Latest News

Hot Issues
spacer
Tips to help you this tax time
spacer
Tax Time Checklists Individuals; Company; Trust; Partnership; and Super Funds
spacer
ATO warns millions of Australian chasing tax deductions to stop making 'unusual' claims
spacer
Impersonation scams are on the rise
spacer
Components of a cyber security plan
spacer
Social Security Payments and Their Effect on Discretionary Trusts
spacer
LRBA ban no better for housing supply or retirement, accountants clap back
spacer
The evolution of the world's languages
spacer
2026 Year-End Tax Planning Guide – Part 1
spacer
2026 Year-End Tax Planning Guide – Part 2
spacer
PAYDAY SUPER STARTS 1 JULY 2026 – Planning guides
spacer
Payday Super: 6 Things Small Businesses Need to Know
spacer
SMEs to be hit hardest by new trust tax reforms
spacer
6 tips to help businesses avoid financial difficulties
spacer
Managing your mental health and wellbeing during times of uncertainty
spacer
Check out what Uses the Most Internet Traffic: Data from 1994 to 2026
spacer
Key tax changes and measures from the 2026 Federal Budget
spacer
Federal budget 2026: Winners and losers
spacer
A breakdown of 2026-27 Federal Budget Themes and Papers.
spacer
ATO reminds practitioners to avoid common FBT mistakes
spacer
Why every business should have an AI policy
spacer
RSM welcomes updated PCG on transfer pricing for inbound distributors
spacer
Major super tax changes now law
spacer
ATO taking a closer look at investment properties
spacer
Choosing the right trustee structure for your SMSF
spacer
Succession planning and why it should be at the top of your to-do list
spacer
From Bricks to iPhones: The Evolution of the Telephone
spacer
Inflation continues to keep SME owners up at night, survey finds
spacer
Payday Super: 6 Things Small Businesses Need to Know
spacer
ATO issues new guidance on penalties for non-compliance with STP
spacer
Strategies for Effective Debt Recovery for Small Businesses
spacer
Succession planning to remain major focus for ATO this year
spacer
Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) Guide – Key Checklist & Rates
spacer
Buy an existing business
spacer
Most Valuable Industries in the World 2026
Article archive
spacer
Quarter 1 January - March 2026
spacer
Quarter 4 October - December 2025
spacer
Quarter 3 July - September 2025
spacer
Quarter 2 April - June 2025
spacer
Quarter 1 January - March 2025
spacer
Quarter 4 October - December 2024
spacer
Quarter 3 July - September 2024
spacer
Quarter 2 April - June 2024
spacer
Quarter 1 January - March 2024
spacer
Quarter 4 October - December 2023
spacer
Quarter 3 July - September 2023
spacer
Quarter 2 April - June 2023
spacer
Quarter 1 January - March 2023
spacer
Quarter 4 October - December 2022
ATO flashes warning over $7.2bn car expenses claims

Over $7.2 billion in work-related car expenses claimed last year have placed the popular deduction firmly in the headlights of the ATO this tax time.

       

 

According to ATO assistant commissioner Karen Foat, over 3.6 million people made a work-related car expense claim in 2017–18, totalling more than $7.2 billion.

The deduction will be a key focus area for the Tax Office this year, with one in five claims exactly at the maximum 5,000km limit for the cent per kilometre method.

“While some claims of exactly 5,000km are legitimate, we’ve found many people are unable to show how they’ve arrived at this amount, and as a result, they’ve had their claim reduced or disallowed in full,” Ms Foat said.

“We are still concerned that some taxpayers aren’t getting the message that overclaiming will be detected, and if it is deliberate, penalties will apply.

“While some people do make legitimate mistakes, we are concerned that many people are deliberately making dodgy claims in order to get a bigger refund. We see taxpayers claiming for things like private trips, trips they didn’t make and car expenses their employer paid for or reimbursed them for.”

Ms Foat said the ATO’s sophisticated analytics will compare taxpayer claims with others earning similar amounts in similar jobs.

In one unsupported claim last year, a taxpayer claiming $4,800 using the logbook method had triggered an ATO red flag, with a request for the logbook resulting in the taxpayer presenting a car service logbook instead of a logbook kept for calculating their work-use car percentage. The taxpayer was found to have not undertaken any work-related car travel during the year.

Another claim was flagged after the ATO identified an office worker claiming $3,300 for 5,000 kilometres of work-related travel using the cents per kilometre method. The taxpayer advised that his employer did not require him to use his car for work and that his claim was based on trips he made from home to work. 

According to Ms Foat, where the Tax Office identifies questionable claims, they will contact taxpayers and ask them to show how they have calculated their claim. In some cases, where further scrutiny is warranted, the ATO may even contact employers to confirm whether a taxpayer was required to use their own car for work-related travel.

“Simply driving between work and home is not enough to warrant a deduction. You must have a work-related need to travel while performing your job, like traveling from site to site or be required to transport bulky tools,” Ms Foat said.

Apart from work-related deductions, the ATO has also indicated its focus on the overclaiming of rental deductions and the non-declaration of rental income, after commissioner Chris Jordan said that a random audit sample of returns with rental deductions found that nine out of 10 contained an error.

 

Jotham Lian 
25 June 2019 
accountantsdaily.com.au

 

Liability limited by a Scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation.
© O'Brien and Partners 2024 - All Rights Reserved | 333 Canterbury Road, Canterbury VIC 3126 | Tel: 03 9509 3911 Site by Acctweb