Tax cuts pass in Parliament
Clarke McEwan Accountants
Government's income tax cuts have been passed by the Senate
Modest tax cuts are available to millions of Australians almost immediately. Eligible taxpayers will receive between $255 and $1,080 in tax cuts for the 2018-19 financial year, which will appear automatically in their bank accounts as part of their refund after they lodge their 2018-19 tax return. The ATO have already begun processing 2018–19 tax returns, so taxpayers eligible for the offset can expect to see the additional credits from 16 July 2019, the official date that the ATO expects to start paying refunds.
On 5 July 2019, the ATO advised
that its systems will be updated once the Bill receives Royal Assent and that they will automatically include any new offset amounts taxpayers are entitled to when tax returns are processed.
Below is an ATO summary of the individual tax cuts that passed through Parliament on 4 July 2019.
From the 2018–19 income year:
- Increase the low and middle income tax offset from a maximum amount of $530 to $1,080 per annum and increase the base amount from $200 to $255 per annum
- Taxpayers with a taxable income that does not exceed $37,000 will receive a low and middle income tax offset of up to $255
- Taxpayers with a taxable income that exceeds $37,000 but is not more than $48,000 will receive $255, plus an amount equal to 7.5 per cent to the maximum offset of $1,080
- Taxpayers with a taxable income that exceeds $48,000 but is not more than $90,000 will be eligible for the maximum low and middle income tax offset of $1,080
- Taxpayers with a taxable income that exceeds $90,000 but is not more than $126,000 will be eligible for a low and middle income tax offset of $1,080, less an amount equal to 3 per cent of the excess.
From the 2022–23 income year:
- The top threshold of the 19 per cent personal income tax bracket will increase from $41,000 to $45,000 such that the rate of tax on the amount of the taxable income of a resident individual that:
- exceeds $18,200 but is not more than $45,000 is 19 per cent
- exceeds $45,000 but is not more than $120,000 is 32.5 per cent
- exceeds $120,000 but is not more than $180,000 is 37 per cent
- exceeds $180,000 is 45 per cent
- Increase the low income tax offset (LITO) from a maximum amount of $645 to $700 per annum
- Taxpayers with a taxable income that does not exceed $37,500 will receive a LITO of $700
- Taxpayers with a taxable income that exceeds $37,500 but is not more than $45,000 will receive a LITO of $700, less an amount equal to 5 per cent of the excess
- Taxpayers with a taxable income that exceeds $45,000 but is not more than $66,667 will receive a LITO of $325, less an amount equal to 1.5 per cent of the excess.
From the 2024–25 income year:
- The 32.5 per cent marginal tax rate will reduce to 30 per cent such that for a resident individual the rate of tax on the amount of their taxable income that:





