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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1051285501361

Date of advice: 4 October 2017

Ruling

Subject: GST and tax invoices

Question 1

Will the electronic document provided satisfy the requirements of a valid tax invoice pursuant to subsections 29-70(1) and (1A) of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act)?

Answer

Yes, provided it can clearly be ascertained that the information shown on the draft tax invoice as ‘ID of supplier’ is the supplier’s ABN. The word ‘ABN’ is required on the tax invoice for it to be compliant.

Relevant facts and circumstances

Entity A is a subsidiary of Entity B, and is authorised and licensed by its parent to sell electronic services in Australia to Australian based customers.

The electronic services are operated from servers outside of Australia.

Via the server customers can browse and purchase goods and services from an online marketplace.

The suppliers listed on the online marketplaces are identified as being:

The online market only concerns itself with business-to-business (B2B) services, where both supplier and customer are residents of Australia and registered for Australian GST. That is, within Australia, only allowing “in-country” supplies where only in-country ‘ship to’ and ‘ship from’ marketplace listings are eligible for purchase.

A summary of the purchasing process is outlined below:

Although Entity A is not involved in the payment process, the online market generates an electronic document.

Entity A provides a technology platform which enables the purchasers to generate the electronic document, amongst other things.

The electronic document outlines the following information:

The purchaser is able to download the electronic document.

The GST amount applicable to each supply is shown on the electronic document.

The participating supplier’s agree to the electronic document being issued as a tax invoice on their behalf.

Relevant legislative provisions

Section 29-70 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999

Reasons for decision

Subsections 29-70(1) and (1A) of the GST Act provide:

29-70 Tax invoices

Paragraph 12 of Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2013/1Goods and services tax: tax invoices provides that a document in electronic form that meets the requirements of subsection 29-70(1) will be in the approved form for a tax invoice.

The electronic document is generated on an electronic platform by the purchaser, and provided to the purchaser by being sent to a personalised inbox on the system accessible by the user.

GSTD2005/2 Goods and Services Tax Determination: is an invoice that is posed on a website ‘issued’ for the purposes of Division 29 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) 1999 (GSTD 2005/2) outlines that an invoice is considered to be ‘issued’ for the purposes of Division 29 of the GST Act when it is posted on a website, provided that:

GSTD 2005/2 further states that a tax invoice can be issued in electronic form, for example, by electronic data interchange (EDI).

GSTD 2005/2 outlines that the supplier and the recipient may have an arrangement or agreement that the recipient will access the website, either at the recipient’s convenience or periodically, to download or print invoices posted on the website, where the recipient is usually required to log onto a website, enter a password to access the invoice. The arrangement or agreement may be contained in the terms of trade, letters, emails or file notes.

The electronic that is generated by recipients is an electronic document satisfying the definition of an EDI. The information for the electronic document is contained within the network and will be generated upon request of the recipient, who accesses the network portal with a unique username and password.

Users must agree to the terms and conditions of use, instructions for use of the software is provided to the user. The terms, conditions and instructions include information for the recipient of a purchase to access the portal and generate the electronic document for their respective purchase. Upon acceptance of the terms and conditions and access to instructions, the user enters into an arrangement with Entity A to access the network portal and generate the electronic document.

The electronic document is not issued by the supplier of the supply, rather the electronic is generated by the purchaser in the network online portal. Entity A is not the supplier of the goods, it is merely providing a technology platform for users.

ATO Interpretative Decision ATO ID 2010/146 Goods and Services Tax: GST and tax invoices issued by another entity on behalf of a supplier (ATO ID 2010/146) considers where an entity, that is not the supplier, prepares and issues a tax invoice. The facts outlined are:

Paragraph 5 of GSTD 2005/2 states that when referring to an invoice, the Determination is equally referring to an invoice prepared by a third party who is authorised to determine and notify an amount payable by one party to another.

The electronic document is a document that is prepared and generated by a party that is not the supplier of the transaction, being Entity A, on the system. Both supplier and recipient agree to the terms and conditions of use of the system, authorising Entity A to facilitate and notify the appropriate parties the amount payable by way of a tax invoice. The electronic document is therefore a tax invoice pursuant to section 29-70(1A) of the GST Act.

The electronic document will satisfy subsection 29-70 of the GST Act and be a valid tax invoice. As the tax invoice will be issued through the online platform under agreement with the supplier for the supply or supplies that the supplier makes, it is in the approved form as it will contain the supplier’s ABN (including identifying that it is an ABN), it will identify the recipient, it will include a description of the goods supplied, the quantity and price of the what is supplied, it will include if the supply or supplies are taxable, the date of the document, the total amount of GST, the words ‘Tax Invoice’ so it can be clearly ascertained from the document that it is intended to be a tax invoice.


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