Australian Taxation Office (ATO) target areas for tax time 2023
The ATO has provided some insights to the areas it will be focusing on consisting of rental property deductions, work-related expenses, and capital gains tax.

.
Specifically, the ATO will be targeting loan interest expenses, working from home deductions, and possible capital gains tax where a main residence is also used for income producing purposes. Overall this tax time, the ATO expects fewer individuals to receive refunds or to receive smaller refunds, and more individuals perhaps with tax debts.
A recent ATO review indicated that nine out of 10 rental property owners are getting their returns wrong, so it is no surprise that this area remains as one of the main tax time targets. Common mistakes of taxpayers include rental income not being reported, overclaiming expenses, or claiming improvements to private properties. However, this tax time, the ATO is particularly focused on interest expenses.
Further, the ATO reminds taxpayers of the recent commencement of the residential investment property loan data matching program that spans the income years of 2021–2022 to 2025–2026. Data such as amounts of interest charged and loan repayments from various financial institutions will be used to identify discrepancies in returns lodged.
The other focus area the ATO will be enforcing is work-related expenses. There have been changes to the methods to work out working from home deductions from 1 July 2022. From that date, you can either choose the actual cost method or the fixed rate method, with the 80 cents per hour “shortcut” method no longer available. To use either of the available methods, you’ll need to keep appropriate records, including the total number of hours worked from home.
The ATO’s last area of focus for tax time 2023 is CGT. In addition to the usual disposal of assets such as shares, crypto-assets, managed investments and properties, the ATO will be looking at situations where a main residence or part of a main residence is used to produce income and is then subsequently sold. This applies where you have rented out all or part of your main residence through traditional means or through the sharing economy (using Airbnb, Stayz, etc), or where a business is run from home.
Hot Issues
- Will a shareholders agreement protect a business from a family law dispute?
- ATO crackdown on profit restructuring leading to higher tax bills: RSM
- Super balance not a priority for young Aussies, SMC reports
- When to Update Your Business Trading Terms
- Support for rebuilding after natural disasters
- Are you ready for Payday superannuation?
- Calculate your costs to start a business
- Most Reliable Car Brands in 2026
- Payday super part 2: not quite ‘all systems go’
- Privacy Compliance Sweep 2026: Is Your Business Ready?
- 6 ways to improve your business plan
- ‘Looking like a rough start’: SMEs set to feel the pinch as CPI spikes
- Student loans debt update
- New SMSF education directions
- Accountants must keep ‘watchful eye’ on financial abuse
- Rare and vanishing: Animals That May Go Extinct Soon
- What is a Commercial Lease?
- 8 tips to improve your online sales
- ATO cracking down on tax dodgers trying to leave the country
- Digital Assets You Forgot You Own (and Why They Still Matter at Tax Time)
- ‘Not insurmountable’: What accountants need to know ahead of Payday Super
- Heading overseas? Centrelink and the ATO might need to know
- The ATO’s new draft rules could change your holiday home tax claims
- Which country produces the most electricity annually?
- Restructuring Family Businesses: From Partnership to Limited Company
- Choose the right business structure step-by-step guide
Article archive
July - September 2023 archive
- Contractor payments (TPAR) are increasingly on the ATO’s radar
- Superannuation and independent contractors: fresh Full Federal Court guidance
- Intergenerational Report 2023
- Property investors beware: new data matching program
- When will we learn to protect ourselves from ourselves?
- Federal Government toughens up employment laws.
- Small Business Tax Time toolkit for 2023.
- Oldest Buildings in the World
- Australian Taxation Office (ATO) target areas for tax time 2023
- Taxing unrealised capital gains a grave concern: Burgess
- Protect your business from cyber threats
- Is your content making you income?
- Australian Taxation Office (ATO) ride-sourcing data-matching program extended
- How a registered trade mark can grow your sales and your business
- The top modes of transport in the world
- Considerations When Negotiating a Resolution
- Things you can do in our digital office
- Working from home expenses for 2023
- Five questions that indicate how financially literate you are.
- New laws come into effect from July 1
- Preparing for EOFY tax scams with business and cyber resilience
- Any tax debts in arrears?
- Scammers continue to fleece unsuspecting victims
- Top 50 Greatest Cuisines
