When GST Rears its Head in Property Transactions – recorded online conference
Hear from the experts at this online lunchtime conference. You can watch it on your computer or on your portable electronic device from anywhere.
Date/Time
About the Recorded Online Conference
Session 1: Am I Conducting an Enterprise? A Property Perspective
One of the elements required for GST to apply is that a supply is made in the “course or furtherance of an enterprise” that the entity carries on. This definition is not always straightforward in the property sphere. This session explores when property transactions may or may not satisfy the enterprise criteria, including:
- What are the factors that can tip a property sale from being the mere realization of a capital asset to an enterprise?
- How are one off property sales treated?
- How is a sale of vacant land rezoned for residential usage treated?
- Property acquired for a planned development sold prior to development proceeding – is this an enterprise?
- When is the sale of farmland subdivided by the owner considered to be an enterprise?
- When is the leasing of a property considered to be an enterprise?
- Practical examples
Session 2: GST Free Going Concern: Getting it Right and What to do if it Goes Wrong
The GST free going concern provisions are generally associated with business sales, however the option is also available for some property sales. This session covers the requirements to use the GST free going concern treatment for property, as well as the implications of getting it wrong, including:
- Should the business and the business premises be sold under two separate contracts or under a single contract?
- Can a tenanted commercial building be sold as a going concern?
- The conditions to supply “all of the things necessary for the continued operation of the enterprise” where property involved:
- what conditions are required if the vendor terminates the lease?
- what if a tenancy at will is in place?
- what if a periodic tenancy is in place?
- what a government license is involved?
- What to do if the GST free going concern requirements are subsequently found not to have been met:
- when advising the vendor
- when advising the purchaser
- Case studies
Session 3: GST Contract Clauses for Property: It Pays to Cover Yourself
The treatment of GST on property sales can involve complexities that include the margin scheme and GST free provisions. Disputes can arise in the event of underpaid GST, including who is liable, after the transaction has undergone a closer look from the ATO. This session looks at the contract clauses that affect GST to assist in ensuring the transacting parties are fully informed of and protected from the potential GST outcomes, including:
- GST treatment of property transactions and key contractual risks
- Elements of an effective GST clause in a property contract
- Specialist GST clauses: supply of farmland
- Obtaining certainty: ATO guidance and private ruling requests
- Case studies
The Faculty
Ken Fehily, Director, Fehily Advisory, Melbourne, Vic. (Chair)
Matthew Cridland, Partner, K&L Gates, Sydney, NSW
Michelle Bennett, Partner, BDO, Melbourne, Vic
John Russell, Special Counsel, MinterEllison, Melbourne, Vic
CPD Information
Lawyers can claim 3 CPD units/points (substantive law). Accountants can claim 3 CPD hours.
WA Lawyers – Please note that TEN is unable to verify your completion of recorded online conferences to the Legal Practice Board of WA. TEN is an accredited provider.
Enquiries/Assistance
If you need assistance or have an enquiry, please do not hesitate to contact our Webinar Coordinator, Lisa Tran on (03) 8601 7709 or email: [email protected]