Federal-Budget-2026

$1,000 Flat Deduction vs Itemising: Which Wins?

$1,000 Flat Deduction vs Itemising: Which Wins?

The question of $1,000 flat deduction vs itemising became urgent on 12 May 2026, the moment Treasurer Jim Chalmers delivered the Federal Budget 2026-27 and announced a new standard deduction for work-related expenses. From 1 July 2026 — the first day of FY2026-27 — every Australian wage earner will be able to choose: accept a flat $1,000 work-related deduction without a receipt in sight, or add up every actual expense and claim the real total. This post gives you the framework, the numbers, and three worked examples so you can decide which approach puts more money back in your pocket.

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2026 Budget for Service Sole Traders (PT, Cleaners)

2026 Budget for Service Sole Traders (PT, Cleaners)

If you run a personal training, cleaning, hairdressing, beauty, gardening, dog-walking, or similar service business as a sole trader, here’s what the 12 May 2026 Federal Budget actually changes for your bottom line. There is plenty of noise in the budget coverage aimed at large corporates and wage earners — this article cuts through to the six measures that directly affect service-based sole traders, with concrete examples for each trade.

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AML/CTF Tranche 2: Accountant Obligations from July 2026

AML/CTF Tranche 2: Accountant Obligations from July 2026

AML/CTF Tranche 2 obligations for accountants are set to commence on 1 July 2026 — bringing a significant new compliance layer to Australian accounting practices that previously sat outside the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006. This post was written on 12 May 2026, the day of the Australian Federal Budget 2026-27 delivery, and the timing convergence of the Budget and Tranche 2 commencement makes this a critical moment for firms to assess their readiness. Everything that follows is framed as proposed and subject to final AUSTRAC guidance — details may shift before commencement and accountants should verify their obligations directly with AUSTRAC and their firm’s regulatory adviser.

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ATO Shadow Economy Crackdown: $231M Funding

ATO Shadow Economy Crackdown: $231M Funding

The ATO shadow economy crackdown got a significant boost on 12 May 2026, when Treasurer Jim Chalmers handed down the 2026-27 Federal Budget and announced a multi-year compliance package worth approximately $281 million in total. The centrepiece is $155.5 million over four years directed squarely at the shadow economy — undeclared income, cash-in-hand arrangements, GST evasion, and a range of related activity the ATO has been building its enforcement capability around for years. If you run a small business, operate as a contractor, or earn anything on the side, now is the time to understand what changed and what it means for you.

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Australian Federal Budget 2026-27: Every Tax Change for Sole Traders, SMBs and Accountants

Australian Federal Budget 2026-27: Every Tax Change for Sole Traders, SMBs and Accountants

The 2026-27 federal budget small business announcements landed in Canberra tonight, and they reshape how sole traders, SMBs, and accountants will run their books from 1 July 2026 onwards. This guide walks through every tax measure published in Budget Paper No. 2 — what changes, when it starts, who’s affected, and what to do about it. We’ve translated the Treasury press release into plain English so you can decide what matters for your business this week, this quarter, and over the next two financial years.

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CGT Reform 2027: Indexation + 30% Min on Real Gains

CGT Reform 2027: Indexation + 30% Min on Real Gains

The most significant CGT changes 2027 budget has delivered in a generation landed on 12 May 2026 when Treasurer Jim Chalmers handed down the 2026-27 Federal Budget. As proposed — subject to passage of enabling legislation — Australia’s 50% CGT discount will be replaced from 1 July 2027 with an indexation-based discount paired with a 30% minimum tax on real gains. If you hold investment property, a share portfolio, crypto, or any asset that generates a capital gain, the way your profit is taxed is set to change materially. This guide explains what was announced, who it affects, how the mechanics work, and what you can do before commencement.

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Client Comms Template: Budget 2026 in Plain English

Client Comms Template: Budget 2026 in Plain English

The right accountant client communication for Budget 2026 goes out within the week — not the month. The Federal Budget was delivered tonight, 12 May 2026, and this post exists for one purpose: to hand Australian accountants a ready-to-send email for each of their main client segments so they can land in inboxes before the mainstream media noise does. Copy the template that matches your audience, replace the bracketed placeholders, and send. The Taxr accountant portal makes the follow-up step — collecting updated expense records from clients who reply — far less painful than it normally is.

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How to Claim the New $1,000 Flat Tax Deduction (Step-by-Step)

How to Claim the New $1,000 Flat Tax Deduction (Step-by-Step)

Here is how to claim the $1,000 flat deduction announced in the Australian Federal Budget on 12 May 2026: confirm you’re eligible, total your actual work-related expenses, decide whether the flat claim or itemising gives you a bigger number, then enter the result on your FY2026-27 tax return — the first year this deduction applies, covering income from 1 July 2026. This guide walks through each of those steps in plain language, with worked examples and answers to the questions that trip people up.

