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2025–26 Financial Year

Your 2026 Tax Time Essentials Guide

Tax time is nearly here, and with 30 June fast approaching, now is the perfect moment to get your records in order, understand what you can claim, and make sure you’re not leaving money on the table — or in the ATO’s sights. Let’s walk through everything you need to know for a smooth, maximised 2026 tax return.

🎯 What the ATO Is Watching in 2026

Every year the ATO publicly signals where it’s directing its compliance resources, and 2026 is no different. ATO Assistant Commissioner Anita Challen has been clear: their data-matching systems are more powerful than ever, cross-referencing information from banks, employers, share registries, crypto exchanges, and gig economy platforms in real time.

🔍 ATO’s Four Primary Focus Areas for 2026
— especially claims without contemporaneous (day-to-day) records, and the ever-common “double-dipping” on working from home expenses.
— particularly mixed-use holiday homes, short-stay rentals (Airbnb/Stayz), and the distinction between repairs vs. capital improvements.
— Uber, Airtasker, eBay, Etsy, cash jobs. If you earned it, declare it. The ATO receives data directly from these platforms.
— including capital gains on shares and cryptocurrency. Even swapping one crypto for another is a CGT event in Australia.
⚠️ A word on AI tax tips & finfluencers
The ATO has specifically warned Australians to be cautious of tax advice from AI platforms, social media finfluencers, and even well-meaning friends. AI tools can draw from inaccurate or non-Australian sources. When in doubt, check ato.gov.au or ask your registered tax agent.

📋 The ATO's Three Golden Rules for Deductions

Before we explore individual deductions, every claim must satisfy these three rules. If any one of them fails, the deduction is at risk:

1
You spent the money yourself
The expense wasn’t reimbursed by your employer or paid for by someone else.
2
It directly relates to earning your income
The expense must have a genuine connection to your work — not just be “helpful” or convenient. A purchase isn’t deductible just because it helps you do your job in a general sense.
3
You have a record to prove it
Receipt, invoice, bank statement, logbook, or diary. “I estimated it” or “everyone claims $300” won’t cut it.
📌 The $300 myth — busted
You can claim up to $300 in work-related expenses without written receipts, but you must have actually incurred those costs and be able to explain them if asked. It is not a freebie — it simply removes the need for receipts, not the need for the expense to be real.

🏠 Working From Home Deductions

With hybrid and remote work still common across Australia, WFH deductions remain the biggest area of claims — and errors. The ATO has confirmed two methods for 2025–26:

Fixed Rate Method — 70c/hour
  • Claim 70 cents for every hour you worked from home
  • Covers electricity, internet, phone, and stationery — you cannot claim these separately
  • You must keep a record of actual hours worked (diary, roster, timesheets — estimates are not accepted)
  • You can still separately claim depreciation on office furniture and equipment
Best for: People who worked from home regularly but don’t have a dedicated home office. Simpler to manage if your records are up to date.
Actual Cost Method
  • Claim the work-related proportion of each individual expense — internet, phone, electricity, office equipment, furniture depreciation
  • Requires detailed records of all expenses and a reasonable calculation of work-use %
  • Typically produces a higher deduction for those with significant home office costs
  • More complex — receipts and usage logs required for everything
Best for: People with a dedicated home office, high internet/electricity costs, and the discipline to track every expense throughout the year.
🚫 The #1 WFH mistake: Double-dipping
If you use the fixed rate method, you cannot also separately claim electricity, internet, or phone usage. The fixed rate already covers these. This is one of the most common errors the ATO flags.
HOW TO TRACK YOUR HOURS

Keep a diary, timesheets, or a simple spreadsheet log updated as you go — not estimated at the end of the year. Even a calendar entry recording “WFH today: 8 hours” is better than nothing. Apps like Toggl Track or Google Calendar make this effortless.

🚗 Car & Vehicle Deductions

Car expenses are a significant and commonly misunderstood deduction. The key rule first: travelling from home to your regular workplace is not deductible. You can claim car use for travel between workplaces, to client sites, to pick up supplies, or to attend work-related conferences.

