How to master employer obligations in 2025
Taxpayers who employ
staff should remember the following important dates and obligations:
Fringe
benefits tax ('FBT')
31 March 2025 marks the end of the
2024/25 FBT year. Employers should
remember the following regarding their FBT tax time obligations.
- They should identify if they have
provided a fringe benefit. If they have,
they should determine the taxable value to work out if they have an FBT
liability.
- They should lodge an FBT return
and pay any FBT owed by 21 May 2025. If their
registered tax agent lodges electronically for them, they have until 25 June
2025.
- They should keep the right records
to support their FBT position.
Pay as you
go ('PAYG') withholding
Taxpayers
need to withhold the right amount of tax from payments they make to their
employees and other payees, and pay those amounts to the ATO.
Single
touch payroll ('STP')
Employers should finalise their STP data
by 14 July 2025 for the 2024/25 financial year (there may be a later due date
for any closely held payees).
Super
guarantee ('SG')
- 28
January, 28 April, 28 July and 28 October are the quarterly due dates for
making SG payments;
- The
SG rate is currently 11.5% of an employee's ordinary time earnings. From 1 July 2025, it will increase to 12%.
- Taxpayers
should ensure SG for their eligible employees is paid in full, on time and to
the right super fund, otherwise they will be liable for the SG charge.
ATO's tips to help taxpayers stay on top of their BAS
The ATO has
the following tips to help taxpayers get their BAS right before they lodge:
- They
should make sure they enter the figures for their obligations at the correct
label, and only complete applicable fields.
- If
lodging online, or through a registered tax or BAS agent, they may be able to
get an extra 2 or 4 weeks to lodge and pay.
- If
they have nothing to report for the period, they can lodge a 'nil' BAS online
by selecting 'Prepare' and then 'Prepare as nil', or they can call the ATO's
automated service "any time of the day".
- If
they made a mistake on their last BAS, instead of lodging a revision, they may
be able to use their current BAS to fix it.
For example, they can use label 1A to adjust GST on sales, or label 1B
to adjust GST on purchases.
- They
can also use their BAS to vary an instalment amount.
Claiming fuel tax credits when rates change
Fuel tax
credits changed on 3 February, and taxpayers could receive more savings for
fuel they have acquired on and from this date.
Different rates apply based on the type of fuel, when it was acquired
and what activity it is used for.
The ATO has
the following tips for taxpayers to ensure they are claiming correctly.
- They
can use the ATO's 'eligibility tool' on its website to find out if they can
claim fuel tax credits for fuel they have acquired and used.
- They
can use the ATO's online fuel tax credit calculator (which should automatically
apply the right rate) to work out their claim.
- They
can lodge their BAS via Online Services or a registered tax or BAS agent
(lodging via an agent can allow them extra time to lodge and pay).
ATO "busts" NFP myths
Editor: As the Not-for-profit ('NFP') self-review return is due in March, the ATO has recently published a document 'busting' various NFP 'myths'.
Myth 1:
All NFPs are income tax exempt.
ATO
response: This is not true. Some NFPs are income tax exempt and some are
taxable.
Myth 2:
There is only one way to lodge the NFP self-review return.
ATO
response: There are three ways, as follows:
- A
'principal authority' may be able to lodge using 'Online services for business'';
- It
may be possible for the return to be lodged by phoning the ATO's automated
self-help phone service on 13 72 26; and
- A
registered tax agent can lodge the return through Online services for agents.
Myth 3:
Anyone can lodge the NFP self-review return online.
ATO
response: If lodging via Online services for business, anyone authorised to access the return in Online Services can lodge. If a registered tax agent has
been engaged, they can also prepare and lodge the return in Online services for agents.
Myth 4: If
a person is unsure whether their NFP has charitable purposes, then they do not
need to lodge.
ATO response: The self-review return still needs to be lodged, even if it is not
certain whether the NFP is charitable.
Taxpayer's claim for input tax credits unsuccessful
In a recent
decision, the Administrative Review Tribunal ('ART') rejected a taxpayer's
claim for input tax credits on the basis that all the relevant GST returns
(i.e., BASs) were lodged out of time.
For the GST
periods from 1 October 2015 to 31 March 2017, the taxpayer filed each of her
GST returns more than four years after they were due. The taxpayer still claimed input tax credits
totalling over $10,000 for this period.
The ATO
disallowed this claim, on the basis that none of the input tax credits were
claimed within the four year period, as required by the GST Act.
The ART
upheld the ATO's decision, noting that, as the taxpayer did not file the GST
returns within the four year period "she did not have input tax credits taken into account .... As a consequence, .... (she) simply ceased to be entitled to those input tax credits."
ATO's
appeal against decision that UPEs are not "loans" fails
The Full
Federal Court recently dismissed the ATO's appeal against an AAT decision that
unpaid present entitlements ('UPEs') owing by a trust to a corporate
beneficiary were not "loans" for Division 7A purposes.
A corporate beneficiary had become
entitled to a share of the income of a trust for the 2013 to 2017 income
years. Parts of these entitlements
remained outstanding, resulting in UPEs.
The ATO treated these UPEs as loans from the corporate beneficiary back
to the trust (and, in consequence, as "deemed dividends" made to the
trust).
The AAT held at first instance that a
loan had not been made in this case.
The Full Federal Court upheld the AAT's decision, noting that a loan for
Division 7A purposes requires an obligation to repay an amount, not
merely the creation of an obligation to pay an amount (such as when a
trust distributes income to a beneficiary).