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Tax Deductions For Tradies & Building Workers

If you are a tradie, carpenter, plasterer, plumber, painter, roofer, concrete worker, road construction worker, or other building or construction worker, here is a checklist of the tax deductions you may be able to claim on your personal tax return.

When Can Tradies Claim for Car Expenses

Our experience with building and construction workers is they often, if not always, use their private car for work. In many cases, those work-related car expenses are an allowable deduction.

Transport or car expenses include public transport fares and the running costs associated with motor vehicles, motorcycles, bicycles, etc., for work-related travel. Following is a brief checklist of car expenses specifically for building and construction workers.

What Car Expenses Can Tradies Claim?

2 Ways of claiming car expenses

The following is a checklist of the 2 different methods of claiming motor vehicle or car expenses:

Meals and Overnight Travel Away From Home

It is common for tradies and building and construction workers to travel away from home. The following is a summary with links to what travel costs can be claimed as a tax deduction:

Keeping Records of Overnight Travel

The following tables explain what records you need to claim domestic or overseas travel expenses for accommodation, food, drink, or incidentals.

If you did not receive a travel allowance:
Domestic travel Overseas travel
Written evidence Travel diary Written evidence Travel diary
Travel less than 6 nights in a row Yes No Yes No
Travel 6 or more nights in a row Yes Yes Yes Yes
If you received a travel allowance and your claim does not exceed the reasonable allowance amount:
Domestic travel Overseas travel
Written evidence Travel diary Written evidence Travel diary
Travel less than 6 nights in a row No No No* No
Travel 6 or more nights in a row No No No* Yes

*Regardless of the length of the trip, written evidence is required for overseas accommodation expenses but not for food, drink, and incidentals

If you received a travel allowance and your claim exceeds the reasonable allowance amount:
Domestic travel Overseas travel
Written evidence Travel diary Written evidence Travel diary
Travel less than 6 nights in a row Yes No Yes No
Travel 6 or more nights in a row Yes Yes Yes Yes

 

Work Clothing

A deduction is allowable for the cost of buying, renting, or replacing clothing, uniforms, and footwear (‘clothing’) if:

Training

Work Tools and Equipment

Reimbursements

If an employee teacher receives a payment from his or her employer for actual expenses incurred, the payment is reimbursement, and the employer may be subject to Fringe Benefits Tax. Generally, if an employee teacher receives a reimbursement, the amount is not required to be included in his or her assessable income, and a deduction is not allowable (see Taxation Ruling TR 92/15).

However, if an employer reimburses motor vehicle expenses on a cents per kilometer basis, the amount is included as assessable income of the employee teacher. A deduction may be allowable for the actual expenses incurred.

If the reimbursement by an employer is for the cost of a depreciable item (e.g., tools and equipment), a deduction is allowable to the employee teacher for depreciation.

If a payment is received from an employer for an estimated expense, the amount received by the employee teacher is considered to be an allowance (not a reimbursement) and is fully assessable to the employee teacher.

Other Work Expenses

General Expenses

There are some tax deductions that all employees can claim on their personal tax returns:

We suggest that you keep receipts for all purchases that are work-related, even if they are not listed above. That way, when we prepare your tax return, we can decide whether you are allowed to claim a tax deduction for them or not.

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