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Subject: GST and supply of Audiometry services and Hearing aids

Question

Is goods and services tax (GST) payable on the supply of following hearing devices and hearing services where you provide them to an injured worker and invoice the cost for the service and devices to the employer's insurer?

Answer

Relevant facts and circumstances

You are registered for goods and services tax (GST).

You are an approved hearing service provider. Injured workers are frequently referred to you by an Insurer to determine whether they require hearing devices. You provide your services in accordance with guidelines and prices set out by certain State authorities to the injured workers. You offer your services as follows:

Invoicing

The invoice that you issue will generally comprise of the following items:

The hearing aids that you supply are specifically designed for people with hearing disabilities and are not widely used by people without hearing disabilities.

There are no agreements between you and the insurance companies or the state authority that the supply of the hearing aids will not be treated as GST-free.

A brief description of the goods and services you supply which you invoice the insurer for are is follows:

There are no agreements between you and the insurance companies or the State Authority that the supply of the hearing aids will not be treated as GST-free.

Relevant legislative provisions

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 38-10

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) 38-45

Reasons for decision

Is GST payable on the supply of hearing services and hearing devices?

GST is payable on taxable supplies that you make.

In this case, it is clear that under the state authority guidelines, a contracted hearing service provider (such as you) is contracted to provide hearing services and hearing devices. We have first analysed the various services and devices for which you invoice the insurer separately to determine whether those hearing services and hearing devices that you supply are taxable supplies.

What is a taxable supply?

A taxable supply is defined in section 9-5 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) as follows:

You make a taxable supply if:

(a) you make the supply for *consideration; and

(b) the supply is made in the course or furtherance of an *enterprise that you *carry on; and

(c) the supply is *connected with Australia; and

(d) you are *registered, or *required to be registered.

However, the supply is not a *taxable supply to the extent that it is *GST-free or *input taxed.

(Asterisks (*) denote a term defined in section 195-1 of the GST Act)

The supply of hearing services and hearing devices meet the requirements of paragraphs (a)-(d) of the GST Act. However, it is necessary to consider whether the supply of hearing services and devices come within any of the GST-free or input taxed provisions of the GST Act. The supply of hearing services and devices are not input taxed under any provision of the GST Act. The relevant GST-free provisions to consider here are sections 38-10 and sections 38-45 of the GST Act.

Hearing devices

· Hearing aids and batteries specifically designed for hearing aids

Section 38-45 of the GST Act states the following in regards to the supply of medical aids.

Thus, under subsection 38-45(1) of the GST Act, the supply of a medical aid and appliance is GST-free where the medical aid or appliance:

Hearing aids and batteries specifically designed for hearing aids are covered under items 43 and 46 of Schedule 3 to the GST Act respectively. Additionally, the hearing aids that you supply are specifically designed for people with an illness or disability and are not widely used by people without an illness or disability. As such, the supply of the hearing aids is GST-free as it satisfies all the requirements of subsection 38-45(1) of the GST Act.

Health Industry Partnership - issues register which is available on the ATO website ato.gov.au states the following:

4.a.3 Are generic batteries for hearing aids GST-free?

Furthermore, you do not have agreements with any of the insurers and/or the state authorities that the supply of the hearing aids and/or the batteries for hearing aids is not GST-free.

Once an item meets all of the requirements of subsection 38-45(1) of the GST Act, its supply is GST-free all the way down the supply chain and not only when it is supplied to a person who has an illness or disability.

This means that when you supply a hearing aid and also batteries for hearing aids following a request made by an insurer, the supply of the hearing aid and the batteries for hearing aids is GST-free.

· Handling fee for buying, handling and providing hearing aids and selling them

Whilst none of these services in their own right is GST-free, where they are supplied as part of another GST-free supply then the fee attributable those fees may be GST-free. In this regard the Commissioner states his views in relation to how to treat supplies that are ancillary or integral to the supply of another supply, in Goods and services tax ruling GSTR 2001/8 Goods and services tax: apportioning the consideration for a supply that includes taxable and non-taxable parts (GSTR 2001/8).

15. You need to consider all of the circumstances of a supply to work out whether the supply is mixed or composite. GST is only payable on the taxable part of a mixed supply. If a composite supply is taxable, then GST is payable on the whole supply. If a composite supply is non-taxable, then no GST is payable on the supply.

Mixed supply

16. A mixed supply is a supply that has to be separated or unbundled as it contains separately identifiable taxable and non-taxable parts that need to be individually recognised. Paragraphs 45 to 54 explain what are separately identifiable parts.

