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Authorisation Number: 1011951512869

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Ruling

Subject: goods and services tax (GST) and property

Question

Are you entitled to an input tax credit on your purchase of the property?

Answer

No.

This ruling applies for the following periods:

The scheme commences on:

Relevant facts and circumstances

You are registered for GST.

You purchased a property located in Australia (the property) with vacant possession from the vendor.

The vendor was registered for GST when he/she sold the property to you

The property is zoned commercial.

The property had a house on it when you purchased the property.

The house looks like a house on the outside.

The house had the following rooms when you purchased the property:

The vendor leased out the property to a medical practice for the first so many years that he/she owned the property. Then the medical professionals moved out. Then the vendor requested a change of use and moved in.

The vendor used the property as his/her residence. He/she also used the property in his/her business.

During the vendor's period of ownership of the property, rooms W, X and Y were set up as bedrooms. Rooms W and Z were used as bedrooms shortly before you purchased the property. Room Y had a spare bed in it shortly before you purchased the property. You do not recall if room X was completely empty or was used for non work related storage shortly before you purchased the property. Rooms W, X and Y previously had sinks in them and the vendor removed these sinks. Room Z had a sink in it when you purchased the property.

Rooms A and B were used for storage or were empty shortly before the property was sold to you. Room A had a sink in it when you purchased the property.

The vendor removed an internal wall in the living room to increase the room's size.

When you purchased the property, the kitchen included kitchen benches, kitchen cupboards, a stove and a sink.

When you purchased the property, the bathroom included a shower, vanity and spa bath. This room was formerly a medical professional's consulting room, which the vendor converted into a bathroom.

The house was on the property when the vendor purchased the property.

The vendor did not substantially renovate the house.

As at the time of sale of the property to you, the house had not been built, and the house did not contain a building that was built, by the vendor to replace a building the vendor demolished on the same land.

Current listings from websites show the vendor as conducting his/her business from the property.

The vendor advertised his/her business on a sign put up on the house.

The vendor had certain things in the yard and these were used for the storage of something.

The vendor's business cars were parked in the yard.

The vendor used the office in his/her business.

You will lease out the property to a medical professional. The house will be used as a specified medical practice when you lease out the property.

You renovated some of the rooms.

You removed the sink from room A

You converted the kitchen into a waiting room. You removed kitchen facilities from this room.

You reduced the shelving height in the office to allow more light into the office.

You installed a dishwasher and instant boil unit in the tea room.

The premises could only be used as residential accommodation again if a planning application was lodged to change the use back to residential and the kitchen was rebuilt.

Relevant legislative provisions

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 9-5

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 paragraph 9-20(1)(c)

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 11-5

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 subsection 11-15(1)

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 subsection 11-15(2)

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 40-35

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 40-65

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 40-75

Reasons for decision

Summary

You are not entitled to an input tax credit on your purchase of the property as the sale of the property to you was an input taxed supply of residential premises under subsection 40-65(1) of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act)

Detailed reasoning

You are entitled to input tax credits on your creditable acquisitions.

You make a creditable acquisition where you satisfy the requirements of section 11-5 of the GST Act, which states:

Subsection 11-15(1) of the GST Act states:

Subsection 11-15(2) of the GST Act states:

Paragraph 9-20(1)(c) of the GST Act provides that an activity or series of activities done on a regular or continuous basis in the form of a lease, licence or other grant of an interest in property is an enterprise. You acquired the property in carrying on your property leasing enterprise.

Your acquisition of the property was not of a private or domestic nature.

Subsection 40-35(1) of the GST Act provides that a supply of premises that is by way of lease is input taxed if the supply is of residential premises (other than a supply of commercial residential premises or a supply of accommodation in commercial residential premises provided to an individual by the entity that owns or controls the commercial residential premises).

However, subsection 40-35(2) of the GST Act states:

Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2000/20 Goods and Services Tax: commercial residential premises (GSTR 2000/20) provides the Australian Taxation Office view on the meaning of residential premises and to be used for residential accommodation.

Paragraphs 19 and 20 of GSTR 2000/20 state:

Paragraph 26 of GSTR 2000/20 states:

Paragraph 28 of GSTR 2000/20 states:

Paragraph 22 of GSTR 2000/20 states:

Paragraph 27 of GSTR 2000/20 states:

Paragraph 31 of GSTR 2000/20 discusses the purpose of premises factor. It states:

Paragraph 23 of GSTR 2000/20 discusses home offices. It states:

When you lease out the property to a medical professional, the premises will not be residential premises to be used for residential accommodation as:

Therefore, you will not make an input taxed supply under subsection 40-35(1) of the GST Act when you lease the property to the psychologist. Your lease of the property will not be an input taxed supply under any other provision in the GST Act.

