
Your creative business deserves financial clarity - here's how to stay in tune with the ATO.
You've poured everything into your creative business - the late nights, the hustle, the passion. But somewhere between chasing invoices and managing your next project, a little form called a Business Activity Statement (BAS) lands in your inbox, and suddenly that creative flow hits a wall of tax obligations.
Here's the honest truth: lodging your BAS doesn't have to feel like tuning a guitar in the dark. With the right knowledge, the right tools, and - where needed - the right people in your corner, BAS compliance is entirely manageable. This guide breaks down everything Australian business owners need to know about the Business Activity Statement, from who has to lodge one to what happens if you miss a deadline.
Whether you're a sole trader in Penrith running a design studio, a music producer managing contractors, or a small creative agency growing your team, this guide is written for you.
A Business Activity Statement is a form submitted to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) that allows businesses to report and pay several tax obligations in one place. Think of it as your tax set list - multiple obligations, one performance.
According to the ATO, if your business is registered for Goods and Services Tax (GST), you are required to lodge a BAS. Your BAS is used to report:
The primary trigger for BAS lodgement is GST registration. According to the ATO, your business must register for GST if:
Once your business hits the $75,000 threshold, you have 21 days to register for GST. Miss that window, and you're already off-beat with the ATO.
Businesses below the threshold can still voluntarily register for GST - and once you do, BAS lodgement becomes an obligation regardless.
Even if your GST turnover hasn't hit the threshold, you may still be required to lodge a BAS if you have PAYG withholding obligations. This applies if your business withholds tax from employee wages, payments to contractors under a labour hire arrangement, or payments to suppliers who haven't quoted their ABN (in which case a 47% withholding rate applies).
Your lodgement frequency depends on the size of your business. The ATO uses your annual GST turnover as the primary measure.
Most small to medium businesses with a GST turnover under $20 million lodge their BAS quarterly. For the 2025–26 financial year, the quarterly due dates are:
| Quarter | Period | Self-Lodged Due Date | Agent-Lodged Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 | July – September 2025 | 28 October 2025 | 25 November 2025 |
| Q2 | October – December 2025 | 28 February 2026 | 28 February 2026 |
| Q3 | January – March 2026 | 28 April 2026 | 26 May 2026 |
| Q4 | April – June 2026 | 28 July 2026 | 25 August 2026 |
Note: Where the due date falls on a weekend or public holiday, the deadline automatically extends to the next business day.
Businesses with a GST turnover of $20 million or more are required to lodge monthly. Monthly BAS is due on the 21st day of the month following the reporting period - so your July BAS is due 21 August, and so on. There is generally no agent concession for monthly lodgements, with one exception for the December BAS for eligible businesses lodging electronically.
Some small businesses can elect to lodge annually. This option is available if you are voluntarily registered for GST and your GST turnover is under $75,000 ($150,000 for non-profits). The annual due date is generally 31 October following the end of the financial year, or 28 February the following year if you're not required to lodge an income tax return.
Knowing what goes into your BAS is just as important as knowing when to lodge it. The two most common components are GST and PAYG withholding.
Your GST obligations are calculated based on your GST turnover - the rolling 12-month total of your business income, including GST-free sales and exports, but excluding the sale of capital assets or sales made in the course of permanently winding down your business.
On your BAS, you report:
The difference between these two figures determines whether you owe the ATO money or are entitled to a refund.
PAYG withholding is reported using specific labels on your BAS form:
Your reporting frequency for PAYG withholding depends on your annual withholding amount. Small withholders (up to $25,000 annually) report quarterly; medium withholders ($25,001–$1 million) report monthly; and large withholders ($1 million+) report electronically within six to eight days of each withholding event.
Here's where the real performance begins. The ATO strongly encourages electronic lodgement, and for good reason - it's faster, more accurate, and can even unlock an additional two-week extension on most quarterly BAS periods.
1. ATO's Online Services for Business
Log in using your myGovID, navigate to Lodgments → Activity Statements, select your BAS period, complete the relevant sections, and submit. Always save your lodgement receipt number as confirmation.
2. myGov (Sole Traders)
If you're operating as a sole trader, you can prepare, lodge, and pay your activity statement directly through your myGov account linked to the ATO.
3. Standard Business Reporting (SBR)-Enabled Accounting Software
Cloud accounting platforms such as Xero, MYOB, QuickBooks Online, and Reckon allow you to lodge directly from your accounting software. This is the most efficient option for businesses with high transaction volumes - your software auto-populates fields from your financial data, dramatically reducing manual entry errors.
