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Advanced guide to capital gains tax concessions for small business

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About this guide

This guide applies to capital gains tax (CGT)   events that happened in the 2010 - 11 income year .

Do not use this guide for CGT   events that happened in earlier years, as the information might have changed. See Capital gains tax - home for earlier ver sions of this guide.

This guide explains the CGT concessions available for small business that are contained in Division   152 of the Income Tax Assessment Act   1997 (ITAA   1997). These concessions apply to CGT   events happening after   11.45am, by legal time in the Australian Capital Territory, on 21   September 1999.

This guide does not explain how the concessions apply to a consolidated group of entities.

In this guide, we use the word 'you' to refer to the taxpayer (or their agent) to which this guide applies, such as a sole trader, a partner of a partnership, a company or a trust that conduct a small business.

This publication can be downloaded in Portable Document Format (PDF): download Advanced guide to capital gains tax concessions for small business 2010-11 (NAT   3359, 1.20MB).

What is new?

Changes to the CGT concessions for small business over recent years have improved access and made it easier for taxpayers to work out whether they are eligible for the concessions. The most recent amendments are contained in Tax Laws Amendment (2009 Measures No.   2) Act   2009 which received royal assent on 23   June 2009. We will refer to these as the June 2009 amendments . This date is relevant later for the time limit for making choices.

The changes apply to:

  • payments and CGT   events happening on or after 23   June 2009, and
  • CGT   events happening in 2006-07 and 2007-08 and later income years.

These changes have been incorporated into this version of the guide. Information about the changes is also available in Capital gains tax (CGT) concessions for small business - more changes for the 2007-09 years .

The following amendments apply to payments and CGT   events happening on or after 23   June 2009 and involve changes to:

  • enable certain liabilities to reduce an entity's net asset value in applying the $6   million maximum net asset value test
  • ensure all uses of an asset (except certain personal use and certain uses from which passive income is derived) are considered in determining what its main use is
  • the operation of the retirement exemption to remove unintended consequences by
    • ensuring the retirement exemption caters for CGT-exempt payments flowing through small business structures involving interposed entities
    • excluding small business retirement exemption payments made to CGT-concession stakeholders from the deemed dividend provisions of section   109 and Division   7A section   109C of the Income Tax Assessment Act   1936 .

The following amendments were announced in the 2008-09 Budget and apply to CGT   events happening in 2007-08 and later income years. The changes increase access to the CGT concessions for small businesses with turnover less than $2   million via the small business entity test for:

  • taxpayers owning a CGT asset used in a business by an affiliate or connected entity ( passively-held assets )
  • partners owning a CGT asset used in the partnership business ( partner's assets ).

Other minor changes improve the operation of the concessions by:

  • increasing the circumstances and purposes for which a spouse or child under 18   years is taken to be an individual's affiliate
  • removing unintended consequences for the retirement exemption by correcting the treatment of capital proceeds received in instalments.

The following changes apply retrospectively for CGT   events happening in 2006-07 and later income years to:

  • increase access to the concessions for joint tenants and trustees of testamentary trusts where a gain arises from an asset within two years of the death of the deceased, where the deceased would have been entitled
  • remove the requirement in the retirement exemption to meet the basic conditions where the replacement asset conditions have not been met for the small business rollover (CGT   events J 5   and   J6).

As the 2006-07 and 2007-08 changes are retrospective, taxpayers have additional time to make their choice to use the concessions where they become eligible as a result of these June 2009 amendments. The extension of time to make a choice applies to CGT   events happening before the 23   June 2009.

The taxpayer has until the later of:

  • the day the entity lodges its tax return for the income year in which the relevant CGT   event happened
  • 12   months after the day on which these amendments receive royal assent, or
  • a later day allowed by the Commissioner.

For more information see:

ATO references:
NO NAT 3359

Advanced guide to capital gains tax concessions for small business
  Date: Version:
You are here 1 July 2010 Original document
  1 July 2011 Updated document
  1 July 2012 Updated document
  1 July 2013 Archived

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