
Commissioner.
(5) The agent must not give
the document to the Commissioner before you make the declaration.
(6) You must sign the
declaration.
388‑70 Declaration by agent
If an agent gives a
return, notice, statement, application or other document to the Commissioner in
the *approved form on behalf of another entity,
the agent must, if the document so requires, make a declaration in the approved
form stating that:
(a) the document has
been prepared in accordance with the information supplied by the other entity;
and
(b) the agent has
received a declaration from the other entity stating that the information
provided to the agent is true and correct; and
(c) the agent is
authorised by the other entity to give the document to the Commissioner.
388‑75 Signing declarations
(1) You must sign a
declaration in a return, notice, statement, application or other document you
give to the Commissioner in paper form.
(2) If your agent gives a
return, notice, statement, application or other document to the Commissioner on
your behalf in paper form, the document must contain:
(a) if the document
so requires—a declaration made by you with your signature; and
(b) if the document
so requires—a declaration made by your agent with the agent’s signature.
(3) Any return, notice,
statement, application or other document of yours that is *lodged electronically:
(a) if you give it to
the Commissioner—must contain your declaration (see section 388‑60) with
your *electronic signature; or
(b) if your agent
gives it to the Commissioner—must contain the agent’s declaration (see section 388‑70)
with the agent’s electronic signature.
(4) Any return, notice,
statement, application or other document of yours that is given by telephone:
(a) if you give
it—must contain your *telephone signature; or
(b) if your agent
gives it—must contain your agent’s telephone signature.
388‑80 Electronic notification of
BAS amounts
An
entity that, under section 31‑25 of the *GST
Act, chooses or is required to *lodge a *GST return electronically must also electronically notify the
Commissioner of all other *BAS amounts whose
notification is required on the same day as the GST return (ignoring any
extension allowed by the Commissioner under section 31‑10 of that Act or a
deferral under section 388‑55).
388‑85 Truncating amounts
If an *approved form that you are required to give the Commissioner
specifies that amounts set out in the form are to be expressed in whole
dollars, you truncate the amounts to the nearest whole dollar.
Example: Stefan Pty Ltd calculates that
its PAYG instalment for a quarter is $8,496.73. Because the approved form
requires amounts to be truncated, the amount would be reported in its BAS as
$8,496.
Division 390—Superannuation reporting
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 390
390‑A Member information statements and roll‑over superannuation benefit
statements
390‑B Statements relating to release authorities
390‑C Other statements
Guide to Division 390
390‑1 What this Division is about
Superannuation
providers must give the Commissioner information about superannuation plans
(such as contributions to superannuation plans) periodically.
Superannuation
providers are also required to give information about roll‑over superannuation
benefits paid from superannuation plans.
Note: For requirements for payment
summaries in relation to superannuation lump sums, see section 16‑165.
Subdivision 390‑A—Member information statements and roll‑over superannuation
benefit statements
390‑5 Member information statements
(1) A *superannuation provider in relation to a *superannuation
plan must give the Commissioner a statement in relation to an individual if the
individual held a *superannuation interest in the plan at any
time during the period specified in a determination under subsection (6).
Note 1: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
Note 2: A
person may make a complaint to the Superannuation Complaints Tribunal under
section 15CA of the Superannuation (Resolution of Complaints) Act 1993
if the person is dissatisfied with a statement given to the Commissioner by a
superannuation provider under this section.
(4) A statement under subsection (1)
must be in the *approved form.
(5) The statement must be
given to the Commissioner on a day specified in the determination under subsection (6).
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(6) The Commissioner may
determine, by legislative instrument:
(a) the period
mentioned in subsection (1); and
(b) the day on which
a statement must be given to the Commissioner.
(7) The period specified in
the determination:
(a) may be:
(i) all
or part of an income year; or
(ii) all
or part of a financial year; or
(iii) any
other period; and
(b) may be different:
(i) for
different kinds of *superannuation provider; and
(ii) in
relation to any other matter.
(8) Subsection (7) does
not limit the way in which the determination may specify the period.
(9) The *approved form may require the statement to contain the following
information:
(a) information
relating to the contributions made to the *superannuation
plan, including the amount and type of the contributions;
(b) the *value of any *superannuation interest,
or superannuation account, the individual held in the superannuation plan at a
particular time;
(c) if no
contributions were made to the superannuation plan in respect of the individual
during the period—a statement to that effect.
(9A) Treat the following as
contributions for the purposes of this section:
(a) *notional taxed contributions in relation to a *defined benefit interest in the *superannuation
plan;
(b) amounts,
mentioned in subsection 291‑25(3) or paragraph 292‑90(4)(a) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997, allocated by the *superannuation
provider in relation to the superannuation plan;
(c) amounts mentioned
in paragraph 292‑90(4)(c) of that Act;
(d) *defined benefit contributions in relation to a *defined benefit interest in the superannuation plan.
(10) Subsection (9) does
not limit the information that the *approved form may
require the statement to contain.
(11) The *approved form may require the statement to contain the *tax file number of:
(a) the *superannuation provider; and
(b) the *superannuation plan; and
(c) the individual who
holds the *superannuation interest in the plan if:
(i) the
individual has quoted the individual’s tax file number to the superannuation
provider; or
(ii) a
person has quoted the individual’s tax file number to the superannuation
provider (and had authority to do so).
390‑10
Statements about roll‑over superannuation benefits etc.
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a *superannuation provider (the first provider) in
relation to a *superannuation plan (the first plan)
pays a *roll‑over superannuation benefit to
another superannuation provider in relation to another superannuation plan; or
(b) a superannuation
provider (also the first provider) in relation to a
superannuation plan (also the first plan) pays to another
superannuation provider in relation to another superannuation plan a *superannuation benefit (other than a roll‑over superannuation
benefit) in these circumstances:
(i) the
first plan or the other superannuation plan is, or both are, a *non‑complying superannuation plan for the income year in which the
benefit is paid; or
(ii) the
first plan or the other superannuation plan was, or both were, a non‑complying
superannuation plan for the previous income year.
(2) The first provider in relation
to the first plan must:
(a) give the other
superannuation provider a statement in relation to the benefit within 7 days
after the day on which the benefit is paid; and
(b) give the
individual in respect of whom the benefit is paid a statement in relation to
the benefit within 30 days after the day on which the benefit is paid.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
(3) A statement under subsection (2)
must be in the *approved form.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(4) The
*approved form may require the statement to contain the following
information:
(a) information
relating to contributions made to the first plan in respect of the individual
during the period specified in a determination under subsection (5) in
which the benefit is paid, to the extent those contributions are reflected in
that benefit;
(b) other information
relating to the benefit, including the *tax
free component, *taxable component, *element taxed in the fund and *element
untaxed in the fund (as applicable) of the benefit.
(5) The
Commissioner may determine, by legislative instrument, the period mentioned in paragraph (4)(a).
(6) The period specified in
the determination:
(a) may be:
(i) all
or part of an income year; or
(ii) all
or part of a financial year; or
(iii) any
other period; and
(b) may be different:
(i) for
different kinds of *superannuation provider; and
(ii) in
relation to any other matter.
(7) Subsection (6) does
not limit the way in which the determination may specify the period.
(8) The *approved form may require the statement to contain different
information depending on whether paragraph (1)(a) or (b) applies.
(9) Subsections (4) and
(8) do not limit the information that the *approved
form may require the statement to contain.
(10) The *approved form may require the statement to contain the *tax file number of:
(a) the first
provider; and
(b) the first plan;
and
(c) the individual in
respect of whom the benefit is paid if:
(i) the
individual has quoted the individual’s tax file number to the first provider;
or
(ii) a
person who made at least some of the contributions mentioned in paragraph (4)(a)
has quoted the individual’s tax file number to the first provider (and had
authority to do so).
390‑12
Statements about benefits paid to KiwiSaver schemes
(1) This section applies if
the trustee of a *complying superannuation fund pays a *superannuation benefit to a *KiwiSaver
scheme provider.
(2) The trustee must:
(a) give to the *KiwiSaver scheme provider a statement under this section within 7
days after the day on which the benefit is paid; and
(b) give to the
individual in respect of whom the benefit is paid a statement in relation to the
benefit within 30 days after the day on which the benefit is paid.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
(3) A statement under subsection (2)
must be in the *approved form.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows the
Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(4) The *approved form may require the statement to contain the following
information:
(a) information
relating to contributions made to the *complying
superannuation fund in respect of the individual during the period specified in
a determination under subsection (5) in which the benefit is paid, to the
extent those contributions are reflected in that benefit;
(b) other information
relating to the benefit, including the *tax
free component and *taxable component (as applicable)
of the benefit.
(5) The Commissioner may
determine, by legislative instrument, the period mentioned in paragraph (4)(a).
(6) The period specified in
the determination:
(a) may be:
(i) all
or part of an income year; or
(ii) all
or part of a *financial year; or
(iii) any
other period; and
(b) may be different:
(i) for
different kinds of trustee; and
(ii) in
relation to any other matter.
(7) Subsection (6) does
not limit the way in which the determination may specify the period.
(8) Subsection (4) does
not limit the information that the *approved form may
require the statement to contain.
390‑15
Superannuation statements to members
(1) An individual, or the
trustee of an individual’s estate:
(a) may ask a *superannuation provider who has given information in a statement
under section 390‑5, 390‑10 or 390‑12 in relation to the individual to
give the individual or the trustee the same information; and
(b) may ask the
superannuation provider to give the information in writing.
(2) The *superannuation provider must:
(a) comply with the
request within 30 days after receiving the request; and
(b) if the individual
or the trustee asked for the information to be given in writing—give the
information in the *approved form.
Note 1: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
Note 2: Section 388‑55 allows the
Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(3) Subsection (2) does
not apply if the *superannuation provider has given the same
information to the individual or the trustee previously (whether or not on
request by the individual or trustee).
(4) If the individual or the
trustee does not ask for the information to be given in writing, the *superannuation provider may give the information to the individual
or trustee in a way that the provider considers appropriate.
Subdivision 390‑B—Statements relating to release authorities
390‑65 Statements relating to
release authorities
(1) A
*superannuation provider in relation to a *superannuation
plan must give the Commissioner a statement under this section if the
superannuation provider has:
(a) been given a
release authority in accordance with:
(i) section 292‑410
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997; or
(ii) section 292‑80B
of the Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997; or
(iii) Subdivision 135‑B
in this Schedule; and
(b) paid an amount out
of the plan in accordance with the release authority.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
(2) The statement must be
given within 30 days after the amount is paid out of the plan.
(3) A statement under subsection (1)
must be in the *approved form.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(4) The *approved form must require the statement to contain information
relating to the release authority.
(5) The *approved form may require the statement to contain the following
information:
(a) the amount paid;
(b) details relating
to the *superannuation provider in relation to the
*superannuation plan;
(c) the individual in
respect of whom the release authority was given to the superannuation provider.
(6) Subsection (5) does
not limit the information that the *approved form may
require the statement to contain.
(7) The *superannuation provider must also give the individual to whom the
release authority relates a copy of the statement within 30 days after the
amount is paid out of the plan.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
Subdivision 390‑C—Other statements
390‑115 Change or omission in
information given to the Commissioner
(1) If a *superannuation provider
in relation to a *superannuation plan becomes aware of a
material change or material omission in any information given to the
Commissioner in relation to the plan under this Division, the provider must:
(a) tell the
Commissioner of the change in the *approved form; or
(b) give
the omitted information to the Commissioner in the approved form.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
(2) Information required by subsection (1)
must be given no later than 30 days after the *superannuation
provider becomes aware of the change or omission.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
Division 391—First home saver account reporting
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 391
391‑A Account activity statements
391‑B Transfer statements
Guide to Division 391
391‑1 What this Division is about
FHSA providers must
give the Commissioner information periodically about FHSAs (such as information
about contributions made to FHSAs).