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IAWO Recordkeeping Checklist Now It's Permanent

IAWO Recordkeeping Checklist Now It's Permanent

Your instant asset write off records checklist just became a permanent fixture in your business’s compliance calendar. On 12 May 2026, Treasurer Jim Chalmers delivered the Federal Budget 2026-27 and made the $20,000 instant asset write-off (IAWO) a permanent feature of the tax system – no more annual extensions, no more June 30 cliffhangers. For Australian small businesses, that is genuinely good news. But the recordkeeping obligations that underpin every IAWO claim are just as permanent as the scheme itself. This guide tells you exactly what to keep, how long to keep it, and how to survive an audit if the ATO ever comes knocking.

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Loss Carry-Back Records Your Clients Need to Keep

Loss Carry-Back Records Your Clients Need to Keep

The loss carry back records required for a successful claim just became substantially more important. Today, 12 May 2026, the Federal Government delivered the 2026-27 Budget, restoring loss carry-back for companies with aggregated turnover under $1 billion from 1 July 2026. If you advise company clients, now is the time to audit their record-keeping — before the first eligible year opens, not after the ATO comes knocking.

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Loss Carry-Back Returns: Refundable Losses for SMB

Loss Carry-Back Returns: Refundable Losses for SMB

The 2026-27 Federal Budget, handed down on 12 May 2026, restores loss carry back for small and medium businesses, giving eligible companies the ability to convert a current-year tax loss into a real cash refund against income tax paid in the previous two financial years. If your company is heading into a loss year after several profitable ones, this measure could put money back in your account rather than leaving it stranded as a carried-forward deduction.

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Medicare Levy Thresholds Increased 2.9% for 2026

Medicare Levy Thresholds Increased 2.9% for 2026

The Medicare levy threshold 2026 increased by 2.9% in the Federal Budget delivered on 12 May 2026, extending relief to approximately 1 million low-income Australians who would otherwise pay the full 2% levy on their income. The change is modest in dollar terms for any single taxpayer, but it reflects a deliberate policy choice to index the relief thresholds to wage growth and keep them meaningful as wages rise.

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Negative Gearing Limits 2027: What Investors Lose

Negative Gearing Limits 2027: What Investors Lose

The negative gearing changes announced in the 2026 Budget are the most significant proposed restriction on residential property investment in Australia’s recent tax history — as proposed, and subject to passage of enabling legislation. Delivered on 12 May 2026, the 2026-27 Federal Budget proposes that from 1 July 2027, investors who purchase established residential property after 7:30pm AEST on Budget night will no longer be able to offset rental losses against their salary or business income. The cut-off is midnight-clear: existing property holders are grandfathered indefinitely, new builds remain fully exempt, and the change affects only established dwellings acquired from this point forward. Whether the proposal survives Parliament in its current form is a different question entirely — this is arguably the most politically contested element of the entire Budget package.

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Payday Super Starts 1 July 2026: What to Know

Payday Super Starts 1 July 2026: What to Know

The payday super start date of 1 July 2026 was confirmed in the Australian Federal Budget 2026-27, delivered on 12 May 2026 — and as proposed, subject to passage of enabling legislation, it is the most operationally significant change to superannuation for employers since the Superannuation Guarantee was introduced in 1992. From that date, employers will be required to pay super contributions to their employees’ funds on or around every single pay run, not once a quarter. If you run payroll for staff, the clock is already ticking.

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Payday Super: Accountant Readiness Checklist for 1 July 2026

Payday Super: Accountant Readiness Checklist for 1 July 2026

If you are looking for a payday super accountant checklist that maps out exactly what your firm needs to do before 1 July 2026, you are in the right place. Tonight’s Federal Budget 2026-27, delivered on 12 May 2026, confirms that Payday Super will commence on 1 July 2026 — as proposed, and subject to passage of the enabling legislation. That gives you, and your clients who pay employees, roughly seven weeks to finalise every system, process, and conversation that the change demands.

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Permanent $20,000 Instant Asset Write-Off Explained

Permanent $20,000 Instant Asset Write-Off Explained

The permanent instant asset write-off 2026 is now law — or at least, it will be once the Budget delivered on 12 May 2026 passes Parliament. The Australian Government confirmed in its 2026-27 Federal Budget that the $20,000 instant asset write-off (IAWO) will be made permanent from 1 July 2026, ending the annual cycle of extensions and sunset clauses that has made planning difficult for small businesses since the scheme was expanded during COVID. If you’ve been using the IAWO for years without thinking much about it, not much will change day-to-day. But if you’ve ever delayed an equipment purchase because you weren’t sure whether the scheme would still exist next financial year, that uncertainty is now gone.

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The New $1,000 Flat Tax Deduction: Who Qualifies

The New $1,000 Flat Tax Deduction: Who Qualifies

Australia’s $1,000 flat tax deduction landed in the 2026-27 Federal Budget delivered on 12 May 2026 — and it is one of the most practically significant changes for working Australians in years. From 1 July 2026, eligible workers can claim a flat $1,000 work-related deduction with no receipts required, instead of itemising individual expenses. If you earn a salary, run a side business, or operate as a sole trader, this change almost certainly affects you.

