Tax Return Guide: Things to Remember

In the preparation of your tax return, you must declare your income statements, payment summaries, and receipts. In understanding the scope of these, we have summarised them below for you to check. It is very important to keep the documents relating to these in order to support your claim.

Income Statements
These refer to the income you have received from your employer, super fund, or government payments, e.g from DVA (Department of Veterans Affairs) or Centrelink.

Bank Statements
These refer to statements from your bank/s manifesting the interest you earn, any fees or charges you have paid during the income year.

Shares, Unit Trusts, or Managed Fund Statements
These refer to dividends or distributions you’ve received. The dividends that you’ve chosen to reinvest must be declared/reported as income.

Buy and Sell Investment Statements
These refer to any assets you bought or sold. What needed to be calculated on this are your capital gains and losses. You can access these from your online broking account or you can get them from your investment consultant or stockbroker.

Records from your Rental Property
These refer to the records of the property you put for rental. What you will be needing is the income and expenses relating to it.
If you use a property manager you will probably get an annual tax statement that details, otherwise you will need to gather details of it such as rental income amounts, interest paid on rental property loans, advertising, body corporate fees, and charges, council rates, water charges, land tax, cleaning, gardening, and lawn mowing, pest control, insurance (building, contents, public liability), interest expenses, property agent’s fees, and commission, income protection insurance, repairs and maintenance, some legal expenses.

Foreign Income
These refer to foreign pensions or other foreign income

Private Health Insurance Policy Statement
Private health insurance rebates and medical costs are tax-deductible only if you pay for them out-of-pocket. Moreover, your financial position, along with where you get health insurance from, will play a massive part in settling if the costs will be qualified for tax deductions. If you are qualified for the rebate, you can claim the rebate either through your private health insurance provider, they will apply the rebate to reduce your private health insurance premiums, or when you lodge your tax return as a refundable tax offset.

Deductions: What are the things that can be claimed?

Vehicle and travel expenses
This only refers if you use your car for work or work in a different location or travel costs relating to work. Travel between home and work, which is generally considered private travel including any personal travel portion of work-related travel cannot be claimed.

Clothing, laundry, and dry-cleaning expenses
This year, face masks and gloves for COVID-19 protection may be deductible. This also refers to uniform, unique and distinctive clothing relating to work. Everyday clothes you bought to wear to work (for example, a suit or black pants), even if your employer requires you to wear them cannot be claimed.

Gifts and donations
This only refers to gifts or donations to organisations that are endorsed by the ATO as “deductible gift recipients”.

Home office expenses
This refers to your computer, phone, or other electronic device and running costs such as an internet service. Again, you can only claim the proportion of expenses that relate to work, not private use. There is also an alternative “80 cents per hour” method that can be used for claiming expenses if you worked from home during the COVID-19 lockdown (only from 1 March). Phone or internet expenses that relate to private use cannot be claimed.

Interest, dividend, and other investment income deductions
This refers to an interest, account fees, investing magazines and subscriptions, internet access, depreciation on your computer.

Self-education expenses
This refers to expenses like course fees, student union fees, textbooks, stationery, internet, home office expenses, professional journals, and some travel related to your current job. Self-education expenses where there is no direct connection to your current employment cannot be claimed.

Tools and other equipment
This refers to tools or equipment you bought to help earn your income.

Others
This refers to other deductions including union fees, the cost of managing your tax affairs, income protection insurance (but not if it’s through your super fund), overtime meals, personal super contributions (that is, after-tax), and other expenses incurred in the course of earning an income. Meal expenses, unless you were required to work away from home overnight cannot be claimed.

3 Golden Rules
Remember the three golden rules when claiming all work-related expenses on your tax return.

(1) You must have spent the money yourself (and not been reimbursed)
(2) The expense must be directly related to earning your income
(3) You must have a record to prove it

How to track the progress of your tax return?
The quickest and easiest way to check the progress of your tax return is by using ATO self-help services. You can check using the following methods:

Online using myGov
Using the ATO app
By phone
With Us
Online using myGov

If you connect your myGov account to the ATO, you can monitor the progress of your tax return or corrections through your myGov account. To check the progress of your tax return, follow the instructions below:

Sign in to myGov
Select ATO from your Member Services From the Home Page select Manage Tax Returns Then, select the income year you are checking If you don’t have a myGov account, it’s easy to create an account and link it to the ATO.

Using the ATO app
To check the progress of your tax return in the ATO app, follow the instructions below:

Login to the ATO app
Select your tax return for the financial year

By phone
To use ATO’s self-help phone service at any time, follow the guide below:
Phone 13 28 65 (Make sure to have your tax file number handy)
Choose option 1 and then option 1

Check with Us
You or your Profit First Accounting agent can check the progress of your tax return anytime by signing in to ATO online services through myGov or the ATO app.

When will I get my refund? Most electronically lodged tax returns are processed within two weeks. ATO processes paper tax returns manually and this can take up to 10 weeks. If you’ve received notification that your refund has been processed, remember your refund may take up to five business days to be in your nominated bank account, depending on your financial institution.

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