The Rules For Giving To Churches Vs. Charities

Churches and charities are classed differently in terms of their ability to give pre-tax money. If you distribute tithes or give money to a church, and they are not a deductible gift recipient, then you need to make sure that they have an income tax exemption by looking their ABN on the Australian Business Register.

Click on their ABN, and down to the bottom you can see the charity tax concession status and income tax exemption.

Here’s an example of a church that you could distribute money to from a trust.

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It is different to a charity, which is a whole lot easier and a lot less paperwork as well. But giving to a charity as a tax deduction, you will need to check if they are DGR or a deductible gift recipient.

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You can’t make donations if it’s not entitled to receive tax deductible gifts but you can distribute trust distributions.

Another example is St John Ambulance Australia Limited

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Deductible gift recipient status from 2nd of May, 2016 onwards – the reason why it’s more recent than this organisation would have existed is they changed the way they dealt with charities around about that time from memory. What you need to claim that on tax is a tax invoice from the charity, and it must be over $2 and you will be able to claim it.

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Minimise Tax With A Bucket Company

If you have a trust earning $500K in profit and you have given $120K each for the husband and wife and for whatever reason, you have only given $60K to your grandparent or the parent. If we add all those up, you have distributed $300K and you still have $200K remaining to distribute. 

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Where we get a bucket company is to soak up the remaining profit, which is $200K. If you distribute that to one of the husband and wife, you’re going to pay 39% or more in tax but if you were to distribute that to a bucket company, you would limit your tax on the remaining $200K at 26%. So you are saving 13% or more on every dollar that goes into that bucket company. 

We use bucket companies for business owners or families that are earning sort of sub-$200K, $250K or more in tax to soak up the balance of that taxable income. 

If you pay it to a bucket company, you pay less tax, but the cash has to go to the bucket company because if you don’t do that, it’s treated as a Division 7A loan.

If you are to distribute money to a company, the cash has to move into that bank account; otherwise; you loan it from the company and it’s a short-term strategy if we are not paying the cash over. What you would like to do is pay the family group enough to live on, with the excess going into that bucket company and it can invest it, buy shares and manage funds or lend it to other entities to buy property.

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4 Categories Of Risks To A Business

Why would asset protection should be talked about when you haven’t run through what the actual risks are? People have had different experiences about getting sued so you may want to be prepared for it, rather than not prepared and have to react.

There are four categories of risks to a business and the first one is clients. If you stuff something up for a client, you cause them a loss and they might sue you to fix out whatever damage or loss that you ended up giving them.

The next one is suppliers, sometimes suppliers sneak into their contract and that is an example of a supplier doubling down on their risk mitigation. If you don’t pay a bill or you have an agreement with the supplier that’s not met, you might be suing them, or they might be suing you for some reason.

The third one is for employees. A HR consultant once said that Fair Works can charge up to $65,000 per offence if you do not meet their Fair Work Act. It’s an incredible amount of money for potentially forgetting a form and employees are one of the largest exposures to a business for asset protection. 

The last one is competitors, and this is usually a sort of IP infringement. It could be things like copyright or you were naughty and used someone’s logo or name but this is actually a pretty low risk one.

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Benefits Of A Self Managed Super Fund

The tax rate of a self-managed super fund is 0% and this is not a trick like the trust was. In certain conditions, your self-managed super fund can actually pay 0% in tax on what it earns. The differentiator between the two is the 15% tax rate is what you pay when you’re accumulating your balance in super. The 0% tax rate is what you pay when you’re taking out a certain type of pension and you meet the requirements to have that concessional tax rate of 0%. 

We don’t have any clients running businesses in their self-managed super funds, but we have a number of clients who own businesses in their self-managed super funds. We have clients that are earning significant amounts of money in their self-managed super fund from a business that are paying 0% in tax. 

It all comes down to the structure that the actual businesses run out of. There are requirements to owning businesses in self-managed super. It is not as easy as setting one up, there are a lot of things you need to tick off, paperwork you need in place and you need to make sure you are doing what you need to do from a compliance perspective too. 

At the start of tax planning, the maximum amount of tax you’re paying in super is 15%, which is almost half a company tax rate or a third of an individual’s highest marginal tax rate, so it’s sensational from a tax planning perspective. 

In terms of asset protection, a self-managed super fund is not just a separate legal entity like a company is to a sole trader, but it is protected against bankruptcy. And that’s assuming that you haven’t just known something bad is happening and just chuck a whole heap of money in your super fund thinking it’s safe.

If you’ve made inconsistent contributions to your fund lately, they can most likely be unwound in the case of bankruptcy. But if you’re making $25K contributions a year, for 10 years, and then bankruptcy happens in the last year, they’re not going to say that your $25K is out of character but superannuation balances are normally protected from bankruptcy, 

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The Pty Ltd Business Structure Explained

How you tell someone has a company in their structure, is the letters “Pty Ltd” at the end of the name. For instance, our own structure is Inspire Accountants Pty Ltd. So we’ve got a company within our own structure.

