Investors urged to declare offshore income or face penalties

ATO australian taxation office

23 June 2014
| By Staff |
image
image
expand image

Australians with undeclared offshore investments are being urged to take advantage of a once-off chance to avoid hefty fines, and a possible jail sentence, by disclosing their foreign income.

Australian Taxation Office (ATO) deputy commissioner, Michael Cranston, warned investors who have not reported their overseas earnings in the past that it was no longer a question of "if" they would be caught, but "when".

Investors who have failed to disclose offshore assets or income can take advantage of the ATO's Project Do It, under which they will be able to pay the tax owing plus interest, with the penalty capped at 10 per cent, Cranston said.

"Project DO IT is a never-to-be-repeated opportunity to come clean and put your offshore tax affairs in order and come back into the tax system," he said.

"Generally, you'll only have to pay the tax owing plus interest, on the undeclared assets or income for the past four years, with the penalty capped at 10 per cent.

"That's a lot more lenient than the regular penalty which can be as high as 90 per cent and the ATO can go back to the beginning of any offshore arrangement.

"Project DO IT means you'll also avoid any criminal investigation by us and we won't voluntarily share your information with other Australian law enforcement agencies on the matters you disclose."

While the ATO has given investors until 19 December 2014 to come clean, Cranston warned that anyone identified as having undeclared offshore investments before that time would be exposed to the full force of the law.

"If we detect your undeclared assets or income, before you come to us via Project DO IT, you've missed the boat, even if it's before 19 December," he said.

"You'll feel the full force of the law, so my advice is…don't put it off, make your disclosure now."

Cranston warned Australians with offshore assets and income that the ATO can automatically exchange taxpayer information with more than 60 countries and can retrieve taxpayer information from more than 100.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

GG

So shareholders lose a dividend plus have seen the erosion of value. Qantas decides to clawback remuneration from Alan ...

4 weeks 1 day ago
Denise Baker

This is why I left my last position. There was no interest in giving the client quality time, it was all about bumping ...

4 weeks 2 days ago
gonski

So the Hayne Royal Commission has left us with this. What a sad day for the financial planning industry. Clearly most ...

4 weeks 2 days ago

The decision whether to proceed with a $100 million settlement for members of the buyer of last resort class action against AMP has been decided in the Federal Court....

2 weeks 1 day ago

A former Brisbane financial adviser has been found guilty of 28 counts of fraud where his clients lost $5.9 million....

4 weeks 1 day ago

The Financial Advice Association Australia has addressed “pretty disturbing” instances where its financial adviser members have allegedly experienced “bullying” by produc...

3 weeks 2 days ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS