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Edited version of your private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1012496135823

Ruling

Subject: GST and meals provided to child care centres

Question

Is a supply of meals to child care facilities GST-free?

Answer

No

Relevant facts

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

You supply prepared cold & cooked ready meals and other food such as purees, crackers etc to registered child care centres.

You will be preparing meals to be supplied to a number of Child Care Facilities to be used for the children's morning tea, lunch and afternoon tea while they attend the facilities.

You do not manufacture the food this function is outsourced by you.

The parents of the children attending the Child Care Facilities will be paying the Child Care Facilities for the provision of the children's morning tea, lunch and afternoon tea as part of the Child Care service.

You deliver the menu of food you have created to the child care centres once a week.

You advise that the food you supply will be a mix of fully prepared meals and ready to eat food. Some lunches are fully prepared. Fruit is required to be cut up. Some afternoon meals are prepared some are not.

The child care facility staff will serve the food to the children at the approved child care centres

You believe the food is GST-free under section 38-155 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act).

The food is supplied directly to approved/registered child care centres only.

If a parent (for example) wants to purchase a 'take home' fully prepared meal you will charge - GST.

Relevant legislative provisions

All references are to the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999:

Section 9-5

Section 38-3

Section 38-20

Section 38-140

Section 38-145

Section 38-150

Section 38-155

Division 153

Reasons for decision

Issue 1

Question 1

Summary

The supply of food items by you to the child care centre is not GST-free. It is a taxable supply under section 38-3 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act).

Detailed reasoning

Section 38-155 of the GST Act deals with supplies directly related to child care that are GST-free and provides that:

In our view there are two separate supplies:

The initial supply of the food by you is a business to business transaction and would be dealt with under the normal rules, that is, section 9-5 of the GST Act. Based on the facts provided, you have been engaged by the child care centre to provide prepared meals daily to the child care centre for consumption by the children under care.

To make a supply 'on behalf of' the child care centre we consider that you would need to be making the supply as an agent for the child care centre. We do not consider that you are acting as an agent (for the purposes of Division 153 of the GST Act) for the child care centre, rather you have merely been contracted to provide prepared meals to the child care centre to enable the centre to provide meals for the children at the child care centre.

Paragraph 18 of GSTR 2000/37 provides guidance on general agents:

Based on the facts and information provided, we do not consider that any agency arrangement exists for the purposes of Division 153 of the GST Act.

We have published an ATO view which we consider to be on-point with this scenario. The view is in relation to subsection 38-20(3) of the GST Act. The wording of that subsection and the underlying principle are predominantly the same as section 38-155 of the GST Act in relation to the principle of GST free supply and the words 'directly related'.

Section 38-20 of the GST Act is the relevant provision for GST and hospital treatment. Subsection 38-20(3) of the GST Act provides:

The ATO technical product Pharmaceutical Health Forum - issues register - Purchasing or hiring goods through a hospital provides the ATO view which we consider relates directly to your case and provides at paragraph 6.

Depending on the types and/or contents of the food items supplied by you to the child care centre, the food items could be GST-free, taxable or a mixed supply. Based on the detail of the menu provided by you it appears to be mainly prepared food and therefore a mixed or taxable supply (refer section 38-3 of the GST Act).

The relevant provision to consider is section 38-155 of the GST Act for this case.

Based on the limited facts provided we consider that paragraph 38-155(a) of the GST Act would not be met for the reasons as follows:

You are not a child care supplier in any event nor are you supplying on behalf of the child care centre. This means paragraph 38-155(b) of the GST Act is not satisfied.

As a consequence, the requirements under section 38-155 of the GST Act are not met and the supply of food items by you to the child care centre is not GST-free under this provision.

However, the supply of the food by the child care centre (as part of their child care operations) to the children is GST-free under section 38-155 of the GST Act.

GSTR 2000/30 particularly paragraphs 105 - 120 and the example at paragraph 112 is the principle to be applied in this case. This ruling provides some guidance on the term 'directly related'.

We have included a copy of GSTR 2000/30 for your perusal.

GSTR 2001/1 particularly paragraphs 70 -75 provide further guidance on the term 'directly related' under the sub-heading What is the meaning of 'directly related' to the supply of an education course?

We have included a copy of GSTR 2001/1 for your perusal.


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