Hence, you acquired the property for a creditable purpose. Therefore, you satisfied the requirement of paragraph 9-5(b) of the GST Act.

Taxable supply

You make a taxable supply where you satisfy the requirements of section 9-5 of the GST Act), which states:

Consideration

The vendor supplied the property to you for consideration when he/she sold the property to you. Hence the requirement of paragraph 9-5(a) of the GST Act was satisfied.

Enterprise

The vendor used the property in his/her business. Therefore, the vendor's sale of the property was a supply made in the course or furtherance of an enterprise that he/she carried on. Hence, the requirement of paragraph 9-5(b) of the GST Act was satisfied.

Connected with Australia

The sale of the property to you was connected with Australia as the property is located in Australia. Hence, the requirement of paragraph 9-5(c) of the GST Act was satisfied.

GST registration

The vendor was registered for GST when he/she sold the property to you. Therefore, the requirement of paragraph 9-5(d) of the GST Act was satisfied.

GST-free

There are no provisions in the GST Act under which the sale of the property to you was GST-free.

Input taxed

In accordance with subsection 40-65(1) of the GST Act, a sale of residential premises is input taxed.

However, subsection 40-65(2) of the GST Act states:

New residential premises are defined in section 40-75 of the GST Act.

Subsection 40-75(1) of the GST Act states:

When the property in your case was sold to you, it had the physical characteristics of residential premises that were to be used for residential accommodation, as it had bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bathroom, toilets and laundry. The fact that the vendor lived in the house also suggests that the premises had the physical characteristics of residential premises to be used for residential accommodation at the time the property was sold to you.

Considering the form and fit-out of the premises in your case at the time the premises were sold to you, the purpose or context of the premises' use would have been for personal accommodation. At the time the premises were sold to you, the building did not have the appearance of having been fabricated or altered to accommodate commercial or professional activities.

Immediately prior to the sale of the premises to you, the characteristics of the premises suggested that the tasks of day to day living, such as preparing food, cleaning and laundering, would have been performed by the occupant.

Immediately prior to the sale of the premises to you, the characteristics of the premises suggested that the status of the occupant would have been owner, tenant or lessee.

Council permitted the property to be used for residential accommodation when the vendor lived in it.

As the property had the physical characteristics of residential premises to be used for residential accommodation when the property was sold to you and the features in paragraph 27 of GSTR 2000/20 were present at that time, the property was residential premises to be used for residential accommodation when it was sold to you. The home office was not sufficiently separate from the rest of the residential premises to distinguish its use and its predominant use was residential accommodation. We consider that all rooms existing when the property was sold to you were part of the residential premises that were sold to you and that they were to be used predominantly for residential accommodation at that time.

These residential premises were not commercial residential premises when the residential premises were sold to you.

The house was on the property when the vendor purchased the property. The sale of the property to the vendor was not a sale of commercial residential premises. Therefore, at the time the property was sold to you it had previously been sold as residential premises (other than commercial residential premises).

Paragraph 28 of Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2003/3 Goods and services tax: when is a sale of real property a sale of new residential premises? (GSTR 2003/3) provides that paragraphs 40-75(1)(b) and 40-75(1)(c) of the GST Act raise the question of what has been done to the building or the activity of building by the current owner and this will determine whether the residential premises are new residential premises.

The vendor did not substantially renovate the residential premises.

The residential premises were not built by the vendor, and they do not contain a building that was built by the vendor, to replace premises the vendor demolished on the same land.

Therefore, the sale of the residential premises to you was not a sale of new residential premises.

Hence, the sale of the property to you was an entirely input taxed supply under subsection 40-65(1) of the GST Act.

As not all of the requirements of section 9-5 of the GST Act were satisfied, the vendor did not make a taxable supply to you. Therefore, you did not satisfy the requirement of paragraph 11-5(b) of the GST Act.

Conclusion

As you did not satisfy all of the requirements of section 11-5 of the GST Act, you did not make a creditable acquisition of the property. Therefore, you are not entitled to an input tax credit on your purchase of the property.


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