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Goods and services tax: the margin scheme for supplies of real
property acquired on or after 1 July 2000
FOI status: may be released
Preamble
What this Ruling is about
1. This Ruling is about how the margin scheme under Division 75 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) applies to a supply of a freehold interest, stratum unit, or long term-lease (referred to collectively as 'real property') you acquired on or after 1 July 2000. 2. The Ruling does not apply to supplies of real property if you acquired the property on or after 1 July 2000, but the supply to you:
3. Instead, the GST treatment of these supplies is addressed in Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2000/211 and Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2006/7.2 4. This Ruling discusses:
5. Unless otherwise stated, all legislative references in this Ruling are to the GST Act. Date of effect
6. This Ruling, except for the legislative amendments made by the Tax Laws Amendment (2005 Measures No. 2) Act 2005 (2005 Amendment Act), and the valuation requirements contained in A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Margin Scheme Valuation Requirements Determination MSV 2005/3 (MSV 2005/3) and A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Margin Scheme Valuation Requirements Determination MSV 2005/1 (MSV 2005/1), explains the Commissioner's view of the law as it applied from 1 July 2000. 7. The legislative amendments contained in the 2005 Amendment Act apply to supplies made on or after 17 March 2005, except for the amendments to section 75-5. The amendments to section 75-5 apply to supplies on or after 29 June 20053 that are:
8. The valuation requirements in MSV 2005/1 applies to supplies made between 17 March 2005 and 30 November 2005. The valuation requirements contained in MSV 2005/3 apply from 1 December 2005. 9. You can rely upon this Ruling on and from its date of issue for the purposes of section 37 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 . Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 1999/1 explains the GST rulings system and our view of when you can rely on our interpretation of the law in GST public and private rulings. 10. If this Ruling conflicts with a previous private ruling that you have obtained, this public ruling prevails. However, if you have relied on a private ruling, you are protected in respect of what you have done up to the date of issue of this public ruling. This means that if you have underpaid an amount of GST, you are not liable for the shortfall prior to the date of issue of this later ruling. Similarly, you are not liable to repay an amount overpaid by the Commissioner as a refund. Margin scheme rulings
11. There are three main public rulings dealing with the margin scheme. The following table summarises the major differences between the three rulings and may assist the reader in ascertaining which ruling is relevant to their circumstances.
Background
12. If you make a taxable supply of real property, the GST payable under the basic rule in section 9-70 is 1/11th of the price.7 However, under subsection 75-5(1), if you make a taxable supply of real property by:
you may apply the margin scheme, if you and the recipient have agreed in writing that the margin scheme is to apply.8 13. Under the margin scheme, the GST payable on the supply of real property is 1/11th of the margin for the supply. The margin for the supply is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds the consideration9 for the acquisition of the real property unless subsection 75-10(3)10 or section 75-11 applies. Section 75-11 applies to supplies made on or after 17 March 2005. 14. The GST payable under the margin scheme is usually lower than when the GST is worked out under the basic rule in section 9-70. Because of this, the margin scheme is used particularly if the recipient of the supply is not entitled to an input tax credit for the acquisition. The most common example is residential land or residential premises supplied to private owners for their own use or for investment purposes. However, the supplier can calculate GST under the margin scheme for supplies of all types of real property11 including residential, commercial, retail and industrial property. Ruling with Explanation
When can you apply the margin scheme? 15. Subsection 75-5(1) deals with applying the margin scheme. It was amended by the 2005 Amendment Act. At the same time, subsection 75-5(1A) was inserted into the GST Act. The 2005 Amendment Act received Royal Assent on 29 June 2005. 16. Subsection 75-5(1A) and the amendment to subsection 75-5(1) apply to supplies that are:
17. In all other circumstances, subsection 75-5(1) prior to its amendment applies. Amended subsection 75-5(1) and subsection 75-5(1A) 18. Subsection 75-5(1) provides that you may use the margin scheme if the supplier and the recipient have agreed in writing that the margin scheme is to apply. Subsection 75-5(1A) provides that the agreement must be made on or before making the supply, or within such further period as the Commissioner allows.12 19. The decision to allow or not allow a further period within which to make an agreement is a reviewable GST decision under item 37AA in the table in subsection 62(2) of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 . Subsection 75-5(1) prior to its amendment 20. Subsection 75-5(1) prior to its amendment applies to supplies where the contract for the real property was entered into before 29 June 200513. 21. Similarly, if prior to 29 June 2005, the recipient of the supply had a right or option to purchase real property, then when the right or option is exercised, the supply of this property falls within subsection 75-5(1) prior to its amendment.14 22. It provides that the supplier 'may choose to apply the margin scheme in working out the amount of GST' if the supplier makes a taxable supply of real property. It does not expressly state when the choice to use the margin scheme needs to be made. 23. However, it is the Commissioner's view that, to be entitled to apply the margin scheme under subsection 75-5(1) prior to its amendment, the supplier must have chosen to apply the margin scheme at or before the time it makes the supply. If the choice is not made by that date, it is the Commissioner's view that it cannot be made at a later date. 24. Support for this view is found in the wording contained in Division 75. For example, the language of subsection 75-20(1) provides that an acquisition is not a creditable acquisition if the supply was a taxable supply under the margin scheme. This suggests that the choice to apply the margin scheme must have been made by the time the taxably supply was made for the supply to be a 'taxable supply under the margin scheme'. 