
Whether you're a freelance graphic designer juggling multiple clients, a touring musician with a mountain of travel receipts, or a studio owner trying to keep your books in tune - there's one question that hits differently come tax time: what records do I need to keep for the ATO?
It's not exactly the most rock 'n' roll topic. But here's the hard truth: under section 262A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936), keeping proper business records isn't optional - it's the law. Failing to hit those record-keeping notes can cost you significantly: denied deductions, adjusted tax assessments, and the kind of ATO audit that no creative professional wants as their encore.
The good news? Once you understand the rules, maintaining your records is far less daunting than it sounds. Think of it like learning the chords before you improvise - get the fundamentals right, and everything else flows naturally from there.
When the ATO asks about your records, they're looking for documentation that explains the tax and superannuation-related transactions of your business. A record needs to contain enough information for the ATO to understand the nature and purpose of each transaction, and how it relates to your income and expenses.
At minimum, every record should include:
Here are the main categories of records most Australian businesses - including creative professionals and sole traders - need to keep for the ATO:
Tax invoices issued to customers, cash register records, bank deposit summaries, records of digital and cash sales, and any government grants or incentives received.
Every business expense needs to be documented - including cash purchases. You'll need to show who you paid, when, how much, and what was purchased. For GST-registered businesses, a valid tax invoice is required for purchases over $82.50 (including GST) to claim GST credits.
Bank statements, deposit slips, credit card records, loan or lease agreements, and payment summaries. If you're a sole trader, a dedicated business bank account keeps things considerably cleaner come tax time.
If your business owns assets - from a camera rig to a rehearsal studio - you'll need purchase contracts, depreciation schedules, improvement records, and disposal documentation.
For those managing a team: TFN declarations, payslips, superannuation contribution records, employment contracts, leave records, staff rosters, and PAYG withholding amounts, among others.
Stocktake sheets, lists of debtors and creditors, worksheets for depreciating assets, and capital gains tax (CGT) records all need to be squared away at year-end.
Tax invoices issued and received, adjustment notes, BAS calculations, reconciliation reports, and records of GST-free or input-taxed supplies - all essential if your business is registered for GST.
This is where many creatives - and honestly, many business owners across the board - get caught out. The ATO has a standard five-year retention period for most records, but there are several important exceptions where you'll need to hold on to things significantly longer.
| Record Type | Examples | Minimum Retention Period |
|---|---|---|
| Standard business records | Income, expenses, BAS, GST | 5 years |
| Employee records (Fair Work) | Payslips, TFN declarations, rosters | 7 years |
| Company financial records | Under the Corporations Act 2001 | 7 years |
| Capital gains tax (CGT) assets | Purchase contracts, settlement documents | Period of ownership + 5 years |
| Depreciating assets | Depreciation schedules, disposal records | Period of ownership + 5 years |
| Petroleum Resource Rent Tax | PRRT-related records | 7+ years |
| Global/Domestic Minimum Tax | Various compliance records | 8+ years |
| SMSF standard records | Bank statements, investment reports | 5 years |
| SMSF permanent documents | Trust deeds, trustee minutes, investment strategy | 10 years or permanently |
The five-year clock generally starts from when you prepared or obtained the record, or when you completed the transaction - whichever comes later.
One important nuance: if you carry forward a business loss from one financial year and apply it in a future return, you need to keep those original records until the period of review for the later return has closed.
The ATO has established five foundational principles that apply to virtually all records related to your tax, super, and registration obligations. Think of these as your set list - you need to know every one of them before stepping on stage.
You need records covering starting, running, changing, and selling or closing your business. If an expense straddles both business and personal use, you must clearly document the business portion.
Records must not be altered or manipulated. The ATO expressly prohibits electronic sales suppression tools and requires that records are stored in a way that prevents them from being changed or damaged.
Most records need to be kept for five years, with several categories requiring longer retention as outlined in the table above.
If the ATO asks to see your records, you must be able to produce them. This includes providing encryption keys, passwords, and access instructions for digital data. Records must be clearly labelled, indexed, and convertible to a standard format such as Excel or CSV.
All records must be in English, or readily convertible to English. If an expense was incurred overseas, a translation certified by an authorised translation service should accompany the original document.
Great news for the digitally inclined: the ATO actively recommends digital record-keeping and accepts electronic records on equal footing with paper ones. Under ATO Ruling TR 2018/2, electronic records carry the same legal weight as their paper counterparts - provided they meet equivalent standards.
Key requirements for digital record-keeping include:
Paper records can be scanned and stored digitally, provided the copy is a true and clear reproduction of the original. Once correctly digitised, you generally don't need to retain the physical paper version.
For sole traders, the ATO's free myDeductions tool - available through the ATO app - is a genuinely useful way to track business income, expenses, and vehicle trips on the go. At year-end, you can send the data directly to your tax agent, cutting down significantly on preparation time.
Not keeping the right records for the ATO comes with real, measurable consequences. Here's what's at stake:
The ATO's general stance is to assume you're trying to do the right thing, and penalties can be remitted where genuine good faith is demonstrated. However, deliberately failing to keep records - or destroying them - places you on very shaky legal ground with little prospect of relief.
The ATO offers some practical exceptions that reduce the administrative burden for smaller claims - genuinely useful for sole traders and creative freelancers navigating a high volume of small expenses.
If your total work-related expense claims amount to $300 or less, you can claim a deduction without full written receipts - provided you can demonstrate you spent the money and explain how you calculated the amount. This exception does not apply to car expenses, meal allowances, award transport payments, or travel allowance expenses.
For work-related laundry claims - excluding dry-cleaning - amounts of $150 or less don't require full written evidence. You still need a record showing how the amount was calculated.
If you can't obtain a receipt for an expense under $10, a diary note or note in your phone may suffice as a record. Your total claim for small expenses recorded this way cannot exceed $200 in a single income year.
Solid record-keeping isn't just about staying on the right side of the ATO - it's a genuine business advantage. When your financial records are accurate and up to date, you can:
Most tax and business records must be kept for a minimum of five years. However, employee records generally require seven years under Fair Work legislation, company records require seven years under the *Corporations Act 2001*, and records relating to CGT assets and depreciating assets must be kept for the full period of ownership plus five additional years after disposal. Certain SMSF documents—such as trust deeds and trustee minutes—must be kept for at least ten years or permanently.
Yes. The ATO accepts digital records in place of paper originals, provided the digital copy is a true and clear reproduction of the original document. Once a paper receipt has been correctly scanned and stored, you generally don't need to keep the physical copy. Digital records must remain accessible, backed up, and convertible to a standard format such as CSV or Excel if requested by the ATO.
Sole traders need records of all business income and sales, expense receipts, bank statements, GST records (if registered for GST), vehicle and home office records, and any contracts or agreements. Maintaining a separate business bank account is strongly recommended to clearly distinguish business transactions from personal spending. The ATO's free myDeductions tool is available to help sole traders manage records throughout the year.
If records are lost or destroyed through circumstances beyond your control—such as theft, fire, or a natural disaster—you may be eligible for relief from the ATO's substantiation requirements. You'll need to demonstrate that reasonable precautions were taken, that you made genuine attempts to obtain substitute records, and that replacement was not reasonably possible. The ATO assesses these situations individually.
Administrative penalties for failing to keep records can range from around $6,600 for a single failure to approximately $44,000 for more serious cases, based on current penalty unit values. The ATO may also direct you to complete a formal record-keeping course. Where non-compliance is deliberate or involves fraud, criminal penalties ranging from approximately $11,000 to $22,000 may apply, with imprisonment possible in the most serious cases.
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