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Ruling

Subject: Home to work travel

Question 1

Is the travel between the employee's home office and testing sites considered to be a business journey for the purposes of calculating a car fringe benefit in accordance with section 10 of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 (FBTAA)?

Answer

Yes

This ruling applies for the following periods:

Year ended 31 March 2012

Year ended 31 March 2013

Year ended 31 March 2014

The scheme commences on:

1 April 2011.

Relevant facts and circumstances

Background

The employer has a class of employees who work from home offices and are not required to work in the employer's office.

The employer provides a vehicle to each of these employees and only one of these employees lives in a locality near the employers business premises.

These employees are unique from the employers other employees and have separate employment conditions.

The following documents were provided:

The employer stipulates that their vehicles are not to be used for private purposes under any circumstances.

Relevant legislative provisions

FBTAA section 7

FBTAA section 9

FBTAA section 10

FBTAA subsection 136(1)

Reasons for decision

Summary

After applying the characteristics of an itinerant worker contained in paragraph 7 of TR 95/34 with the employment conditions of these employees', employment is considered to be itinerant in nature.

Therefore travel from home to a work location or from a work location home is considered to be business journeys.

Detailed reasoning

Section 7 of the FBTAA details when a car benefit will arise under the FBTAA and under subsection 7(2) of the FBTAA a car benefit will arise where a car is garaged or kept at or near an employee's place of residence.

In addition, although the employees are required to work from home and, there are no other employer's business premises available for some of these employees to work from, an employee's places of residence are specifically excluded from the definition of 'business premises' contained subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA.

Therefore for the purposes of the FBTAA the employee's home is not business premises of the employer and on the days an employer provided car is garaged at the employee's home a car benefit will arise. A car fringe benefit will have to be calculated using the statutory formula under section 9 of the FBTAA or if the employer so elects using the operating cost method under section 10 of the FBTAA.

In order to use section 10 of the FBTAA a logbook has to be kept for a minimum of 12 weeks detailing the business journeys undertaken in that car. The substantive issue in this case is whether the trip from the employees' homes to a work site (of from a work site back home) is a business or private journey. If they are considered to be business journeys then they will need to be recorded as such when the logbook records are being kept.

Generally journeys that start or end at an employees home are private. However there are exceptions to this and in this case, we should examine Taxation Ruling TR 95/34 Income tax: employees carrying out itinerant work - deductions, allowances and reimbursements for transport expenses to see if the employees carry out itinerant work. If so then the trips between their homes and testing sites will be business journeys.

Paragraph 7 of TR 95/34 states:

It is the above characteristic that we need to look at to determine whether the nature of the work is itinerant.

Is travel is a fundamental part of the work?

As stated in paragraph 22 of TR 95/34 'Travel must be an essential feature of an employee's duties in order for that work to be classified as itinerant .

In this case the employees must travel to various work sites and the employee has no input where that site is.

Therefore travel is a fundamental part of the work as they cannot perform their work without travelling.

Is there a web' of work places in the regular employment?

Paragraph 28 of TR 95/34 states:

The employees maintain a home office and work from that office. However they travel to the work locations and once there set up temporary places of work. In effect this means that the work site becomes the employee's work place and then once the work is completed at that location they move to another location.

Overall this could be seen as a 'web' of work places.

Do the employees continually travel from one work site to another?

Paragraph 34 of TR 95/34 states:

In this case the employees are required to attend different locations as nominated and as required by their employer.

Do any of the other factors apply?

Paragraph 47 of TR 95/34 states:

There is uncertainly in the work locations as the employees travel to the location as directed and chosen by the employer.

Paragraph 56 of TR 95/34 states:

The employees are required to maintain a home office and do all their administration there. In addition completed work is collected from the homes for transportation for further work. The home office could be seen as a base of operations.

Paragraph 63 of TR 95/34 states:

A special allowance is paid to these employees.


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