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Edited version of private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1011511997060

Ruling

Subject: Living-away-from-home Allowance benefits

Questions

1. Is the employee considered to be living away from the usual place of residence for the purposes of section 30 of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 (FBTAA)

2. If the answer to question 1 is yes, is the proposed allowance a living-away-from-home allowance (LAFHA) pursuant to section 30 of the FBTAA?

3. If the answer to question 2 is yes, will the taxable value of the allowance be reduced to nil pursuant to section 31 of the FBTAA?

This ruling applies for the following periods:

Year ended 31 March 2010

Year ended 31 March 2011

Year ended 31 March 2012

Year ended 31 March 2013

Year ended 31 March 2014

The scheme commences on:

19 June 2009

Relevant facts and circumstances

The employee is an employee of the employer. The employer is located in Locality A.

The employee is originally from Country A whose entire family resides there.

Prior to leaving Country A the employee was living in a rental apartment in Locality B. This apartment is being maintained by the employee's mother.

The employee came to Country B in November 2008 from Country A under Visa A and whilst in Country B worked for two other employers both in Locality A.

Whilst working at one of these earlier employers the employee was contacted by the employer and offered the current role. As a result the employee was living in Locality A when they accepted the position with the employer. The current position was not prearranged prior to the employee leaving Country A.

The employee subsequently applied for and was granted Visa B. This expires on Date A and the employee intends to return to Country A when this current visa expires.

The employee commenced working for the employer on Date B.

The employee has not purchased property in Country B and has left personal effects in Country A.

The employee and the employee's partner are living in a rented unit in Locality A with the partner also under Visa B. The employee's partner is from the Country C; however they lived in Locality B with the employee prior to coming to Country B.

The employee returned to Country A once since relocating to Country B and intends to visit again.

Proposed allowance

The employer wishes to pay the employee an allowance titled a LAFHA of $X per annum.

This is made up of an accommodation and food component. A break-up was provided.

The employer has stated that the reason they are paying the allowance is:

The LAFHA is not in addition to the employee's current salary. It is a component of the current salary. It is intended that the LAFHA will be provided by way of a purported salary sacrifice arrangement (SSA).

The employee will be required to give the employer a declaration as to the particulars of the usual place and actual place of residence for the fringe benefits tax (FBT) year during which the allowance is paid.

Relevant legislative provisions

Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 section 30.

Reasons for decision

Question 1

Is the employee living-away-from-home?

It is the facts of the case which determine whether an employee is living-away-from-home and MT 2030 provides guidance on how the Commissioner determines whether an employee is living-away-from-home. Paragraph 14 states in part:

In essence, this paragraph effectively states that 'but for' having to relocate temporarily for employment an employee would not have changed their residence and, once that temporary employment ceases the employee will return to that residence.

For the purposes of the FBTAA a place of residence is defined in subsection 136(1) and paragraph 12 of MT 2030, which explains this definition, states:

Therefore for an employee to be living-away-from-home, the employee would have had to have two places of residence and that the employee moved to the second place of residence as a result of the employee having to work temporarily for their employer at another locality. In addition the employee wouldn't have moved from the first residence if not for the fact that they had to work temporarily for their employer elsewhere.

In this case the employee is from Country A and prior to leaving Country A was residing in Locality B. In respect of expatriates paragraph 22 of MT 2030 looks at expatriate employees who are living-away-from-home. It states:

So in looking at paragraphs 14 and 22 of MT 2030 for the employee to be living-away-from-home they would need to satisfy the following:

In this case the employee left the home in Locality B to come to Country B on Visa A.

Whilst on that visa the employee worked for two other employers in Locality A before being employed by the current employer. The employee was working for the second of the former employers when approached by the current employer to work for them and was already living in Locality A when employed by the employer.

Therefore as the employee was not living in Locality B when accepting the employment with the employer it cannot be said that the employee would have remained there if they hadn't taken up employment with the employer. This is because leaving Locality B predated working for the employer in Locality A.

All their employment with the employer has done is extend an existing absence from Locality B. The reason for leaving Locality B was not a direct result of taking up the employment with the employer. The decision to take up employment with the employer was made after the employee had already relocated to Locality A and as such there was no requirement to change residence in order to take up employment.

Although the employee has stated they intend to return to live in Locality B when the current visa expires, the employee is not living-away-from-home in the sense required under section 30 of the FBTAA. This is because the original decision to leave Locality B is unrelated to taking up employment with the employer.

Questions 2 and 3

As both these questions were only to be answered if the answer to the previous question was yes they have not been addressed.


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