he/she would pay $23 500 in tax and Medicare levy. If an investor with no other income had a $100 000 capital gain he/she would pay $5967 — a saving of $17 533.
PITFALL
Any tax benefit derived by transferring an income-producing asset from one spouse to another may be lost if there is CGT to pay on assets originally acquired after 19 September 1985.
If you transfer an income-producing asset to your spouse you may need to find out the market value of the asset from a professional valuer. This is regardless of what you actually receive because the transaction is not independent nor is it at arm's length. In this situation either party could exercise influence or control over the other in connection with the transaction.
TIP
If you do not have a spouse, or you are both in the highest tax brackets, consider creating an investment company that is taxed at a flat rate of 30 per cent (reducing to 25 per cent if your company derives at least 20 per cent of its income from non-passive sources and has an annual turnover below the small company threshold of $50 million) for all income.
3 DEPENDANT (INVALID AND CARER) TAX OFFSET
The dependant (invalid and carer) tax offset (DICTO) is only available to taxpayers who maintain a dependant who is genuinely unable to work due to carer obligation or disability.
TAX FACT
The DICTO has consolidated the following tax offsets:
invalid spouse
carer spouse
housekeeper
housekeeper (with child)
child housekeeper
child housekeeper (with child)
invalid relative
parent/parent-in-law.
The ATO may deem you eligible for the DICTO if the following applies:
you contribute to the maintenance of your spouse, your parent (or your parent's spouse), your child (aged 16 or over) or siblings (aged 16 or over)
your dependant was being paid either:a disability support, a special needs disability support or an invalidity service pensiona carer allowance for a child or sibling aged 16 or over
your adjusted taxable income as the primary income earner was $100 000 or less
your dependant's adjusted taxable income was less than $11 614
you and your dependant were Australian residents (not just visiting).
If you satisfy the above and your dependant's adjusted taxable income was $285 or less and you maintained him or her for the whole year, you can claim the maximum dependant (invalid and carer) tax offset of $2833.
PITFALL
The DICTO is reduced by $1 for every $4 that your dependant's adjusted taxable income exceeds $282.
TIP
You may be able to receive more than one amount of DICTO if you contributed to the maintenance of more than one dependant during the year, including if you had different spouses during the year.
TAX FACT
The ATO defines your ‘adjusted taxable income’ as the sum of the following amounts, less any child support that you have paid:
taxable income
adjusted fringe benefits
tax-free pensions or benefits
income from overseas not reported in your tax return
reportable super contributions
total net investment loss for both financial investments and rental properties.
EXAMPLE
Marlene and Saxon are married. Marlene is genuinely unable to work and has no salary or wage income. They have rental properties and a share portfolio. Saxon has also entered into a salary-sacrificing arrangement to boost his super. His taxable income is $130 000 after claiming a total net investment loss of $18 000. He has reportable super contributions of $17 000.
Saxon's adjusted taxable income is $165 000 ($130 000 + $18 000 + $17 000). As Saxon's adjusted taxable income is over the income threshold for this offset ($100 000) he is not eligible to claim the dependant (invalid and carer) tax offset.
4 CHILDREN
Any income that has been earned by your child's efforts, such as wages from an after-school job, is considered ‘excepted income’ and is taxed at the general adult tax rates regardless of whether your child is under 18. However, you should be cautious when putting investments in your child's name because minors do not enjoy the same tax-free thresholds as adults on this type of income, known as ‘eligible income’. Table 1.2 sets out the tax rates that apply to minors’ eligible income.
TABLE 1.2: tax on eligible income for minors (2022-23)
Source: © Australian Taxation Office for the Commonwealth of Australia.
Taxable income | Tax on this income |
---|---|
$0–$416 | Nil |
$417–$1307 | 66c for each $1 over $416 |
$1307 and over | 45% of total income |
PITFALL
Minors under the age of 18 are taxed at the highest marginal tax rate for ‘eligible income’ (such as interest, dividends and trust distributions) over $416 per annum.
If some of your child's income is excepted income and the rest is eligible income, they will pay ordinary rates on the excepted income and pay at the higher rate on the eligible income.
EXAMPLE
Louie is 17 on 30 June. He earned $8780 from a part-time job. He also received $920 in interest from money he had saved over the years from gifts. Therefore, he has an excepted income of $8780 and is entitled to the tax-free threshold of $18 200 for this income. He also has eligible