FHSA providers are
also required to give information to other FHSA providers when making transfer
payments from FHSAs to other FHSAs or to superannuation interests.
Subdivision 391‑A—Account activity statements
Table
of sections
391‑5 FHSA account activity
statements
391‑5 FHSA account activity
statements
(1) An *FHSA provider must give the Commissioner the following statements
under this section:
(a) a statement in
relation to the amount of *personal FHSA
contributions (if any) made to each *FHSA
provided by the provider during the period mentioned in subsection (3) for
that kind of statement;
(b) a statement in
relation to the balance of an FHSA provided by the provider during the period
mentioned in subsection (3) for that kind of statement;
(c) a statement in
relation to each FHSA opened or issued (if any) by the provider during the
period specified in subsection (3) for that kind of statement;
(d) a statement in
relation to each FHSA closed (if any) by the provider during the period
specified in subsection (3) for that kind of statement;
(e) a statement in
relation to payments (other than a payment of a kind mentioned in subparagraph 31(1)(b)(iii)
or paragraph (1)(f), (g) or (h) of the First Home Saver Accounts Act
2008) (if any) made from each FHSA provided by the provider during the
period specified in subsection (3) for that kind of statement.
Note: Section 286‑75 in
Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 provides an
administrative penalty for breach of any of these paragraphs. A breach of any
of these paragraphs may also be an offence under section 8C of that Act.
(2) However, the provider is
not required to give a statement mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) if, during
the period, the provider transferred the balance of the *FHSA to another FHSA.
(3) The period for a
particular kind of statement under subsection (1) is:
(a) a financial year;
or
(b) if the
Commissioner determines another period under subsection (4) for the kind
of statement—that period.
(4) The Commissioner may
determine, by legislative instrument, a period mentioned in subsection (1)
for a kind of statement.
(5) A statement under subsection (1)
must be in the *approved form.
(6) A statement must be
given to the Commissioner on or before a day specified in the determination
under subsection (7) for the statement.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(7) The Commissioner may
determine, by legislative instrument, the day, on or before which, a statement
under subsection (1) must be given to the Commissioner.
(8) The
day specified in the determination may be different:
(a) for different
kinds of *FHSA provider; and
(b) in relation to
any other matter.
(9) Subsection (8) does
not limit the way in which the determination may specify the day.
(10) The *approved form may require a statement to contain the following:
(a) the *tax file number of the *FHSA holder;
(b) the tax file
number of the *FHSA provider.
(11) Subsection (10) does
not limit the information that the *approved form may
require a statement to contain.
Subdivision 391‑B—Transfer statements
Table
of sections
391‑10 Statements about transfer
payments between FHSAs etc.
391‑10 Statements about transfer
payments between FHSAs etc.
(1) This section applies if
an *FHSA provider (the first provider) in relation to an *FHSA (the first FHSA) makes a payment from the FHSA:
(a) to an FHSA
provided by another FHSA provider, in accordance with section 35 of the First
Home Saver Accounts Act 2008; or
(b) to a *superannuation provider in relation to a *complying
superannuation plan, in accordance with section 22 or 34 of that Act.
(2) The first provider must:
(a) give the other *FHSA provider or *superannuation provider
a statement in relation to the payment within 7 days after the day on which the
payment is made; and
(b) give the
individual for whose benefit the payment is made a statement in relation to the
payment within 30 days after the day on which the payment is made.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
(3) A statement under subsection (2)
must be in the *approved form.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(4) The
*approved form may require the statement to contain the following
information:
(a) information
relating to *personal FHSA contributions made to the
first FHSA;
(b) information
relating to the FHSA holder, including whether the individual is in breach of
the account balance cap and whether the condition in subparagraph 32(1)(c)(i)
of the First Home Saver Accounts Act 2008 has been met in relation to
the individual.
(5) Subsection (4) does
not limit the information that the *approved form may
require the statement to contain.
(6) The *approved form may require the statement to contain the *tax file number of:
(a) the first provider;
and
(b) the *FHSA holder.
Division 392—Employee share scheme reporting
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 392
392‑A Statements
392‑B Miscellaneous
Guide to Division 392
392‑1 What this Division is about
A company that
provides ESS interests to an individual under an employee share scheme during a
year must, at the end of the year (and, in certain cases, at the end of a later
year), give certain information to the Commissioner and to the individual.
Note: For
the tax treatment of employee share schemes, see Division 83A of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Subdivision 392‑A—Statements
Table
of sections
392‑5 Statements by providers
392‑10 Change or omission in
information given to the Commissioner
392‑5 Statements by providers
Statements
(1) An entity (the provider)
must give a statement to the Commissioner and to an individual for a *financial year if:
(a) both of the
following subparagraphs apply:
(i) the
provider provides *ESS interests to the individual during the
year;
(ii) Subdivision 83A‑B
or 83A‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about employee share
schemes) applies to the interests; or
(b) all
of the following subparagraphs apply:
(i) the
provider has provided ESS interests to the individual (whether during the year
or during an earlier year);
(ii) Subdivision 83A‑C
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about employee share schemes)
applies to the interests;
(iii) the *ESS deferred taxing point for the interests occurs during the year.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
Form of statements
(2) The statement must be in
the *approved form.
(3) The *approved form may require the statement to contain the following
information:
(a) the provider’s *ABN;
(b) the following information
about the individual:
(i) the
individual’s name and address;
(ii) if
the individual has quoted his or her*tax file number to
the provider—that tax file number;
(iii) if
the individual acquired the interests in relation to any services provided to
the provider, or to a *subsidiary of the
provider, in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise
*carried on by the individual, and the individual has *quoted his or her ABN to the provider—that ABN;
(c) the following
information about any interests to which both paragraph (1)(a) of this
section and Subdivision 83A‑B of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
apply:
(i) the
number of the interests;
(ii) the
amount paid, at or before the time of acquisition, towards acquiring the
interests;
(iii) the provider’s
estimate of the *market value of the interests at the time
of acquisition;
(iv) the
amount of *TFN withholding tax (ESS) paid or payable
by the provider in respect of the interests during the year;
(d) the following
information about any interests to which both paragraph (1)(a) of this
section and Subdivision 83A‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
apply:
(i) the
number of the interests;
(ii) the
amount paid, at or before the time of acquisition, towards acquiring the
interests;
(e) the following
information about any interests to which paragraph (1)(b) applies:
(i) the
number of the interests;
(ii) the
amount paid, after the time of acquisition but not after the *ESS deferred taxing point, towards acquiring the interests;
(iii) the
provider’s estimate of the market value of the interests at the ESS deferred
taxing point;
(iv) the
amount of TFN withholding tax (ESS) paid or payable by the provider in respect
of the interests during the year.
Note: Regulations made for the
purposes of section 83A‑315 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 may
substitute different amounts for the market values of the ESS interests: see
section 392‑15 in this Schedule.
(4) Subsection (3) does
not limit the information that the *approved form may
require the statement to contain.
When statements must be given
(5) The statement must be
given:
(a) to the individual
no later than 14 July after the end of the year; and
(b) to the
Commissioner no later than 14 August after the end of the year.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
Disregard 30 day rule for ESS deferred
taxing point if provider does not know when shares are disposed of etc.
(6) For the purposes of Subdivision 14‑C
(about TFN withholding tax (ESS)) and this Division, in working out the *ESS deferred taxing point for an *ESS
interest, disregard subsection 83A‑115(3) or 83A‑120(3) (whichever is
applicable) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about the 30 day
rule) if the provider does not know the time worked out under that subsection
at the earlier of:
(a) the time (if any)
the provider gives a statement to the relevant individual under this section
for the *financial year mentioned in subsection (7);
and
(b) the later of:
(i) 14 July
after the end of the financial year mentioned in subsection (7); and
(ii) if,
under section 388‑55, the Commissioner defers to a later time the time
within which the statement under this section for that financial year is
required to be given to the individual—that later time.
(7) The *financial year is the financial year in which the *ESS deferred taxing point for the *ESS
interest occurs, disregarding subsection 83A‑115(3) or 83A‑120(3)
(whichever is applicable) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about
the 30 day rule).
392‑10 Change or omission in
information given to the Commissioner
(1) If the provider becomes
aware of a material change or material omission in any information given to the
individual or the Commissioner under this Division, the provider must:
(a) tell the
individual or the Commissioner, as applicable, of the change in the *approved form; or
(b) give the omitted
information to the individual or the Commissioner, as applicable, in the approved
form.
(2) Information required by subsection (1)
must be given no later than 30 days after the provider becomes aware of the
change or omission.
Note 1: Section 388‑55 allows the
Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
Note 2: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this section.
Subdivision 392‑B—Miscellaneous
Table
of sections
392‑15 Application of certain
provisions of Division 83A of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997
392‑15 Application of certain
provisions of Division 83A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
The following
provisions of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 have effect for the
purposes of this Division in the same way as they have for the purposes of
Division 83A of that Act:
(a) section 83A‑130
(about takeovers and restructures);
(b) section 83A‑305
(about associates);
(c) section 83A‑315
(about market values and discounts);
(d) section 83A‑320
(about trusts);
(e) section 83A‑325
(about relationships similar to employment);
(f) section 83A‑335
(about stapled securities);
(g) section 83A‑340
(about indeterminate rights).
Division 393—Reports by investment bodies
Guide to Division 393
393‑1 What this Division is about
An investment body
must give to the Commissioner quarterly reports about the quoting of investors’
tax file numbers and ABNs, and annual reports on Part VA investments.
Table
of sections
393‑5 Reports about quoting
tax file numbers and ABNs
393‑10 Annual investment income
reports
393‑15 Errors in reports
393‑5 Reports about quoting tax file
numbers and ABNs
(1) If an entity is an *investment body in relation to a *Part VA
investment for which either of the following occurs during a *quarter:
(a) an *investor’s *tax file number is *quoted in connection with the investment;
(b) an investor’s *ABN is quoted in connection with the investment;
the entity must give to the Commissioner
a report on all Part VA investments, in relation to which the entity is an
investment body, for which either of those events occurs during the quarter.
(2) The report must be in
the *approved form.
(3) The report must be given
to the Commissioner no later than 28 days after the end of the *quarter.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(4) Subsection (1)
does not apply to an *investment body in relation to a *quarter for which the investment body has complied with an *arrangement in force between the investment body and the
Commissioner relating to the reporting of *tax
file numbers and *ABNs.
393‑10 Annual investment income
reports
(1) An entity must give to
the Commissioner a report, for a *financial year, on all *Part VA investments in relation to which it was an *investment body at any time during the year.
(2) The report must be in the
*approved form.
(3) The report must be given
to the Commissioner within the following period after the end of the *financial year:
(a) the period the
Commissioner specifies by legislative instrument; or
(b) otherwise—4
months.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(4) The report need not
include particulars of an investment for which the return during the *financial year was less than $1.
(5) Despite subsection (1),
the entity need not give to the Commissioner a report, for a *financial year during which the total number of *Part VA investments in relation to which it was an *investment body is less than:
(a) the number the
Commissioner specifies by legislative instrument; or
(b) otherwise—10.
(6) Subsection (1) does
not apply to an *investment body in relation to a *financial year for which the investment body has complied with an *arrangement in force between the investment body and the
Commissioner relating to the reporting on *Part VA
investments.
393‑15 Errors in reports
(1) An
entity must give to the Commissioner a corrected report if:
(a) the entity has
given a report to the Commissioner under this Division; and
(b) after giving the
report, the entity becomes aware of a material error in it.
