SAVING TAX USING SALARY PACKAGING

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Ways to utilize salary packaging to reduce tax Superannuation Voluntarily contribute more to your superannuation and save tax if your marginal tax rate is above 15%. If you are aged 48 years or younger on the 30 June 2016, you can contribute up to $30,000 a year in concessional contributions for the 2016/2017 year. If you are aged 49 years or older on the 30 June 2016, you can contribute up to $35,000 a year in concessional contributions for the 2016/2017 year.

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Example:
John has a gross salary of $100,000. His income tax is $26,732 for the year. If he chooses to salary sacrifice $20,000 to his super scheme, his income tax would be reduced to $19,147. He has reduced his tax by $7,585!

Important note: A relatively unknown loophole in the Superannuation Guarantee (SG) rules allows an employer to cut an individual’s SG entitlements when an employee reduces their taxable salary via a salary sacrificing arrangement. Make sure you check that your employer is not reducing their contributions after you make additional contributions to your superannuation. In the meantime, watch out that you don’t exceed capped limits.

Use Novated Lease to purchase a car with Pre-tax income
A Novated Lease allows an employee to lease a car from a finance company by signing a Novation Agreement with their employer. The employer is then responsible for making the lease payments to the finance company. In the meantime, the employer deducts lease payments from employees before tax income. Employees also pay Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) themselves through a deduction from their after tax income.

Example: Mary has an income of $90,000 per year. She would like to enter into a Novated Lease arrangement to acquire a car for personal use costing $65,000. Annual running costs are estimated to be $21,000. Fringe benefits on the car would be $13,000 which will be deducted from Mary’s package. Mary will save $2,895 per year on her tax, and $14,475 over the 5-year lease. Note: this example ignores the impact of GST, input tax credits and the luxury car tax threshold.

Work related items

Work related items can be provided under salary packaging arrangements. Such as:

  • Portable electronic devices (e.g. laptop or tablet devices, mobile phones).
  • Computer software
  • Protective clothing
  • Tools of trade
  • Briefcases
  • Work related newspapers and business journals
  • Work-related membership and fees, such as corporate airport lounge
    membership

Before you decide to embark on a salary sacrifice arrangement, talk to your Accountant or a Financial Advisor about the overall tax implications of such a strategy. Ensure you do notlose out financially on your employment package.

Declaration: The Excel files and content of this website have been prepared without taking into account your personal financial situation or knowledge of your financial needs. Impact Taxation and Financial Services cannot be liable for any losses or damages arising from using the information provided. It is the user’s responsibility to seek independent advice from a professional accountant before implementing any financial plan.

10 things you should consider before buying a property

Are you considering buying a property? Do you know you could miss opportunities to save thousands, or tens of thousands of dollars if you don’t plan well before the purchase?

Below are a few key considerations:

1. How should you set up your loan structure? If you don’t have a loan offset account for a rental property, after you make extra payments directly to the loan account, you can only claim interest deduction on the remaining balance of the loan. For tax purposes, this deductible balance can’t be changed even if you redraw the overpaid amount later. A good loan structure could also help you to stabilize interest rate and speed up loan repayment by combining a standard variable loan (with an offset account) and a fix rates account.

2. Timing of renovation. You might want to do a renovation right after you have bought the rental property. But do you know for any genuine repair & maintenance included in the renovation, you can claim an outright deduction against the rental income when the property is available for rental? If the work is done before the date when the property is available for rental, you can only claim the deduction against future capital gain when the property is sold. Depend on when you are going to sell, it could take years or up to decades before you can claim the deduction.

3. How should you split ownership? You might want to share the property ownership with a family member. For tax purposes, the percentage of ownership is based on the legal title, regardless of who is paying more on the mortgage. If the property will give you a tax profit, you might want to allocate more
ownership to the low-income earner to utilize the lower marginal tax rate. If it is giving you a tax loss, you might want to allocate more ownership to the high-income earner to utilize the loss. The goal is for the family to pay minimum tax together.

4. Should you use a family trust to purchase the property? There are many pros and cons related to a family trust. The advantages include tax savings on rental profit or capital gain, asset protection and succession planning on family wealth. However, family trust can’t distribute losses. All losses are trapped in the trust to be used to offset future trust profit. Therefore, you can’t utilize any rental loss in a trust to offset other income such as salary & wages. Family trusts also attract high accounting fees on initial setup and annual fees on financial statements and tax returns. State governments also charge much higher land tax on family trusts.

5. Will the income level change in future years for different owners? You might want to forecast the possible income for different owners to understand total tax payment / savings related to the property. This could also impact on your decision making on point 3 and 4 above.

6. Understand when you can treat your property as main residence to receive an exemption on capital gains tax. When eligible, even if you have received rental income, you could still treat your rental property as main residence and receive the exemption. To be eligible, you will need to treat it as your main residence at the beginning. Please check out this ATO link: Treating former home as main residence.

7. Decide whether you need to purchase a depreciation report. Most taxpayers don’t know that the depreciation on the building will need to be added back to calculate capital gains tax when the property is sold. When the property is held for more than 12 months, after applying the capital gains tax discount of 50%, it will effectively cut the tax rate by half at the time of sales. This makes depreciation deductions desirable for high income earners. However, for low-income earners it might not be ideal to claim depreciation as a rental deduction since they could be paying more on capital gains tax in the future. It could get more complicated if the property is under joint ownership between high and low income earners.

8. You might want to consider Centrelink payments for future or existing owners. Most Centrelink payments are income and asset tested. Before attaching a rental property to a family member who is receiving, or plan to receive government benefits, you might want to check the testing thresholds first to see if the Centrelink payment will be impacted. This is also applicable when you are making distributions from a family trust to different family members.

9. Have you considered using your SMSF (selfmanaged super fund) to make the purchase of a rental property? There are a lot of tax saving opportunities with a SMSF since the income tax rate is only 15%. And the capital gains tax rate is effectively only 10% after factoring in the 1/3 discount. The major downside with a SMSF is normally you can’t get the money out until you retire or on compassionate grounds (SMSF does have more flexibilities compared to normal retail super fund. But the choices are still very limited). It could be expensive to set up and operate a SMSF too. There are also strict legal requirements on the trustees. Penalties on incompliance could be severe. Tax law around SMSF is very complicated too. You will need to find a good tax accountant specialized in SMSF to help you to understand the structure, also do a cost-benefit analysis before setting it up.

10. Consider internal ownership changes. For your existing rental properties, you can also consider whether you should transfer the ownership between family members, or between different business structures (this is not applicable for SMSF). You might want to do this when the income level changes with family members, or rental property changes between tax profit and loss. Before the change, you need to consider the cost of transfer including capital gains tax, stamp duty, conveyancer fees, etc. Again, a cost-benefit analysis is a must before the change.

Last but not the least, did you combine all the above strategies and compare your choices? If you haven’t yet, how would you know that you have picked the best strategy to minimize your taxes? We can help you to factor in all considerations, compare different scenarios, also present you with a Property Prepurchase Report with all our findings to help you to make a decision. Contact us today to book in a consultation with an experienced tax accountant!

IMPORTANT INFORMATION
This is general advice only and does not consider your financial circumstances, needs and objectives. Before making any decision based on this document, you should assess your own circumstances or seek advice from your financial adviser and seek tax advice from your accountant.

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