Archive for the ‘Work Related Expenses’ Category

Work Related Expenses – Travel Expenses

expensesCommon travel expenses you may be able to claim include air, bus, train & taxi fares. If you use  a road vehicle designed to carry a load of one tonne or more, or nine or more passengers, use a  motor cycles, incur bridge/road tolls, parking, car hire fees, meal expenses or accommodation expenses whilst away overnight for work then you have incurred travel expenses.

You cannot claim a deduction for costs associated with travel to and from work however if the travel is from one job directly to a second job you can claim a deduction for costs incurred for that leg of the travel. Travel from the second job to home is not deductible.

You can claim a deduction for costs incurred traveling from your usual place of work to another location for the same employer, for example to a clients premises while still on duty then back to your usual work place or directly home. In this case you can claim the cost of travel to another work location and the cost of returning to your usual workplace or the cost of going straight home. Travel to and from locations for the purpose of study is not covered here as these are claimed under ‘Self Education Expenses’.

Generally parking fees and tolls can only be claimed where there is also a deduction available for the traveling expense, there are a few exceptions to this rule and you can view these on the ATO website.

The treatment of overnight travel for work is varied depending on an individual’s circumstances.

For an employee, this is where they undertake the travel for an activity which is directly related to their income earning activities as an employee. For a business person (sole trader etc) the expense must have been necessarily incurred for the purpose of producing assessable income.

For travel within Australia, no written evidence and no travel records are required if the employee receives a travel allowance and claims no more than the amount considered reasonable by the Tax Office.

If the employee is traveling for 6 nights or more a travel diary or similar must be maintained for travel within Australia or overseas

If no travel allowance is received, or the claim is more than the amount considered reasonable by the Tax Office all travel expenses claimed must be supported by written records. It is always advisable to keep a diary if traveling overseas, or if you are away for any period of time. Records, such as the date and time of meetings, business cards of people attending the meetings etc always help to substantiate any travel claim.

Contact Les or one of his team for detailed advise on these and any other tax or accounting problem you have.

Work Related Expenses – Protective Work Clothing Part 2

Last week we looked at work clothing, whereby a uniform may be compulsory or non compulsory. With compulsory uniforms you can claim the cost of buying and maintaining those uniforms. With non compulsory uniforms each case is treated on its merits.

Protective clothing is different in that in the main it is tax deductible, an example would be steel capped boots or wet weather gear worn when using chemicals or high pressure hoses. Sun glasses, sun screen and hats are protective clothing for outdoor workers and other taxpayers required to spend part of their day out of the office. The ATO have advised that drill trousers, shorts, shirts and conventional footwear such as sports shoes and joggers are not considered protective clothing, they are of a private nature.

Protective clothing is the clothing and footwear that you wear to protect yourself from the risk of illness or injury posed by your income earning activities or the environment in which you are required to carry them out. To be considered protective the items must provide a sufficient degree of protection against that risk. Examples of protective clothing include: fire resistant and sun protective clothing; safety coloured vests; non slip nurses shoes; rubber boots for concreters; steel capped boots; gloves; overalls; and heavy duty shirts and trousers.

The tax office also considers that dust coats, smocks and aprons you wear to avoid damage or soiling to your ordinary clothes during the course of your income earning activities to be protective clothing. Ordinary clothes such as jeans, drill shirts and shorts, trousers and socks that lack protective qualities designed for the risks of your work are not protective clothing.

For more information about claiming a deduction for expenses associated with your work related clothing you could refer to Tax Rulings TR 94/22; TR 97/12; TR 2003/13 and tax determination TD 1999/62. Reading of these publications is also a cure for insomnia.

Contact Les or one of his team for detailed advise on these and any other tax or accounting problem you have.

Work Related Expenses – Work Clothing

The tax Office has gone to print in order to assist taxpayers in identifying what is or is not Work Clothing. This is an attempt to guide taxpayers and to take the guess work out of claiming legitimate expenses in tax returns.

