All Topics / Help Needed! / What is a legitimate repair?

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  • Profile photo of waynel2waynel2
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    @waynel2
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    What is a legitimate repair? Any what is considered as capital works?

    Can anyone direct me to an information source which explains what are considered repairs on a rental property and what arn’t?

    Thanks

    Wayne Leech

    *Below are links to my websites – any feedback, comments would be appreciated:)
    http://www.landsearcher.com.au – List your land for FREE (Private sellers only)
    http://www.homesearcher.com.au – List your property for FREE (Private sellers only)

    Profile photo of Mortgage HunterMortgage Hunter
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    @mortgage-hunter
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    Basically a repair takes it back to the condition at which you bought it. A capital improvement takes it beyond.

    The common example is painting – painting on purchase, no matter how bad the condition is, doesn’t fall under the definition of a repair.

    Do a search at the ATO website for the DS definition.

    Cheers,

    Simon Macks
    Mortgage Broker
    http://www.mortgagehunter.com.au
    0425 228 985

    Comments may not be relevant to individual circumstances. If you intend making any investment, financial or taxation decision you should consult a professional adviser.

    Profile photo of waynel2waynel2
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    @waynel2
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    Thanks Simon:) Appreciate your feedback:)

    In regards to painting – if you had a tenant in the property and then painted the walls would this be classed as a repair?

    Wayne Leech

    *Below are links to my websites – any feedback, comments would be appreciated:)
    http://www.landsearcher.com.au – List your land for FREE (Private sellers only)
    http://www.homesearcher.com.au – List your property for FREE (Private sellers only)

    Profile photo of Mortgage HunterMortgage Hunter
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    Post Count: 3,781

    Yes. Not sure of the exact timeframe it should be tenanted though. I suspect a few years would be quite straightforward whereas 3 months might not be anywhere near enough.

    Casll the ATO for specific info.

    Simon Macks
    Mortgage Broker
    http://www.mortgagehunter.com.au
    0425 228 985

    Comments may not be relevant to individual circumstances. If you intend making any investment, financial or taxation decision you should consult a professional adviser.

    Profile photo of JuliaJulia
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    @julia
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    wayne12,

    Repairs and Maintenance, not improvements are deductible. For example if the house needed painting when you bought it then painting it would be an improvement or if the house did not have a garden hose then purchasing one would be an improvement, therefore not deductible. On the other hand if during the time of your ownership the hose wears out and you replace it or the paint starts to peel and you repaint, these expenses would be a deduction. No deduction is available for your own labour. Take care to perform repairs only when the premises are tenanted or in a period where the property will be tenanted before and after with no private use in the middle (IT180). Do not make repairs in a financial year during which you may not receive any rental income (IT180). If a property is used only as a rental property during the whole year then a repair would be fully deductible even though some of the damage may have been done in previous years when the property was used for private purposes (TR 97/23). Note this does not apply if the damage was done in a period you did not own the property. If the state of disrepair the property was in at the time you purchased it is directly responsible for further damage when you own it, all the repairs relating to that damage are considered improvements (Law Shipping Co. UK). A repair can become an improvement if it does not restore things to their original state (case M60) i.e. replacing a metal roof with tiles. The whole cost of the tiled roof would be an improvement and no deduction would be available for what it would have cost you to put up another metal roof. But a change is not always an improvement. In ID 2002/330 the ATO states that the cost of removing carpets and polishing the existing floorboards is deductible. Yet in ID 2001/30 underpinning due to subsidence was considered by the ATO to be an improvement not a repair. It is not necessary to use the original materials to restore the thing or structure to its original state. Modern materials can be used even when these might be a slight improvement because they are more efficient. As long as the benefit is only minor or incidental it can still be considered a repair.
    Work that replaces the whole thing or structure is an improvement not a repair. So don’t pull down all of the old fence and replace it just replace the damaged area. TR 97/23 recognises that eventually the whole thing or structure may be replaced in a progression of repairs. These repairs are still deductible providing each repair is on a small scale, the progression is over a long period of time and that it is not just in reality a replacement done over time but individual repairs.
    Tree removal is claimable if the tress have become diseased or infested during the time of ownership. Removal is also claimable if the tree is causing damage such as roots interfering with pipes and the damage was not present when you purchased the property. If a tree is removed because it may cause damage in the future or you are fed up with the leaf litter that has always happened since you bought the property, then you are making an improvement which is not deductible.
    Note improvements that are still present when the property is sold can increase your cost base for CGT purposes.

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    Profile photo of waynel2waynel2
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    Julia,

    Thanks for the great reply:) Makes sense now:)

    cheers!

    Wayne Leech

    *Below are links to my websites – any feedback, comments would be appreciated:)
    http://www.landsearcher.com.au – List your land for FREE (Private sellers only)
    http://www.homesearcher.com.au – List your property for FREE (Private sellers only)

    Profile photo of KICKS 66KICKS 66
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    @kicks-66
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    Hi, I’m about to buy a property where the bathroom is basically a concrete room,so,if i was to tile it and put in a shower screen etc, would that be seen as an improvment and not tax deductable and how does one prove these things?
    Would taking photo’s of a property before you start be a good way of going?
    Cheers Anita.
    By the way all the plumbing is in place.

    Profile photo of KICKS 66KICKS 66
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    @kicks-66
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    Hi Julia, it’s taken me until today to realise what you were saying in regards to what is considered as repairs and maintenance and improvements.I guess i didn’t want to believe it as i’m about to buy my first IP and it needs about $5,000 worth of renovations and i would of like to have thought that most of it would be tax deductable.Not so.Never mind.
    cheers
    anita

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