25. Similarly, paragraph 75-25(1)(a) refers to 'a taxable supply of real property under the margin scheme' and subsection 75-30(1) refers to 'a supply of real property under the margin scheme'. These provisions appear to be founded on the assumption that it will be known that the supply is a supply under the margin scheme, which can only be the case if the supplier has chosen to apply the margin scheme by the time the supply is made. 26. However, in limited circumstances the Commissioner allows GST to be calculated as if the choice to apply the margin scheme had been made by the time the supply is made.15 Conditional application of the margin scheme 27. Commonly, contracts specify that there is no GST payable on a supply, but that if the supply is taxable then the GST payable will be calculated under the margin scheme. In these circumstances, the Commissioner accepts that the requirements in paragraph 75-5(1A)(a) have been satisfied. 28. Similarly, where subsection 75-5(1), prior to its amendment applies, the Commissioner accepts that the supplier has made a choice to apply the margin scheme before the supply has been made. Supplies made before 17 March 2005 to which the margin scheme cannot be applied 29. Under the subsection 75-5(2), prior to its amendment,16 you could not apply the margin scheme if you acquired the real property through a taxable supply and the GST on the supply was not calculated under the margin scheme. The effect of the former subsection 75-5(2) was that the margin scheme could only apply if the supply of the real property that you acquired was:
Example 1: former subsection 75-5(2) 30. Tureia and Phil are both registered for GST purposes. Tureia is a builder. On 20 January 2002, Phil sold Tureia a block of land for $220,000. The sale of the land was a taxable supply, but Phil did not use the margin scheme. Instead, he accounted for GST of $20,000 (1/11th of $220,000) on the supply and issued Tureia with a tax invoice for the supply. Tureia intends to build a block of units on the land and sell them . 31. Tureia sells the units on 20 December 2004. Tureia could not use the margin scheme for the sale of the units, because she acquired the land through a taxable supply where the GST on the supply was calculated without using the margin scheme. Tureia must pay GST of 1/11th of the price for which she sells the units. She can claim an input tax credit of $20,000 for the acquisition of the land . Supplies made on or after 17 March 2005 that are ineligible for the margin scheme 32. Subsection 75-5(2) (as amended by the 2005 Amendment Act) provides that the margin scheme does not apply if you acquired the entire freehold interest, stratum unit or long-term lease through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme. Under subsection 75-5(3) a supply is ineligible for the margin scheme if:
Example 2: GST groups 33. Apex Pty Ltd made a taxable supply of land to Beta Pty Ltd for $1.1 million without applying the margin scheme. Beta Pty Ltd is a member of a GST group but Apex Pty Ltd is not. Beta Pty Ltd sells the land to Cara Pty Ltd, another member of the GST group, for $2.2 million. The supply from Beta Pty Ltd to Cara Pty Ltd is not a taxable supply as both entities are members of the same GST group .19 34. Cara Pty Ltd then makes a taxable supply of the land to Delta Pty Ltd who is not a member of the GST group . 35. Cara Pty Ltd cannot use the margin scheme. The supply by Cara Pty Ltd is ineligible for the margin scheme under paragraph 75-5(3)(c) because the supply between Apex Pty and Beta Ltd was a taxable supply on which the GST was worked out without applying the margin scheme . When do you supply or acquire real property? 36. Most legal interests in Torrens title land are created or transferred only upon registration of the relevant instrument. 37. However, because of the practical difficulties of determining precisely when the instrument is registered or lodged for registration that would arise if a literal interpretation of the law were to be taken, the Commissioner considers that Parliament would have intended that, in the context of GST, a less strict approach should apply. 38. For that reason, the Commissioner considers that for the sale of a freehold interest or stratum unit, the supply and the acquisition is made at settlement as this is when the purchaser (or the purchaser's agent) obtains:
39. If the supply is made by way of sale or grant of a long-term lease, the lease is supplied and acquired when the recipient obtains a leasehold estate in the land. However, if registration of the lease or instrument of transfer is required under the State or Territory legislation applying when the lessee obtains the leasehold interest, the Commissioner considers that the lease is supplied and acquired when the recipient (or the recipient's agent) obtains:
Again, as in the case of a sale of a freehold interest or stratum unit, this is at settlement. Can you use the margin scheme when you supply a tenancy in common interest in real property? 40. Subsection 75-5(1) describes the types of real property that can be supplied under the margin scheme, as follows:
41. Tenancy in common is defined in Butterworth's Australian Legal Dictionary , 1997, as:
42. In Nullagine Investments Pty Ltd v. Western Australian Club Inc (1993) 177 CLR 635 at 644 Brennan J described an interest held by a tenant in common as:
43. It is evident that when tenants in common acquire freehold land, each tenant has a freehold interest in the land. This will also be the case, if the tenants in common each have a freehold interest in a stratum unit. The sale of the freehold interest in either of these circumstances falls within paragraph 75-5(1)(a). 44. Similarly, if tenants in common have a leasehold interest in land or a stratum unit, the sale or grant of the leasehold interest in these circumstances falls within paragraph 75-5(1)(c). How is the margin for the supply calculated under subsection 75-10(2)? 45. Under subsection 75-10(2), the margin for the supply is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds the consideration for the acquisition of the real property. 