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Edited version of your private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1012442382874

Ruling

Subject: GST and various supplies relating to GST-free medical aids and appliances and/or spare parts

Questions

Answers

Relevant facts and circumstances

You are an Australian company and you are registered for GST.

You sell and hire rehabilitation equipment and other daily living aids to hospitals, nursing homes, and disabled individuals. You service, modify and repair rehabilitation equipment and living aids.

You do not seek a ruling on whether the products that you supply are GST-free medical aids or appliances or spare parts specifically designed for a GST-free medical aid or appliance.

You provided the ATO with invoices that include labour, repairs and delivery charges.

Your consultancy services refer to your administrative costs in preparing quotes and obtaining GST-free spare parts for a medical aid or appliance.

In relation to delivery, you have a showroom and a website. The products are supplied to customers at the showroom/retail outlets. Alternatively, you will deliver the products at the customer's request. Delivery service is optional.

You have not provided an invoice or detail of your installation services. You wish to receive general guidance on this installation service and the testing service. The testing relates to the supply of installation of the medical aid or appliance and is part of the Quality Assurance process relating to the supply of installation of the medical aid or appliance.

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, Section 38-45

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999, Section 195-1

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999, Schedule 3

Reasons for decision

A supply is a taxable supply where the requirements of section 9-5 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) are satisfied. Section 9-5 of the GST Act states:

Based on the facts provided, you satisfy the requirements of paragraphs 9-5(a) to 9-5(d) of the GST Act as the supply made by you will be for consideration, made in the course of an enterprise carried on by you, you will supply the services in Australia, and you are registered for GST.

Section 38-45 of the GST Act states:

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

1. Repair service:

Issue 2.a.15 in GST Health Industry Partnership - Issues Register states:

Goods and Service Tax Ruling (GSTR) 2001/8 state:

GSTR 2001/8 further explains what integral, ancillary or incidental parts are as follows:

Integral, ancillary or incidental parts

Examples of mixed supplies

Examples of composite supplies

Example 9 - delivery of GST-free goods

Example 13 - fitted car parts

Issue 4.a.2 in the GST Health Industry Partnership - Issues Register provides guidance for determining whether the repair of medical aids and appliances is GST-free under section 38-45 of the GST Act.

You provided 3 invoices for repair service.

Invoice 1 outlines the removal of an old pan carrier on the shower commode and a new replacement pan carrier for the client. You have not charged separately for your repair service, and the price in the invoice is the replacement cost of a new pan carrier. You did not charge GST on this amount since it is a supply of a spare part of a medical aid/appliance.

Invoice 2 is for the repair of seat padding on a medical aid. The price on the invoice is the GST inclusive repair cost.

Invoice 3 shows you charged no GST on the cost of a shower chair, you charged GST on the repair cost to remove a spare part and fit a new spare part to the shower chair.

We agree with your GST treatment of the above three invoices. In the first invoice, we characterise the repair service as a composite supply, the dominant part of the supply (the supply of the new pan carrier) has subordinate parts (the labour to replace the new pan carrier) that complement the dominant part. The labour cost is a necessary procedure in providing the new pan carrier, and is not a supply in its own right. The labour service represents a small proportion of the value of the transaction for the supply of the new pan carrier and is integral, ancillary or incidental to the supply of the new pan carrier. The whole supply is essentially the provision of one thing, the new pan carrier. If the pan carrier is a GST-free medical aid/appliance, then the supply is GST-free.

In the second invoice, there is one single supply of repair services, it is the labour component of the repair service, and it is a taxable supply (Issue 4.a.2 in the GST Health Industry Partnership - Issues Register).

In the third invoice, your supply is characterised as a mixed supply of GST-free spare part of medical aid/appliance and taxable supply of repair service.