There are two methods for claiming car deductions:

Cents Per Kilometre Method
  • Claim a flat rate per km for work-related travel (check the ATO for the current rate for 2025–26)
  • Capped at 5,000 km per year
  • No need to keep fuel receipts or log every trip — but you do need to be able to explain how you calculated your km
  • Covers all car running costs (fuel, insurance, registration, depreciation)
Best for: Employees with modest, straightforward work-related travel. Easy and low-admin.
Logbook Method
  • Based on your car’s actual expenses multiplied by your work-use percentage
  • Requires a valid 12-week logbook kept during a representative period, then reused for up to 5 years
  • Expenses include: fuel, insurance, registration, servicing, interest on car loan, and depreciation
  • No km cap — can be significantly higher than cents per km for high-use vehicles
Best for: People who drive frequently for work, use an expensive vehicle, or travel more than 5,000 km for work per year.
📱 APP TO HELP: DRIVERSNOTE (LOGBOOK METHOD)

Driversnote is an ATO-compliant mileage tracking app that automatically detects when you’re driving, classifies trips as business or personal, and generates a compliant logbook report. It takes the pain out of the 12-week logbook requirement and is ideal for anyone who regularly travels for work. Available on iOS and Android.

OTHER VEHICLE TRACKING APPS WORTH CONSIDERING
🗺️
Driversnote
Auto-detects trips, ATO-compliant logbook, exportable reports. The gold standard for car logbooks.
📊
MileIQ
Automatic mileage tracking with swipe classification. Clean interface, good for high-volume drivers.
🚘
TripLog
Mileage tracker with GPS verification. Produces detailed reports suitable for ATO substantiation.

💡 Common Deductions Worth Checking

Beyond WFH and car travel, here’s a checklist of deductions that are legitimate but often overlooked or underclaimed. Remember: you need records for all of these.

There are two methods for claiming car deductions:

✅ Work-Related Expenses Checklist
Work uniforms & protective clothing (with logo or required by employer)
Laundry & dry-cleaning of work clothing
Tools & equipment purchased for work
Professional memberships & union fees
Work-related training courses, seminars, conferences
Technical books, journals, & subscriptions (work-related)
Home office equipment (depreciation or instant write-off)
Phone & internet (work-use proportion — only under actual cost method)
Income protection insurance (outside super)
Tax agent fees (from last year’s tax return)
Sunscreen, sunglasses & hats (for outdoor workers)
First aid course (required by employer)
Charitable donations to DGR-registered charities
Investment property expenses (interest, rates, repairs, depreciation)
Self-education expenses (if directly related to current job)
Overtime meal expenses (if allowance received from employer)
💬 Industry-specific deductions
The ATO acknowledges that legitimate deductions vary significantly by occupation. Security workers can claim guard dog expenses. Flight attendants can claim sensible shoes. Tradespeople can claim professional-grade tools. Always check the ATO’s occupation-specific guides at ato.gov.au or ask your tax agent what’s appropriate for your role.

💰 Don't Forget to Declare All Income

Income is the other side of the equation, and the ATO’s data-matching is now so advanced that omitting even small amounts of income is increasingly likely to be detected automatically.

Always declare:

Income Sources to Declare
Salary & wages (from all employers)
Freelance / contractor income
Gig economy income (Uber, Airtasker, Deliveroo etc.)
Airbnb / short-stay rental income
Bank interest (all accounts)
Share dividends & franking credits
Capital gains (shares, property, crypto)
Cryptocurrency transactions (incl. swaps)
Government payments (Centrelink, JobKeeper)
Cash jobs & tips
Foreign income
Trust distributions

Cryptocurrency note: If you bought, sold, swapped, or staked crypto during 2025–26, you have a CGT event to report — even if you never converted back to Australian dollars. Swapping ETH for another coin is a sale event. The ATO obtains data directly from CoinSpot, Swyftx, Binance Australia, and several international exchanges.

🗂️ Keeping Records Like a Pro

Great record-keeping throughout the year makes tax time dramatically simpler — and ensures your claims are defensible if the ATO ever comes knocking. Keep records for at least 5 years after lodging your return.

THE FUNDAMENTALS

For every deduction you plan to claim, you need evidence: a receipt, invoice, bank statement, or logbook. Digital copies are fully accepted by the ATO — photograph receipts with your phone before they fade.

