logo
ATO's dragnet: Millions of side hustles face shock tax bill

ATO's dragnet: Millions of side hustles face shock tax bill

Courier-Mail4 hours ago

The tax office now sees everything you earn from Airbnb, Uber, OnlyFans and property investments – and their AI system is ready to flag thousands of Aussies side hustlers who don't declare it all.
New reporting regimes will see the Australian Taxation Office have its strongest indication yet in 2025 of individual's sources of wealth across a dozen different types of third-parties including online marketplaces, cryptocurrency providers and share economy providers – with AI data-matching expected to flag all discrepancies.
The ATO's new system can now see transactions as small as a $50 car space rental, a $100 Airtasker job or a weekend Airbnb rental – and match them to names, birth dates, and tax file numbers.
MORE: Cash-strap student turns $40k to 38 homes
Govt pays $3.3m for unliveable derelict house
MORE: Rate cut windfall: Aus big bank's shock new forecast
Shock as city's distressed home listings surge 36pc in one month
CPA Australia tax lead Jenny Wong said the gig economy was now reporting incomes directly to the ATO which could see some in for a shock bill this year.
She warned anyone who doesn't report money earned through online platforms and pay tax on those amounts risked an amended return, extra tax bill and penalties.
'Until this year, individuals have been required to self-declare the income from their side-hustles. Now nothing will go under the radar. If you deliver food with DoorDash, work some casual jobs through Airtasker, or make content for Patreon, YouTube or OnlyFans, these sites are now reporting your earnings to the tax office.'
The data-matching warning applies right down to even renting out a car space for a night, let alone a spare room or your investment unit.
'These rules apply to a broad range of services, not just the most well-known. If you use a website to rent out a carparking space or your designer handbag, this income will be recorded, and you'll need to pay tax.'
MORE: Buyer of $12m mansion plans to give it away
Culture Kings founders' bold $30m push
Property investors will face the highest scrutiny under the new system, with the ATO now cross-referencing not just data from bank accounts, property managers and insurance companies, but also those off rental platforms and sharing economy apps.
'You can claim an immediate deduction for some expenses in the income year you incur them provided your property is rented or genuinely available for rent,' an ATO statement said – though the cost must be paid by you not your tenant or someone else and you must keep adequate records for evidence.
Ms Wong reserved the biggest warning influencers and those who have had a strong year of earning activity through sites like YouTube and OnlyFans, and said influencers have an obligation to declare any gifts and gratuities received as a form of payment.
'You must pay tax on income you earn above the tax-free threshold of $18,200,' she said.
'So, if you've had a successful year earning money through advertising revenue and streaming subscriptions, as well as through gifts and gratuities, the ATO will be expecting you to cough up. Yes, this even includes free cars, holidays, clothes and anything else you're lucky enough to receive as a form of payment.'
Those amounts due to the tax office could run into the tens of thousands, she warned, 'depending on how much you've earned during the year'.
This as ATO warned wild claims and missed income declarations were in its sights this tax return season.
Among the areas in the hunt were interest and investment income, employment income, government payments, capital gains tax from the disposal of shares and property, employment-related foreign source income, taxable government grants and payments, payments made to contractors in the building and construction industry, private health fund information and distributions from a favoured source for many investors: partnerships, trusts and managed funds.
CPA Australia's tips for gig economy workers:
– Declare all income: Ensure that all earnings are reported in your tax return, regardless of the amount or frequency. This includes gifts and gratuities.
– Maintain accurate records: Keep detailed records of income and expenses to support your deduction claims.
– Understand your obligations: Familiarise yourself with your tax requirements, including ABN registration and GST obligations if applicable.
– Seek professional advice: Consider consulting a professional tax agent like a CPA to navigate your tax affairs and ensure compliance.
(Source: CPA Australia)
MORE REAL ESTATE NEWS

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why buying ETFs feels easy, until the tax man comes knocking
Why buying ETFs feels easy, until the tax man comes knocking

