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ATO reveals focus on WFH deductions, rental errors, and incomplete income this tax time

Dodgy work-from-home deductions, rental property errors, and miscalculated income continue to vex the Australian Taxation Office, which has warned taxpayers to pay special attention to this yearโ€™s claims.
David Adams
David Adams
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Dodgy work-from-home deductions, rental property errors, and miscalculated income continue to vex the Australian Taxation Office (ATO), which has warned taxpayers to pay special attention to this yearโ€™s claims.

On Monday, the ATO revealed its three priority areas for the upcoming tax season, with incorrect work-related expenses taking the top spot.

The method for calculating fixed rate work-from-home deductions changed last year, requiring taxpayers to keep a detailed log of every day they actually work outside the job site, instead of rough estimations.

Around four million Australians claimed a WFH-related deduction last financial year.

Those taxpayers have now been warned not to replicate last yearโ€™s claims.

โ€œCopying and pasting your working from home claim from last year may be tempting, but this will likely mean we will be contacting you for a โ€˜please explainโ€™,โ€ ATO assistant commissioner Rob Thomsen said in a statement.

โ€œYour deductions will be disallowed if youโ€™re not eligible or you donโ€™t keep the right records.โ€

Nine in ten landlords miscalculated their rental income, the ATO added, with Thomsen pointing to a poor understanding of eligible deductions linked to property maintenance.

โ€œThis year, weโ€™re particularly focused on claims that may have been inflated to offset increases in rental income to get a greater tax benefit,โ€ he said.

The tax office is asking landlords to recognise the difference between repairs, which are immediately deductible, and major capital improvements, like a kitchen renovation, which are deductible over time.

Thomsen encouraged property owners to consider the services of a registered tax agent to ensure they only claim what they are entitled to.

Finally, the tax office is urging taxpayers to wait some time after July 1 to actually file their returns.

For many taxpayers, income information will automatically pre-fill by the end of July, eliminating the need to scramble for interest statements and dividend filings.

โ€œWe know some prefer to tick their tax return off the to-do list early and not have to think about it for another 12 months, but the best way to ensure you get it right is to wait for just a few weeks to lodge,โ€ Thomsen said.

The ATOโ€™s call-out to taxpayers comes months after it revealed its focus on small business compliance.

Unpaid superannuation, audit-raised liabilities, refund fraud, aging debts, and self-assessed debts are all on its radar.

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