46. If the consideration for the acquisition is equal to or greater than the consideration for the supply, then the margin for the supply is zero. Consideration for the supply and settlement adjustments 47. The consideration for the supply and the consideration for the acquisition may be either monetary or non-monetary or both. The consideration for the supply or acquisition should take into account adjustments on settlement that are commonly made for rates, land tax and other outgoings. Goods and Services Tax Determination GSTD 2006/320 contains a detailed discussion on this topic. Consideration for the acquisition 48. The consideration for the acquisition of the real property is the original purchase price after taking into account settlement adjustments. In the case of subdivided land or a stratum unit, the effect of section 75-15 is that the consideration for the acquisition is the corresponding proportion of the consideration for the real property that you acquired. If land that is part of the original broadacres is used for public purposes including roads, parklands or utilities ('lost land'), the acquisition consideration of the entire broadacres is apportioned to the total number of subdivided lots, so that the sum of the apportioned amounts equals the acquisition consideration for the broadacres (including the 'lost land'). 49. The consideration for the acquisition does not include costs that the supplier had incurred that were associated with their purchase of the real property, such as their legal expenses and stamp duty. It also does not include costs incurred in developing the real property, prior to or after its acquisition. Alternative view 50. The interest in real property that you acquire may differ from the interest that you supply. The most common examples of this are where you subdivide land or construct stratum units. 51. In these circumstances, the title for the interest that you supply is not created until the subdivided land or stratum unit is registered with the relevant authority. Because of this, one view of the meaning of consideration for the acquisition is that any expenditure incurred in subdividing the land or constructing the stratum unit forms part of the consideration for the acquisition. The rationale for this is that the acquisition of the interest only occurs when the interest that you supply is created. 52. The Commissioner does not accept this view as section 75-15 addresses circumstances where the interest that is supplied differs from the interest that was acquired. The effect of section 75-15 is that for subdivided land or stratum title units, the consideration for the acquisition is the corresponding proportion of the consideration for the land or premises that you acquired. 53. The Full Federal Court decision in Sterling Guardian Pty Limited v. Commissioner of Taxation [2006] FCAFC 12 confirms that costs incurred in developing real property do not form part of the consideration for the acquisition of the real property. The effect of section 75-14 on supplies made on or after 17 March 2005 54. The treatment of excluding costs incurred in developing real property from the calculation of the margin for the supply is confirmed by section 75-14. Section 75-14 is effective from 17 March 2005. 55. Section 75-14 makes it clear that in working out the consideration for the acquisition the following are disregarded:
including acquisitions or work connected with bringing the real property into existence. Example 3: section 75-14 56. Bob is a builder. He purchases a block of vacant land for $180,000 and then constructs a house on the land. The cost of constructing the house is $100,000. Bob sells the house and land package for $400,000. 57. The margin for the supply is $220,000 ($400,000 - $180,000). The cost of constructing the house is not part of the consideration for the acquisition of the land. Instead, Bob is entitled to input tax credits for any construction acquisitions (for example, building materials and subcontractors' services) that are creditable acquisitions . Apportionment methods 58. To ascertain the proportion of the purchase price that relates to the subdivided allotment or stratum unit, you may use any fair and reasonable method of apportionment. The method of apportionment used must result in the sum of the proportionate amount of the purchase price that relates to each subdivided allotment or stratum unit equalling in total, the actual consideration for the acquisition. You cannot change the method of apportionment after sales of allotments or stratum units have been made unless the changed method is applied to calculate the margin for all the sales. 59. Examples of some methods that you may use are as follows:
60. The methods above may be used provided they give a fair and reasonable result. Use of 'lots or sites' as an apportionment method would not give a fair and reasonable result if the size or value of the lots or sites varied significantly. 61. In some circumstances, you may use a combination of these or other fair and reasonable methods of apportionment. An example of where this may provide a fair and reasonable apportionment is a multi-staged development. Example 4: area basis 62. Josine is a property developer who is registered for GST purposes. She acquired a block of land of 2,000 square metres for $240,000. The block was of approximately uniform value per square metre. She subdivided the block into two allotments of 600 square metres each and one allotment of 800 square metres. As the lots are approximately of uniform value per square metre, Josine can use an area basis to ascertain the consideration for the acquisition of the subdivided allotments as it will provide a fair and reasonable result. Using this method, the consideration for the acquisition for each of the 600 square metre allotments is $72,000 (600/2,000 ? $240,000), whilst the consideration for the acquisition of the 800 square metre allotment is $96,000 (800/2,000 ? $240,000). 63. If Josine sells the 800 square metre allotment for $140,000, the margin for the supply is $44,000 ($140,000 - $96,000) and the GST payable on the supply is $4,000 . Example 5: lots area 64. Neville acquires a house and land for $500,000. Neville intends to demolish the house and construct four duplexes on the land. As each of the duplexes is of similar value Neville can use the lots method to establish the consideration for the acquisition for each of the duplexes. Using this method, the consideration for the acquisition of each duplex is $125,000 (1/4 ? $ 500,000 ). Example 6: anticipated sales price 65. Adam is a builder who is registered for GST purposes. He acquires land for $400,000. He subdivides the land and builds a house on each allotment. As the quality of the land varies between allotments, the anticipated sales method will provide a fair and reasonable apportionment method to ascertain the consideration for the acquisition for each of the house and land packages . 66. The anticipated sales price for each of the house and land packages and the consideration for the acquisition of each of them is shown below .
