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SMSF landlords reminded of allowable claims

SMSF trustees can claim tax on repairs to rental investment homes held within a fund provided such repairs are not classified as improvements, the ATO has stated as part of its end-of-financial-year guidance.

The regulator has pointed to its current guidance online to highlight the difference between repair, maintenance and capital expenditure in regards to a rental property and the associated tax deductions that can be made.

The guidance noted a repair was when something that is worn out, damaged or broken as a result of renting out the property is replaced, while maintenance is preventing or fixing the deterioration of an item that occurred while renting out the property. Capital expenditure is renovating or replacing an entire structure or adding a new structure to the property.

Breaking this down further, the ATO highlighted its top 10 tips to avoid taxation mistakes in relation to rental properties in the run-up to the end of the financial year.

“Ongoing repairs that relate directly to wear and tear or other damage that happened as a result of you renting out the property can be claimed in full in the same year you incurred the expense,” it stated.

For example, repairing a hot water system or part of a damaged roof can be deducted from tax immediately.

“Initial repairs for damage that existed when the property was purchased, such as replacing broken light fittings and repairing damaged floorboards, are not immediately deductible, but a deduction may be claimed over a number of years as a capital works deduction,” the ATO said.

“These costs are also used to work out your capital gain or capital loss when you sell the property.”

It added that replacing an entire structure, such as a damaged roof, or renovating a bathroom are classified as improvements and cannot be deducted immediately.

“As a general rule, you can claim a capital works deduction at 2.5 per cent of the construction cost for 40 years from the date the construction was completed,” it said.

It also warned SMSFs to obtain clear evidence regarding income and expenses in order to claim entitlements.

“Capital gains tax may apply when you sell your rental property, so keep records over the period you own the property and for five years from the date you sell the property,” it said.

Source: smsmagazine.com.au

Younger trustees driving establishments

SMSF trustees aged below 50 have shown a strong interest in gaining control of their retirement savings, leading to an upturn in the total number of SMSFs, according to a long-running survey of the SMSF sector.

The 2022 “Vanguard/Investment Trends SMSF Report” revealed a spike in SMSF establishments during 2020 and 2021 driven by a ‘COVID cohort’ of younger trustees seeking control of their superannuation.

Data presented in the report showed net SMSF establishments had been declining since December 2012, when they represented 8.7 per cent of all SMSFs, down to 3.6 per cent in December 2019.

However, this turned from 2020 when the annual rate of establishment was 3.7 per cent and then surged to 4.8 per cent in December 2021, while annual wind-ups decreased from 17,098 in December 2019 to 10,210 in December 2021.

Speaking at a media briefing in Sydney today, Investment Trends head of research Irene Guiamatsia said: “On a net basis, we are certainly seeing a spike in the establishment rates, which then leads us to now over 600,000 SMSFs that are operating in the market.

“The latest figures show about 29,000 SMSFs were established last year. This is the highest [number] in the past three or four years.”

Guiamatsia added the research also examined the average age and balance at time of establishment from 2020 to 2022 and found both of those were at their lowest points since 2005.

“The key data point shows that the average age of establishment is the lowest that we have seen compared to some of the previous generations [of trustees],” she said.

“Now the average at which an SMSF has been established is 46 years of age and at an average balance of about $340,000.”

In comparison, the average starting balance for an SMSF established between 2015 and 2019 was $440,000 and the average establishment age was 50, while from 2006 to 2014, those figures were 51 years old and $530,000.

The last set of equivalent figures dates from before 2005 when the average age at establishment was 46 and average balances at the time of establishment were $380,000.

The 17th annual investor report from Vanguard and Investment Trends gathered information from 2430 SMSFs and was conducted between March and April 2022.

Source: smsmagazine.com.au