When you acquire a capital gains tax (CGT) asset, you need to start keeping accurate records as there may be a long period of time between acquiring and disposing of the asset. Without these records, you may end up paying more tax than necessary.
Information your records need to show |
Examples of types of records |
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You must keep records of every transaction, event or circumstance that may be relevant to working out whether you've made a capital gain or loss from a CGT event, including:
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How long you need to keep capital gains tax (CGT) records
You need to keep CGT records for 5 years after you sell or dispose of an asset, unless you keep an asset register.
Keeping an asset register may allow you to discard some records that you might otherwise need to keep for a long time. Once details have been entered into the register and the register has been certified by an approved person (such as a registered tax agent), you only have to keep the documents for 5 years from the date the register is certified.
For a CGT event that resulted in a capital loss which you've offset against a capital gain in a later year, you need to keep records from the year of the offset, for a further:
- 2 years for individuals or small businesses
- 4 years for other taxpayers.
Claiming small business tax deductions
Steps | Progress | ||||
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What are deductions and what can I claim? |
5 mins | ||||
Accounting for private use of assets |
9 mins | ||||
Expenses you can never deduct |
1 mins | ||||
Expenses you can deduct over time |
10 mins | ||||
Stock and asset records |
5 mins | ||||
Expenses you can deduct immediately |
5 mins | ||||
Other deductions records |
1 mins | ||||
Motor vehicle deductions |
4 mins | ||||
Motor vehicle deductions records |
2 mins | ||||
Related courses |
1 mins | ||||
Course Feedback |
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