Before buying a company car for your business, it is very important to take into account any possible motor vehicle fringe benefit implications. Here are a few things to consider before signing on the dotted line.

What is a fringe benefit?

Put simply, a fringe benefit arises when an employer provides an employee with a non-monetary benefit. Either in addition to or instead of monetary remuneration. It is difficult for the ATO to tax these benefits under the income tax legislation. Therefore, these benefits are assessed under the Fringe Benefits Act 1986. Any Fringe Benefit Tax (FBT) that arises, is payable by the employer, not the employee.

FBT legislation defines the term ‘car’ in a very specific way. As a general rule, fringe benefit may arise if a car is made available for the private use of an employee by the employer. There are several considerations a business owner should be aware of prior to making a new vehicle purchase.

The vehicle’s purpose by design

Regardless of how you plan to use the new vehicle, it is important to know the vehicle’s purpose by design. Is it a commercial vehicle designed to carry goods? Private vehicle for non-business use? Or somewhere in the middle?

A variety of factors assist in this matter including:

There are no fringe benefit implications for vehicles that are not designed to carry passengers. Such as, trucks, vans, taxis and utilities that are designed with greater than one tonne carrying capacity. Any personal use of these vehicles by employees, employee’s partner and/or other associates, satisfies the private use exemption rules. Private use is limited to travel between home and work, incidental private travel between home and work and other private use that is minor, irregular and infrequent.
However, for vehicles primarily designed to carry passengers, there are more compliance requirements in place. This is to determine actual business use and make any private use subject to FBT.

Private Use Exemption

The ATO has recently proposed changes to the private use exemption in the form of compliance guidelines (PCG 2017/D14). The guidelines would deny access to the exemption should due care is not taken during the purchase process. Even for the most commercial vehicle purchases.

This notably includes the following requirements:

These proposed changes could be a huge concern for businesses and employers. As the guidelines aim to prevent employees misusing work vehicles for personal use and stop businesses from over claiming running expenses.

This could mean, in addition to taking precautionary steps during the purchase of the vehicle, business owners may also need to complete additional time consuming documentation. As well as paying closer attention to the private use of company vehicles.

Reducing motor vehicle FBT liability

The needs of a business could result in the purchase of a vehicle deemed private in nature or design. Which may then have fringe benefit implications and possible tax payable at the end of the FBT year.

There are a few ways to reduce the taxable value of such benefits including:

Record keeping for FBT

For vehicles not exempt from FBT and those with high business use, it is recommended to keep detailed records of the vehicle and its usage throughout the FBT year. Be aware that the FBT year starts on 1st April and ends on the 31st March of the subsequent year.

It’s important to keep a detailed logbook for business and private travel for a minimum of 12 consecutive weeks. This assists in calculating the percentage of use for business purposes and the portion of vehicle running expenses to be claimed by the business. The higher the percentage for business use, the lower the fringe benefit taxable value. That logbook can then be used for the next five years. Providing it is for the same vehicle and the overall use does not change significantly. A business is required to keep a separate logbook for each vehicle.

We have found many of our clients initial logbooks to be inadequately maintained as per ATO guidelines. This may result in the ATO denying any motor vehicle expense deductions or a higher taxable value of motor vehicle fringe benefits.

Maintaining a detailed logbook

A detailed logbook involves:

The following documentation is also recommended:

Considering these issues before purchasing a motor vehicle will help your business avoid any fringe benefits and additional tax pitfalls. FBT is always changing, so getting expert advice to ensure you know your obligations is crucial to avoid costly mistakes.

Should you require further information, we are always here to help. Please get in touch with our team.