(2) The report must be in
the *approved form.
(3) The report must be given
to the Commissioner no later than 28 days after the entity becomes aware of the
error.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
Division 394—Reporting about forestry managed investment
schemes
Guide to Division 394
394‑1 What this Division is about
A forestry manager of
a forestry managed investment scheme must give the Commissioner information
about initial contributions by participants in the scheme. The forestry manager
must also inform the Commissioner if the trees are not established under the
scheme within 18 months of the first investment in the scheme.
Table
of sections
394‑5 Statements about initial
contributions to scheme
394‑10 Statements about failure
to establish trees within 18 months
394‑5 Statements about initial
contributions to scheme
(1) The *forestry manager of a *forestry managed
investment scheme must give the Commissioner a statement in relation to the
scheme if:
(a) the scheme
satisfies the requirement in paragraph 394‑10(1)(c) of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 (the *70% DFE rule); and
(b) the forestry
manager (or an *associate of the forestry manager)
receives an amount under the scheme that is included in the forestry manager’s
(or the associate’s) assessable income under section 15‑46 of that Act;
and
(c) that amount is
the amount that is first paid under the scheme by a *participant
in the scheme.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
(2) A statement under subsection (1)
must be in the *approved form.
(3) The statement must be
given to the Commissioner within 3 months after the end of the income year in
which the *forestry manager (or the *associate) receives the amount.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(4) The *approved form may require the statement to contain the following
information:
(a) the name of the
scheme;
(b) information
relating to the identity of the *forestry manager (or the
*associate);
(c) information
relating to the amounts paid or payable under the scheme by *participants in the scheme.
(5) Subsection (4) does
not limit the information that the *approved form may
require the statement to contain.
394‑10 Statements about failure to
establish trees within 18 months
(1) If:
(a) a *forestry managed investment scheme satisfies the requirement in
paragraph 394‑10(1)(c) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (the *70% DFE rule); and
(b) the condition in
subsection 394‑10(4) of that Act is not satisfied in relation to the
scheme;
the *forestry
manager of the scheme must give the Commissioner a statement in relation to the
reasons why that condition was not satisfied.
Note: Section 286‑75 provides
an administrative penalty for breach of this subsection.
(2) A statement under subsection (1)
must be in the *approved form.
(3) The statement must be
given to the Commissioner within 3 months after the end of the 18 months mentioned
in subsection 394‑10(4) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
(4) The
*approved form may require the statement to contain the following
information:
(a) the name of the
scheme;
(b) information
relating to the identity of the *forestry manager;
(c) information
relating to the circumstances that gave rise to the condition not being
satisfied.
(5) Subsection (4) does
not limit the information that the *approved form may
require the statement to contain.
Division 396—FATCA
Guide to Division 396
396‑1 What this Division is about
This Subdivision gives
effect to the FATCA Agreement between the Government of Australia and the
Government of the United States of America.
Reporting Australian
Financial Institutions must give the Commissioner certain information about
U.S. Reportable Accounts. For the 2015 and 2016 calendar years, they must also
give the Commissioner information about payments made to Nonparticipating
Financial Institutions.
This Subdivision also
creates record‑keeping obligations in relation to the requirements to give the
Commissioner information.
Table
of sections
396‑5 Statements about U.S.
Reportable Accounts
396‑10 Statements about payments
to Nonparticipating Financial Institutions
396‑15 Meaning of the FATCA Agreement
396‑20 Permissions and elections
396‑25 Record keeping
396‑5 Statements about U.S.
Reportable Accounts
(1) Subsection (2)
applies if:
(a) an entity is a
Reporting Australian Financial Institution (within the meaning of the *FATCA Agreement) at any time in a calendar year; and
(b) the entity
maintains a U.S. Reportable Account (within the meaning of the FATCA Agreement)
at any time in the year.
(2) The
entity must give the Commissioner a statement that contains the information in
respect of that U.S. Reportable Account that the Australian Government is
required to obtain in order for it to fulfil its obligations under the *FATCA Agreement in respect of that U.S. Reportable Account.
(3) The information
contained in the statement must be determined by the entity by applying the due
diligence procedures required under the *FATCA
Agreement.
Note: Those due diligence
procedures are specified in Annex I to the FATCA Agreement, subject to the
application of Article 7 of that Agreement (consistency in the application of
FATCA to partner jurisdictions).
(4) A statement under subsection (2)
must be in the *approved form.
(5) More than one statement
under subsection (2) may be included in the same document.
(6) The statement must be
given to the Commissioner no later than the first 31 July after the end of
the year.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
396‑10 Statements about payments to
Nonparticipating Financial Institutions
(1) Subsection (2)
applies if:
(a) an entity is a
Reporting Australian Financial Institution (within the meaning of the *FATCA Agreement) at any time in a calendar year; and
(b) the calendar year
is the 2015 or 2016 year; and
(c) the entity makes
a payment to a Nonparticipating Financial Institution (within the meaning of
the FATCA Agreement) at any time in the year.
(2) The entity must give the
Commissioner a statement that contains the information in respect of that
payment that the Australian Government is required to obtain in order for it to
fulfil its obligations under the *FATCA Agreement in
respect of that payment.
(3) The information
contained in the statement must be determined by the entity by applying the due
diligence procedures required under the *FATCA
Agreement.
Note: Those due diligence
procedures are specified in Annex I to the FATCA Agreement, subject to the
application of Article 7 of that Agreement (consistency in the application of
FATCA to partner jurisdictions).
(4) A statement under subsection (2)
must be in the *approved form.
(5) More than one statement
under subsection (2) may be included in the same document.
(6) The statement must be
given to the Commissioner no later than the first 31 July after the end of
the year.
Note: Section 388‑55 allows
the Commissioner to defer the time for giving an approved form.
396‑15 Meaning of the FATCA
Agreement
The FATCA
Agreement is the Agreement between the Government of Australia and the
Government of the United States of America to Improve International Tax
Compliance and to Implement FATCA, done at Canberra on 28 April 2014.
Note: The text of the Agreement is
set out in Australian Treaty Series [2014] ATNIF 5. In 2014, the text of the
Agreement in the Australian Treaty Series was accessible through the Australian
Treaties Library on the AustLII website (www.austlii.edu.au).
396‑20 Permissions and elections
(1) This section applies,
for the purposes of this Division:
(a) in determining
whether the conditions in subsections 396‑5(1) and 396‑10(1) are
satisfied; and
(b) in determining
which information the Australian Government is required to obtain in order for
it to fulfil its obligations under the *FATCA
Agreement.
(2) To
the extent that the *FATCA Agreement gives Australia
the ability to permit an entity to use or rely on matters provided for in U.S.
Treasury Regulations in determining obligations under the FATCA Agreement,
assume that the permission has been given.
(3) To
the extent that the *FATCA Agreement gives Australia
the ability to provide for an entity to make an election in determining
obligations under the FATCA Agreement, assume that the entity may make the
election.
396‑25 Record keeping
(1) If an entity is obliged
to give the Commissioner a statement under subsection 396‑5(2) or 396‑10(2),
the entity must keep written records that:
(a) correctly record
the procedures by which the entity determines the information that is required
to be contained in the statement; and
(b) are in English,
or readily accessible and easily convertible into English.
(2) The entity must retain
the records until the expiration of 5 years after the entity gives the
Commissioner the statement under subsection 396‑5(2) or 396‑10(2).
Note: Section 288‑25 imposes
an administrative penalty if an entity does not keep and retain records as
required by this section.
Division 398—Miscellaneous reporting obligations
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 398
398‑A Farm Management Deposit
reporting
Guide to Division 398
398‑1 What this Division is about
This Division
contains reporting obligations not covered by other Divisions of this Part.
Subdivision 398‑A—Farm Management Deposit reporting
Table of sections
398‑5 Reporting to Agriculture
Department
398‑5 Reporting to Agriculture
Department
FMD provider must provide monthly
information
(1) An *FMD provider must, before the 11th day after the end of a calendar
month, give in writing to the *Agriculture Secretary
the information specified in subsection (3) if the provider holds a *farm management deposit at the end of that month.
Penalty: 10 penalty units.
(2) An offence under subsection (1)
is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see
section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Information required
(3) The
information is:
(a) the
number of *farm management deposits held at the end
of that month; and
(b) the number of
depositors in respect of such deposits at the end of that month; and
(c) the sum of the
balances of such deposits at the end of that month; and
(d) any other
information, in relation to farm management deposits held by the *FMD provider at any time in that month, that is required by the
regulations for the purposes of this section.
Regulations not to require identity of
depositor
(4) Regulations made for the
purposes of paragraph (3)(d) must not require information:
(a) that discloses
the identity of a depositor; or
(b) from which the
identity of a depositor could reasonably be inferred.
Part 5‑30—Payment, ABN and identification verification system
Division 400—Guide to Part 5‑30
400‑1 What Part 5‑30 is about
To improve compliance
with the tax laws that relate to payments for certain supplies, this Part
imposes additional requirements on purchasers and suppliers.
The additional
requirements relate to verification of ABNs and to reporting information about
payments.
Regulations will
specify the supplies that are covered and the additional requirements that
apply to payments for those supplies.
400‑5 The payment, ABN and
identification verification system
(1) There are 4 components
in the payment, ABN and identification verification system:
(a) transaction
reporting by purchasers (Division 405);
(b) transaction
reporting by suppliers (Division 410);
(c) verification of
suppliers’ *ABNs by purchasers (Division 415);
(d) verification of
suppliers’ identities by purchasers (Division 417);
One or more of the components may apply
to a particular payment. The regulations will specify which components apply.
(2) Where a component of the
system applies to a payment, the requirements of that component must be
complied with.
Division 405—Transaction reporting by purchasers
Table of sections
405‑5 Payments to which this
Division applies
405‑10 Reporting requirements
405‑15 Invoices produced by
purchasers
405‑5 Payments to which this
Division applies
(1) This Division applies to
any payments made, or liable to be made, for a *supply
where the supply is specified in regulations made for the purpose of this
section.
(2) A payment is liable to
be made if the obligation to make the payment is notified in an *invoice.
(3) Payments to which this
Division applies are called Division 405 payments.
(4) Without limiting the
ways in which the regulations may specify a *supply,
the regulations may specify a supply by reference to:
(a) the goods or
services supplied; or
(b) the supplier; or
(c) the purchaser.
405‑10 Reporting requirements
(1) Any entity (the purchaser)
that makes, or is liable to make, a *Division 405
payment during a *quarter must give a *Division 405 report to the Commissioner within 21 days after
the end of the quarter.
(2) A Division 405
report is a written statement in the *approved
form that names the purchaser and, for each supplier in relation to whom the
purchaser made, or was liable to make, a *Division 405
payment during the *quarter:
(a) names the
supplier; and
(b) specifies the
supplier’s *ABN (if known by the purchaser); and
(c) specifies the
total of the Division 405 payments that the purchaser made, or was liable
to make, to the supplier during the quarter that:
(i) were
notified in an invoice during the quarter (unless the payment was reported in
an earlier Division 405 report); or
(ii) were
made during the quarter but for which no invoice had been received before the
end of the quarter.
The report must also include any other
information that the Commissioner requires.
(3) The Commissioner may, in
writing, require particular information to be included in a *Division 405 report or a class of Division 405 reports.
(4) The Commissioner may, by
written notice, vary any requirements under subsection (1), (2) or (3) in
relation to a purchaser or class of purchaser. The Commissioner may do so in
such instances and to such extent as the Commissioner thinks fit.
