Managing a remote or hybrid workforce in 2022?
Tax deductions can get complicated for employers with a remote workforce. Know the rules and changing pandemic exemptions to optimise your tax and stay on the ATO’s good side.
Almost half of businesses have staff working remotely. It’s up to 44% from a pre-pandemic 20% of businesses.
If you’re an SME managing the complexities of a remote or hybrid workforce, it’s important to stay compliant with employer obligations across costs, deductions, and tax.
Let’s take a look at:
Typically, employers cover the costs of:
Encourage your employees to keep a log book of work-related expenses if they want to claim a proportion of costs as deductions on their personal tax return. |
Employees generally cover their own costs for:
Three golden rules outline what the ATO accepts as a valid business deduction:
Your company may be managing Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) for the first time in the context of remote or hybrid work. If you’ve provided employees with new benefits because of Covid-19, including items that enable work from home, you’re probably paying some FBT.
It’s important to be across what exemptions and concessions — particularly those related to Covid-19 — that may have changed or ended between tax years.
What’s exempt from FBT?
Laptops, portable printers and other electronic devices are generally exempt from FBT if they’re primarily used by your employees for work. This is where a log book of personal and work use comes in handy.
The minor benefits exemption applies to minor, infrequent and irregular benefits under $300. The otherwise deductible rule allows for the taxable value of an expense payment benefit to be reduced to nil. They may apply if your business:
allows employees to take home electronic equipment normally used in the workplace
provide stationery products or computer consumables like toner
pay for employee phone and internet access.
A 2022 priority for the ATO is to target taxpayers claiming expenses that have already been reimbursed by their employer.
ATO Assistant Commissioner, Tim Loh, said, “A mistake that we often see in tax returns is people claiming expenses twice. Remember, we use sophisticated data analytics to monitor for incorrect information and you risk being audited or penalised for deliberately providing incorrect information.”
Communicate with your staff around costs and deductions to ensure they understand what they can claim, and set clear boundaries around expenses.
Remote workforce deductions are still new to a lot of businesses. There's a lot to get your head around if your team has worked remotely on and off through the year, or have shifted to remote-first.
The right expert support means your business stays compliant, doesn’t leave deductions on the table, and keeps up with new and evolving Covid-related exemptions. Getting help with your tax is an expense your business can claim.
Get expert eyes on your remote workforce deductions.