1. Home
  2. /
  3. Australia Updates
  4. /
  5. Why the Latest ATO...

Why the Latest ATO Tax Changes Will Change the Way You Sell in Australia

Mar 17, 2026 | Australia Updates

The End of “Estimate-Based” Reporting

For years, many businesses, especially those operating across borders, relied on manual reconciliations at the end of the financial year. Those days are over. The ATO has moved toward a “data-first” infrastructure.

By March 2026, the ATO’s myGov systems and business portals have become significantly more sophisticated. They are now pre-filling data from a wider variety of sources, including share registries, property transaction records, and even digital platform reports. This means the ATO often knows your sales figures and asset disposals before you even start your tax return.

The Benefit: Pre-filling reduces the administrative burden if your data is clean.
The Risk: If your internal records don’t match the ATO’s third-party data, you trigger an immediate red flag for an audit.

Capital Gains Tax (CGT): Accuracy is Non-Negotiable

If you are selling assets in Australia, be it investment property, business equipment, or shares, the CGT landscape has tightened. While the 50% discount for assets held over 12 months remains a cornerstone of the Australian tax system, the reporting requirements have become granular.

The ATO is now using advanced matching technology to track the “cost base” of assets more accurately. If you’ve previously been a bit “flexible” with how you calculated the acquisition costs of your business assets, you need to tighten up your bookkeeping immediately.

Reporting Share and Property Transactions

The ATO now receives direct feeds from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) and state-based land titles offices. When you sell, the transaction is flagged in real-time. To avoid penalties, you must ensure that your CGT calculations are performed at the point of sale, not six months later. If you’re looking for broader context on how tax shifts impact your bottom line, check out our insights on 2024 tax bracket changes to see how the trajectory of Australian tax has evolved.

Tighter Scrutiny on Business Deductions

Perhaps the biggest change affecting daily operations is the ATO’s crackdown on business deductions. The “grey areas” of 2024 and 2025 have been replaced by strict “bright-line” rules in 2026.

Motor Vehicle and Travel Claims

The ATO is implementing much tighter scrutiny on motor vehicle and travel claims. Gone are the days of claiming a flat percentage of your car expenses without a rigorous logbook. In 2026, the ATO expects digital records. If you are a sales professional or a business owner traveling across Australia to meet clients, you must maintain a contemporaneous digital log.

Home Office Expenses

With the hybrid work model now permanent for many, the ATO has standardized the home office deduction. You can no longer simply “guess” your electricity and internet usage. You must either use the revised fixed-rate method (which requires a record of all hours worked) or the actual cost method (which requires receipts for every single cent spent).

Action Step: Use a dedicated app to track your hours and expenses. If you can’t prove it, don’t claim it. To avoid late payment fines and audit stress, let us handle the heavy lifting of your ongoing compliance and bookkeeping.

The “Leisure Facility” Trap for Property Sellers

A specific change effective from 2026 involves holiday homes and short-term rentals. If you own a property that is used for both personal holidaying and as a rental income stream, the rules have shifted.

From July 2026, the ATO may classify specific holiday homes as “leisure facilities.” If a property is deemed a leisure facility, you cannot claim maintenance deductions unless the property is mainly rented out to generate income. This is a significant blow to “lifestyle” investors. If you sell such a property, the way your CGT is calculated will also be affected by these disallowed deductions.

Digital Compliance and GST Transparency

For e-commerce sellers, GST (Goods and Services Tax) compliance is becoming more automated. The ATO is pushing for real-time data submission for business transactions. This means that your Business Activity Statements (BAS) should ideally be a reflection of your live accounting data.

If you sell through platforms like Amazon, eBay, or Shopify, the ATO is increasingly using data-sharing agreements with these platforms to verify your GST obligations. If you are a foreign entity selling into Australia, ensure you are registered for GST if you meet the AUD $75,000 threshold.

Pro Tip: Managing cross-border VAT and GST can be a nightmare. We offer standalone modular tax services to help you navigate these global hurdles without the headache.

How Sterlinx Global Supports Your Australian Growth

Navigating the ATO’s 2026 updates doesn’t have to be a solo mission. At Sterlinx Global, we aren’t just consultants who give you a “to-do” list and leave you to it. We are a Global Tax Compliance Suite.

What does that mean for you? It means you provide the data, and we complete the compliance. We handle the daily and ongoing tasks that keep your business in the ATO’s good books:

  • Bookkeeping: We maintain your records to the standard the ATO demands.
  • Tax Calculations: Whether it’s GST, CGT, or Income Tax, we do the math.
  • Filings: We submit your BAS and year-end accounts on time, every time.
  • Cross-Border Expertise: We support Australian entities, UK Limited Companies, USA LLCs, and Canadian Corporations.

Don’t let a change in tax law slow down your expansion. Whether you are dealing with the intricacies of value added tax or trying to understand Australian corporate tax, we have the infrastructure to support you.

Checklist: Staying Compliant in 2026

  1. Validate your GST Registration: If you’re nearing the $75,000 threshold, register now to avoid back-dated penalties.
  2. Digital Logbooks: Start using automated tracking for all motor vehicle and home office claims.
  3. Review Asset Holdings: If you plan to sell property or shares, ensure your “cost base” calculations are documented and accurate.
  4. Holiday Home Assessment: Determine whether any property you own could be classified as a “leisure facility” and adjust your deduction strategy accordingly.
  5. Real-Time Data Systems: Implement accounting software that can feed directly into your BAS submissions.
  6. Professional Support: Engage a tax advisor who understands the 2026 ATO changes and can help you stay ahead of compliance requirements.

Hire Us for Accounting?

Why not save time and hire us to do your books in the UK or globally?

Share This