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Why buying ETFs feels easy, until the tax man comes knocking

ETFs aren't as simple at tax time You must report all income, even if reinvested AMMA statements are essential for getting tax right For most Aussie investors, ETFs feel like the ultimate set-and-forget play. Buy a few low-cost funds, reinvest the returns, and let compound interest do the heavy lifting. Too easy, right? Well… not quite. Because when it comes to tax time, the ATO doesn't care how chill your strategy is. If you own ETFs, there's a good chance your return is more complicated than you think. What the ATO says Let's start with the basics. The ATO classifies ETFs as managed investment trusts, meaning you're not buying assets directly, you're buying units in a trust that holds the assets for you. That trust collects income and passes it on to you in the form of distributions. These distributions can include all sorts of income: dividends, interest, capital gains, even foreign income. And yep, you have to declare all of it, even if you never actually see the cash. That includes when your distribution is reinvested into more ETF units (via DRPs or dividend reinvestment plans), or when the ETF holds some of it back for fees and reserves. The ATO expects you to declare any income attributed to you in the year it's earned, not when it hits your bank account. They also expect you to report capital gains when you sell your ETF units, just like shares. And if your ETF sells assets inside the fund, they can pass those capital gains onto you, even if you didn't touch a thing. And that is where most DIY investors get blindsided. 'You're probably underreporting your tax' According to chartered accountant Davie Mach, that's one of the biggest traps ETF investors fall into. 'If you invest in ETFs and you're not across how it works, how capital gains are attributed, or what to do with foreign tax offsets, you're probably underreporting your tax,' he said on his podcast. 'And with the ATO cracking down harder on ETF investors, that's a risk you can't afford to take.' Mach breaks it down: most Aussie ETFs operate under the AMIT (Attribution Managed Investment Trust) regime, meaning they attribute income to investors whether or not it's paid in full. So if the ETF says you earned $100, but they only paid you $90, you still have to report the full $100 on your tax return. The good news is that $10 difference increases your cost base, which decreases your capital gains tax when you eventually sell. ETF providers send out AMMA statements. In other words, your end-of-year tax roadmap showing how much income was attributed to you, including franking credits, foreign income, offsets and capital gains. These numbers go into very specific boxes on your return. If you miss one, or worse, just report what landed in your bank account, you're probably getting it wrong. 'Don't ignore your ETF tax statements' Tax agent Irene Zhu has seen that mistake too many times. 'The biggest mistake I see, especially from beginners, is this – they completely ignore their ETF tax statements,' Zhu said on her podcast. 'They don't know what it means. They don't use them. And when tax time rolls around, they just enter whatever cash hit their bank account.' She also warns about foreign ETFs. If you've got US-listed ETFs in your portfolio, the IRS may have already taken a slice before your money arrives. You might be eligible to claim that back through a foreign income tax offset. But again, only if you report it correctly. A few simple fixes that could save you thousands Both Zhu and Mach agree on a few key rules of thumb for ETF investors: Wait for your tax statement. Don't lodge early just because you want it done. Your ETF's AMMA statement usually lands around August and has all the info you need. Use prefill, but don't blindly trust it. Cross-check it with your statement. Track your cost base. That's your running total of what you paid and all the adjustments over time. If you're not updating it, your capital gains tax could be way off when you sell. Be careful buying ETFs near the end of the financial year. You might cop a capital gains distribution you weren't expecting. So... ETFs might seem like the low-maintenance option, but from a tax perspective, they're anything but. 'Taxes are one of those quiet wealth killers. You don't notice at first, but over time, they can eat a big chunk of your returns,'' said Zhu. Read the fine print, track your numbers, and remember, when it comes to ETFs, the ATO's watching, even if you aren't.

