Australian Tax Substantiation Guide 2025–26: Records & Receipts
Australian Tax · Records & Substantiation · 2025–26
What Tax Records Do You Need? Substantiation Thresholds for Every Claim
A complete reference for the records you must keep to claim a deduction. Each expense type has its own threshold and rules — knowing them stops claims being disallowed at audit.
Quick answer
If your total work-related expenses are $300 or less, no receipts are required — but the expense must actually have been incurred. Once they exceed $300, written evidence is required for the entire claim, not just the amount over $300. Several expenses sit outside this total and have their own rules — car (cents per km needs no logbook), laundry under $150 (no receipts), travel diaries (6+ consecutive nights away), and working from home (a contemporaneous timesheet of actual hours). Keep records for 5 years from the date the return was lodged.
Key takeaways
- $300 is all-or-nothing. Claim $310 and you need evidence for the full $310, not just the $10 over.
- Five expense types sit outside the $300 total — car, travel allowance, overtime meals, award transport, laundry, and WFH — each with its own rule.
- The WFH timesheet must be contemporaneous. Reconstructed-at-year-end hours aren't accepted under the fixed-rate method.
- Bank statements alone usually fail — they don't show the nature of the goods or services. Keep the receipt.
- Retention is 5 years generally — but CGT and depreciation records run far longer, and fraud/evasion has no limit.
What triggers whatThe core substantiation thresholds
Total work-related expenses
$300
Under $300: no written evidence required, but the expense must have been incurred — the ATO can ask how it was calculated.
Over $300: written evidence required for the entire claim, not just the amount over $300. Excludes car, laundry, overtime meals and travel allowance — these have separate rules.
Laundry expenses
$150
Up to $150: no receipts. Reasonable basis: $1 per load of work clothing washed at home (own clothes), $0.50 per load (mixed with private). Diary encouraged.
Over $150: written evidence required. Applies only to clothing eligible for a deduction (uniforms, protective, occupation-specific).
Small expenses (single)
$10
Individual expenses $10 or less: a diary record is acceptable instead of receipts — provided the total of such expenses is $200 or less for the year.
Diary must include date, supplier, amount and nature, recorded as soon as possible after the expense.
Small expenses (annual total)
$200
Total of all small expenses (each ≤$10): if the annual total stays at or under $200, a diary is sufficient.
Once the total exceeds $200, all of these expenses then require proper written evidence — the diary alone is no longer adequate.
Asset cost — immediate deduction
$300
Asset cost $300 or less: immediate deduction available where used more than 50% for producing non-business assessable income.
Over $300: depreciate under Div 40 or pool in the low-value pool. The "set rule" and "multiples rule" prevent splitting a larger purchase into items under $300.
Travel diary trigger
6 nights
Domestic travel 6+ consecutive nights: a travel diary is mandatory in addition to receipts — each activity recorded with date, place, time, duration.
Overseas travel 6+ consecutive nights: diary always required, even when receiving a travel allowance equal to the reasonable amount.
Over the thresholdWhat counts as written evidence
The five required details
Acceptable forms of written evidence
| Required detail | What it means |
|---|---|
| Name of supplier | The business or person you paid |
| Amount of expense | In Australian dollars (or with conversion if foreign) |
| Nature of the goods or services | What was purchased — not just "groceries" or "miscellaneous" |
| Date the expense was incurred | The transaction date, not the receipt print date |
| Date of the document | When the document was created |
✓ Acceptable forms
Tax invoices, receipts, bank or credit card statements (if they show all required details), supplier invoices, electronic receipts, photos of receipts, screenshots of online purchases. Bank statements alone are usually insufficient — they don't show the "nature of goods or services", so keep the original receipt.