Accordingly, if you replace spare parts specifically designed for a GST-free medical aid or appliance, your supply of the spare parts will be GST-free. However, if you supply the repair of the products, the labour component of repairs does not satisfy all of the requirements of subsection
38-45(1) of the GST Act, and is not GST-free. Nor is that supply GST-free under any other provision of the GST Act. Your supply of repair of the products to a customer in Australia is a taxable supply and you are liable to pay GST on that supply.

2. Testing and Installation service

Taxable supply:

The testing and installation service of medical aid/appliance could be considered a mixed supply of a GST-free medical aid/appliance and taxable supply of testing and installation service.

GST-free supply:

In some circumstances, the testing and installation will form a part of the supply of a medical aid or appliance listed in Schedule 3 in Section 38-45 of the GST Act and be GST-free. In these scenarios, the testing and installation service of medical aid/appliance is considered as being integral, ancillary or incidental to the dominant part of the supply of a medical aid or appliance and hence, be a GST-free supply.

Per your request, we provide several scenarios for your guidance.

Issue 4.a.13 in the GST Health Industry Partnership - Issues Register provides guidance for determining whether the installation of medical aids and appliances is GST-free under section 38-45 of the GST Act.

We have provided you with written general guidance as above. Written general guidance provides you with general principles of the operation of the law. Written general guidance does not interpret the law or apply it to your factual situation. The decision as to how those principles apply to your circumstances remains with you.

3. Delivery service:

Paragraphs 1 and 2 of Goods and Service Tax Determination (GSTD) 2002/3 "Goods and services tax: how do I account for GST when I supply taxable goods, non-taxable goods and delivery services together?" state:

You state that in relation to delivery of the products, you have a showroom and a website. The products are supplied to customers at the showroom/retail outlets. Alternatively, you will deliver at the customer's request. Delivery is optional.

Paragraphs 13 to 16 of GSTD 2002/3 states

Example 2 - optional delivery, separate charge

13. Lay hires out medical aids and appliances. They have a showroom and a website. They also issue catalogues to hospitals and medical centres.

14. The goods are supplied to customers at the showroom. Alternatively, Lay will deliver at the customer's request. Lay's GST inclusive delivery charges are:

15. Felix hires a wheelchair and ventilator, both GST-free. Felix lives outside the metropolitan area and he arranges for Lay to deliver the appliances to his home. He is invoiced for:

Goods

Price

GST included

4 weeks hire wheelchair

$60.00

Nil (GST-free supply)

4 weeks hire ventilator

$50.00

Nil (GST-free supply)

Delivery

$15.00

$1.36

Total

$125.00

$1.36

16. Lay is making separate supplies of goods and a delivery service. The goods are GST-free, but the delivery service is taxable. Lay's GST liability on the supplies to Felix is $1.36.

Inn addition, paragraph 6 of GSTD 2002/3 states:

Supplies of goods and delivery services

You provided the ATO with 2 invoices showing delivery charge of a medical aid per hourly rate. In these two invoices, you charged a separate amount for the delivery and included GST on the cost of delivery.

We agree with your GST treatment of the above 2 invoices because we consider that the supply of the goods and the delivery services are separate supplies. Your delivery service is optional to customers and may depend on the distance of customers' premises to your retail outlets/showroom. Hence, your supply of delivery of the products to a customer in Australia is a taxable supply and you are liable to pay GST on that supply.

4. Travel charges to customers' place to install, test, or repair of the medical aid/appliance

We consider that a supply of travel service to install/repair the products is a separate supply to the supply of installation, testing or repairing in relation to the products. Where you supply travel service that is a separate supply, or a separate part of a mixed supply, then the travel service would be a taxable supply because there is no provision in the GST Act or any other Act which provide for travel service to install/repair medical aid/appliance in Australia to be GST-free.

5. Consultancy services

You state that your consultancy services include administrative costs in preparing quotes and obtaining GST-free spare parts. At the moment, you absorb consultancy charges into the labour component of your invoices.

We consider this service is a separate supply from the supply of the GST-free spare parts. There is no provision in the GST Act or any other Act for the administrative costs in preparing quotes and obtaining GST-free spare parts to be GST-free.


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