405‑15 Invoices produced by
purchasers
If a purchaser produces
an *invoice that notifies the purchaser’s obligation to make a payment,
the purchaser is taken to have been notified of the payment at the time that
the invoice is produced.
Division 410—Transaction reporting by suppliers
Table of sections
410‑5 Payments to which this
Division applies
410‑10 Reporting requirements
410‑15 Invoices produced by purchasers
410‑5 Payments to which this
Division applies
(1) This Division applies to
any payments received, or entitled to be received, for a *supply where the supply is specified in regulations made for the
purpose of this section.
(2) A payment is entitled to
be received if the obligation to make the payment is notified in an *invoice.
(3) Payments to which this
Division applies are called Division 410 payments.
(4) Without limiting the
ways in which the regulations may specify a *supply,
the regulations may specify a supply by reference to:
(a) the goods or
services supplied; or
(b) the supplier; or
(c) the purchaser.
410‑10 Reporting requirements
(1) Any entity (the supplier)
that receives, or is entitled to receive, a *Division 410
payment during a *quarter must give a *Division 410 report to the Commissioner within 21 days after
the end of the quarter.
(2) A Division 410
report is a written statement in the *approved
form that names the supplier and, for each purchaser in relation to whom the
supplier received, or was entitled to receive, a *Division 410
payment during the *quarter:
(a) names the
purchaser; and
(b) specifies the
purchaser’s *ABN (if known by the supplier); and
(c) specifies the
total of the Division 410 payments that the supplier received, or was
entitled to receive, from the purchaser during the quarter that:
(i) were
notified in an invoice during the quarter (unless the payment was reported in
an earlier Division 410 report); or
(ii) were
received during the quarter but for which no invoice had been provided before
the end of the quarter.
The report must also include any other
information that the Commissioner requires.
(3) The Commissioner may, in
writing, require particular information to be included in a *Division 410 report or a class of Division 410 reports.
(4) The Commissioner may, by
written notice, vary any requirements under subsection (1), (2) or (3) in
relation to a supplier or class of supplier. The Commissioner may do so in such
instances and to such extent as the Commissioner thinks fit.
410‑15 Invoices produced by
purchasers
If a purchaser produces
an *invoice that notifies the purchaser’s obligation to make a payment,
the supplier is taken to have notified the purchaser of the payment at the time
that the invoice is produced.
Division 415—Verification of suppliers’ ABNs by
purchasers
Table of sections
415‑5 Payments to which this
Division applies
415‑10 ABN verification
requirements
415‑15 Method of obtaining ABN
verification
415‑20 Verification applies to
later payments
415‑5 Payments to which this
Division applies
(1) This Division applies
if:
(a) a payment is
made, or is liable to be made, by an entity (the purchaser) to
another entity (the supplier) for a *supply;
and
(b) the supply is
specified in regulations made for the purpose of this section; and
(c) the supplier has
purported to *quote his or her *ABN
to the purchaser.
(2) Payments to which this
Division applies are called Division 415 payments.
(3) Without limiting the
ways in which the regulations may specify a *supply,
the regulations may specify a supply by reference to:
(a) the goods or
services supplied; or
(b) the supplier; or
(c) the purchaser.
415‑10 ABN verification requirements
Before the purchaser
makes a *Division 415 payment to the supplier,
the purchaser must obtain verification that the *ABN
*quoted by the supplier is the ABN entered in the *Australian Business Register with the name given by the supplier.
Note: If the purchaser has
reasonable grounds to believe that the supplier has not correctly quoted his or
her ABN, the purchaser is required to withhold an amount under section 12‑190.
415‑15 Method of obtaining ABN
verification
(1) To
obtain verification of a supplier’s *ABN, a purchaser
must seek the verification in a manner approved in writing by the Commissioner.
(2) Without limiting the
Commissioner’s power under subsection (1), the Commissioner may approve
verifications being sought orally or by way of electronic transmission.
(3) Verification of an *ABN may be obtained in such form, including orally or by way of
electronic transmission, as the Commissioner approves in writing.
(4) The Commissioner may, by
written notice, vary any requirements under subsection (1) in relation to:
(a) a purchaser or
class of purchaser; or
(b) a supplier or
class of supplier.
The Commissioner may do so in such
instances and to such extent as the Commissioner thinks fit.
415‑20 Verification applies to later
payments
(1) Verification of a
supplier’s ABN applies to all later *Division 415
payments by the purchaser to the supplier unless there is a period of 2 years
during which no *Division 415 payment is made by the
purchaser to the supplier. If this occurs, the verification continues to apply
to any purchases before 1 July first occurring after the end of the 2 year
period.
(2) However, verification of
a supplier’s *ABN does not apply to a *Division 415 payment if the purchaser has reasonable grounds to
believe that the *ABN *quoted
by the supplier is no longer the ABN entered in the *Australian
Business Register with the name given by the supplier.
Division 417—Verification of suppliers’ identities by
purchasers
Table of sections
417‑5 Payments to which this
Division applies
417‑10 Identity verification
requirements
417‑15 Method of obtaining
identity verification
417‑20 Verification applies to
later payments
417‑5 Payments to which this
Division applies
(1) This Division applies
if:
(a) a payment is
made, or liable to be made, by an entity (the purchaser) to
another entity (the supplier) for a *supply;
and
(b) the supply is
specified in regulations made for the purpose of this section.
(2) Payments to which this
Division applies are called Division 417 payments.
(3) Without limiting the
ways in which the regulations may specify a *supply,
the regulations may specify a supply by reference to:
(a) the goods or
services supplied; or
(b) the supplier; or
(c) the purchaser.
417‑10 Identity verification
requirements
Before the purchaser
makes a *Division 417 payment, the purchaser
must obtain verification of the supplier’s identity.
Note: If the purchaser has
reasonable grounds to believe that the supplier has not correctly quoted his or
her ABN, the purchaser is required to withhold an amount under section 12‑190.
417‑15 Method of obtaining identity
verification
(1) To obtain verification
of a supplier’s identity, a purchaser must carry out the identity verification
procedure that is determined, in writing, by the Commissioner.
(2) The Commissioner may
determine different identity verification procedures for:
(a) different
purchasers or classes of purchasers; or
(b) different
suppliers or classes of suppliers.
417‑20 Verification applies to later
payments
(1) Verification of a
supplier’s identity applies to all later *Division 417
payments by the purchaser to the supplier unless there is a period of 2 years
during which no *Division 417 payment is made by the
purchaser to the supplier. If this occurs, the verification continues to apply
to any purchases before 1 July first occurring after the end of the 2 year
period.
(2) However, verification of
a supplier’s identity does not apply to a later *Division 417
payment if the purchaser has reasonable grounds to believe that the verified
identity is not the supplier’s true identity.
Division 420—Penalties for not reporting or verifying
Table of sections
420‑5 Failing to report or verify: administrative penalty
420‑5 Failing to report or verify:
administrative penalty
An entity that fails
to:
(a) give a *Division 405 report to the Commissioner as required by section 405‑10;
or
(b) give a *Division 410 report to the Commissioner as required by section 410‑10;
or
(c) verify a
supplier’s *ABN as required by section 415‑10; or
(d) verify a
supplier’s identity as required by section 417‑10;
is liable to pay to the Commissioner a
penalty of 20 penalty units.
Note 1: See section 4AA of the Crimes
Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.
Note 2: Division 298 contains
machinery provisions for administrative and civil penalties.
Division 425—Other matters
Table of sections
425‑20 Constructive payment
425‑25 Non‑cash benefits
425‑20 Constructive payment
(1) In working out whether
an entity has paid an amount to another entity, and when the payment is made,
the amount is taken to have been paid to the other entity when the first entity
applies or deals with the amount in any way on the other’s behalf or as the
other directs.
(2) An amount is taken to be
payable by an entity to another entity if the first entity is required to apply
or deal with it in any way on the other’s behalf or as the other directs.
425‑25 Non‑cash benefits
For the purposes of
this Part, if an entity (the payer) provides a *non‑cash benefit to another entity (the recipient),
the payer is taken to have made a payment of an amount equal to the *market value of the benefit provided.
Part 5‑35—Registration and similar processes for
various taxes
Division 426—Process of endorsing charities and other
entities
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 426
426‑A Application of Subdivision 426‑B
to various kinds of endorsement
426‑B Process of endorsement etc.
426‑C Entries on Australian
Business Register
426‑D Public and private ancillary
funds
Guide to Division 426
426‑1 What
this Division is about
This Division sets
out procedural rules relating to endorsement of charities and other entities
(the conditions for entitlement to endorsement are set out in the GST Act, the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986, and the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997).
These rules cover matters such as application for and revocation of
endorsement, and entry of the details of endorsement on the Australian Business
Register.
Subdivision 426‑D
deals with types of philanthropic trust funds known as public ancillary
funds and private ancillary funds.
Subdivision 426‑A—Application of Subdivision 426‑B to various kinds of
endorsement
Table
of sections
426‑5 Application
of Subdivision 426‑B to various kinds of endorsement
426‑10 How
Subdivision 426‑B applies to government entities in relation to
endorsement under section 30‑120 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997
426‑5 Application of Subdivision 426‑B
to various kinds of endorsement
Subdivision 426‑B
applies separately in relation to each of these kinds of endorsement:
(a) endorsement of an
entity as a charity under subsection 176‑1(1) of the *GST Act;
(ba) endorsement of:
(i) a
fund as an approved worker entitlement fund under subsection 58PB(3) of
the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986; or
(ii) an
entity for the operation of a fund as an approved worker entitlement fund under
subsection 58PB(3A) of that Act;
(c) endorsement of an
entity as a public benevolent institution under subsection 123C(1) of the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986;
(e) endorsement of an
entity as a health promotion charity under subsection 123D(1) of the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986;
(f) endorsement of
an entity under subsection 123E(1) of the Fringe Benefits Tax
Assessment Act 1986 as a registered charity covered by table item 1 in
subsection 65J(1) of that Act;
(g) endorsement of an
entity as a *deductible gift recipient, or as a
deductible gift recipient for the operation of a fund, authority or
institution, under section 30‑120 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997;
(h) endorsement
of an entity as exempt from income tax under section 50‑105 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997.
426‑10 How Subdivision 426‑B
applies to government entities in relation to endorsement under section 30‑120
of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
(1) This section applies in
relation to endorsement under section 30‑120 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997.
(2) Subdivision 426‑B
applies in relation to a *government entity in the
same way as it applies in relation to an entity.
(3) If, apart from this
subsection, section 426‑40 or 426‑45 (as applied by this section) would
impose an obligation on a *government entity:
(a) that is an
unincorporated association or body; and
(b) for whose
management a single person is responsible to persons or bodies outside the
government entity;
the obligation is imposed on that person.
(4) Subsection (3) has
effect despite:
(a) subsection (2);
and
(b) subsection 426‑50(2)
as it applies because of this section.
Subdivision 426‑B—Process of endorsement etc.
Table of sections
426‑15 Applying for endorsement
426‑20 Dealing with an
application for endorsement
426‑25 Notifying outcome of
application for endorsement
426‑30 Date of effect of
endorsement
426‑35 Review of refusal of
endorsement
426‑40 Checking entitlement to
endorsement
426‑45 Telling Commissioner of
loss of entitlement to endorsement
426‑50 Partnerships and
unincorporated bodies
426‑55 Revoking endorsement
426‑60 Review of revocation of
endorsement
426‑15 Applying for endorsement
(1) An
entity may apply to the Commissioner for endorsement.
(2) The
application:
(a) must be in a form
approved by the Commissioner; and
(b) may be *lodged electronically; and
(c) must be signed
for the entity, or include the entity’s *electronic
signature if the application is lodged electronically; and
(d) must be lodged
at, or posted to, an office or facility designated by the Commissioner as a
receiving centre for applications of that kind.
