Australia: Australian offshore voluntary disclosure initiative 2014

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Australia: Australian offshore voluntary disclosure initiative 2014

seymour.jpg

Tom Seymour

Australia's commissioner of taxation recently announced a new offshore voluntary disclosure initiative for 2014 – Project DO IT: Disclose Offshore Income Today. Taxpayers eligible for the initiative will be those who have omitted to declare foreign income or capital gains, or previously over-claimed tax deductions relating to foreign income. The initiative provides taxpayers with a mechanism to make disclosures to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) concerning their international taxation affairs with the ability to take advantage of significantly reduced penalties and a capped number of amendment years. The ATO has further undertaken that eligible Project DO IT taxpayers will not be further investigated for fraud or evasion. Taxpayers eligible for Project DO IT are those who have previously omitted foreign sourced income or capital gains, or taxpayers who have previously over claimed deductions relating to foreign income. A taxpayer who has recently lodged a voluntary disclosure outside of the Project DO IT process may still be eligible to participate in the initiative in circumstances where amended assessments have not yet been issued and there has been no finding of fraud or evasion.

Taxpayers will be ineligible for Project DO IT if they are already under audit, or are involved in the objection stage or litigation relating to the omitted offshore income, capital gains or over-claimed deductions.

As Project DO IT will operate independently of a standard voluntary disclosure, this initiative will have the following unique benefits:

  • The taxpayer will only be assessed for years that fall within the time limit for the commissioner amending an assessment (generally four years) compared with the normal rules which allow for unlimited years of review for fraud or evasion;

  • The shortfall penalty will be capped at 10% compared with the normal rules which can impose penalties in a range of up to 75%;

  • The ATO will agree not to investigate the disclosure for the purposes of a criminal prosecution, nor refer the disclosure to any other law enforcement agency (however this will not apply to promoters of tax evasion schemes);

  • For taxpayers seeking to wind up offshore structures and repatriate their offshore assets to Australia, the ATO will provide certainty on the appropriate tax treatment of these transactions. A concession is also provided in respect of amounts repatriated to Australia when there is a winding up of the offshore structure; and

  • Enabling a taxpayer to enter into a deed of settlement with the ATO to provide certainty of outcome going forward.

The ATO's increasing focus on international tax avoidance in conjunction with their continuously enhanced capacity for the automatic exchange of tax information with other jurisdictions makes the concessions offered by Project DO IT worthy of serious consideration by eligible taxpayers. This initiative makes it very attractive for eligible taxpayers to come forward given that investigations into fraud and evasion would ordinarily be unlimited in the years of review rather than the cap offered under the initiative, and particularly in light of the agreement not to further investigate the matter or refer it to other law enforcement agencies. Project DO IT will operate until December 19 2014, after which time it has been foreshadowed by the ATO that more robust forms of audit will be pursued in this area.

Tom Seymour (tom.seymour@au.pwc.com)

PwC

Tel: +61 (7) 3257 8623

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

If the Reform leader becomes UK prime minister then he may follow the direction of the US in at least one significant way
Trump declared a new national emergency in issuing the order; in other news, Grant Thornton Germany is up for sale and the subject of interest from both its UK and US counterparts
The judgment, which saw Denmark's Supreme Court rely on OECD TP guidance, sets aside more than 15 years of consistent administrative practice, experts have told ITR
Belgium’s new coalition government has gone ahead with a new exit tax regime that could land it in the courts
Brazil’s government has not officially framed the bill as a countermeasure amid trade tensions with the US, but the move is being considered as part of Brazil’s strategic response, one expert tells ITR
Understanding India’s income tax landscape can help charities ensure compliance, optimise tax benefits, and enhance their impact, writes Raghav Bajaj of Khaitan & Co
Tax advisers in Brazil are rising above the country’s notoriously complex tax system to deliver high-quality advisory services, ITR’s exclusive in-house data reveals
ITR’s data has highlighted the US firm’s ambition to become America’s ‘premier’ tax player via a concerted partner recruitment strategy
Jaap Zwaan’s arrival continues a recent streak of A&M Tax investing in the region; in other news, the US and Japan struck a deal that significantly lowered tariff rates
In a world where international tax concepts rely on human activity, Leonard Wagenaar poses existential questions about the future of such ideas when AI is ever-present
Gift this article