Every common expenseSubstantiation by claim type
← Swipe the table sideways to see all columns →
| Expense type | Threshold rule | Records required | In $300 total? |
|---|---|---|---|
| General work expenses | $300 substantiation rule | Receipts/invoices for all if total >$300; nothing if ≤$300 (but must have incurred) | Yes |
| Car — cents per km | Up to 5,000 work km per car | Reasonable estimate of work km (calendar, diary, examples) — no logbook needed | No — separate |
| Car — logbook method | No km limit; full method | 12-week logbook (valid 5 years), odometer readings, receipts for fuel, registration, insurance, repairs, services | No — separate |
| Laundry of eligible clothing | $150 threshold | Up to $150: diary or reasonable basis ($1/load, $0.50 mixed). Over $150: receipts, written records | No — separate |
| Overtime meals | Award allowance required | Allowance must be paid under industrial award. Reasonable amount per ATO determination — receipts only if exceeding it | No — separate |
| Travel — domestic, <6 nights | Travel allowance + reasonable amount | Receipts if exceeding the reasonable amount; no diary required under 6 consecutive nights | No — separate |
| Travel — domestic, 6+ nights | Diary required | Travel diary recording activities (date, place, time, duration) plus receipts | No — separate |
| Travel — overseas (any length) | Diary required for 6+ nights | Diary, receipts, apportionment of work vs private days | No — separate |
| WFH — fixed rate (70c/hr) | Contemporaneous timesheet required | Timesheet of actual hours worked from home (start date critical), one bill for each running cost claimed | Combined |
| WFH — actual cost | Receipts and diary | 4-week diary of work use, receipts for all costs claimed, calculations showing work percentage | Combined |
| Phone & internet | Diary if work % | 4-week representative diary, monthly bills. If the claim is under $50 total, no records required | Yes |
| Tools & equipment ≤$300 | Immediate deduction | Receipt showing item, cost, date — used >50% for income production | Yes |
| Tools & equipment >$300 | Depreciation under Div 40 | Receipt, effective-life calculation, depreciation schedule, opening balance each year of pool | Yes (the depreciation) |
| Self-education | $300 rule + nexus test | Course receipts, textbooks, stationery, evidence of relationship to current job | Yes |
| Donations to DGRs | $2 minimum per donation | Receipt from the deductible gift recipient showing date, amount, ABN, DGR status | No — separate |
| Union fees, memberships | Standard $300 rule | Income statement entry, payment receipts, or annual membership invoice | Yes |
| Tax agent fees (D10) | Standard $300 rule | Invoice from a registered tax agent or BAS agent showing fee, services, year | Yes |
| Personal super contributions (D12) | Special rules | Notice of intent lodged with fund, fund acknowledgement, receipt of contribution | No — separate |
| Income protection insurance | Standard $300 rule | Insurance policy schedule, premium receipt or statement | Yes |
Retention periodsHow long to keep records
The 5-year rule and its exceptions
Most records: 5 years — but some run much longer
| Record type | Minimum retention | Why |
|---|---|---|
| General work-related expenses | 5 years from lodgement | Standard amendment period for individuals |
| Records for CGT assets | Until 5 years after disposal | Cost base must be proven on sale — possibly decades after acquisition |
| Depreciation schedules | Until 5 years after the asset is fully written down or disposed | Effective life, decline in value and balancing adjustments relate back to original cost |
| Trust & partnership returns | 5 years from later of lodgement or last action affecting them | Beneficiary entitlements span multiple years |
| Records involving fraud or evasion claims | No limit | The ATO can amend assessments indefinitely where fraud or evasion is alleged |
| Self-managed super fund records | 10 years for trustee minutes and member records | SIS Act requirements |
Limited exceptionsWhen records are lost or destroyed
Narrow concessions — evidence required
What the ATO will and won't accept
✓ ATO may accept
Records lost in circumstances beyond your control:
• Fire (police or fire report)
• Flood or natural disaster
• Theft (police report)
• Computer failure with no backup (only if reasonable precautions were taken)
You must show you took reasonable precautions to protect the records.
✗ ATO will likely disallow
Records lost through carelessness:
• Receipts thrown out at year end
• Files lost when changing computers
• Records misplaced over time
• Records "left at home" during travel
• No backup of digital records
The onus is on the taxpayer — there's no defence in saying "I had them."
When standard rules don't applyExpenses with their own rules
The exceptions
Six categories sit outside the $300 total
| Expense category | Its own rule | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Car expenses | Cents per km (up to 5,000 km, no actual-cost records) OR logbook (12-week, every 5 years) | Choose method per car. Switching to logbook requires recording all costs. |
| 2. Travel allowance expenses | Receipts only if the claim exceeds the ATO reasonable amount | Reasonable amount varies by destination tier and salary band |
| 3. Overtime meal expenses | Allowance must be paid under industrial award. No receipts if within the reasonable amount | Both conditions required — no overtime allowance = no concessional substantiation |
| 4. Award transport payments | Special substantiation rules apply | The industry award sets specific transport allowance terms |
| 5. Laundry of eligible clothing | Up to $150 — no receipts | Reasonable basis ($1/load, $0.50 mixed) acceptable |
| 6. WFH — fixed rate | Timesheet of hours from start of year + one bill per running cost | Can't retroactively reconstruct hours — start date critical |
⚠️ Critical — these are NOT in the $300 total
When working out whether work expenses exceed $300, do not include car expenses, laundry, overtime meals, travel allowance or working-from-home costs. A taxpayer with $250 of general expenses plus $1,000 of car expenses does not need receipts for the $250 — even though the combined total is $1,250.