67. Adam subsequently sells Lot 1 for $190,000. The margin for the supply of Lot 1 is $150,000 ($190,000 - $40,000). The GST payable on the supply is $13,636.36 (1/11 of $150,000 ). Example 7: multi-staged developments 68. Johanna purchases land for $1.5 million which she intends to subdivide in three stages. As the land is of approximately uniform value per square metre, Johanna initially apportions the $1.5 million on an area basis between the three stages, giving values of $500,000 for stage one, $600,000 for stage two and $400,000 for stage three. When stage one is developed, Johanna can apportion the $500,000 acquisition consideration attributed to stage one between the allotments on an anticipated sales price basis provided this method gives a fair and reasonable result . The effect of section 75-11 on supplies made on or after 17 March 2005 69. The margin for the supply is not calculated under subsection 75-10(2) if the circumstances in subsection 75-11 apply, as subsection 75-10(2) is subject to the operation of section 75-11. 70. Section 75-11 applies to supplies made on or after 17 March 2005, and applies if real property was acquired from:
71. If more than one of these circumstances apply, the margin is worked out as follows:
Supply of real property made on or after 17 March 2005 if the acquisition is from a fellow member of a GST group Subsection 75-11(1) 72. For GST groups, subsection 75-11(1) deals with working out the margin for the supply if:
73. If these circumstances apply, the margin for your supply to the non-GST group member is worked out under either paragraph 75-11(1)(c) or (d). Paragraph 75-11(1)(c) 74. Paragraph 75-11(1)(c) applies in working out the GST on your supply to the non-GST group member, if the real property was acquired by an entity that was a GST group member (or subsequently became one) from an entity that was not:
75. Under paragraph 75-11(1)(c), the margin for the supply is the amount by which the consideration for the supply you make to the non-GST group member exceeds the consideration for the real property acquired by the GST group member. This means that supplies between group members are effectively disregarded. Example 8: GST groups where earlier supply made on or after 1 July 2000 76.
77. In the context of the diagram above, the margin for the supply by Cara Pty Ltd to Delta Pty Ltd is the difference between the consideration for the supply of $220,000 and the consideration for the acquisition by Beta Pty Ltd of $110,000. The supply by Beta Pty Ltd to Cara Pty Ltd is effectively disregarded when working out the margin for the supply by Cara Pty Ltd. 78. In the diagram, Beta Pty Ltd was a member of the GST group when it acquired the real property. However, subsection 75-11(1) would also apply if Beta Pty Ltd was not a member of the GST group when it acquired the real property, but became a member of the GST group by the time Cara Pty Ltd made its supply to Delta Pty Ltd. Paragraph 75-11(1)(d) 79. Paragraph 75-11(1)(d) applies in working out the GST on your supply to the non-GST group member, if the real property was acquired by an entity that was a GST group member (or subsequently became one) from an associated entity21 that was not a member of the GST group. 80. Under paragraph 75-11(1)(d), the margin is the amount by which the consideration for the supply you make to the non-GST group member exceeds the GST-inclusive market value of the real property at the time of the last earlier supply. The supplies between group members are disregarded. Example 9: GST groups and associates where earlier supply made on or after 1 July 2000 81.
