At this time of year, with the end of financial year just around the corner, we’re often asked by clients what they can do to minimise tax. There are number of key principles to bear in mind when trying to arrange your affairs as tax effectively as possible, and these don’t just apply at year end.
- If you have a tax problem you don’t have a problem, because it usually indicates that you have made some money. In general the bigger the tax “problem”, the more money you have made.
- What I call the Kerry Packer principle, you should pay not one cent more than you have to.
- Many of our tax strategies really only change the timing of the incidence of tax, but in principle don’t pay tax until you have to.
- Tax should not be an excuse for spending money. Its no good spending $1 to save yourself 46 cents, unless of course you were going to spend the dollar anyway.
With that in mind, here is my countdown of my top 5 year end tips for business. Review Receivables You know all those little amounts sitting in your debtors ledger that you’re not going to collect? Now is the time to write them off. In order to claim a tax deduction for bad debts this year, you must have written off the debt in your records prior to 30th June. If you are on an accruals basis for GST don’t forget to claim the refund of GST in respect of these in your next BAS.
Repairs We all have small jobs that need doing in our businesses. If tax is an issue for you this year (or if you just want to apply my 3rd principle above), now is the time to get them done. Vehicles serviced, office painted, light globes replaced, leaking tap fixed etc. that sort of stuff…. You were going to spend the money anyway, so why not do it now, and get a tax deduction this year, rather than putting it off until July.
Prepay Business Expenses I like to have things like insurances and subscriptions fall due on 30th June, then I can decide whether to prepay twelve months of the cost as a tax minimisation strategy. Small business can generally obtain a full deduction in the year of the payment, so long as the prepayment is not for more than 12 months and finishes before the end of the following income year. Things like Workers Comp, Professional memberships, and at a personal level Income Protection Insurance could fall into this category. You could even arrange to prepay twelve moths worth of rent with your landlord if you wanted to.