Note: The Commissioner could
approve a form that is part of an application form for an ABN.
(3) Section 426‑5 does
not prevent the Commissioner from approving a single form to be used by an
entity to make applications for 2 or more kinds of endorsement.
426‑20 Dealing with an application
for endorsement
Requiring further information or
documents
(1) The Commissioner may
require an applicant to give the Commissioner specified information, or a
specified document, that the Commissioner needs in order to decide whether the
applicant is entitled to endorsement.
Treating application as being refused
(2) After the time worked
out under subsection (3), the applicant may give the Commissioner written
notice that the applicant wishes to treat the application as having been
refused, if the Commissioner has not given the applicant before that time
written notice that the Commissioner endorses or refuses to endorse the
applicant.
Note: Section 426‑25 requires
the Commissioner to give the applicant written notice if the Commissioner
endorses or refuses to endorse the applicant.
(3) The time is the end of
the 60th day after the application was made. However, if before that time the
Commissioner requires the applicant under subsection (1) to give
information or a document, the time is the later of the following (or either of
them if they are the same):
(a) the end of the
28th day after the last day on which the applicant gives the Commissioner
information or a document he or she has required;
(b) the end of the
60th day after the application was made.
(4) If the applicant gives
notice under subsection (2), section 426‑35 operates as if the
Commissioner had refused the application on the day on which the notice is
given.
Note: Section 426‑35 lets the
applicant object against refusal of an application in the manner set out in
Part IVC of this Act. That Part provides for review of the refusal
objected against.
(5) The notice given by the
applicant:
(a) may be *lodged electronically; and
(b) must be signed
for the applicant, or include the applicant’s *electronic
signature if the application is *lodged electronically.
426‑25 Notifying outcome of
application for endorsement
(1) The Commissioner must
give the applicant written notice if:
(a) the Commissioner
endorses the applicant; or
(b) the Commissioner
refuses to endorse the applicant.
(2) The Commissioner may
give the notice by way of electronic transmission. This does not limit the ways
in which the Commissioner may give the notice.
426‑30 Date of effect of endorsement
(1) The endorsement has
effect from a date specified by the Commissioner.
(2) The date specified may
be any date (including a date before the application for endorsement was made
and a date before the applicant had an *ABN).
426‑35 Review of refusal of
endorsement
If the applicant is
dissatisfied with the Commissioner’s refusal to endorse the applicant in
accordance with the application, the applicant may object against the refusal
in the manner set out in Part IVC of this Act.
Note: That Part provides for review
of the refusal objected against.
426‑40 Checking entitlement to
endorsement
(1) The Commissioner may
require an entity that is endorsed to give the Commissioner information or a
document that is relevant to the entity’s entitlement to endorsement. The
entity must comply with the requirement.
Note 1: The conditions for an entity
to be entitled to be endorsed are set out in:
(a) subsections 176‑1(2) of the GST
Act; and
(b) subsections 123C(2), 123D(2) and
123E(2) of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986; and
(c) sections 30‑120 and 50‑105 of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Note 2: Failure to comply with this
subsection is an offence against section 8C. Also, the Commissioner may
revoke the endorsement of the entity under section 426‑55 if it fails to
comply with this subsection.
Note 3: Section 426‑50 modifies
the way this subsection operates in relation to partnerships and unincorporated
bodies.
(2) The requirement:
(a) is to be made by
notice in writing to the entity; and
(b) may ask the
entity to give the information in writing; and
(c) must specify:
(i) the
information or document the entity is to give; and
(ii) the
period within which the entity is to give the information or document.
The period specified under subparagraph (c)(ii)
must end at least 28 days after the notice is given.
(3) The Commissioner may
give the notice by way of electronic transmission. This does not limit the ways
in which the Commissioner may give the notice.
(4) If the requirement is
for the entity to give information in writing, the document setting out the
information:
(a) must be given to
the Commissioner; and
(b) may be *lodged electronically; and
(c) must be signed
for the entity, or include the entity’s *electronic
signature if the document is lodged electronically.
426‑45 Telling Commissioner of loss
of entitlement to endorsement
(1) Before, or as soon as
practicable after, an entity that is endorsed ceases to be entitled to be
endorsed, the entity must give the Commissioner written notice of the
cessation.
Note 1: Failure to comply with this
subsection is an offence against section 8C.
Note 2: Section 426‑50 modifies
the way this subsection operates in relation to partnerships and unincorporated
bodies.
(2) The notice:
(a) may be *lodged electronically; and
(b) must be signed
for the entity, or include the entity’s *electronic
signature if the document is lodged electronically.
(3) Subsection (1) does
not apply to an entitlement to endorsement ceasing because the entity ceases to
have an *ABN.
426‑50 Partnerships and
unincorporated bodies
Application to partnerships
(1) If, apart from this
subsection, section 426‑40 or 426‑45 would impose an obligation on a
partnership, the obligation is imposed on each partner, but may be discharged
by any of the partners.
Application to unincorporated bodies
(2) If, apart from this
subsection, section 426‑40 or 426‑45 would impose an obligation on an
unincorporated association or body, the obligation is imposed on each member of
the committee of management of the association or body, but may be discharged
by any of the members of the committee.
Defences for partners and members of
committee of management
(3) In a prosecution of a
person for an offence against section 8C of this Act because of subsection (1)
or (2), it is a defence if the person proves that the person:
(a) did not aid,
abet, counsel or procure the act or omission because of which the offence is
taken to have been committed; and
(b) was not in any
way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in, or
party to, the act or omission because of which the offence is taken to have
been committed.
426‑55 Revoking endorsement
(1) The Commissioner may
revoke the endorsement of an entity if:
(a) the entity is not
entitled to be endorsed; or
(b) the Commissioner
has required the entity under section 426‑40 to provide information or a
document that is relevant to its entitlement to endorsement and the entity has
not provided the required information or document within the time specified in
the requirement; or
(c) in the case of an
entity endorsed under section 30‑120 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997—the entity has contravened Subdivision 30‑CA of that Act (which
requires the entity to ensure that certain things are stated in any receipts it
issues for certain gifts).
Note: The conditions for an entity
to be entitled to be endorsed are set out in:
(a) subsections 176‑1(2)
of the GST Act; and
(b) subsections 58PB(4)
and (4A), 123C(2), 123D(2) and 123E(2) of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment
Act 1986; and
(c) sections 30‑120
and 50‑105 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
(2) The revocation has
effect from a day specified by the Commissioner (which may be a day before the
Commissioner decided to revoke the endorsement).
(3) However, if the Commissioner
revokes the endorsement because the entity is not entitled to it, the
Commissioner must not specify a day before the day on which the entity first
ceased to be entitled.
(4) The Commissioner must
give the entity written notice if the Commissioner revokes its endorsement.
(5) The Commissioner may
give the notice by way of electronic transmission. This does not limit the ways
in which the Commissioner may give the notice.
426‑60 Review of revocation of
endorsement
If the entity is
dissatisfied with the revocation of its endorsement, the entity may object
against the revocation in the manner set out in Part IVC of this Act.
Note: That Part provides for review
of the revocation objected against.
Subdivision 426‑C—Entries on Australian Business Register
Table
of sections
426‑65 Entries on Australian
Business Register
426‑65 Entries on Australian
Business Register
(1) If an entity that is
endorsed in any of these ways:
(a) as a charity
under subsection 176‑1(1) of the *GST Act;
(ba) as an approved
worker entitlement fund under subsection 58PB(3) of the Fringe Benefits
Tax Assessment Act 1986;
(bb) for the operation
of an approved worker entitlement fund under subsection 58PB(3A) of the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986;
(c) as a public benevolent
institution under subsection 123C(1) of the Fringe Benefits Tax
Assessment Act 1986;
(e) as a health
promotion charity under subsection 123D(1) of the Fringe Benefits Tax
Assessment Act 1986;
(f) as a registered
charity covered by table item 1 in subsection 65J(1) of the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 under subsection 123E(1) of
that Act;
(g) as exempt from
income tax under section 50‑105 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997;
the *Australian
Business Registrar must enter in the *Australian
Business Register a statement that the entity is so endorsed for a specified
period.
Note 1: An entry (or lack of entry) of
a statement required by this section does not affect concessions available to
the entity under the Act for the purposes of which it is endorsed.
Note 2: For
entities and government entities that are endorsed under section 30‑120 of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997, see section 30‑229 of that Act.
(2) The
*Australian Business Registrar may remove the statement from the *Australian Business Register after the end of the period.
(2A) If the endorsed entity is
also registered under the Australian Charities and Not‑for‑profits
Commission Act 2012 as an entity of a particular type or subtype, the *Australian Business Registrar must also enter in the *Australian Business Register:
(a) a statement that
the entity is so registered; and
(b) a statement as to
the date of effect of the registration.
(2B) The *Australian Business Registrar may remove the statements from the *Australian Business Register if the registration is revoked under
the Australian Charities and Not‑for‑profits Commission Act 2012.
(3) The *Australian Business Registrar must take reasonable steps to ensure
that a statement appearing in the *Australian
Business Register under this section is true. For this purpose, the Registrar
may:
(a) change the
statement; or
(b) remove the
statement from the Register if the statement is not true; or
(c) remove the
statement from the Register and enter another statement in the Register under
this section.
(4) Making, changing or
removing an entry in the *Australian Business
Register as required or permitted by this section does not contravene section 355‑25
or 355‑155.
Subdivision 426‑D—Public and private ancillary funds
Guide to Subdivision 426‑D
426‑100 What this Subdivision is
about
This Subdivision deals with types of philanthropic trust funds known
as public ancillary funds and private ancillary funds.
The Minister may make guidelines determining when ancillary funds
are entitled to be endorsed as deductible gift recipients.
This Subdivision also provides for:
(a) penalties for trustees who fail to comply
with the public ancillary fund guidelines or private ancillary fund guidelines
(whichever are applicable), and the liability of directors of trustees to pay
those penalties in certain circumstances; and
(b) powers
for the Commissioner to suspend or remove trustees who breach their
obligations.
Table of sections
Public ancillary funds
426‑102 Public ancillary funds
426‑103 Public ancillary fund
guidelines
426‑104 Australian Business
Register must show public ancillary fund status
Private
ancillary funds
426‑105 Private ancillary funds
426‑110 Private ancillary fund
guidelines
426‑115 Australian Business
Register must show private ancillary fund status
Administrative penalties
426‑120 Administrative penalties
for trustees of ancillary funds
Suspension
and removal of trustees
426‑125 Suspension or removal of
trustees
426‑130 Commissioner to appoint
acting trustee in cases of suspension or removal
426‑135 Terms and conditions of
appointment of acting trustee
426‑140 Termination of appointment
of acting trustee
426‑145 Resignation of acting
trustee
426‑150 Property vesting orders
426‑155 Powers of acting trustee
426‑160 Commissioner may give
directions to acting trustee
426‑165 Property vested in acting
trustee—former trustees’ obligations relating to books, identification of
property and transfer of property
Transfers
between ancillary funds
426‑170 Ancillary funds must not
provide funds to other ancillary funds
Public ancillary funds
426‑102 Public ancillary funds
(1) A trust is a public
ancillary fund if:
(a) at least one of
the following subparagraphs applies:
(i) each
trustee of the trust is a *constitutional corporation;
(ii) the
only trustee of the trust is the Public Trustee of a State or Territory, or each
trustee of the trust is prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this
subparagraph; and
(b) each trustee of
the trust has agreed, in the *approved form given to
the Commissioner, to comply with the rules in the *public
ancillary fund guidelines, as in force from time to time; and
(c) none of the
trustees has revoked that agreement in accordance with subsection (2).
