Income averaging for special professionals 2012-13
Who is a special professional?

Warning:
This information may not apply to the current year. Check the content carefully to ensure it is applicable to your circumstances.
End of attention
A special professional is an author of a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, an inventor, a performing artist, a production associate or a sportsperson. Theatre entrepreneurs are not special professionals.
The expression 'author' is a technical term from copyright law. In general, the 'author' of a musical work is its composer and the 'author' of an artistic work is the artist, sculptor or photographer who created it.
Author or inventor
If you are employed as an author or inventor, you are a special professional only if you are engaged or commissioned to produce one or more specified works, or to invent one or more specified inventions, and successive engagements or commissions do not result in continuous employment over a substantial period of time. This means that journalists, draughtspersons and graphic artists do not qualify as special professionals simply as a result of their ordinary employment.
Performing artist
You are a special professional if you use intellectual, artistic, musical, physical or other personal skills in the presence of an audience, or you perform or appear in a film, on a tape or disc, or in a television or radio broadcast.
Production associate
You are a special professional if you use artistic rather than technical skills in the production.
Sportsperson
You are a special professional if you compete in sporting activities where you primarily use physical prowess, physical strength or physical stamina. A navigator in car rallying, a coxswain in rowing or a similar competitor is also a special professional.
You are not a special professional if you coach or train competitors, umpire or referee sport, administer sport, are a member of a pit crew in motor sport, a professional golf caddy, own or train animals, or are a sports entrepreneur.
Who is subject to income averaging?

Warning:
This information may not apply to the current year. Check the content carefully to ensure it is applicable to your circumstances.
End of attention
You are eligible for special professional income averaging (a concessional tax treatment) if:
- you are an individual who is an Australian resident at any time during the income year
- you are a special professional, and
- you satisfy the first year requirements (see below) in either the current income year or an earlier income year.
The first year you are eligible for special professional income averaging is the first income year for which the taxable professional income (TPI) you earned as a resident special professional individual is more than $2,500. This is known as year 1.
Taxable professional income

Warning:
This information may not apply to the current year. Check the content carefully to ensure it is applicable to your circumstances.
End of attention
TPI is the amount (if any) remaining after taking away from your assessable professional income:
- the total of the deductions that reasonably relate to your assessable professional income, and
- the part of any apportionable deductions (for example, gifts to charity which you have shown at item D9 on your tax return) that are to be taken into account in calculating your TPI.
Assessable professional income
Assessable professional income is used in calculating your TPI. It is income arising directly from the activities of a special professional and includes:
- rewards and prizes
- income from endorsements, advertisements, interviews, commentating and any similar service
- royalties from copyright of a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, and
- income from a patent for an invention.
The following are specifically excluded from assessable professional income:
- a superannuation lump sum or an employment termination payment
- payments for unused annual or long service leave on retirement or termination, and
- a net capital gain.
Average taxable professional income

Warning:
This information may not apply to the current year. Check the content carefully to ensure it is applicable to your circumstances.
End of attention
Generally, average taxable professional income (ATPI) in an income year is one-quarter of the sum of your TPI for each of the preceding four years. Special rules apply for working out the ATPI if your first income averaging year was less than four years ago. So, in the first four years, ATPI is worked out as follows if you were an Australian resident during the year immediately before your year 1:
- year 1 = nil
- year 2 = one-third of TPl in year 1
- year 3 = one-quarter of the sum of your TPI in years 1 and 2
- year 4 = one-quarter of the sum of your TPl in years 1, 2 and 3.
If you were not a resident at any time during the year immediately before your year 1, phone us on 13 28 66.
Above-average special professional income

Warning:
This information may not apply to the current year. Check the content carefully to ensure it is applicable to your circumstances.
End of attention
Your above-average special professional income is the amount of TPI you earned during the income year that is more than your average TPI. Your tax payable is the sum of tax on your above-average special professional income and tax on your other income (step 1 explains ‘other income’). If there is no above-average special professional income (that is, your TPI is equal to or less than your average TPI) you will pay tax at ordinary rates on your taxable income.
Completing your tax return
For us to work out your income averaging, you must complete Z item 24 on your Tax return for individuals (supplementary section) 2013. See step 3 question 24 in Individual tax return instructions supplement 2013 and read the following:
The amount to write at Z item 24 on your tax return (supplementary section) is your assessable professional income less the total of your deductions that reasonably relate to this income. Do not deduct any apportionable deductions, for example, gifts to charity that you have shown at item D9 on your tax return. We will take these into account to work out your TPI and your income averaging.
At V item 24 on your tax return (supplementary section), write the total of your category 2 other income (see step 1 question 24 in Individual tax return instructions supplement 2013), including the amount you wrote at Z item 24. Do not include any amounts already shown at item 1, 2, 13, 14 or 15 on your tax return. If you have not shown your TPI at other items on your tax return, you must include it at V item 24. If you include your TPI at V, do not claim any deductions you used to work out your TPI at items D1 to D10 or D11 to D15 on your tax return.
How to work out tax payable with income averaging

