Using trading stock for private purposes

If you take an item of your business's trading stock for your private use, you need to:

  • account for it as if you had sold it
  • include the value of the item in your business's assessable income.

There are 2 ways you can value this stock. You can either:

  • keep records of the actual value of goods you take from your trading stock for your own private use and report that amount, or
  • use the amounts the ATO provides as estimates of the value of goods you’ve taken (updated annually), which are available in the ATO’s taxation determination.

Example

John runs a grocery store. At the end of each week, he takes food from his grocery store for his wife and 3 children.

John records the value of these goods and reports the amount as income in his business accounts. His records include:

  • the date
  • a description of what was taken
  • the reason stock was taken (personal use)
  • the cost or market value of the item (excluding GST).

Record keeping

Steps Progress

Record keeping overview

10 mins

Tasks and tips

6 mins

Starting your business records

2 mins

Digital record keeping

5 mins

Manual or paper record keeping

2 mins

Banking records

2 mins

Income records

3 mins

Accounting for private use of assets

9 mins

Motor vehicle deductions records

2 mins

Home-based business deductions records

1 mins

Other deductions records

1 mins

Stock and asset records

5 mins

GST records

1 mins

Employee records

7 mins

Car fringe benefits records

1 mins

Expense payment FBT records

2 mins

Contractor records

2 mins

Sharing economy records

1 mins

Cryptocurrency records

1 mins

Records for other taxes

5 mins

Sole trader structure records

4 mins

Partnership structure records

3 mins

Company structure records

3 mins

Trust structure records

1 mins

Changing your business structure records

1 mins

Selling or closing your business records

2 mins

Related courses

1 mins

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