The New Zealand Herald

Tax warning for short-stay holiday rentals

Letting bach, apartment or house might push you over GST threshold, says expert

- — Otago Daily Times

New Zealand’s tourism boom means it can be lucrative to rent out property but owners need to do their homework or they could get stung. A lot of apartments and houses in areas such as Queenstown, for example, could easily be rented out on a short-term basis in excess of $1000 a night, Deloitte tax partner Phil Stevenson said.

“At this rate, it only takes 60 nights of occupancy to exceed the GST registrati­on threshold, requiring the property owner to register for GST.”

There were several implicatio­ns from being GST-registered, Stevenson said.

The biggest and most obvious was GST often needed to be returned on the sale price of the property.

While it was possible to get a credit on the original purchase of the property, becoming GST-registered essentiall­y gifted 15 per cent of any capital gain to Inland Revenue.

If a person decided to go back to using the property for private purposes and deregister for GST, they were deemed to have sold the property at market value and they would need to fund a GST cost without realising any cash from the sale of the property, he said.

In recent years, Inland Revenue had been focusing on taxing New Zealand’s black economy which was made up in part by taxpayers providing short-term accommodat­ion.

However, unlike a plumber’s cash job or handshake agreements between friends, using an online platform to arrange short-term accommodat­ion generated readily accessible electronic records.

Inland Revenue had wide informatio­n gathering powers and the ability to request informatio­n from online platforms.

Inland Revenue could use the informatio­n to quickly identify who was providing short-term accommodat­ion and request evidence income had been de- clared in a tax return and taxes paid, Stevenson said.

Similarly, with the recent requiremen­t for IRD numbers to be associated with property transactio­ns, it was now much easier for Inland Revenue to identify when GST should be paid on the sale of a property.

Local government­s were also focused on short-term accommodat­ion being provided.

Under local council regulation­s, a property used for short-term accommodat­ion was generally considered to be a commercial property which might affect rates charges and result in other administra­tive requiremen­ts such as consents to operate, he said.

Taxpayers should also consider other contracts held if they were providing short-term accommodat­ion to ensure items such as insurance over the property remained valid.

Staying just one night privately in a property being used for short-term accommodat­ion could have a significan­t impact on the expenditur­e that could be claimed as a tax deduction because deductions for expenditur­e on days the property was empty could be disallowed, Stevenson said.

“Some of our clients get quite surprised when we tell them they might be better off staying in a hotel or renting the apartment next to theirs rather than staying in their own vacant property.”

The message for anyone wanting to rent their property on a short-term basis was to do their homework and make sure they did so with their eyes wide open. “If you are crunching the numbers on a property investment, crossing the $60,000 GST turnover threshold and private use of the property may have a large impact on your bottom line.”

 ?? Source: Canstar Blue. Picture: 123rf.com / Herald graphic ??
Source: Canstar Blue. Picture: 123rf.com / Herald graphic
 ??  ?? Deloitte tax partner Phil Stevenson
Deloitte tax partner Phil Stevenson

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