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Eligibility

There are certain qualities that must exist in a business structure for it to be eligible for consolidation.

Last updated 24 February 2016

The head company must:

  • be an Australian resident (but not a prescribed dual resident) company
  • not be a subsidiary member of a consolidated group or a group that is eligible to consolidate
  • have at least some of its taxable income (if any) taxed at the general company tax rate.

A corporate unit trust or public trading trust that elects to be taxed like a company may be a head company.

A subsidiary member must:

  • be a company, trust or partnership
  • be wholly owned (either directly or indirectly) by the head company (disregarding finance shares that are a debt interest and up to 1% of ordinary shares that meet certain employee share scheme requirements)
  • be an Australian resident (but not a prescribed dual resident)
  • have at least some of its taxable income (if any) taxed at the general company tax rate (if a company).

Certain types of companies cannot be a head company or subsidiary member and certain types of trusts cannot be a subsidiary member. For example, superannuation funds generally cannot be a head company or subsidiary member.

A foreign-owned group of Australian resident subsidiaries that does not have a single resident head company may instead choose to consolidate by forming a multiple entry consolidated (MEC) group.

Figure 1

Figure 1 - As wholly-owned subsidiaries of the head company, companies A and B are subsidiary members of a consolidatable group. Company C is not a member as it is not wholly owned (directly or indirectly) by the head company

Figure 1 - As wholly-owned subsidiaries of the head company, companies A and B are subsidiary members of a consolidatable group. Company C is not a member as it is not wholly owned (directly or indirectly) by the head company.

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