Work Uniforms can either be compulsory or non compulsory. If the uniform is compulsory then you may be able to claim for a single item of distinctive clothing such as a jumper, if it is compulsory for you to wear it at work. You cannot claim expenses incurred for non compulsory work uniforms, unless your employer has registered the design with Ausindustry. Check with your employer who should be able to confirm this information for corporate wear at www.ausindustry.gov.au. Shoes, sock and stockings can never form part of a non compulsory work uniform, and neither can a single item such as a jumper.

Generally, you cannot claim a deduction for the cost of purchasing or cleaning a plain uniform or conventional clothing worn at work, even if your employer tells you to wear them, as this is deemed a private expense.

According to the ATO, if you receive an allowance from your employer for clothing, uniforms, laundry or dry cleaning you cannot automatically claim a deduction. Clothing expenses you can claim are related to compulsory uniforms comprising a set of clothing that, when worn, identifies you as an employee of a specific organisation having a strictly enforced policy that makes it compulsory for you to wear the uniform whilst at work.

You may be able to claim a deduction for shoes, socks and stockings where they are an essential part of this distinctive compulsory uniform, the characteristic of which are stated in your employer’s uniform policy.

You may also claim for a single item of distinctive clothing, such as a jumper, where it is compulsory for you to wear it at work. Generally clothing is distinctive where it has the employer’s logo permanently attached and the clothing is not available to the general public.

If you wear a non compulsory uniform you cannot claim for stockings, short socks or shoes as these items cannot be registered as part of a non compulsory uniform. Your employer can tell you if your uniform or wardrobe is registered. If your employer requires you to wear a distinctive uniform or wardrobe, but does not enforce the wearing of the uniform, the design of the uniform must be registered before you can claim a deduction.

You can claim a deduction for the cost of occupation specific clothing, eg checked pants worn by chefs. The clothing would be specific to your occupation and is not everyday in nature. It is unlikely that a building worker would have occupation specific clothing.

More next week on protective clothing.

Contact Les or one of his team for detailed advise on these and any other tax or accounting problem you have.

Work Related Expenses. What are they?

Taxpayers can claim deductions for work related expenses (WRE) incurred while performing their job. You can incur a work related expense when you receive a bill or invoice for an expense that you are liable for and must pay or you receive a good or service and pay for it. The fact that you have not yet paid for the goods does not stop you claiming a tax deduction in the year the debt was incurred.

The basic rules associated with work related expenses are: (a) you must have incurred the expense in the current tax year; (b) you cannot claim an expense that your employer (or any other person) has or will reimburse for you; (c) you must have incurred the expense in the course of earning your assessable income and (d) it must not be private, domestic or capital in nature. For example, travel to & from work each day is private expenditure.

You must have written evidence to prove your claims if your total claims exceed $300, the records you keep must prove the total amount, not just the amount over $300.

The $300 limit does not apply to claims for car, meal allowance, award transport payments allowance and travel allowance expenses. There are special written evidence rules for these claims which are explained on the ATO Website. If the amount you are claiming is less than $300.00 you need to be able to show how you arrived at that figure but you do not need written evidence ie receipts, bank statements, etc. The ATO advise that it is best if you retain all receipts so that in the event of you claiming more than the $300.00 you can justify the full claim.

Many taxpayers believe that they are entitled to a tax deduction of $300.00 whether or not they have actually spent anything.  This is totally wrong. The only tax deduction available is one whereby the taxpayer has actually incurred an expense or paid for one. Aligned with this is the fact that the expense must be related to the earning if income.

Generally, tax deductions for work related expenses are similar irrespective of the occupation undertaken, whether you are a building worker, teacher, truck driver, nurse, shop assistant or defence force member. No matter what the occupation, you may be able to claim for work related travel, protective clothing or uniforms, reference material, tools of trade, self education expenses and overtime meal allowances. I say ‘you may be able to’ because although you are required to spend money in order to work, the Tax Office does not see that spending as being an integral part of earning your income.

In the coming weeks we will look at specific deductions.

Contact Les or one of his team for detailed advise on these and any other tax or accounting problem you have.