Foreign Residents

Quy v FCT: less than 2 months in Australia … I still call Australia home

Quy v FCT: less than 2 months in Australia … I still call Australia home

The Administrative Appeals Tribunal (Tribunal) has held in Quy v FCT [2024] AATA 245 that a taxpayer, who was physically in Australia for less than 2 months each year, was a resident of Australian tax purposes.

Capital gains, Discretionary Trusts and Foreign Residents: round 3 to the ATO

Capital gains, Discretionary Trusts and Foreign Residents: round 3 to the ATO

We wrote here and here about the Greensill (Thawley J) and Martin (Steward J) Federal Court decisions. In those decisions the Federal Court found in favour of the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) that section 855-10 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) did not disregard a non-taxable Australian property capital gain distributed to a foreign resident beneficiary of an Australian discretionary trust.

International Tax Series Part 7 – CGT main residence exemption for foreign resident beneficiaries of a deceased estate

International Tax Series Part 7 – CGT main residence exemption for foreign resident beneficiaries of a deceased estate

Our international tax series predominantly discusses Federal tax issues relating to non-resident (foreign) beneficiaries or non-resident trustees of a trust. This seventh article of the series focuses on the CGT main residence exemption (CGT MRE) for non-resident beneficiaries of deceased estates.

Sladen Snippet – Addy – ATO wins backpacker tax case in the Full Federal Court

Sladen Snippet – Addy – ATO wins backpacker tax case in the Full Federal Court

As we discussed in Coelho v FCT [2020] AATA 2474, different tax rates apply to residents and non-residents. Further, under Pt III of Sch 7 to the Income Tax Rates Act 1986, a working holiday maker pays tax at 15% on the first $37,000 of income in Australia. Commonly referred to as the ‘backpacker tax’.

Capital gains, discretionary trusts, and foreign residents – round 2 to the ATO

Capital gains, discretionary trusts, and foreign residents – round 2 to the ATO

We wrote here on the decision of Thawley J of the Federal Court in Peter Greensill Family Co Pty Ltd (trustee) v FCT (Greensill) where the Commissioner of Taxation was successful in arguing that section 855-10 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) does not disregard a capital gain distributed to a foreign resident beneficiary of an Australian discretionary trust. The taxpayer has appealed that decision to the Full Federal Court.

Capital gains, discretionary trusts, and foreign residents – first blood to the ATO

Capital gains, discretionary trusts, and foreign residents – first blood to the ATO

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) position for several years has been a foreign beneficiary distributed a capital gain made by an Australian discretionary trust on an asset that is not taxable Australian property is assessed on the capital gain even though that would not occur if the foreign resident made the gain directly, or through a fixed trust. Some commentators disagree with that view, the Federal Court in a recent case agreed with the ATO position in what may be the first skirmish of a battle through the courts on this issue.