HOW TO BUILD A SIMPLE SUMMARY FOR YOUR TAX AGENT

Your tax agent will love you (and give you more time) if you arrive with a neat summary rather than a shoebox of receipts. Here’s a simple structure to follow:

What to Prepare for Your Tax Agent
PAYG Payment Summary (or access to myGov)
Bank interest statements
Share dividend statements
Private health insurance statement
Receipts for all work-related expenses (in folders by category)
Total hours worked from home (dated log)
Car logbook or km summary
Rental property income & expense summary
Investment property loan statements
Charitable donation receipts (DGR only)
Income protection insurance invoice
Tax agent fees paid last year
Crypto trading history (exported from exchange)
Any government support payments received

📲 Apps to Make Record-Keeping Easy

These apps can save you hours at tax time and keep your records ATO-compliant throughout the year:

🏛️
ATO myDeductions
Free, built into the ATO app. Snap receipts, log work expenses, track WFH hours, and share directly with your tax agent or upload to myTax.
🗺️
Driversnote
Auto-detects trips, classifies business vs personal, generates ATO-compliant logbook reports. Set-and-forget vehicle tracking.
📸
Hubdoc / Dext
Photograph receipts and invoices — they’re digitised, categorised, and stored automatically. Ideal for sole traders and property investors.
⏱️
Toggl Track
Simple time tracker to log WFH hours in real time. Free tier is sufficient for most individuals. Exportable records for the ATO.
Koinly / CoinTracker
Connects to crypto exchanges, calculates CGT events automatically, and produces ATO-compliant tax reports for crypto traders.
📁
Google Drive / Dropbox
Create a “Tax 2025–26” folder and drop in all scanned receipts, statements, and documents throughout the year. Simple and free.

📅 Key Dates for 2026

These apps can save you hours at tax time and keep your records ATO-compliant throughout the year:

30 Jun
End of 2025–26 Financial Year
Final day to make deductible purchases, top up super (personal contributions), and donate to charities for this tax year.
1 Jul
Tax lodgement opens
myTax opens. Most pre-fill data (employer, bank, health fund) is available from late July. Wait for pre-fill before lodging yourself.
31 Oct
Self-lodgement deadline
If you lodge your own tax return via myTax or paper, this is your deadline.
May ’27
Tax agent deadline
If you use a registered tax agent, you generally have until May 2027 to lodge — but you need to be on your agent’s books before 31 October 2026.

🔭 What's Coming in 2026–27 (Not Yet for This Return)

Two significant changes are on the horizon — but they apply from 1 July 2026, meaning they’ll affect your 2027 tax return, not this one. Don’t be caught by early rumours:

$1,000 Instant Tax Deduction (from 2026–27)
A proposed $1,000 standard work-related deduction has been confirmed for the 2026–27 income year. This means taxpayers with work-related expenses below $1,000 won’t need to substantiate those expenses on their next tax return. It does not
apply to your 2025–26 return lodged this year. Those with expenses over $1,000 can continue to claim the full actual amount.

Additionally, personal income tax cuts take effect from 1 July 2026, reducing the marginal tax rate for taxable income between $18,201 and $45,000 from 16% to 15%. This will flow through to your take-home pay via PAYG adjustments from your employer.

🤝 Ready to Lodge? Here's How We Can Help

Tax time doesn’t need to be stressful. The clients who have the smoothest experience are the ones who keep records consistently throughout the year — not just in a mad dash in July. Start a folder today. Log those WFH hours. Snap those receipts.

When you’re ready to come in, bring your summary and we’ll take care of the rest. Our job is to make sure you claim everything you’re legitimately entitled to — no more, no less — and to keep you on the right side of the ATO.

📞 Get in touch before 30 June
If you have questions about whether a purchase is deductible, whether to use the fixed rate or actual cost method for WFH, or whether you need to start a logbook before EOFY — reach out now. Pre-30 June advice is often the most valuable.

Disclaimer: This blog post is general information only and does not constitute personal tax advice. Individual circumstances vary. Please consult your registered tax agent for advice specific to your situation. Information is based on ATO guidance current as at May 2026.