A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) (Simplified Method to Apportion Input Tax Credits for Caravan Park Operators Who Input Tax Supplies of Long-term Accommodation) Determination 2001/1
I, GEOFFREY MILLS, Assistant Commissioner, Goods and Services Tax, and delegate of the Commissioner of Taxation, make this Determination under subsection 11-30(5) of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999.
Dated 23rd August 2001
Signed by Geoffrey Mills
Assistant Commissioner, Goods and Services Tax
Contents
Page
Part 1 Preliminary 2
1.1 Name of Determination 2
1.2 Commencement 2
1.3 Definitions 2
1.4 Information about the simplified method 3
Part 2 Simplified method to apportion input tax credits 4
2.2 Scope of the simplified method 4
2.3 Method to apportion input tax credits 4
This Determination is the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) (Simplified Method to Apportion Input Tax Credits for Caravan Park Operators Who Input Tax Supplies of Long-term Accommodation) Determination 2001/1.
This Determination commences on 1 July 2001.
In this Determination:
GST Act means the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999.
Industry factor means 1.75%
Non-capital acquisitions means acquisitions of things that are not capital assets or improvements to capital assets
Short-term accommodation means caravan park accommodation that is not long-term accommodation.
Other expressions in this Determination have the same meaning as in the GST Act.
Under subsection 11-30(5) of the GST Act, the Commissioner may determine in writing one or more ways in which to work out, for the purpose of subsection 11-30(3), the extent to which a creditable acquisition is for a creditable purpose.
Section 87-25 of the GST Act operates so that a supplier of long-term accommodation in commercial residential premises (for example, a caravan park) may choose not to treat its supplies of long-term accommodation as taxable. If this choice is made, paragraph 40-35(1)(b) of the GST Act treats supplies of long-term accommodation as input taxed.
Caravan park operators, who treat supplies of long-term accommodation as input taxed and who also make taxable supplies (such as short-term accommodation and shop sales), must apportion their inputs as they cannot claim input tax credits for acquisitions relating to the input taxed supplies. Where an acquisition (for example, a general overhead expense) is only partly creditable because it relates to making both taxable and input taxed supplies, the extent of creditable purpose must be calculated.
GST Ruling GSTR 2000/15 provides a number of suggested apportionment methods. However, the methods in that Ruling may not always give a fair result for caravan park operators.
As an alternative to the methods of apportionment in GSTR 2000/15, this simplified method to apportion input tax credits will assist those operators that input tax supplies of long-term accommodation.
Part 2 Simplified method to apportion input tax credits
Some terms in this determination are shown in bold italics when first used. They are explained in the Definitions section.
2.1 Eligibility
A caravan park operator is eligible to use this simplified method to apportion input tax credits if:
2.2 Scope of the simplified method
(1) What is covered by the simplified method
The simplified method provided by this Determination applies to non-capital acquisitions that are partly creditable, that is, those acquisitions that relate to making supplies of long-term accommodation and other supplies including short-term accommodation.
(2) What is not covered by the simplified method
The simplified method provided by this Determination does not apply to capital acquisitions or acquisitions that are not partly creditable.
2.3 Method to apportion input tax credits
For a tax period, input tax credits on acquisitions to which this Determination applies are apportioned under this Determination by ;
The resultant amount is the extent to which input tax credits can be claimed in respect of the acquisitions for a creditable purpose.