
Home office expenses
If you're an employee who works from home, you may be able to claim a deduction for expenses you incur relating to that work. These can be additional running expenses such as electricity, the decline in value of equipment or furniture and phone and internet expenses.
If your home is your principal place of business, you should refer to π
Running your business from home β
Expenses you can't claim
There are some expenses you can't claim a deduction for as an employee. Employees who work at home can't claim costs:
π for coffee, tea, milk and other general household items your employer may provide you at work
π for your children and their education including setting them up for online learning, teaching them at home, buying equipment such as iPads and desks
π your employer pays for or repays you for the expense
πfor the decline in value of items provided by your employer β for example, a laptop or a phone.
Employees generally can't claim occupancy expenses such as rent, mortgage interest, water and rates.
Calculation methods
There are three ways of calculating home office expenses depending on your circumstances. The methods are the:1. Shortcut method (80 cents) β only available from 1 March 2020 to 30 June 2021
2. Fixed rate method (52 cents)
3. Actual cost method
3. Actual cost method
1. Shortcut method
The shortcut method simplifies how you calculate your deduction for working from home. Using this method, you can claim 80 cents per hour for each hour you work from home.
This method is temporary and can only be used to work out your work from home deduction:
πbetween 1 March to 30 June 2020 in the 2019β20 income year
πfor the 2020β21 income year.
All employees who work from home during these dates can use this method if you:
πare working from home to fulfil your employment duties, not just carrying out minimal tasks such as occasionally checking emails or taking calls
πhave incurred additional running expenses as a result of working from home.
The shortcut method covers all your working from home expenses, such as:
πphone expenses
πinternet expenses
πthe decline in value of equipment and furniture
πelectricity and gas for heating, cooling and lighting.
If you use this method, you can't claim any other expenses for working from home.
You don't need to have a dedicated work area to use this method. However, you must keep a record of the number of hours you have worked from home. This could be a timesheet, roster, a diary or documents that set out the hours you worked from home
πreceipts for depreciating assets or equipment you use when working from home
πrecords of how you calculated your work-related use of the asset
πyour decline in value calculations.
2. Fixed rate method
You can claim a deduction for additional running expenses you incur when you work from home. The fixed rate is 52 cents for each hour you work from home. The rate covers the additional running expenses you incur for:
πthe decline in value of home office furniture and furnishings β for example, a desk
πelectricity and gas for heating, cooling and lighting
πthe cost of repairs to your home office equipment, furniture and furnishings.
To claim using this method, you must keep records of either:
πyour actual hours spent working at home for the year
πa diary for a representative four-week period to show your usual pattern of working at home.
You can apply the four-week representative period across the remainder of the year to determine your full deduction amount. However, if your work pattern changes you will need to create a new record.
To use this method, you need to have a dedicated work area, such as a home office when you work from home.
This method doesn't include the following, so you will need to separately calculate your work-related use for:
π phone expenses
π internet expenses
π computer consumables and stationery β such as ink
π decline in value of equipment β such as phones, computers and laptops.
To claim the work-related portion of these expenses you must have records such as:
π receipts or other written evidence that shows the amount spent on expenses and depreciating assets you purchased
π phone accounts identifying your work-related calls and private calls to work out your percentage of work-related use for a representative period
πa diary that shows a representative four-week period of your usual pattern of working at home, any small expenses ($10 or less) that you can't get a receipt for totalling no more than $200, your work-related internet use, the percentage of the year you used depreciating assets exclusively for work.
3. Actual cost method
You can claim a deduction for additional running expenses you incur when you work from home. Using the actual expenses method, you work out your deduction from actual costs you incur as a result of working from home. This may include the following expenses:
π electricity and gas for cooling, heating and lighting
π the decline in value of home office furniture (desk, chair) and furnishings,
π the decline in value of phones, computers, laptops or similar devices
π phone expenses
π internet expenses
π cleaning (if you use a dedicated area for working)
π computer consumables and stationery β such as ink
If you don't have a dedicated work area, such as a home office, you will generally only incur minimal additional running expenses. For example, if the area you use for work is a common area of the home such as a lounge room and that area is being used by other members of your household for another purpose (such as, family members watching television) at the same time you're working, you won't be incurring any additional costs for lighting, heating or cooling as a result of working in that room.
To work out the work-related portion of your actual expenses you must have records. You can either keep:
π a record of the number of actual hours you work from home during the income year
π a diary for a representative four-week period to show your usual pattern of working at home
π work out the decline in value of depreciating assets and, keep receipts showing the amount you spent on the assets, show the percentage of the year you used those depreciating assets exclusively for work β you can claim for the portion of the decline in value that reflects your work-related use of the depreciating assets
π work out the cost of your cleaning expenses (if you have a dedicated work area) β for example, a room set up as a home office, by adding together your receipts and multiplying it by the floor area of your dedicated work area (floor area of the dedicated work area divided by the whole area of the house as a percentage) β your claim should be apportioned for any private use of your home office, use of the home office by other family members
π work out the cost of your heating, cooling and lighting by working out the following
- the cost per unit of power used β refer to your utility bill for this information
- the average units used per hour β this is the power consumption per kilowatt hour for each appliance, equipment or light used
- the total annual hours used for work-related purposes β refer to your record of hours worked or your diary for this information
π work out the cost of your phone or internet plan expenses β where you receive an itemised bill, you need to determine your percentage of work use over a four-week representative period.
π work out the cost of computer consumables and stationery by keeping receipts for the items purchased.
You must take into account other members of your household when you work out your expenses. If a member of your household is using the same area of the house or the same service when you're working, you must apportion your expenses accordingly.
To claim a deduction for an asset that cost $300 or more, you need to calculate the decline in value for both the period you:
π owned the assets during the income year
π used the assets for work-related purposes.
You can use the depreciation and capital allowances tool to calculate your deduction for the decline in value of equipment, furniture and furnishings that cost more than $300, use the depreciation and capital allowances tool to work this out.