Create a free account, or log in

15 more tax tips for entrepreneurs

Last week, we spoke to a panel of tax experts to provide you with 15 tips to see you through the end of the financial year. But 15 isnโ€™t enough. So weโ€™ve asked them all for 15 more to give you that extra advantage in tax season. 1. Trusts โ€“ donโ€™t forget those unpaid entitlements […]
Andrew Sadauskas
Andrew Sadauskas

feature-15-tips-200Last week, we spoke to a panel of tax experts to provide you with 15 tips to see you through the end of the financial year.

But 15 isnโ€™t enough. So weโ€™ve asked them all for 15 more to give you that extra advantage in tax season.

1. Trusts โ€“ donโ€™t forget those unpaid entitlements

If youโ€™re organising a trust, then you need to be very careful about unpaid entitlements this year. Tax experts say if your entitlement is unpaid you have to clearly identify and deal with the unpaid income distribution.

For instance, this could occur if a trust owes money to a company.

Pitcher Partners executive director Theo Sakell says you can leave amounts unpaid if you put the unpaid distribution on certain commercial terms.

โ€œSo, in other words, the trust enters into a legal agreement with the company and then under that agreement the trust will pay out that money over a longer period of time. But, each year, the trust needs to pay interest.โ€

โ€œThe Australian Tax Office is really concerned with the interest fees being paid annually.โ€

2. Capital gains tax can be a pain

Most capital gains tax issues will be unchanged this year, but Crowe Horwath tax director Tristan Webb warns thereโ€™s one thing you need to be aware of in regard to the CGT discount.

For all capital gains accrued after May 8, the Federal Government intends to remove the CGT discount โ€“ but only for non-residents. The discount will remain available for capital gains accrued prior to that date.

โ€œItโ€™s quite prudent to get a valuation of your CGT asset. Youโ€™ll need to know what the gain is up until May 8,โ€ Webb says.

3. Interest and term deposits

Most people wonโ€™t have earned too much interest income to be worried about, but the odd entrepreneur needs to be wary here.

Sakell says while โ€œthe average person isnโ€™t a bankโ€, you still need to be careful about your interest income, especially as the ATO will crack down on any undisclosed amounts.

โ€œAlso, related to this, if youโ€™re looking at rolling over your term deposits, then you may want to think about having them mature after the end of the financial year to put it in the next year.โ€

4. Donโ€™t get caught in a CGT contract trip

Other tax experts say thereโ€™s something else you should watch out for when it comes to capital gains tax โ€“ the actual contract date. When you sign contracts to achieve a capital gain, you need to be careful.

โ€œLetโ€™s say youโ€™re selling an asset and you sign a contract on June 29, but the deal doesnโ€™t settle until the end of July,โ€ says Pitcher Partnersโ€™ Ray Cummings. โ€œThat gain will still be realised in the current financial year.โ€

โ€œIt starts from when you sign the contract. Some people miss that, so you should watch out for it.โ€

5. Donโ€™t forget your currencies

Itโ€™s been a shocking year for currency exchange, with the Australian dollar surging upwards of parity and then dropping down to US97c in just the past few weeks. For businesses trading in currencies, itโ€™s been a stressful and confusing time.

That stress can be exacerbated during tax time, so Sakell says itโ€™s worth trying to get all your currency exchanges in order before itโ€™s too late.

โ€œThere are plenty of businesses trading in currencies right now, and if youโ€™ve bought or sold currencies then you need to get everything sorted out.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s important to do some calculations in order to figure out what you might want to crystallise as an unresolved loss, or whether itโ€™s worth doing that at all? You may want to think about transferring that money to another investment.