82. In the context of the diagram above, the margin for the supply by Cara Pty Ltd to Delta Pty Ltd is the difference between the consideration for the supply of $330,000 and the GST-inclusive market value of the real property of $110,000 at the time of the acquisition by Beta Pty Ltd. The supply by Beta Pty Ltd to Cara Pty Ltd is effectively disregarded when working out the margin for the supply by Cara Pty Ltd. 83. In the diagram Beta Pty Ltd was a member of the GST group when it acquired the real property. However, subsection 75-11(1) would also apply if Beta Pty Ltd was not a member of the GST group when it acquired the real property, but later became a member of the GST group. Subsection 75-11(2) 84. Subsection 75-11(2) deals with working out the margin if:
85. Under subsection 75-11(2), the margin for the supply you make is the amount by which the consideration for the supply to the non-GST group member exceeds an approved valuation of the real property as at 1 July 2000. Approved valuations are discussed at paragraphs 115 to 128. Example 10: GST group where earlier supply made before 1 July 2000 86.
87. In the context of the diagram above, the margin for the supply by Cara Pty Ltd to Delta Pty Ltd is $220,000, being the difference between the consideration for the supply of $330,000 and the approved valuation of the real property as at 1 July 2000 of $110,000. The supply between Beta Pty Ltd and Cara Pty Ltd in June 2003 is effectively disregarded. Supply of real property made on or after 17 March 2005 where the real property was acquired from a joint venture operator 88. Subsection 75-11(2A) applies if the joint venture operator acquired the real property on or after 1 July 2000, while subsection 75-11(2B) applies if the joint venture operator acquired the property before that date. Subsection 75-11(2A) 89. Subsection 75-11(2A) applies if you make a supply of real property under the margin scheme and all of the following apply:
90. If the joint venture operator acquired the real property from an entity that was not an associate at the time of the acquisition then under paragraph 75-11(2A)(d) the margin for the supply of the real property is the amount by which the consideration for the supply you make exceeds the consideration for the supply to the joint venture operator. This means that supplies between the joint venture operator and the participants of the GST joint venture are effectively disregarded. 91. If the joint venture operator acquired the real property from an entity that was an associate at the time of the acquisition, then under paragraph 75-11(2A)(e), the margin for the supply of the real property is the amount by which the consideration for the supply you make exceeds the GST inclusive market value of the real property at the time that the joint venture operator acquired the real property. Subsection 75-11(2B) 92. Subsection 75-11(2B) applies if you make a supply of real property under the margin scheme and all of the following apply:
93. If subsection 75-11(2B) applies, the margin for the supply you make is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds an approved valuation of the real property as at 1 July 2000. Approved valuations are discussed at paragraphs 115 to 132. Supply of real property made on or after 17 March 2005 where the acquisition was from a deceased estate 94. Subsections 75-11(3) and (4) address how the margin scheme works when you supply real property that you acquired through inheriting it. Section 195-1 specifies the manner in which real property can be inherited. It states that you inherit a freehold interest in land, a stratum unit or a long-term lease if you become an owner of the interest, unit or lease:
95. Subsection 75-11(3) applies if the deceased acquired the real property before 1 July 2000, while subsection 75-11(4) applies if the deceased acquired the property on or after that date. Both these subsections only apply if subsections 75-11(1) to (2B) do not apply (GST groups and GST joint ventures). 96. If you supply real property that you inherit, and the deceased acquired it before 1 July 2000, then paragraph 75-11(3)(ca) allows you to choose to use the consideration for the deceased's acquisition of the real property when calculating the margin for the supply. However, paragraph 75-11(3)(ca) can only apply if:
97. Under paragraph 75-11(3)(ca) the margin for the supply is the amount by which consideration for the supply you make exceeds the consideration for the deceased's acquisition of the property. 98. If you do not know the consideration for the deceased's acquisition of the real property, or you do not choose to calculate the margin for the supply under paragraph 75-11(3)(ca), then the margin is calculated under paragraph 75-11(3)(d) or 75-11(3)(e). Paragraph 75-11(3)(d) 99. Paragraph 75-11(3)(d) applies if the margin for the supply is not calculated under paragraph 75-11(3)(ca) and immediately before the time that you inherited the real property, the deceased was neither registered or required to be registered for GST purposes. If paragraph 75-11(3)(d) applies, the margin for the supply is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds an approved valuation of the real property as at the latest of:
100. It is evident from paragraph 6.29 of the Revised Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment (2005 Measures No. 2) Bill 2005 that Parliament's intention is that the day on which you inherited the real property will ordinarily be the date of death of the deceased.23 However, in some circumstances such as where a will is varied by a court order or the beneficiaries of the estate enter into a deed of arrangement, then the day on which you inherited the real property will be the date the court order or deed of arrangement becomes effective. Paragraph 75-11(3)(e) 101. Paragraph 75-11(3)(e) applies if the margin for the supply is not calculated under paragraph 75-11(3)(ca) and immediately before the time that you inherited the real property, the deceased was registered or required to be registered for GST purposes. Under paragraph 75-11(3)(e) the margin for the supply is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds an approved valuation of the real property as at the latest of:
Subsection 75-11(4) 102. If you supply real property that you inherit, and the deceased acquired it on or after 1 July 2000, then paragraph 75-11(4)(d) allows you to choose to use the consideration for the deceased's acquisition of the real property when calculating the margin for the supply. However, paragraph 75-11(4)(d) can only apply if:
103. Under paragraph 75-11(4)(d) the margin for the supply is the amount by which consideration for the supply you make exceeds the consideration for the deceased's acquisition of the property. 104. If you do not know the consideration for the deceased's acquisition of the real property, or you do not choose to use that consideration, then the margin for the supply is calculated under paragraph 75-11(4)(e). 105. Under paragraph 75-11(4)(e) the margin for the supply is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds an approved valuation of the real property as at the day that the deceased acquired it. Supply of real property made on or after 17 March 2005 where the real property was acquired from an associate 106. If you supply real property that you acquired on or after 1 July 2000 from an entity that was your associate24 at the time of acquisition, the margin for the supply is worked out under paragraph 75-11(7)(d),25provided that the other subsections in section 75-11 do not apply. 107. Under paragraph 75-11(7)(d), the margin is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds the GST inclusive market value of the real property at the time of its acquisition. Example 11: real property acquired from an associate 108.
