Goods & Services Tax (GST) |
Aug 09 |
Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a tax of 10% in Australia on most goods,
services, and other consumables. If you are a registered business, you need to
charge GST on most goods and services you sell or supply. You must be a registered
if your business turnover exceeds $75,000 per annum or $150,000 for a
not-for-profit organization but you may elect for voluntary registration if you
are below the threshold.
Likewise registered suppliers will include GST in the price of items you
purchase from them for your business. You may be entitled to claim input tax
credits from the ATO if you are registered for GST and the acquisitions are
acquired for the purpose of carrying on your enterprise. Although the liability
for paying GST rests with GST-registered entities, the end consumer bears the
economic cost.
Some supplies will be GST free such as medical and educational services
but you are still entitled to claim input tax credits for GST included in any
purchases you made if you are a registered entity. For an input tax sale, such
as providing residential rental accommodation, you do not charge GST on the
sale of the goods or services to your customers and cannot claim input tax
credits for the GST portion of your business expenses relating to the items
acquired to make the supply.
The reporting periods for GST are called tax periods and can be
quarterly or monthly. Quarterly tax periods are three months long, ending 30
September, 31 December, 31 March, and 30 June. Monthly tax periods end on the
last day of each calendar month. Entities with an annual turnover of less than
$20 million generally have quarterly tax periods, but can choose to have
monthly tax periods. Entities with an annual turnover greater than $20 million
are required to have monthly tax periods.
The rules for attributing GST payable and input tax credits to tax
periods differ according to whether GST is accounted for on a cash or accrual
basis. You can account for GST on a cash basis if you meet one of these
requirements:
- Are a small business with an
annual turnover of less than $2 million. This includes the turnover of your
related entities.
- Are not running a business, but
are carrying on an enterprise with a GST turnover of $2 million or less.
- Account for income tax on a cash
basis.
- Carry on an enterprise the
commissioner has determined can account for GST on a cash basis regardless of
your GST turnover.
- Are an endorsed charitable
institution regardless of your GST turnover.
- Are a trustee of an endorsed
charitable fund, gift-deductible entity, or government school, regardless of
your GST turnover.
If you are not registered for GST, you cannot include GST on anything
you sell or provide. You also cannot claim back any GST included in the price
you pay for goods or services used in your business.
FURTHER
INFORMATION: For more information, see the GST guide for small
business.
| IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: This article is published as a guide to clients and for their private information. This article does not constitute advice. Clients should not act solely on the basis of the material contained in this article. Items herein are general comments only and do not convey advice per se. Also changes in legislation may occur quickly. We therefore recommend that our formal advice be sought before acting in any of these areas. |
|