General anti-avoidance rules (GAAR) and PSI

This information is relevant to you if both of the following apply:

  • you receive PSI as a sole trader or through your company, partnership or trust, and
  • the PSI rules do not apply to your income because you’re carrying on a PSB.

The GAAR may apply where there are factors indicating that the dominant purpose of the arrangement is to obtain a tax benefit by diverting, alienating or splitting your PSI or retaining profits in your lower-taxed company, partnership or trust (being an interposed entity).

In deciding whether the PSB has engaged in income splitting to gain a tax benefit, the following considerations may be relevant:

  • Whether the salary or wages paid to you is commensurate with
    • the skills you exercised or services you provided, and
    • the income received by the PSB for your services.
  • Remuneration commensurate to the value of your services will generally be the gross amount received by the PSB for your services, less allowable deductions (other than deductions associated with non-PSI income of the PSB or income splitting).
  • Whether the PSB distributes income to associates and does not distribute income to you, the individual who provided the actual services.
  • Whether the salary or wages paid to associates by the sole trader or PSB is not commensurate with
    • the skills exercised and services provided by the associate, and
    • the income received by the sole trader or PSB is for services performed by the individual (which is different to income being generated by assets of an interposed entity).

Examples include if you:

  • use a company, partnership, or trust to retain profits from your PSI
  • divert, alienate or split your PSI with an associate – which reduces your overall income tax liability, or
  • create an entitlement to deductions which would not be available to an individual providing the same services as an employee.

Example: when the GAAR may apply

Jason provides services as a computer analyst through his trust, JB Trust. Jason's wife and children are also beneficiaries of JB Trust. The contract price for Jason's services is $120,000.

Through the income year, Jason is paid a salary of $50,000 by JB Trust to perform his services. JB Trust also incurs $25,000 of deductions. The balance of $45,000 is distributed to Jason's wife and children, who are in the lowest marginal tax rate.

The JB Trust self-assesses as a PSB due to passing the results test. The PSI rules do not apply to the income. The GAAR may apply to the arrangement JB Trust has in place, as Jason may be obtaining a tax benefit by splitting the income with his associates.

If the GAAR applied, then the tax benefits would be cancelled. This is done by making a determination, and relevant amounts would be deemed to be included in Jason's assessable income.

Personal services income

Steps Progress

What is PSI?

4 mins

Is the income PSI?

5 mins

Income that is not PSI

9 mins

Whose PSI is it?

7 mins

Working out if the PSI rules apply: self-assess as a personal service business (PSB)

2 mins

The 80% rule

5 mins

Results test

8 mins

Unrelated clients test

5 mins

Employment test

5 mins

Business premises test

7 mins

Obtaining work through an agency

5 mins

Apply for a personal services business determination (PSBD)

3 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply

2 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply: claiming deductions

11 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply: how to attribute PSI

8 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply: PAYG

18 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply: completing your tax return

4 mins

What to do if the PSI rules don’t apply

3 mins

Record keeping for PSI

1 mins

Help for PSI

1 mins

Case study: instructions

1 mins

Case studies: sole trader

11 mins

Case studies: partnership

12 mins

Case studies: company

12 mins

Case studies: trust

12 mins

Related courses

1 mins

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