109. The margin for the supply by Cara Pty Ltd to Delta Pty Ltd is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds the GST inclusive market value of the real property at the time of acquisition from Beta Pty Ltd. That is:
Subsection 75-11(8) 110. Subsection 75-11(8) extends the application of subsection 75-11(7) to acquisitions through supplies made by the following:
in the same way as Subdivision 72-D affects the operation of Division 72. 111. The effect of this is that subsection 75-11(7) applies not only to associates as defined in section 195-1 but also treats the following as if they were associates:
Supply of real property to an associate where the supply is made on or after 17 March 2005 112. If you supply real property to an associate, section 75-13 deems the consideration for the supply to be the GST-inclusive market value of the real property at the time of the supply. Example 12: supplies to associates 113.
114. The GST inclusive market value of the supply at the time of the supply is treated as the consideration for the supply from Cara Pty Ltd to Delta Pty Ltd. The margin for the supply by Cara Pty Ltd to Delta Pty Ltd is the amount by which the 'deemed' consideration for the supply exceeds the consideration for the acquisition by Cara Pty Ltd. That is:
Approved valuations 115. Section 75-35 applies to supplies made on or after 17 March 2005. It provides that the Commissioner may by legislative instrument 'determine in writing requirements for making valuations' for the purposes of the margin scheme. 116. A legislative instrument, MSV 2005/1, was registered on 16 March 2005. It applies to supplies made between 17 March 2005 and 30 November 2005 inclusive. Under this Determination, the valuation may be determined in writing by a professional valuer. Section 75-35 is effective from 17 March 2005. As this Determination was made prior to section 75-35 being enacted it was made under paragraph 75-10(3)(b) of the GST Act. 117. MSV 2005/3 was registered on 9 September 2005. It replaces MSV 2005/1, and applies to supplies of real property made on or after 1 December 2005.26 118. This Determination provides that a supplier may obtain an approved valuation of the real property at the valuation date. An approved valuation may be made either by:
119. The effect of subsection 75-35(2) is that a valuation made in accordance with the requirements in the determination is an approved valuation. Valuation dates 120. Valuations are required to work out the margin for supplies of real property in particular circumstances under section 75-11. The table below sets out the valuation dates for the purposes of section 75-11.
Time to make valuations 121. To work out the margin for the supply of real property, you require a valuation as at the valuation date. The valuation process itself does not have to be undertaken on that date. 122. The valuation must be made by the due date for lodgment of the supplier's Activity Statement for the tax period to which the GST on the supply is attributable 123. However, if the Commissioner has allowed a further period under paragraph 75-5(1A)(b) for the supplier and the recipient to agree in writing that the margin scheme is to apply in working out the GST on the supply, the valuation must be made by the later of:
124. If the valuation is not undertaken within the time periods specified in paragraphs 122 and 123, the Commissioner may for good reason allow an additional period to obtain a valuation.33 125. The time periods mentioned in paragraphs 122 to 124 for obtaining valuations do not affect the date by which the choice or agreement to apply the margin scheme must be made - see paragraphs 18 to 28. What is the real property that you value? 126. If any of the provisions of section 75-11 require you to obtain an approved valuation, the real property that you value is the real property that is in existence at the valuation date. This will not always be the real property that is supplied. 127. Often the real property that is supplied was not in existence at the valuation date. Examples of this are:
128. If the real property that is supplied was not in existence at the valuation date but is part of the real property that was in existence at that date, the valuation must be made as follows:
Example 13: valuing real property that is subdivided after the valuation date 129.