ATO's dragnet: Millions of side hustles face shock tax bill
ATO's dragnet: Millions of side hustles face shock tax bill

News.com.au

time4 hours ago

  • News.com.au

ATO's dragnet: Millions of side hustles face shock tax bill

The tax office now sees everything you earn from Airbnb, Uber, OnlyFans and property investments – and their AI system is ready to flag thousands of Aussies side hustlers who don't declare it all. New reporting regimes will see the Australian Taxation Office have its strongest indication yet in 2025 of individual's sources of wealth across a dozen different types of third-parties including online marketplaces, cryptocurrency providers and share economy providers – with AI data-matching expected to flag all discrepancies. The ATO's new system can now see transactions as small as a $50 car space rental, a $100 Airtasker job or a weekend Airbnb rental – and match them to names, birth dates, and tax file numbers. Govt pays $3.3m for unliveable derelict house CPA Australia tax lead Jenny Wong said the gig economy was now reporting incomes directly to the ATO which could see some in for a shock bill this year. She warned anyone who doesn't report money earned through online platforms and pay tax on those amounts risked an amended return, extra tax bill and penalties. 'Until this year, individuals have been required to self-declare the income from their side-hustles. Now nothing will go under the radar. If you deliver food with DoorDash, work some casual jobs through Airtasker, or make content for Patreon, YouTube or OnlyFans, these sites are now reporting your earnings to the tax office.' The data-matching warning applies right down to even renting out a car space for a night, let alone a spare room or your investment unit. 'These rules apply to a broad range of services, not just the most well-known. If you use a website to rent out a carparking space or your designer handbag, this income will be recorded, and you'll need to pay tax.' Culture Kings founders' bold $30m push Property investors will face the highest scrutiny under the new system, with the ATO now cross-referencing not just data from bank accounts, property managers and insurance companies, but also those off rental platforms and sharing economy apps. 'You can claim an immediate deduction for some expenses in the income year you incur them provided your property is rented or genuinely available for rent,' an ATO statement said – though the cost must be paid by you not your tenant or someone else and you must keep adequate records for evidence. Ms Wong reserved the biggest warning influencers and those who have had a strong year of earning activity through sites like YouTube and OnlyFans, and said influencers have an obligation to declare any gifts and gratuities received as a form of payment. 'You must pay tax on income you earn above the tax-free threshold of $18,200,' she said. 'So, if you've had a successful year earning money through advertising revenue and streaming subscriptions, as well as through gifts and gratuities, the ATO will be expecting you to cough up. Yes, this even includes free cars, holidays, clothes and anything else you're lucky enough to receive as a form of payment.' Those amounts due to the tax office could run into the tens of thousands, she warned, 'depending on how much you've earned during the year'. This as ATO warned wild claims and missed income declarations were in its sights this tax return season. Among the areas in the hunt were interest and investment income, employment income, government payments, capital gains tax from the disposal of shares and property, employment-related foreign source income, taxable government grants and payments, payments made to contractors in the building and construction industry, private health fund information and distributions from a favoured source for many investors: partnerships, trusts and managed funds. CPA Australia's tips for gig economy workers: - Declare all income: Ensure that all earnings are reported in your tax return, regardless of the amount or frequency. This includes gifts and gratuities. - Maintain accurate records: Keep detailed records of income and expenses to support your deduction claims. - Understand your obligations: Familiarise yourself with your tax requirements, including ABN registration and GST obligations if applicable. - Seek professional advice: Consider consulting a professional tax agent like a CPA to navigate your tax affairs and ensure compliance.

Revealed: Complete property investor tax checklist for 2025
Revealed: Complete property investor tax checklist for 2025

News.com.au

time4 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Revealed: Complete property investor tax checklist for 2025