Composite supply

17. If you make a supply that contains a dominant part and the supply includes something that is integral, ancillary or incidental to that part, then the supply is composite. You treat a composite supply as a supply of a single thing. Paragraphs 55 to 63 explain what are integral, ancillary or incidental parts.

18. A composite supply is either taxable or non-taxable. It may also be a part of a larger mixed supply.

Integral, ancillary or incidental parts

55. Some supplies include parts that do not need to be separately recognised for GST purposes. We refer to these parts of a supply as being integral, ancillary or incidental. In a composite supply, the dominant part of the supply has subordinate parts that complement the dominant part. If such a supply is analysed in a commonsense way, it can be seen that the supply is essentially the provision of one thing. It need not be broken down, unbundled or dissected any further. For this reason, a composite supply may appear, at first, to have more than one part, but is treated as if it is the supply of one thing.

When considering the services that you provide in regards to handling, buying and selling the hearing aids we are of the view that these services are an integral part of the supply of the GST-free supply of the hearing aids and as such consistent with paragraph 55 of GSTR 2001/8, the handling service is also GST-free.

Hearing services

Subsection 38-10(1) of the GST Act relevantly states:

(1) A supply is GST-free if:

(a) it is a service of a kind specified in the table in this subsection, or of a kind specified in the regulations; and

(b) the supplier is a *recognised professional in relation to the supply of services of that kind; and

(c) the supply would generally be accepted, in the profession associated with supplying services of that kind, as being necessary for the appropriate treatment of the *recipient of the supply.

The following is a discussion of whether the hearing services that you supply satisfies the requirements of subsection 38-10(1) of the GST Act. It is noted that hearing services comprises of the supply of:

· Hearing needs' assessment service

We have been advised that the hearing needs' assessment service that you provide is an Audiometry service. Item 3 of the table in subsection 38-10(1) of the GST Act lists 'Audiometry' and thus satisfies paragraph 38-10(1)(a) of the GST Act. We are of the view that any other service that you provide under hearing services that is an essential part of providing the Audiometry service will also satisfy paragraph 38-10(1)(a) of the GST Act.

We have been advised that you are a recognised professional in relation the supply of the audiometry services and thus the supply of the hearing needs' assessment services satisfies paragraph 38-10(1)(b) of the GST Act.

What remains to be decided is whether the requirement under paragraph 38-10(1)(c) of the GST Act is satisfied. In this regard, it is necessary to determine who the 'recipient of the supply' is. This is because, in order for this requirement to be satisfied, the service must be 'appropriate treatment of the "recipient" of the supply'. In other words, it is implied that the recipient must be the one receiving treatment.

Who is the 'recipient' of your services?

In this regard, the following is provided in the ATO publication GST and other health services

What if the service is not provided to the patient directly?

A health professional makes a supply to a third party if all of the following apply:

· the third party engages the health professional to provide something to them or to someone else

· the third party, by agreement with the health professional, decides what the health professional will provide

· the agreement creates a binding obligation between the third party and the health practitioner.

According to the information that you have provided, it is evident, that you have been contracted by the insurer to provide the service to the patient and that you do not have any contractual arrangement with the patient directly. Accordingly, we are of the view that the 'recipient' of the hearing assessment service is the insurer. Consequently, as the supply of the hearing assessment service cannot be considered as 'appropriate treatment of the 'recipient' of the service', it does not satisfy paragraph 38-10(1)(c) of the GST Act. Accordingly, as one of the requirements of subsection 38-10(1) of the GST Act is not satisfied, the hearing needs assessment service is not GST-free under that provision. It is not GST-free under any other provision of the GST Act nor is it input taxed. It is a taxable supply.

· Hearing aids fitting services and reviewing of the hearing aids 12 months after supply of hearing aids

Considering the description of the services you have provided in relation to fitting and the review of hearing aids, we are of the view that those services are an integral part of the supply of your Audiometry services. Accordingly, consistent with GSTR 2001/8 (paragraph 55 mentioned above) the above two supplies should be treated as taxable supplies as we are of the view that they are part of supplying the taxable supply of audiometry services mentioned above.

How to treat your supplies:

It is clear that when you supply hearing services and hearing devices, the supply involves separately identifiable GST-free and also taxable components. Accordingly, when you supply your hearing services and hearing devices, you are required to pay GST on the taxable components appropriately.


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