(2) A trustee may revoke an
agreement mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) only by giving the revocation to
the Commissioner in the *approved form.
(3) Sections 426‑125 to
426‑165 do not apply to a *public ancillary fund if
subparagraph (1)(a)(ii) of this section applies to the fund.
426‑103 Public ancillary fund
guidelines
The Minister must, by
legislative instrument, formulate guidelines (the public ancillary fund
guidelines) setting out:
(a) rules that *public ancillary funds and their trustees must comply with if the
funds are to be, or are to remain, endorsed as *deductible
gift recipients; and
(b) the amount of the
administrative penalty, or how to work out the amount of the administrative
penalty, under subsection 426‑120(1) in relation to public ancillary
funds.
426‑104 Australian Business Register
must show public ancillary fund status
(1) If a *public ancillary fund has an *ABN,
the *Australian Business Registrar must enter
in the *Australian Business Register in relation
to the fund a statement that it is a public ancillary fund.
Note 1: An entry (or lack of entry) of
a statement required by this section does not affect whether a trust is a
public ancillary fund.
Note 2: The Australian Business
Register will also show if a public ancillary fund is endorsed as a deductible
gift recipient: see section 30‑229 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997.
(2) The *Australian Business Registrar must take reasonable steps to ensure
that a statement appearing in the *Australian
Business Register under this section is true. For this purpose, the Registrar
may:
(a) change the
statement; or
(b) remove the
statement from the Register if the statement is not true.
Private ancillary funds
426‑105 Private ancillary funds
(1) A trust is a private
ancillary fund if:
(a) each trustee of
the trust is a *constitutional corporation; and
(b) each trustee has
agreed, in the *approved form given to the Commissioner,
to comply with the rules in the *private ancillary fund
guidelines, as in force from time to time; and
(c) none of the
trustees has revoked that agreement in accordance with subsection (2).
(2) A trustee may revoke an
agreement mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) only by giving the revocation to
the Commissioner in the *approved form.
426‑110 Private ancillary fund guidelines
The Minister must, by
legislative instrument, formulate guidelines (the private ancillary fund
guidelines) setting out:
(a) rules that *private ancillary funds and their trustees must comply with if the
funds are to be, or are to remain, endorsed as *deductible
gift recipients; and
(b) the amount of the
administrative penalty, or how to work out the amount of the administrative
penalty, under subsection 426‑120(1) in relation to private ancillary
funds.
426‑115 Australian Business Register
must show private ancillary fund status
(1) If a *private ancillary fund has an *ABN,
the *Australian Business Registrar must enter
in the *Australian Business Register in relation
to the fund a statement that it is a private ancillary fund.
Note 1: An entry (or lack of entry) of
a statement required by this section does not affect whether a trust is a
private ancillary fund.
Note 2: The Australian Business
Register will also show if a private ancillary fund is endorsed as a deductible
gift recipient: see section 30‑229 of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1997.
(2) The *Australian Business Registrar must take reasonable steps to ensure
that a statement appearing in the *Australian
Business Register under this section is true. For this purpose, the Registrar
may:
(a) change the
statement; or
(b) remove the
statement from the Register if the statement is not true.
Administrative penalties
426‑120 Administrative penalties for
trustees of ancillary funds
Administrative penalty
(1) The persons mentioned in
subsection (2) are jointly and severally liable to an administrative
penalty if:
(a) a trustee of an *ancillary fund holds the fund out as being endorsed, entitled to be
endorsed, or entitled to remain endorsed, as a *deductible
gift recipient; and
(b) the fund is not
so endorsed or entitled.
(2) The persons are:
(a) each person who
is a trustee of the fund; and
(b) each director of
each *constitutional corporation that is a
trustee of the fund, if:
(i) any
of the penalty cannot reasonably be recovered from the constitutional
corporation; and
(ii) the
constitutional corporation is neither a licensed trustee company (within the
meaning of Chapter 5D of the Corporations Act 2001) nor the Public
Trustee of a State or Territory.
Note: A person mentioned in paragraph (2)(a)
may, in certain circumstances, not be a constitutional corporation: see item 28
of Schedule 2 to the Tax Laws Amendment (2009 Measures No. 4) Act
2009 (former prescribed private funds).
(3) The amount of the
penalty is:
(a) the amount
specified in the *public ancillary fund guidelines under
paragraph 426‑103(b), or the *private ancillary
fund guidelines under paragraph 426‑110(b), whichever are applicable; or
(b) the amount worked
out in accordance with the method specified under that paragraph.
The guidelines may specify different
penalties or methods for different circumstances.
(4) The
penalty must not be reimbursed from the fund.
Note: Division 298 in this
Schedule contains machinery provisions for administrative penalties.
Defences for directors
(5) Paragraph (2)(b)
does not apply to a director if:
(a) the director was
not aware of the holding out mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) and it would
not have been reasonable to expect the director to have been aware of that
holding out; or
(b) the director took
all reasonable steps to ensure that the holding out mentioned in that paragraph
did not occur; or
(c) there were no
such steps that the director could have taken.
(6) In determining what is
reasonable for the purposes of paragraph (5)(a), (b) or (c), have regard
to all relevant circumstances.
(7) A person who wishes to
rely on subsection (5) bears an evidential burden in relation to the
matters in that subsection.
Power of courts to grant relief
(8) Section 1318 of the
Corporations Act 2001 (power of Court to grant relief in case of breach
of director’s duty) does not apply to a liability of a director under this
section.
Suspension and removal of trustees
426‑125 Suspension or removal of
trustees
Suspension
(1) The
Commissioner may suspend all of the trustees of an *ancillary
fund if the Commissioner is satisfied that the fund, or any of the trustees of
the fund, have breached:
(a) the *public ancillary fund guidelines or the *private
ancillary fund guidelines (whichever are applicable); or
(b) any other *Australian law.
(2) The
suspension of a trustee:
(a) starts when the
Commissioner gives the trustee notice of the suspension under subsection (3);
and
(b) ends at the time
specified in the notice.
(3) If the Commissioner
decides to suspend a trustee under this section, the Commissioner must give to
the trustee a written notice:
(a) setting out the
decision; and
(b) giving the
reasons for the decision; and
(c) setting out the
time the suspension ends.
Extension of suspensions
(4) The Commissioner may
change the time the suspension of a trustee ends.
(5) If the Commissioner
decides to change the time the suspension of a trustee ends under this section,
the Commissioner must give to the trustee a written notice:
(a) setting out the
decision; and
(b) giving the
reasons for the decision; and
(c) setting out the
new time the suspension ends.
Removal
(6) The Commissioner may
remove all of the trustees of an *ancillary fund if the
Commissioner is satisfied that the fund, or any of the trustees of the fund,
have breached:
(a) the *public ancillary fund guidelines or the *private
ancillary fund guidelines (whichever are applicable); or
(b) any other *Australian law.
(7) If the Commissioner decides
to remove a trustee under this section, the Commissioner must give to the
trustee a written notice:
(a) setting out the
decision; and
(b) giving the
reasons for the decision.
Review of decisions under this section
(8) A trustee who is dissatisfied
with any of the following decisions under this section may object in the manner
set out in Part IVC of this Act:
(a) a decision to
suspend the trustee;
(b) a decision to
change the time a suspension of the trustee ends;
(c) a decision to remove
the trustee.
426‑130 Commissioner to appoint
acting trustee in cases of suspension or removal
Appointment of acting trustee
(1) If the Commissioner
suspends all of the trustees of an *ancillary fund
under section 426‑125, the Commissioner must appoint a single entity to
act as the trustee (the acting trustee) of the fund during the
period of the suspension.
(2) If the Commissioner
removes all of the trustees of an *ancillary fund
under section 426‑125, the Commissioner must appoint a single entity to
act as the trustee (the acting trustee) of the fund until all of
the vacancies in the position of trustee are filled.
Acting trustee need not be
constitutional corporation
(3) An acting trustee need
not be a *constitutional corporation, and may be the
Commissioner. Paragraph 426‑105(1)(a) does not apply in relation to an acting
trustee.
(4) An entity that is not a *constitutional corporation may not act as trustee under this section
for longer than 6 months.
Acting trustee must have agreed to
comply with guidelines
(5) An entity may only be
appointed as acting trustee if the entity has, in accordance with paragraph 426‑102(1)(b)
or 426‑105(1)(b), agreed to comply with the rules in the *public ancillary fund guidelines or the *private
ancillary fund guidelines (whichever are applicable) as in force from time to
time.
426‑135 Terms and conditions of
appointment of acting trustee
(1) The Commissioner may
determine the terms and conditions of the appointment of the acting trustee,
including fees. The determination has effect despite anything in:
(a) any *Australian law other than this section; or
(b) the *ancillary fund’s governing rules.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1),
the Commissioner may make a determination under that subsection to the effect
that the acting trustee’s fees are to be paid out of the corpus of the *ancillary fund.
426‑140 Termination of appointment
of acting trustee
The Commissioner may
terminate the appointment of the acting trustee at any time.
426‑145 Resignation of acting
trustee
(1) The acting trustee may
resign by writing given to the Commissioner.
(2) The resignation does not
take effect until the end of the seventh day after the day on which it was
given to the Commissioner.
426‑150 Property vesting orders
(1) If
the Commissioner appoints an acting trustee, the Commissioner must make a
written order vesting the property of the *ancillary
fund in the acting trustee.
(2) If the appointment ends,
the Commissioner must make a written order vesting the property of the fund in
the new acting trustee, the previously suspended trustee or trustees or the new
actual trustee or trustees (whichever is applicable).
(3) If the Commissioner makes
an order under this section vesting property of an *ancillary
fund in an entity or entities, then, subject to subsection (4), the
property immediately vests in the entity or entities by force of this section.
(4) If:
(a) the property is
of a kind whose transfer or transmission may be registered under an *Australian law; and
(b) that law enables
the registration of such an order, or enables the entity or entities to be
registered as the owner of that property;
the property does not vest in the entity
or entities until the requirements of the law referred to in paragraph (a)
have been complied with.
426‑155 Powers of acting trustee
Subject to section 426‑150:
(a) the acting
trustee has and may exercise all the rights, title and powers, and must perform
all the functions and duties, of the original trustee or trustees; and
(b) the *ancillary fund’s governing rules and every *Australian
law apply in relation to the acting trustee as if the acting trustee were the
trustee of the fund.
426‑160 Commissioner may give
directions to acting trustee
(1) The
Commissioner may give the acting trustee a written notice directing the acting
trustee to do, or not to do, one or more specified acts or things in relation
to the *ancillary fund.
(2) The acting trustee
commits an offence if:
(a) the acting
trustee engages in conduct (within the meaning of subsection 2(1) of this
Act); and
(b) that engagement
in conduct contravenes a notice given to the acting trustee under subsection (1).
Penalty: 100 penalty units.
(3) This section does not
affect the validity of a transaction entered into in contravention of a notice
given under subsection (1).
426‑165 Property vested in acting
trustee—former trustees’ obligations relating to books, identification of
property and transfer of property
Books
(1) An entity commits an
offence if:
(a) the Commissioner
makes an order under subsection 426‑150(1) or (2) vesting the property of an
*ancillary fund in an acting trustee; and
(b) just before the
Commissioner made the order, the property was vested in:
(i) the
entity (the former trustee); or
(ii) 2 or
more entities (the former trustees), including the entity; and
(c) the former
trustee or former trustees do not, within 14 days of the Commissioner making
the order, give the acting trustee all books (within the meaning of the Corporations
Act 2001) relating to the fund’s affairs that are in the former trustee’s
or former trustees’ possession, custody or control.
