64 Jolimont Street, East Melbourne VIC 3002

Accounting News

Taxation ruling on commercial website deductibility

An unfavourable opinion from the Australian Taxation Office sets out the tax deductibility of expenditure incurred in acquiring, developing, maintaining or modifying a commercial website for use in carrying on a business.

   

 

Broadly, the ruling explains that acquiring or developing a commercial website for a new or existing business is considered to be a capital expense, and is therefore not deductible.  “Developing” could include internal labour costs.  On the other hand, maintaining a website, including annual licence fees, remedying software faults, is generally a revenue expense, so may be deductible.

If you have a website and have incurred cost to enhance it, you need to carefully analyse all elements.

If there is new functionality or modification, even if piecemeal or incremental, this is likely to be capital.

Creating a presence on social media is deductible where the cost is trivial.

Unfortunately, this opinion creates many shades of grey to the characteristics of website costs beyond the knowledge of most small business people.

 

AcctWeb



W Marshall & Associates 64 Jolimont Street, East Melbourne VIC 3002

Important: This is not advice. Clients should not act solely on the basis of the material contained in this Commentary. Items herein are general comments only and do not constitute or convey advice per se. Also changes in legislation may occur quickly. We therefore recommend that our formal advice be sought before taking any action. The Commentary is issued as a helpful guide to clients and for their private information. Therefore it should be regarded as confidential and not be made available to any person without our prior approval.