Australia's property investors can legitimately slash thousands from their tax bills through dozens of deductions many don't know exist. With the average property investor able to claim between $8,000-$15,000 in deductions annually, these legal tax breaks represent some of Australia's most generous concessions. As the ATO ramps up its AI-driven crackdown on undeclared income, investors who properly document these deductions gain a crucial advantage. Govt pays $3.3m for unliveable derelict house Shock as city's distressed home listings surge 36pc in one month 'You can claim an immediate deduction for some expenses in the income year you incur them provided your property is rented or genuinely available for rent,' an ATO statement said – though the cost must be paid by you not your tenant or someone else and you must keep adequate records for evidence. Here's the complete checklist of what you can claim as a property investor for the 2024-2025 financial year which runs from July 1, 2024 to June 30, 2025. The deadline for self-lodged returns set for October 31, 2025, and the extended deadline for tax agent lodgements May 15, 2026. Quarterly Business Activity Statements are due July 28, October 28, February 28 and April 28 for those registered for GST. NOTE: This checklist is a general guide only and should not replace professional tax advice. Consult a registered tax agent before lodging your return if uncertain. Immediate Deductions – Advertising for tenants – Body corporate administrative fund fees and charges – Council rates and water charges – Land tax payments – Cleaning costs – Gardening and lawn mowing services – Pest control services – Insurance (building, contents, public liability, loss of rent) – Interest expenses on loans – Property agent's fees and commission – Repairs and maintenance receipts – Legal expenses (evicting non-paying tenant, court action for loss of rental income, defending damage claims) – Stationery, telephone, and postage costs for property management – Bank fees related to property accounts – Tax depreciation schedule fees – Secretary and bookkeeping fees – Smoke alarm maintenance and compliance costs – Safety inspection costs – Pool safety and maintenance costs (Note: From July 1, 2017, travel expenses to inspect, maintain, or collect rent for your residential rental property could no longer be claimed as deductions). Body Corporate Fees – Regular body corporate administrative fund fees – General purpose sinking fund contributions – Documentation distinguishing between administrative fees (immediate deduction) and capital improvement levies – Records of special purpose fund contributions for specific expenses – Documentation of completed capital works funded by special levies Pre-paid Expenses Under $1,000 – Insurance premium statements showing coverage periods – Pre-paid interest documentation – Records of any prepaid service contracts (e.g., pool maintenance, gardening) – Documentation showing the eligible service period for each prepayment – Calculations for prepaid expenses that need to be apportioned over multiple years Depreciating Assets – Appliances (ovens, refrigerators, dishwashers, etc.) – Carpets, curtains, and blinds – Furniture provided for tenant use – Airconditioners and heaters – Hot water systems – Security systems – Current tax depreciation schedule – Receipts for new assets purchased during the year – Details of assets disposed of or scrapped Capital Works Deductions – Construction costs of buildings and structural improvements – Major renovations costs – Cost of altering a building or making structural improvements – Fencing and retaining wall expenses – Paving expenses – Engineering fees related to capital works – Special levy payments for capital improvements (details of works completed) Legal Expenses – Legal fees for evicting non-paying tenants – Legal costs for court action for loss of rental income – Legal expenses for defending third-party damage claims – Solicitor's fees for loan document preparation (borrowing expense) – Legal costs related to purchase/sale (for CGT cost base) – Legal costs for resisting land resumption (for CGT cost base) – Legal costs for defending title to the property (for CGT cost base) DOCUMENTATION REQUIRED: Loan and Borrowing Documentation – Loan statements showing interest and principal payments – Refinancing cost statements – Loan establishment fees documentation – Mortgage discharge fees – Mortgage broker fees – Loan offset account details – Records of borrowing expenses (if total exceeds $100, these are claimed over 5 years or the loan term, whichever is shorter) Records for Partially Deductible Items – Private usage proportion calculations for any shared expenses – Documentation for periods when property was not rented or available for rent – Documentation for personal use periods of the property – Calculations for apportioning expenses between rental and non-rental use New Property Investor Items – Settlement statement – Contract of purchase – Conveyancing documents – Building inspection reports – Stamp duty costs – Initial repairs documentation before renting – Property valuation fees Property Sale Documentation – Contract of sale – Settlement statement – Conveyancing costs for the sale – Agent's commission on sale – Advertising expenses for the sale – Original purchase documentation (for CGT calculation)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store