Penalty: 50 penalty units.
Identification of property and
transfer of property
(2) Subsections (3) to
(5) apply if:
(a) the property of an
*ancillary fund is vested in an entity (the former trustee)
or entities (the former trustees); and
(b) the Commissioner
makes an order under subsection 426‑150(1) or (2) vesting the property in
an acting trustee.
(3) The acting trustee may,
by notice in writing to the former trustee or former trustees, require the
former trustee or former trustees, so far as the former trustee or former
trustees can do so:
(a) to identify
property of the fund; and
(b) to explain how
the former trustee or former trustees have kept account of that property.
(4) The
acting trustee may, by notice in writing to the former trustee or former
trustees, require the former trustee or former trustees to take specified
action that is necessary to bring about a transfer of specified property of the
fund to the acting trustee.
(5) The former trustee, or
each of the former trustees, commits an offence if:
(a) the acting
trustee gives the former trustee or former trustees a notice under subsection (3)
or (4); and
(b) the former
trustee or former trustees do not, within 28 days of the notice being given, comply
with the requirement in the notice.
Penalty: 50 penalty units.
Strict liability
(6) Subsections (1) and
(5) are offences of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see
section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Transfers between ancillary funds
426‑170 Ancillary funds must not
provide funds to other ancillary funds
An
*ancillary fund must not provide money, property or benefits to
another ancillary fund unless permitted to do so by the *public ancillary fund guidelines or the *private
ancillary fund guidelines (whichever are applicable).
Part 5‑45—Application of taxation laws to certain entities
Division 444—Obligations of entities on behalf of other entities
Table of Subdivisions
Guide to Division 444
444‑A Unincorporated associations
and bodies and companies
444‑B Partnerships
444‑C Superannuation funds
444‑D Incapacitated entities
444‑E Indirect tax specific
entities
Guide to Division 444
444‑1 What this Division is about
This Division imposes
onto other entities the liabilities of unincorporated associations or bodies,
companies, partnerships, superannuation funds, incapacitated entities, trusts
and various indirect tax specific entities.
Subdivision 444‑A—Unincorporated associations and bodies and companies
Table of sections
444‑5 Unincorporated
associations and bodies
444‑10 Public officers of
companies
444‑15 Notifying and serving
companies
444‑5 Unincorporated associations
and bodies
(1) Obligations that would
be imposed under this Schedule or an *indirect tax law
on an unincorporated association or body of entities are imposed on each member
of the committee of management of the association or body, but may be
discharged by any of those members.
(2) Any offence against this
Schedule or an *indirect tax law that is committed by the
association or body is taken to have been committed by each member of its
committee of management.
(3) In a prosecution of an
entity for an offence that the entity is taken to have committed because of subsection (2),
it is a defence if the entity proves that the entity:
(a) did not aid,
abet, counsel or procure the relevant act or omission; and
(b) was not in any
way knowingly concerned in, or party to, the relevant act or omission (whether
directly or indirectly and whether by any act or omission of the entity).
Note 1: The defence in subsection (3)
does not apply in relation to offences under Part 2.4 of the Criminal
Code.
Note 2: A defendant bears a legal
burden in relation to the matters in subsection (3): see section 13.4
of the Criminal Code.
444‑10 Public officers of companies
(1) The individual who is
the public officer of a company for the purposes of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936 is also the public officer of the company for the
purposes of an *indirect tax law. The public officer’s
address for service under that Act is also the public officer’s address for
service for the same purposes.
(2) The public officer is
answerable for doing everything required to be done by the company under an *indirect tax law, and in case of default is liable to the same
penalties.
(3) A proceeding under an *indirect tax law that is brought against the public officer is taken
to have been brought against the company, and the company is liable jointly
with the public officer for any penalty imposed on the public officer.
(4) Everything done by the
public officer that the public officer is required to do in that capacity is
taken to have been done by the company.
(5) Service
of a notice or other document on the public officer or at the public officer’s
address for service is sufficient service on the company for the purposes of an
*indirect tax law. If at any time there is no public officer, service
on an individual who is acting or appears to be acting in the business of the
company is sufficient.
Note: See section 444‑15 for
alternative ways to give a notice to, or serve a process on, a company (through
its officers, attorneys or agents).
(6) This section does not,
by implication, reduce any of the obligations or liabilities of the company.
444‑15 Notifying and serving
companies
For the purposes of an *indirect tax law, if the Commissioner considers it appropriate, a
notice or process may be given to, or served on, a company by giving the notice
to, or serving the process on:
(a) a director, the
secretary or another officer of the company; or
(b) an attorney or
agent of the company.
Note: See subsection 444‑10(5)
for alternative ways to serve a notice or another document on a company
(through its public officer or someone else acting or appearing to act for the
company).
Subdivision 444‑B—Partnerships
Table
of sections
444‑30 Partnerships
444‑30 Partnerships
(1) Obligations that are
imposed under this Schedule or an *indirect tax law
on a partnership are imposed on each partner, but may be discharged by any of
the partners.
(2) The partners are jointly
and severally liable to pay any amount that is payable under this Schedule or
an *indirect tax law by the partnership.
(3) Any offence against this
Schedule or an *indirect tax law that is committed by a partnership
is taken to have been committed by each of the partners.
(4) In a prosecution of an
entity for an offence that the entity is taken to have committed because of subsection (3),
it is a defence if the entity proves that the entity:
(a) did not aid,
abet, counsel or procure the relevant act or omission; and
(b) was not in any
way knowingly concerned in, or party to, the relevant act or omission (whether
directly or indirectly and whether by any act or omission of the entity).
Note 1: The defence in subsection (4)
does not apply in relation to offences under Part 2.4 of the Criminal
Code.
Note 2: A defendant bears a legal
burden in relation to the matters in subsection (4): see section 13.4
of the Criminal Code.
Subdivision 444‑C—Superannuation funds
Table of sections
444‑50 Superannuation funds
444‑50 Superannuation funds
If a superannuation
fund does not have a trustee of the fund, this Schedule applies to the fund as
if:
(a) the entity that
manages the fund were the trustee of the fund; or
(b) each of the
entities that manage the fund were a trustee of the fund.
Note: The trustee of a
superannuation fund is taken to be an entity: see subsection 960‑100(2) of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.
Subdivision 444‑D—Incapacitated entities
Table
of sections
444‑70 Representatives
of incapacitated entities
444‑70 Representatives of
incapacitated entities
(1) If:
(a) there are, at the
same time, 2 or more *representatives of the same *incapacitated entity; and
(b) the
representatives were not appointed to act in different capacities as
representatives;
the representatives are jointly and
severally liable to pay any amount that is payable under an *indirect tax law by any of the representatives in relation to that
same incapacitated entity.
(2) If:
(a) there are, at the
same time, 2 or more *representatives of the same *incapacitated entity; and
(b) the
representatives were not appointed to act in different capacities as
representatives;
any offence against an *indirect tax law that is committed by one of the representatives is
taken to have been committed by each of the representatives.
(3) In a prosecution of an
entity for an offence that the entity is taken to have committed because of subsection (2),
it is a defence if the entity proves that the entity:
(a) did not aid,
abet, counsel or procure the relevant act or omission; and
(b) was not in any
way knowingly concerned in, or party to, the relevant act or omission (whether
directly or indirectly and whether by any act or omission of the entity).
Note 1: The defence in subsection (3)
does not apply in relation to offences under Part 2.4 of the Criminal
Code.
Note 2: A defendant bears a legal
burden in relation to the matters in subsection (3): see section 13.4
of the Criminal Code.
Subdivision 444‑E—Indirect tax specific entities
Table of sections
444‑80 GST joint ventures
444‑85 Non‑profit sub‑entities
444‑90 GST groups
444‑80 GST joint ventures
Joint and several liability
(1) The *participants in a *GST joint venture are
jointly and severally liable to pay any amount (an indirect tax amount)
that is payable under an *indirect tax law by the *joint venture operator for the joint venture, to the extent that the
amount relates to the joint venture.
Indirect tax sharing agreements
(1A) Despite subsection (1),
if:
(a) before the *joint venture operator for the joint venture is required to give to
the Commissioner a *GST return for a *tax period, an agreement (the indirect tax sharing agreement)
has been entered into between:
(i) the joint
venture operator; and
(ii) one
or more *participants in the joint venture (the contributing
participant) (other than the joint venture operator); and
(b) a particular
amount (the contribution amount) could be determined under the
indirect tax sharing agreement for each contributing participant in relation to
that tax period; and
(c) the contribution
amounts for each of the contributing participants under the indirect tax
sharing agreement represent a reasonable allocation among:
(i) the
joint venture operator; and
(ii) the
contributing participants;
of the total
amount payable, under *indirect tax laws, for
which the participants in the joint venture would be jointly or severally
liable under subsection (1) in relation to that tax period;
then:
(d) if the
contributing participant leaves the joint venture before the joint venture
operator for the joint venture is required to give to the Commissioner a GST
return for that tax period, and subsection (1B) applies—the contributing
participant is not liable under subsection (1) in relation to an indirect
tax amount relating to that tax period; or
(e) otherwise—the
contributing participant’s liability under subsection (1) in relation to
that tax period is not to exceed that contribution amount.
(1B) This subsection applies
if:
(a) leaving the joint
venture was not part of an arrangement, a purpose of which was to prejudice the
recovery by the Commissioner of the indirect tax amount; and
(b) before the day on
which the *joint venture operator is required to give
to the Commissioner a *GST return for that tax
period, the contributing participant pays to the joint venture operator:
(i) the
contribution amount relating to that tax period; or
(ii) if
the contribution amount cannot be determined at the time of the payment—an
amount that is a reasonable estimate of the contribution amount.
(1C) Subsection (1A) does
not apply if:
(a) the indirect tax
sharing agreement was entered into as part of an arrangement; and
(b) a purpose of the
arrangement was to prejudice the recovery by the Commissioner of the indirect
tax amount.
(1D) Subsection (1A) does
not apply if:
(a) the Commissioner
gives the *joint venture operator of the joint
venture written notice under this subsection in relation to the indirect tax
sharing agreement (whether before, when or after an indirect tax amount to
which the agreement relates becomes payable); and
(b) the notice
requires the joint venture operator to give the Commissioner a copy of the
agreement in the *approved form within 14 days after the
notice is given; and
(c) the Commissioner
does not receive a copy of the agreement by the time required.
(1E) Subsection (1A) does
not apply if, apart from this subsection, the requirements of subsection (1A)
would be satisfied in relation to 2 or more agreements:
(a) that were entered
into by the *joint venture operator; and
(b) that relate to
the same tax period.
Criminal liability of participants in
GST joint ventures
(2) Any offence against an *indirect tax law that:
(a) is committed by
the *joint venture operator for a *GST joint venture; and
(b) relates to the
joint venture;
is taken to have been committed by each
of the *participants in the joint venture.
(3) In a prosecution of an
entity for an offence that the entity is taken to have committed because of subsection (2),
it is a defence if the entity proves that the entity:
(a) did not aid,
abet, counsel or procure the relevant act or omission; and
(b) was not in any
way knowingly concerned in, or party to, the relevant act or omission (whether
directly or indirectly and whether by any act or omission of the entity).
Note 1: The defence in subsection (3)
does not apply in relation to offences under Part 2.4 of the Criminal
Code.
Note 2: A defendant bears a legal burden
in relation to the matters in subsection (3): see section 13.4 of the
Criminal Code.
444‑85 Non‑profit sub‑entities
(1) Obligations that would
be imposed under the *GST law or the *fuel tax law on a *non‑profit sub‑entity
are imposed on each entity who is responsible, to entities or bodies outside
the sub‑entity, for the management of the sub‑entity, but may be discharged by
any entity who is so responsible.