Professional valuers 130. A professional valuer34 is:
You may use an in-house employee who is a professional valuer. 131. A supplier may engage a professional valuer to undertake the valuation or accept a valuation made by a professional valuer commissioned by another party, for example, a purchaser. Documentation that a professional valuer is required to provide 132. For supplies of real property made on or after 1 December 2005, paragraph 10 of MSV 2005/3 states that the valuation must include a signed certificate which specifies:
Can you apply the margin scheme when you make a supply of real property and the supply is partly taxable and partly input taxed or partly taxable and partly GST-free? 133. If a supply of real property is partly input taxed and partly taxable or partly taxable and partly GST-free (a mixed supply), then the margin scheme can apply to the taxable component. Examples of supplies that may be mixed supplies are a supply of a building that contains areas that are input taxed residential premises and taxable commercial premises or a supply of a building that includes new residential premises as well as an area supplied as a GST-free supply of a going concern. 134. In these circumstances, if the margin for the supply is calculated under subsection 75-10(2), the consideration for the supply and the consideration for the acquisition, are the amounts of the consideration that relate to the taxable component of the supply. 135. If the circumstances in section 75-11 apply, the margin is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds an approved valuation or the GST-inclusive market value of the real property as the case may be. 136. You may use any fair and reasonable method of apportionment to ascertain the consideration for the supply and either
that relates to the taxable component of the supply. Approved valuation 137. The table in paragraph 120 specifies when an approved valuation is required to work out the margin for the supply. 138. If an approved valuation is required to work out the margin for the taxable component of a supply, the valuation is to be obtained for the entire real property supplied. The valuation is then apportioned on any fair and reasonable basis to ascertain the part of the valuation that relates to the taxable component of the supply. GST inclusive market value 139. Paragraphs 75-11(1)(d), 75-11(2A)(e) and 75-11(7)(d) require the margin to be worked out by reference to the GST inclusive market value of the real property supplied. 140. Paragraph 75-11(1)(d) applies when a member of a GST group acquires real property on or after 1 July 2000 from an entity that is not a member of the GST group but is an associate of the GST group member. 141. Paragraph 75-11(2A)(e) applies if the joint venture operator acquired the real property from an entity that was an associate at the time of the acquisition. 142. Paragraph 75-11(7)(d) applies if you supply real property that you acquired on or after 1 July 2000 from an entity that was your associate at the time of acquisition. 143. If the GST inclusive market value is required to work out the margin for the taxable component of a supply, the GST-inclusive market value is to be obtained for the entire real property supplied. The GST inclusive market value is then apportioned on any fair and reasonable basis to ascertain the part that relates to the taxable component of the supply. How do you calculate the GST inclusive sale price and the margin? 144. For the purposes of Division 75 the GST inclusive sale price is the GST exclusive price plus the GST payable on the margin. The following example sets out how to calculate the GST inclusive price when initially only the GST exclusive price is known. Example 14: where only the GST exclusive price is known 145. The GST exclusive price is $96,364 and the consideration for the acquisition is $60,000. The GST inclusive price is calculated using the formula:
146. If the margin for the supply is calculated using an approved valuation or the GST inclusive market value the same equation is used. However, C in the equation will be the approved valuation or the GST inclusive market value. Increasing adjustments for supplies made on or after 17 March 2005, where part of the acquisition was ineligible for the margin scheme Subsection 75-22(1) 147. You may apply the margin scheme to the supply of real property even though you acquired part of the real property through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme. An example of this is where a supplier acquires two adjoining properties and one of the properties was acquired as a taxable supply without using the margin scheme, and the other property was acquired as:
148. If you apply the margin scheme to a later supply of real property acquired in this manner, you have an increasing adjustment under subsection 75-22(1). The increasing adjustment is an amount equal to the previously attributed input tax credit amount36 for the acquisition of the real property that was acquired as a taxable supply without using the margin scheme. 149. Subsection 75-22(1) applies to supplies made on or after 17 March 2005 and may apply to:
Subdivision of broadacres 150. If you acquire adjoining properties, one of which is acquired through a supply that is ineligible for the margin scheme, and you subdivide the properties, the margin scheme can be used for the supply of some of the subdivided lots. 151. The margin scheme:
Example 15: subdivision of broadacres 152. This is diagrammatically represented below as:
153. In the context of the diagram, the real property that would have been ineligible for the margin scheme is shaded. 154. The margin scheme cannot apply to supplies of Lots 1 to 3 as they were acquired entirely through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme under subsection 75-5(2). The margin scheme can apply to Lots 7 to 9 because subsection 75-5(2) does not apply to make the supply of them ineligible. The margin scheme can also apply to the supply of Lots 4 to 6 as the entire interest in each of those lots was not acquired through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme. They are therefore not excluded by subsection 75-5(2). 155. If the margin scheme is applied to supplies of Lots 4 to 6, there are increasing adjustments under subsection 75-22(1). The increasing adjustment for each supply is a proportionate amount of the previously attributed input tax credit amount for the acquisition of the land. You may use any fair and reasonable basis of apportionment to work out the increasing adjustment. Stratum unit 156. 'Stratum unit' is defined in section 195-1 as having 'the meaning given by subsection 124-190(3) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997'. Subsection 124-190(3) defines a stratum unit as 'a lot or unit (however described in an Australian law or a foreign law relating to strata title or similar title) and any accompanying common property.' The Commissioner considers that the reference to 'similar title' in the definition of stratum unit includes other arrangements such as group title arrangements. 157. The definition of stratum unit in section 195-1 encompasses a legal arrangement where real property is divided into units or allotments and common property. The common property is usually held by a body corporate as agent for the land owners as tenants in common. 158. For the purpose of the discussion below, the term 'strata title' refers to a strata plan where the boundaries of unit are defined by reference to the structures (for example, walls floors and ceilings). For example, a single building divided into units. 159. In the discussion below the term 'group title' refers to arrangements where the real property is divided into allotments of land and common property. The boundaries are defined by reference to land rather than by reference to building structure. Strata title 160. If you acquire adjoining properties, one of which was acquired through a supply that is ineligible for the margin scheme, and you then construct stratum units on the properties, then ordinarily some part of the common property will be constructed on land that was acquired through a supply that:
161. In these circumstances, all of the stratum units have been partly derived from land that was acquired through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme. The supply of these units can be made under the margin scheme as subsection 75-5(2) does not apply. However, because the units were partly acquired through land that was ineligible for the margin scheme you have an increasing adjustment under subsection 75-22(1). The increasing adjustment is the proportionate amount of the input tax credits for the acquisition of the land referable to the supply of each stratum unit. Example 16: stratum units 162.
