| Small business tax break |
You can claim a 50% tax deduction off the cost of eligible new assets that cost $1,000 or more. This is in addition to deductions available under the simpler or normal depreciation rules (uniform capital allowances). |
| CGT 15-year asset exemption |
If you are 55 or older and retiring and your business has owned an asset for at least 15 years, you won’t pay capital gains tax when you sell the asset. |
| CGT 50% active asset reduction |
If you have owned an asset to conduct your business you will only pay tax on 50% of the capital gain when you sell the asset. |
| CGT retirement exemption |
There is CGT exemption on the sale of a business asset (up to a lifetime limit of $500,000). If you are under 55, money from the sale of the asset must be paid into a complying superannuation fund, approved deposit fund, or retirement savings account. |
| CGT rollover |
If you sell a small business asset and buy a replacement, you can roll over your CGT liability to the value of the replacement asset. This means you won’t pay any CGT owing until you sell the replacement asset. |
| Simpler depreciation rules |
You can usually pool your assets to make depreciation calculations easier. You can also claim an immediate deduction for most assets that cost less than $1,000. |
| Simpler trading stock rules |
If the value of your trading stock has not increased or decreased by more than $5,000 over the year, you can choose whether or not to do an end-of-year stock take. |
| Immediate deduction for certain prepaid business expenses |
You can claim an immediate deduction for prepaid business expenses if the payment covers a period of 12 months or less and ends in the following income year. |
| Entrepreneur's tax offset (ETO) |
If your business has less than $75,000 turnover, the entrepreneur's tax offset might reduce the tax you owe by up to 25%. |
| Accounting for GST on a cash basis |
You don't need to account for GST on a sale you make until you receive payment for the sale. |
| Annual apportionment of GST input tax credits |
If you purchase items you use partly for private purposes, you can claim full GST credits for these on your activity statements. You can then make a single adjustment to account for the private use percentage at the end of the year. |
| Paying GST by instalments |
You can pay GST by instalments the ATO calculates for you and can vary this amount each quarter if required. |
| FBT car parking exemption |
In some cases you may be exempt from FBT for employee car parking. |
| PAYG instalments based on GDP amount |
To save you working out how much you need to pay, as of 1 July 2009, a company or superannuation fund that is a small business entity can pay quarterly instalment amounts as calculated by the ATO based on their business and investment income in their most recently assessed tax return. |