There are two tax rates. The first one is 30% and that was around for years and years but now it has changed over the last handful of years, where 30% is for non-businesses or investment companies (passive investments) The tax rate at the moment for small businesses under the threshold is 26% tax and if you compare it to the highest rate of an individual, it is a lot less. 

If you earn $100K in profit in either of these structures, you can easily see that using a company would save 17% or more. It’s a cool way to save a heap of tax just by using that different structure.We call this a small business concession or the small businesses concessional tax rate for the company. 

GST can apply in any of these entities and in terms of tax planning for a company, we do get a lot more flexibility. A company like a Pty Ltd company is a separate legal entity, it has separate assets and is considered as separate for legal purposes then the director running the company. So, on a surface level, if your company gets sued, you do have a layer of protection between your personal assets and the company’s assets.

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Draw Vs. Loan - What's The Difference?

A way to take money out of a company is through a loan and it’s quite complex. If you have a company structure you might have heard your accountant talk about this thing called Division 7A, or maybe a frustration with company loans. 

Division 7A basically says you can’t just rip money out of a company with no recourse as a loan. We’ve got to pay that back over time and with a minimum amount of interest and the rate is set by the ATO.

How that looks on a practical level is, if you were to borrow $100,000 from your company and it was an unsecured loan, you have to pay that back within seven years and with interest. Make sure you are meeting the minimum repayments for that loan. It can be quite tricky and we feel it’s a short to medium-term way of taking money out of a company. There are better ways or better strategies we can use to not get ourselves stuck in this Division 7A problem and if you’ve got it, you will know about it.

We also have loans from trusts and we call these ‘Owner Drawings’ – a common bookkeeping term where we literally take the $100,000 out of the trust’s bank account, there’s no Division 7A requirements or anything like that to actually repay that money. It’s great to see trusts are a little bit more flexible when it comes to loans.

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The Cons Of Being A Sole Trader

What is the highest rate of tax you can pay as an individual or a sole trader in Australia?

The top marginal tax rate is 47%, and it goes higher than that if you’ve got HECS. You can pay north of 50% tax, where literally half of your profit is going to the tax man. If we work our way down to tax planning, we’ve got a list of about 56 tax-saving strategies that we apply every year to see whether our clients are eligible for them and out of those 56, there is only about half of them that we can use as a sole trader. So it’s actually not too flexible from a tax planning perspective, including one of the biggest bang for buck is actually incorporating trusts in your structure. 

In asset protection, if you are trading as a sole trader in business and for whatever reason, you get sued as a business owner, then all of the assets held in your personal name are also exposed to that lawsuit so we absolutely do not advocate for business owners trading as sole traders at all.

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3 Characteristics Of A Trust

Trust is not a legal requirement like the Pty. Ltd. in a company.

The tax rate of a trust is 0% and with a trust, it gives its profit to other people or other entities in the family group and they pay the tax for the trust. However, it is not technically zero because we still need to deal with the profit and get taxed on it from the trust, but we choose who actually receives that profit.

If you don’t choose a beneficiary to receive it, it does actually pay the top rate of 47%. A bit of a technicality, we don’t want that ending up to be the case. But it gives its profit to other people or entities. And asset protection needs to be set up correctly as well.

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Are You Running A High-Risk Business?

Sole traders are basically the highest risk you’ve got. In terms of asset protection, it is a continuum of how comfortable you are with risk.

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What we want to do when clients come on board is educate them on the principles around asset protection and some people start really far around the higher risk side. What we want them to do over the course of working together is kind of slowly move over towards low risk.

In terms of how we might do that, if a company, trust or a combination of the two and its set up correctly, it will take you about halfway along this continuum.

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There are still things that can affect it but a company is a separate legal entity and this concept is called the corporate veil. It acts like a wall, so if a missile is shot at your business, there is still a wall that it needs to get through before it starts taking your personal assets.

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Differences Between Dividends & Distributions

For shareholders who own the company and who are entitled to the profits, you pay a dividend which is a payment of prior year profits to the shareholders. If the dividend is franked, which means the company has paid tax on that amount, the shareholder will receive a franking credit so that they don’t pay tax on the full amount.

If you pay a $100,000 dividend, that would have a 26% or a 30% franking credit, which is the company’s tax rate that it’s already been paid on. The person receiving that money would be assessed on the tax again, less the credit. So they might pay 40% tax that might be their rate, less the 30% credit so they only pay a top-up tax of that 10% difference. 

The third way to take money out of a trust is to pay a distribution. The difference between a dividend and a distribution is, a distribution is current year profits. The company earning $100,000, paying $30,000 in tax and paying the dividend out afterwards in the following financial year. If a trust earns $100,000, it has to distribute that money in that financial year. And that’s what we call distributing the current year profits. Otherwise, we get that 47% tax rate that nobody wants.

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