163. In the context of the diagram, the real property that was acquired through a supply that would have been ineligible for the margin scheme is shaded. 164. The common property in this example is made up of property that was acquired through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme as well as property that was eligible for the margin scheme. 165. Therefore, the margin scheme can apply to the supply of all the stratum units as the entire interest in each of the stratum units, including the common property, was not acquired through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme. They are therefore not excluded from the margin scheme by subsection 75-5(2). 166. If the margin scheme is applied to the supply of any of the stratum units, there is an increasing adjustment under subsection 75-22(1). The increasing adjustment is equal to the proportion of the input tax credit for the acquisition of the land that relates to the stratum unit supplied. To ascertain the extent of the increasing adjustment, you may use any reasonable basis of apportionment. Group title 167. The margin scheme can be used in group title arrangements where:
Subsection 75-22(2) 168. Subsection 75-22(2) is effective from 17 March 2005. Under subsection 75-22(2), you may use the margin scheme if you inherit real property and the deceased acquired part of that property through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme. An example of this is where:
169. If you apply the margin scheme in these circumstances you have an increasing adjustment to the extent of any input tax credits for the acquisition of the land. 170. The increasing adjustment is worked out in the same manner as indicated in paragraphs 155 and 161. Supplies made on or after 17 March 2005 where the full consideration for the acquisition has not been paid 171. If an entity makes supplies of real property but does not pay the full contract price for the acquisition of that property, section 75-12 applies. It provides that the margin for the supply is worked out as the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds the consideration paid for the acquisition (which may not be the consideration for the acquisition reflected in the contract). Section 75-12 is effective from 17 March 2005. Example 17: full consideration not paid for supply 172. Terry supplies real property to Adam. The consideration for the supply is $770,000. However, Adam only pays Terry $700,000. Adam then sells the property to Wendy for $1,100,000 and uses the margin scheme to calculate the GST payable on the supply. When Adam calculates the margin for the supply, the consideration for the acquisition is the amount he paid Terry ($700,000 ). 173. The margin for the supply is $400,000 ($1,100,000 - $700,000 ). Decreasing adjustment for later payment of consideration 174. If section 75-12 applies, and you later make a further payment of the acquisition consideration, you have a decreasing adjustment under section 75-27. Subsection 75-27(2), which is effective from 17 March 2005, provides that the amount of the decreasing adjustment is equal to 1/11th of the further amount of consideration paid. Example 18: decreasing adjustment where consideration for a supply paid later 175. Using the facts in the example shown above, if Adam subsequently pays Terry the remaining $70,000, he has a decreasing adjustment of $6,364 (1/11 ? $ 70,000 ). Entitlement to input tax credits 176. If the GST payable on a supply of real property has been worked out under the margin scheme, the acquisition of the property by the recipient of the supply is not a creditable acquisition. This means that the recipient is not entitled to an input tax credit for the acquisition of the real property.37 Tax invoices 177. A supplier is not required to issue a tax invoice for a taxable supply that is solely a supply of real property under the margin scheme.38 Record keeping requirements 178. Section 70 of the Tax Administration Act 1953 requires you to keep records that record and explain all transactions and other acts that you engage in that are relevant to the supply. You must retain these records for at least 5 years after the completion of the transactions or acts to which they relate. 179. As well as retaining accounting records documenting the transaction, you must also retain records showing how you have applied the margin scheme. Examples of these records include:
180. For supplies made on or after 17 March 2005, the following records must also be retained:
181. For supplies made on or after 29 June 200539 to which subsection 75-5(1A) applies, the following records must also be retained:
* Extract only. You can find the full ruling, including footnotes, from the ATO website.
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