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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1012985597508

Date of advice: 18 March 2016

Ruling

Subject: Goods and services tax (GST) and food

Question

Is GST payable on your sales of the gift packs?

Answer

Yes, GST is payable on the taxable part of the supply of each gift pack.

However, GST is not payable on the GST-free part of the supply of each gift pack.

Relevant facts and circumstances

You are registered for GST.

You plan to produce and sell gift packs that contain a condiment and a non-food gift item.

You will sell the gift packs to retailers.

You will supply the gift packs within Australia.

The condiment will be sold in a straight glass container. The outer packaging of the gift pack will be a printed cardboard box.

You are still in the process of working out costings, so you are not sure what you will sell the gift packs for and what each item in a gift pack will be worth.

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 38-2

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 38-3

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 38-4

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Schedule 1

Reasons for decision

Summary

Your sale of a gift pack is a mixed supply. The supply is partly a GST-free supply of food under section 38-2 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) and partly a taxable supply (the non-food items).

You are liable to pay GST on the taxable part of the supply.

Detailed reasoning

GST is payable on any taxable supplies that you make.

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

You make a taxable supply if:

(*Denotes a term defined in the GST Act)

The indirect tax zone is Australia.

Mixed supplies and composite supplies

Some supplies contain separately identifiable taxable and non-taxable parts that need to be individually recognised for GST classifications purposes. Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2001/8 refers to such a supply as a 'mixed supply'.

Paragraph 16 of GSTR 2001/8 states:

GSTR 2001/8 also describes the characteristics of a supply that appears to have more than one part but is essentially a supply of one thing. GSTR 2001/8 refers to such a supply as a 'composite supply'.

Paragraph 17 of GSTR 2001/8 states:

Paragraphs 58 and 59 of GSTR 2001/8 provide guidance on determining whether an entity makes a supply that contains parts that are integral, ancillary or incidental to the dominant part of the supply. They state:

Paragraph 45 of GSTR 2001/8 states:

Paragraph 45A of GSTR 2001/8 refers to Re Food Supplier and Commissioner of Taxation [2007] AATA 1550; 2007 ATC 157; (2007) 66 ATR 938, which concerned the supply of a GST-free food product packaged with a non-food product for a single price and whether GST was payable on the supply of the non-food product. It states:

Similarly in your case, the supply of a non-food item contained in a gift pack is unconnected with the food that it is packaged with. The food component of the gift pack is not the dominant part of the overall supply and the other non-food item is not ancillary or incidental to the supply of the food. The food and non-food items you supply in the gift pack are each separately identifiable and retain their own identity.

Therefore, we need to determine the GST treatment of each part.

Your supply of the condiment

Section 38-2 of the GST Act states 'A supply of *food is GST-free'.

Paragraph 38-4(1)(e) of the GST Act provides that food includes goods to be mixed with or added to food for human consumption (including condiments, spices, seasoning, sweetening agents or flavourings).

Condiments are added to food for human consumption. Therefore, they are food for the purposes of section 38-2 of the GST Act.

However, a supply of food is not GST-free if an exclusion in subsection 38-3(1) of the GST Act applies.

Paragraph 38-3(1)(c) of the GST Act provides that a supply of food of a kind specified in the third column of the table in clause 1 of Schedule 1 to the GST Act, or food that is a combination of one or more foods at least one of which is food of such a kind, is not GST-free under section 38-2 of the GST Act. Condiments are not listed in Schedule 1 to the GST Act. Therefore the exclusion at paragraph 38-3(1)(c) of the GST Act does not apply.

None of the other exclusions in subsection 38-3(1) of the GST Act apply. Therefore, your supply of the condiment is GST-free under section 38-2 of the GST Act.

Hence, GST is not payable on your supply of the condiment.

Your supply of the non-food items

Your supply of the non-food item in a gift pack satisfies the requirements of paragraphs 9-5(a) to 9-5(d) of the GST Act, because:

There are no provisions of the GST Act under which your supply of the non-food item(s) s GST-free or input taxed. Therefore, your supply of the non-food item(s) is taxable, as all of the requirements of section 9-5 of the GST Act are met.

As your supply of the non-food item is taxable and your supply of the condiment is GST-free, your supply of a gift pack (containing the products you referred to in your ruling request) is characterised as a mixed supply.

Calculating the GST payable on the taxable part of a mixed supply

Where the supply of a gift pack is a mixed supply, GST is payable on the taxable part of the gift pack. To work out the value of the taxable part of the gift pack you need to apportion the total price for a gift pack to the taxable and GST-free parts on some reasonable basis.

The GST would be 1/11th of the part of the total price that is reasonably apportioned to the taxable part.

As stated in paragraphs 21 and 61 of GSTR 2001/8, as a means of minimising compliance costs, you may choose to treat something (or things taken together) as being integral, ancillary or incidental if the consideration that would be apportioned to it (if it were part of a mixed supply) does not exceed the lesser of :

Paragraph 61 of GSTR 2001/8 provides an example of such a situation:

Example 1 - cereal with stickers

Therefore, in your case, if the consideration that would be apportioned to all of the non-food items in a gift pack collectively does not exceed the lesser of:

you may choose to treat the entire supply of the gift pack as being a GST-free supply of a condiment

For further information on how to apportion the consideration between the taxable and GST-free components of the gift packs, please refer to GSTR 2001/8 which is available on our website at ato.gov.au

Setting out tax invoices for mixed supplies

Where an entity makes a mixed supply, the tax invoice must satisfy the requirements of subsection 29-70(1) of the GST Act, including that it contain enough information to clearly ascertain:


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