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Trust 30% Minimum Tax Coming in 2028

Trust 30% Minimum Tax Coming in 2028

The discretionary trust tax changes 2028 are now officially on the table: on 12 May 2026, the Federal Government handed down the 2026-27 Budget and announced a 30% minimum tax on income retained in or distributed from discretionary trusts, effective 1 July 2028. As proposed — and subject to passage of enabling legislation — this is the most significant structural change to family trust taxation in a generation, and it will affect roughly 350,000 small and medium businesses across Australia.

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Trust Restructure Window: How to Advise Clients

Trust Restructure Window: How to Advise Clients

If you have clients with discretionary trusts, the trust restructure 2028 advise-clients conversation starts today — 12 May 2026 — with the delivery of the Australian Federal Budget 2026-27. As proposed in Budget Paper No. 2 and subject to passage of enabling legislation, the government has announced a three-year rollover-relief window opening 1 July 2027. Eligible discretionary trusts will be able to restructure into another vehicle with no income tax or CGT consequence — a genuine opportunity for clients who will be materially affected by the 30% minimum tax landing 1 July 2028. Your job between now and then is to triage your client base, model the numbers, and guide each client to a defensible decision.

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What the 2026 Budget Means for Australian Tradies

What the 2026 Budget Means for Australian Tradies

Sparkies, chippies, plumbers, painters — here’s what the 12 May 2026 Federal Budget actually changes for your business. The federal budget 2026 tradies conversation usually gets buried under superannuation charts and housing announcements, but several measures land directly on trade businesses: the permanent instant asset write-off (IAWO), a new $1,000 flat tax deduction, payday super starting 1 July 2026 if you employ an apprentice, and a significantly larger ATO enforcement budget aimed squarely at cash-economy work. This article cuts through the noise to tell you what each measure means in practice, what to do before 1 July, and whether the changes actually benefit your specific situation. For a baseline on what you can already claim, see our guide on tax deductions every tradie should know in Australia.

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What the 2026 Budget Means for Content Creators

What the 2026 Budget Means for Content Creators

If you make a living (or supplement one) on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Twitch, or any other content platform, here’s what the 12 May 2026 Federal Budget actually changes for your tax bill. Three measures stand out from the budget papers: the permanent instant asset write-off (IAWO), a new flat $1,000 deduction option, and a meaningful lift in ATO compliance funding directed squarely at the sharing and platform economy. Everything else — the $75k GST threshold, working-from-home rates, sole-trader rules — is unchanged. We have a full breakdown of every deduction available to you in our tax deductions guide for content creators.

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What the 2026 Budget Means for IT Contractors

What the 2026 Budget Means for IT Contractors

If you contract software development, infrastructure, security, data, or any other IT discipline in Australia, here is what the federal budget 2026 IT contractors need to know from the 12 May 2026 Budget — specifically what changes for your tax position, what stays the same, and what you should do before 30 June. Unlike a general Budget summary, this post focuses on the handful of measures that have a direct, practical impact on how IT contractors structure their work, purchase equipment, and plan their income. For a broader picture of what you can already claim, see our guide on tax deductions for IT contractors in Australia.

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What the 2026 Budget Means for Real Estate Agents

What the 2026 Budget Means for Real Estate Agents

If you sell residential property, manage rentals, or work as a buyer’s agent in Australia, here’s what the federal budget 2026 real estate changes actually mean — for both your business and the market you operate in. The 12 May 2026 Federal Budget delivers several measures that land on the property sector from two directions: changes that affect your investor and vendor clients (negative gearing limits, CGT reform), and changes that affect your own business operations (permanent instant asset write-off, ATO compliance funding, payday super). Neither set can be treated in isolation. A well-informed agent who understands both sides of these changes will have better conversations with clients — and will end up paying less tax personally. For the full picture of what you can already claim, see our guide on tax deductions for real estate agents in Australia.

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What the 2026 Budget Means for Rideshare Drivers

What the 2026 Budget Means for Rideshare Drivers

If you drive Uber, Didi, Ola, Bolt, or any other rideshare platform, here’s what the 12 May 2026 federal budget 2026 rideshare changes actually mean for your tax bill. Most of the budget coverage focuses on cost-of-living relief and housing — but three specific measures hit rideshare drivers directly, and two of them could cost you money if you get them wrong. Here’s the plain-English rundown.

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Working Australians Tax Offset: $250 Explained

Working Australians Tax Offset: $250 Explained

The working Australians tax offset 2026 is official: tonight’s Federal Budget, delivered 12 May 2026, confirmed a permanent new $250 Working Australians Tax Offset (WATO) commencing from 1 July 2027. Approximately 13.3 million workers will benefit — automatically, with no separate claim required. Here is what the measure does, who it covers, and how it layers on top of the other Budget changes already flowing through from 1 July 2026.

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