Remote work tax deductions Australia

Remote work tax deductions Australia 2026: Home office claims explained What Can Remote Workers Claim? If you work from home, you can claim tax deductions for home office expenses. But…

Remote work tax deductions Australia 2026: Home office claims explained

What Can Remote Workers Claim?

If you work from home, you can claim tax deductions for home office expenses.

But only the work-related portion. And only if you have records.

What you CAN claim:

  • Home office rent (proportional to workspace)
  • Electricity (proportional)
  • Internet (work-related portion)
  • Phone (work-related portion)
  • Office furniture (desk, chair, filing cabinet)
  • Office equipment (computer, printer, monitor)
  • Stationery and supplies
  • Home insurance (workspace proportion)

What you CAN’T claim:

  • Mortgage interest (unless self-employed)
  • Car expenses (separate deduction)
  • Meals and drinks
  • General household items

Two Methods to Claim

Method 1: Simplified Rate (Easier)

$0.80 per hour worked from home.

No receipts needed. Just track hours.

Example:

  • Work from home: 20 hours/week
  • 52 weeks/year
  • Total: 1,040 hours
  • Deduction: 1,040 × $0.80 = $832/year

Pros: Simple. No records needed. Cons: Fixed rate. Can’t claim actual costs.

Method 2: Actual Expenses (More complex)

Calculate actual costs. Claim your proportion of them.

Example:

  • Home office rent: $200/month
  • Office takes 10% of house
  • Deduction: $200 × 10% = $20/month = $240/year

Pros: Can claim more (if actual costs exceed $0.80/hour) Cons: Need receipts. Need to calculate proportions.


How This Affects Payroll (Employer Side)

If you REIMBURSE employees for home office costs, it affects payroll.

Scenario 1: Reimbursement is not salary

You reimburse $50/month for internet. Employee claims $50/month deduction.

  • Not taxable to employee (reimbursement, not salary)
  • Not deductible to employer (personal expense)
  • No payroll impact

Scenario 2: Reimbursement is treated as salary

You add $50/month to their salary instead of reimbursing.

  • Taxable to employee (part of salary)
  • Deductible to employer (business expense)
  • Payroll impact: Add to gross salary, withhold tax

Best practice: Reimburse actual expenses (not salary). Lower tax impact for employee.


Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Claiming mortgage interest

If you own your home, you can’t claim mortgage interest as a home office deduction (unless self-employed with specific rules).

Mistake 2: Not keeping records

If you claim actual expenses, the ATO can ask for receipts. Internet bill, rent receipt, etc. Without them, claim is disallowed.

Mistake 3: Overstating home office proportion

You claim 50% of your house is a home office. ATO knows it’s not. Claim gets rejected or audited.

Real proportion: Measure your office. Divide by total house. That’s your claim percentage.

Mistake 4: Claiming personal expenses as work

That coffee machine? Personal (unless you run a cafe). That gym membership? Personal (not work). Claiming these = audit risk.

Mistake 5: Mixing methods

You can’t claim $0.80/hour AND actual expenses for the same period.

Pick one method per tax year.


What Employers Should Know

If employees work from home:

  1. You can’t claim their home office costs (they do)
  2. You can reimburse actual costs (internet, software licenses, equipment)
  3. Reimbursements aren’t salary (no PAYG withholding needed)
  4. You CAN provide equipment (laptop, monitor, chair) treated as employer-provided equipment, not taxable to employee

Best practice:

  • Provide work equipment (laptop, monitor, chair)
  • Reimburse actual expenses (internet, phone)
  • Employee claims home office rent/utilities on tax return

2026 Rule Changes

From 1 July 2026, the simplified rate ($0.80/hour) is subject to review.

Check the ATO website closer to July for any updates.


Quick Checklist

Working from home?

  • Track hours worked from home
  • Collect receipts for actual expenses
  • Decide: simplified rate or actual expenses
  • Keep records for 5 years
  • Claim on tax return (not on payroll)

Employer reimbursing?

  • Reimburse actual expenses (not salary)
  • Keep receipts from employees
  • Don’t withhold tax on reimbursements
  • Provide equipment where possible

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