Source: Australian Tax Forum Journal Article
Published Date: 1 Dec 2020
In Australia, the cost of repairing an asset used to produce assessable income is immediately deductible under s 25-10 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997. To claim this deduction, the repairs must not be of a capital nature. The courts have developed three tests to distinguish repair costs from capital expenses. The first test, the initial repair test' is fairly sound. However, the other two tests, which focus on replacing and improving assets, are far less reliable. This article begins with a general discussion on repairs and critiques the three tests used for characterising repair costs. It explores the rationale for allowing immediate tax deductions for repair costs and the significant difficulty involved in producing coherent and consistent tax outcomes in practice. Next, the article demonstrates this difficulty through a survey of case law, arguing that the current rules need to be clarified. Lastly, the article recommends that new tax rules be adopted to deal with repair costs, to complement the existing regimes governing depreciating assets and capital works, simplify tax administration and reduce compliance costs.
More by Christina Allen
The confused path of the Australian corporate tax residence rules: is reform necessary? - Journal 22 Apr 2024
Lost and found coins: cryptocurrency chain splits in Australia - Journal 15 Dec 2023
Statutory depreciation regimes for intangible assets - Journal 01 Jul 2021
Recognising the cost of purchased goodwill - Journal 01 Mar 2020
Sorry, this is subscriber only content.
To gain access to this material and much more - Subscribe Now.
(Note: Members can access Taxation in Australia journal articles without a Tax Knowledge Exchange subscription - please log in to access).
Already a Subscriber? Login now
Already a Subscriber? Login now
Details
The material is copyright. Apart any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research criticism or review, as permitted under the copyright Act, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission from The Tax Institute.
Unless expressly stated, opinions are not that of The Tax Institute, which accepts no responsibility for the accuracy of any of the information contained within it.
The Tax Institute
(ABN 45 008 392 372 (PRV14016))
("TTI")
The Tax Institute is a Recognised Tax Agent Association (RTAA) under the Tax Agent Services Regulations 2009.
All materials provided on this site are protected by copyright and are owned by or licensed to TTI.
Except as expressly permitted by TTI or the copyright owner, any person or company who uses this site must not use, reproduce, redistribute, retransmit, publish or otherwise transfer, or commercially exploit, the materials or any information, software or other content, in whole or in part, which is available through this site.
Tags