A permitted substituteWhen a diary alone is enough
Contemporaneous records
When a diary replaces receipts
| Diary use case | What the diary must show | Limits |
|---|---|---|
| Small expenses (each ≤$10) | Date, supplier, amount, nature of expense | Annual total of all such expenses must be ≤$200 |
| Travel — 6+ nights (domestic) or overseas | Date, place, time and duration of each work activity | In addition to receipts, not a substitute |
| Mobile phone / internet usage | 4-week representative period showing work vs private use, with a calculated % | Applies the % to actual bills — doesn't replace the bills |
| Laundry under $150 | Date, number of loads, eligible clothing washed | Reasonable basis: $1/load own clothes, $0.50/load mixed |
| WFH — fixed rate method | Timesheet recording every hour worked from home through the year | Must be kept from the start of the year — retrospective estimates not accepted |
| Car — work km estimate (cents per km) | Reasonable basis showing how the km figure was estimated | Diary of trips, calendar entries, examples of typical work trips |
Adviser playbookPractical tips for better substantiation
🎯 Tip 1 — Digital is fine, but capture immediately
The ATO accepts electronic copies — photos, scans, PDFs, screenshots. Use a receipt-tracking app (or your phone's camera) to capture receipts the moment you get them. Paper fades and gets lost; digital captures preserve every required detail, and timestamps confirm they're contemporaneous.
🎯 Tip 2 — Start the WFH timesheet on 1 July
Under the fixed-rate method, working-from-home hours must be recorded as they happen. The ATO will not accept a timesheet reconstructed at year end. A client who started keeping a timesheet partway through the year can only claim from the date it began. Set up the diary on 1 July — every year.
🎯 Tip 3 — Bank statements alone are not enough
A bank statement shows you paid a supplier, but not the nature of the goods or services. For deductions over the threshold, the original receipt or invoice is still required. The exception is utilities, rates and similar suppliers where the statement clearly identifies the supplier and the nature of the transaction.
🎯 Tip 4 — Document the apportionment, not just the receipts
For mixed-use expenses (phone, internet, computer, car), keep the calculation showing how the work percentage was derived — not just the receipts. The ATO will ask "how did you arrive at 60% work use?" Without a diary, calculation or supporting record, the claim is likely to be reduced.
🎯 Tip 5 — Don't fall for the $300 threshold trap
A claim of $310 in work-related expenses (excluding car, laundry, meals, travel) requires written evidence for the full $310 — not just the $10 above the threshold. Many people think it means "no receipts up to $300"; it actually means all-or-nothing. This is one of the most common audit failure points.
FAQFrequently asked questions
Do I really need receipts if my total work expenses are under $300?
No — you don't need written evidence (receipts, invoices) if your total work-related expenses are $300 or less. However, you must have actually incurred the expense and be able to explain how you calculated the claim. The ATO can still ask questions and disallow claims with no reasonable basis. Car expenses, laundry, overtime meals and travel allowance are excluded from this $300 calculation — they have their own rules.
How long do I need to keep tax records?
Generally five years from the date the return was lodged. For CGT assets, keep records for at least five years after the asset is disposed of — so records for a property bought in 2010 and sold in 2030 must be kept until 2035. Depreciation records similarly span the entire effective life of the asset plus five years. Records relating to fraud or evasion can be requested indefinitely.
Can I claim deductions if I lost my receipts in a flood or fire?
Yes, in limited circumstances. The ATO will generally accept claims where records were lost or destroyed in circumstances beyond your control — fires, floods, theft — provided you have evidence of the incident (police report, insurance claim, fire report) and can show you took reasonable precautions to protect the records. Records lost through carelessness, system failures without backup, or simply being misplaced are not covered.
What's the difference between the $300 substantiation threshold and the $300 immediate deduction threshold?
They are completely different rules that happen to share the same dollar amount. The $300 substantiation rule says you don't need written evidence if your total work-related expenses are under $300. The $300 immediate deduction rule (Section 40-80) says you can deduct the full cost of a depreciating asset immediately if it cost $300 or less and is used more than 50% for non-business income. One is about records; the other is about depreciation.
Do I need a logbook to claim car expenses?
Only if you use the logbook method or claim more than 5,000 work km. Under the cents per km method you can claim up to 5,000 work km per car without a logbook — but you must show a reasonable basis for the figure (diary, calendar entries, examples of typical work trips). Above 5,000 km, or to claim actual costs, a 12-week logbook is required, and it remains valid for five years.
Do I need receipts for laundry of my work uniform?
Only if your total laundry claim exceeds $150. Up to $150, the ATO accepts a reasonable basis: $1 per load when washing only eligible work clothing, or $0.50 per load when washing eligible items mixed with private clothes. A diary record is encouraged. Above $150 you need receipts for dry cleaning and a written record of home laundry. This only applies to clothing that qualifies for a deduction — uniforms, occupation-specific or protective clothing.
Disclaimer
General information only — not financial, tax or legal advice. Verify all rules at ato.gov.au or consult a registered tax agent for advice specific to your circumstances.
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