Warning:
This information may not apply to the current year. Check the content carefully to ensure it is applicable to your circumstances.
End of attention
You do not need to work out your tax payable with income averaging. We will work it out from the amount at Z item 24 on your tax return. If you want to work it out for yourself, follow these steps:
Step 1
Add your ATPI to your taxable income that is not subject to income averaging (your taxable non-professional income). The total, called your ‘other income’, is taxed at normal rates.
Step 2
Subtract your ATPI from this year’s TPI to get your above average special professional income. To work out the tax payable on this income:
- to your ‘other income’, add one-fifth of your above average special professional income
- work out the tax payable on this amount
- subtract the tax payable on your ‘other income’, and
- multiply the result by five.
Step 3
Add the tax on your ‘other income’ and the tax on your above-average special professional income. The result is your total tax payable.
For more information, phone 13 28 66.
Example: Working out tax payable with income averaging
Kevin has a taxable income of $60,000, including assessable professional income of $45,000. He has deductions of $5,000 that reasonably relate to his assessable professional income (this amount does not include gifts) and he has no other deductions. His average TPI over the last four years was $9,000.
Kevin’s tax payable, before the Medicare levy or tax offsets are taken into account, is $7,942.00. It would have been $11,047.00 (the tax on $60,000) if income averaging had not been applied.
The following steps show you how Kevin’s tax payable has been worked out.
|
$
|
|
Assessable professional income
|
45,000.00
|
(a)
|
Deductions
|
5,000.00
|
(b)
|
TPI = (a) - (b) = $45,000 - $5,000
|
40,000.00
|
(c)
|
Kevin transfers the amount at (c) to Z item 24 on his tax return (supplementary section) and, if he has not already included any of this amount at item 1, 2, 13, 14 or 15, he also writes it at V item 24 on his tax return (supplementary section).
ATPI
|
$
|
|
=
|
one-quarter of the sum of your TPI for the preceding four years, not including this income year
|
9,000.00
|
(d)
|
Taxable non-professional income
|
=
|
amount of TAXABLE INCOME OR LOSS at $ on his tax return minus the amount shown at Z item 24 on his tax return (supplementary section)
|
|
|
=
|
$60,000 - $40,000
|
20,000.00
|
(e)
|
Other income
|
|
|
=
|
(d) + (e)
|
|
|
=
|
$9,000 + $20,000
|
29,000.00
|
(f)
|
Tax on other income at ordinary rates
|
2052.00
|
(g)
|
Above-average special professional income
|
=
|
(c) - (d)
|
|
|
=
|
$40,000 - $9,000
|
31,000.00
|
(h)
|
Tax on [other income plus one-fifth of above-average special professional income]
|
=
|
tax on [(f) + 1/5 (h)]
|
|
|
=
|
tax on [$29,000 + $6,200]
|
|
|
=
|
Tax on $35,200
|
3,230.00
|
(i)
|
Tax on above-average special professional income
|
=
|
[(i) - (g)] x 5
|
|
|
=
|
[$3,230.00 - $2,052.00] x 5
|
5,890.00
|
(j)
|
Kevin's tax payable
|
=
|
(g) + (j)
|
|
|
=
|
$2,052.00 + $5,890.00
|
7,942.00
|
(k)
|
End of example
More information

Warning:
This information may not apply to the current year. Check the content carefully to ensure it is applicable to your circumstances.
End of attention
Website
For general tax information and up-to-date and comprehensive information about deductions, explore this site.
Publications
To get any publication referred to in this fact sheet:
Phone
We can offer a more personalised service if you provide your tax file number (TFN).
- Individual 13 28 61
Individual income tax and general personal tax enquiries, including capital gains tax
- Business 13 28 66
Information about business income tax, fringe benefits tax (FBT), fuel tax credits (FTC), goods and services tax (GST), pay as you go (PAYG) and activity statements, including lodgment and payment, accounts and business registration (including Australian business number and tax file number), and dividend and royalty withholding tax
- Superannuation 13 10 20
Other services
If you do not speak English well and need help from the ATO, phone the Translating and Interpreting Service (TIS) on 13 14 50.
If you are deaf or have a hearing or speech impairment, phone the ATO through the National Relay Service (NRS) on the numbers listed below and ask for the ATO number you need:
- TTY users, phone 13 36 77. For ATO 1800 free call numbers, phone 1800 555 677.
- Speak and Listen users, phone 1300 555 727. For ATO 1800 free call numbers, phone 1800 555 727.
- Internet relay users, connect to the NRS at relayservice.com.auExternal Link
If you are an artist, composer, writer, inventor, performer, production associate or sportsperson, this guide will explain special averaging provisions which may apply to your income. NAT 2475.