(2) The entities who are so
responsible in respect of the sub‑entity are jointly and severally liable to
pay any amount that is payable under the *GST
law or the *fuel tax law by the sub‑entity.
(3) Any offence against the *GST law or the *fuel tax law that is
committed by the sub‑entity is taken to have been committed by each entity who
is responsible, to entities or bodies outside the sub‑entity, for the
management of the sub‑entity.
(4) In a prosecution of an
entity for an offence that the entity is taken to have committed because of subsection (3),
it is a defence if the entity proves that the entity:
(a) did not aid,
abet, counsel or procure the relevant act or omission; and
(b) was not in any
way knowingly concerned in, or party to, the relevant act or omission (whether
directly or indirectly and whether by any act or omission of the entity).
Note 1: The defence in subsection (4)
does not apply in relation to offences under Part 2.4 of the Criminal
Code.
Note 2: A defendant bears a legal
burden in relation to the matters in subsection (4): see section 13.4
of the Criminal Code.
444‑90 GST groups
Joint and several liability
(1) The *members of a *GST group are jointly
and severally liable to pay any amount (an indirect tax amount)
that is payable under an *indirect tax law by the *representative member for the group.
Indirect tax sharing agreements
(1A) Despite subsection (1),
if:
(a) before the *representative member of the group is required to give to the
Commissioner a *GST return for a *tax
period, an agreement (the indirect tax sharing agreement) has been
entered into between:
(i) the
representative member; and
(ii) one
or more other *members of the group (the contributing
member); and
(b) a particular
amount (the contribution amount) could be determined under the
indirect tax sharing agreement for each contributing member in relation to that
tax period; and
(c) the contribution
amounts for each of the contributing members under the indirect tax sharing
agreement represent a reasonable allocation among:
(i) the
representative member; and
(ii) the
contributing members;
of the total
amount payable, under *indirect tax laws, for
which the members of the group would be jointly or severally liable under subsection (1)
in relation to that tax period;
then:
(d) if the
contributing member leaves the group before the representative member of the
group is required to give to the Commissioner a GST return for that tax period,
and subsection (1B) applies—the contributing member is not liable under subsection (1)
in relation to an indirect tax amount relating to that tax period; or
(e) otherwise—the
contributing member’s liability under subsection (1) in relation to that
tax period is not to exceed that contribution amount.
(1B) This subsection applies
if:
(a) leaving the group
was not part of an arrangement, a purpose of which was to prejudice the
recovery by the Commissioner of the indirect tax amount; and
(b) before the day on
which the *representative member is required to give
to the Commissioner a *GST return for that tax
period, the contributing member pays to the representative member:
(i) the
contribution amount relating to that tax period; or
(ii) if
the contribution amount cannot be determined at the time of the payment—an
amount that is a reasonable estimate of the contribution amount.
(1C) Subsection (1A)
does not apply if:
(a) the indirect tax
sharing agreement was entered into as part of an arrangement; and
(b) a purpose of the
arrangement was to prejudice the recovery by the Commissioner of the indirect
tax amount.
(1D) Subsection (1A)
does not apply if:
(a) the Commissioner
gives the *representative member of the group written
notice under this subsection in relation to the indirect tax sharing agreement
(whether before, when or after an indirect tax amount to which the agreement
relates becomes payable); and
(b) the notice
requires the representative member to give the Commissioner a copy of the
agreement in the *approved form within 14 days after the
notice is given; and
(c) the Commissioner
does not receive a copy of the agreement by the time required.
(1E) Subsection (1A) does
not apply if, apart from this subsection, the requirements of subsection (1A)
would be satisfied in relation to 2 or more agreements:
(a) that were entered
into by the *representative member; and
(b) that relate to
the same tax period.
Effect of prohibitions on certain
arrangements
(2) Subsection (1) does
not apply to a *member of a *GST
group if an *Australian law has the effect of
prohibiting the member from entering into any *arrangement
under which the member becomes subject to the liability referred to in that
subsection.
(3) However, a *member to which subsection (2) applies remains liable for any
amount payable under an *indirect tax law by the *representative member for the group, to the extent that the
liability arises from an act or omission of the member to which subsection (2)
applies.
Criminal liability of members of GST
groups
(4) Any offence against an *indirect tax law that is committed by the *representative
member for a *GST group is taken to have been committed
by each of the *members of the group.
(5) In a prosecution of an
entity for an offence that the entity is taken to have committed because of subsection (4),
it is a defence if the entity proves that the entity:
(a) did not aid, abet,
counsel or procure the relevant act or omission; and
(b) was not in any
way knowingly concerned in, or party to, the relevant act or omission (whether
directly or indirectly and whether by any act or omission of the entity).
Note 1: The defence in subsection (5)
does not apply in relation to offences under Part 2.4 of the Criminal
Code.
Note 2: A defendant bears a legal
burden in relation to the matters in subsection (5): see section 13.4
of the Criminal Code.
Division 446—Local governing bodies
Guide to Division
446‑1 What this Division is about
A local governing
body can resolve that its members are subject to Pay As You Go withholding.
This also results in the members being treated as employees for a wide range of
other taxation purposes.
Table of sections
Operative provisions
446‑5 Requirements for
unanimous resolutions by local governing bodies
Operative provisions
446‑5 Requirements for unanimous
resolutions by local governing bodies
When section applies
(1) This section applies to
the following unanimous resolutions made by a *local
governing body:
(a) a resolution that
the remuneration of members of the body be subject to withholding under Part 2‑5 (about Pay As You Go withholding);
(b) a resolution
cancelling a resolution covered by paragraph (a).
When resolution takes effect
(2) The resolution must
specify a day as the day on which the resolution takes effect. The specified
day must be within the 28‑day period beginning on the day after the day on
which the resolution was made.
Resolution not affected by change in
membership of body
(3) The resolution continues
in force in spite of a change in the membership of the *local
governing body.
Commissioner to be notified of
resolution
(4) The *local governing body must give written notice of the resolution to
the Commissioner within 7 days after the resolution was made.
Eligible local governing bodies to be
notified in Gazette
(5) If the Commissioner is
notified of the resolution, the Commissioner must cause to be published in the Gazette
a notice setting out:
(a) the name of the *local governing body; and
(b) the day on which
the resolution takes effect.
When resolution applies for purposes
of affected provisions
(6) This table sets out when
the resolution applies for the purposes of particular provisions whose
operation it affects.
|
When
the resolution applies
|
|
Item
|
If the
resolution affects the operation of ...
|
the
resolution applies to ...
|
|
1
|
section 12‑45
|
amounts that become payable after the day
on which the resolution takes effect
|
|
2
|
Subdivision AB of Division 17 of
Part III of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (about tax offset
for lump sum payments in arrears)
|
*ordinary income *derived, and amounts that become *statutory income, after the day on which the resolution takes
effect
|
|
3
|
sections 26‑30
and 34‑5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about deductions for
relatives’ travel expenses and non‑compulsory uniforms)
|
expenditure
incurred after the day on which the resolution takes effect
|
|
4
|
Divisions 28 and 900 of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 (about car expenses and substantiation)
|
expenses incurred after the day on which
the resolution takes effect
|
|
5
|
section 130‑80 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 (about capital gains tax and employee share trusts)
|
*shares and rights to which a beneficiary
becomes absolutely entitled after the day on which the resolution takes
effect
|
|
6
|
provisions of the Fringe Benefits Tax
Assessment Act 1986 relating to assessments
|
(a) in the case of a loan benefit within the
meaning of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986—a loan made
after the day on which the resolution takes effect;
(b) in the case of a housing benefit within
the meaning of that Act—the subsistence, after the day on which the
resolution takes effect, of the housing right concerned;
(c) in the case of a residual benefit within
the meaning of that Act that is *provided during
a period—so much of the period as occurs after the day on which the
resolution takes effect;
(d) any other *fringe benefit provided after the day on which the resolution
takes effect.
|
|
7
|
Division 4
of Part II of the Income Tax Rates Act 1986 (about pro‑rating the
tax‑free threshold)
|
amounts
that become assessable income after the day on which the resolution takes
effect
|
|
8
|
the provisions of the Child Support
(Registration and Collection) Act 1988
|
*ordinary income *derived, and amounts that become *statutory income, after the day on which the resolution takes
effect
|
|
9
|
section 9‑20 of the *GST Act (about the meaning of enterprise)
|
activities, or series of activities, done
after the day on which the resolution takes effect
|
|
10
|
Division 111 of the *GST Act (about reimbursement of employees)
|
reimbursements made after the day on
which the resolution takes effect
|
Part 5‑100—Miscellaneous
Division 850—Transactions exempt from application of taxation laws
Table of Subdivisions
850‑A Declaration relating to
security or intelligence agency
Subdivision 850‑A—Declaration relating to security or intelligence agency
Table of sections
850‑100 Declaration relating to
security or intelligence agency
850‑100 Declaration relating to
security or intelligence agency
Object
(1) The object of this
section is to remove the possibility of a conflict arising between Australia’s
national security interests and Australia’s taxation laws.
Making a declaration
(2) The Director‑General of
Security holding office under the Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation Act 1979 may declare that this section applies to one or more
specified entities (the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation itself
may be specified) in relation to one or more specified transactions.
(3) The Director‑General of
the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) may declare
that this section applies to one or more specified entities (ASIS itself may be
specified) in relation to one or more specified transactions.
(4) A declaration under this
section may only be made if the relevant Director‑General is satisfied that the
making of the declaration is necessary for the proper performance of the
functions of:
(a) for the Director‑General
of Security—the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or
(b) for the Director‑General
of ASIS—ASIS.
(5) A declaration under this
section must be in writing, signed by the relevant Director‑General.
Note 1: A declaration may specify an
entity or transaction by reference to a class of entities or transactions (see subsection 33(3AB)
of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901). For example, a declaration may
specify the subsidiaries of a specified company, or the parties to a specified
transaction.
Note 2: For variation and revocation,
see subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
(6) A declaration may be
made even though:
(a) a transaction it
specifies has already been entered into or carried out; or
(b) an entity it
specifies has died or ceased to exist;
(whether before or after the commencement
of this section).
(7) A written document
signed by the relevant Director‑General purporting to be a declaration is prima
facie evidence that this section has been complied with in making the
declaration, but this subsection does not affect the performance of the
functions of the Inspector‑General of Intelligence and Security.
Effect of declaration
(8) For an entity specified
in a declaration in relation to a specified transaction, the transaction is to
be disregarded in determining any of the following:
(a) the existence or
amount of a liability of the entity relating to taxation under any *Commonwealth law, even if the law requires express words to be used
to exempt an entity or transaction from liability to taxation under that law;
Example: Examples of liabilities covered
by paragraph (a) are a liability to GST (despite section 177‑5 of the
GST Act), and amounts required to be paid by Part 2‑5 in this Schedule
(Pay as you go (PAYG) withholding).
(b) the
existence or amount of any kind of benefit (however the benefit is expressed)
relating to taxation under any Commonwealth law;
Example: Examples of benefits covered by paragraph (b)
are deductions, credits and offsets under the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997,
and input tax credits under the GST Act.
(c) the existence or
extent of any other obligation (or right) of the entity relating to a liability
or benefit of a kind mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b).
Example: Examples of obligations covered
by paragraph (c) include the following:
(a) an obligation to withhold money from
a payment;
(b) an obligation to lodge a return, or
to provide information, to the Commissioner of Taxation;
(c) an obligation to become registered
under a taxation law.
(9) A declaration under this
section is not a legislative instrument.