4. Registered Tax or BAS Agent
A registered BAS or tax agent can prepare and lodge on your behalf, often unlocking extended deadlines (as shown in the table above). Critically, your agent must be registered with the Tax Practitioners Board (TPB). Using an unregistered agent provides you with no protection. A registered agent can also receive BAS reminder messages on your behalf.
5. Paper Lodgement (Being Phased Out)
Paper BAS can still be mailed to the ATO (Locked Bag 1936, Albury NSW 1936), but paper lodgements don't qualify for the two-week electronic extension and take longer to process.
6. Phone (Nil Statements Only)
If you have nothing to report for a period, you can lodge a nil BAS by calling 13 72 26 - an automated service available 24/7. You'll need your ABN or TFN and your BAS document ID number. Even if your activity has been completely quiet for the quarter, a nil BAS still needs to be lodged.
Missing your BAS due date isn't just a minor flat note - it can cost you real money through the ATO's Failure to Lodge (FTL) penalty and a General Interest Charge (GIC) on any unpaid amounts.
The FTL penalty is calculated at one penalty unit per 28 days (or part thereof) that the lodgement is overdue. As of 2025–26, one penalty unit equals $330. The penalties are scaled by business size:
| Entity Size | Annual Turnover | Penalty Rate | Maximum Penalty Units | Maximum Penalty (2025–26) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small | Under $1 million | 1 unit per 28 days | 5 units | $1,650 |
| Medium | $1 million – $20 million | 2 units per 28 days | 10 units | $3,300 |
| Large | $20 million+ | 5 units per 28 days | 25 units | $8,250 |
Note: The FTL penalty generally won't be issued if the late lodgement results in a refund or nil outcome - unless the penalty was already applied before the return was lodged, or you are classified as a large withholder.
On top of the FTL penalty, any unpaid tax debt attracts the General Interest Charge - currently approximately 11.38% per annum, calculated daily and compounding. An important change to note: GIC incurred from 1 July 2025 onwards is no longer tax-deductible, making timely payment even more important for your bottom line.
If you're facing genuine financial difficulty, contact the ATO before the due date. The ATO can arrange payment plans, and in some circumstances, may grant a lodgement deferral. Ignoring the ATO, on the other hand, can escalate into compliance action, default assessments, and significant financial consequences.
If a registered BAS or tax agent failed to lodge on time - despite you having provided all relevant information by the due date - you may be protected from the FTL penalty under the safe harbour provisions. This is one of the key benefits of working with a registered professional.
Maintaining strong BAS compliance isn't just about avoiding penalties - it's about giving your creative business a solid financial foundation to grow from. Here are the habits that keep your compliance rhythm tight:
Quarterly BAS due dates generally fall on the 28th day after the end of each quarter. Set calendar reminders at least two weeks in advance to allow time for reconciliation.
SBR-enabled platforms like Xero, MYOB, and QuickBooks automatically track GST and PAYG obligations throughout the period, making BAS preparation a far less painful process.
Cross-check your BAS figures against your accounting records before submitting. A discrepancy between your BAS and your books is a red flag the ATO may investigate.
Electronic lodgement can provide an additional two-week extension on most quarters - that's extra breathing room that paper lodgement simply doesn't offer.
If your BAS is growing in complexity - multiple employees, contractor payments, variable income streams - a registered BAS agent or accountant can save you time, reduce errors, and unlock extended deadlines.
Your Business Activity Statement is one of the most fundamental compliance obligations for Australian businesses registered for GST. From understanding your lodgement frequency to navigating PAYG withholding labels, and from choosing the right lodgement method to protecting yourself from avoidable penalties - BAS lodgement is a discipline that rewards consistency, preparation, and the right support.
The creative professionals and small business owners who thrive financially aren't the ones who wing it at tax time - they're the ones who build solid compliance rhythms into their business from day one. Whether you're lodging quarterly from your Penrith studio or managing a growing team of creatives across Sydney, the fundamentals remain the same: know your deadlines, keep your records clean, and never let a nil BAS go unfiled.
For standard businesses, the GST registration threshold is $75,000 in annual turnover, and for non-profit organisations it is $150,000. Additionally, businesses providing taxi, limousine, or ride-sourcing services must register regardless of turnover, and once you reach the threshold, you have 21 days to register for GST.
You can lodge your BAS yourself using the ATO's Online Services for Business, myGov (for sole traders), or SBR-enabled accounting software such as Xero, MYOB, or QuickBooks Online. However, using a registered BAS or tax agent can offer advantages like extended lodgement deadlines and reduced errors.
Lodging your BAS late can result in a Failure to Lodge (FTL) penalty calculated per penalty unit (currently $330 per unit as of 2025–26) and a General Interest Charge (GIC) on any unpaid amounts, which is approximately 11.38% per annum, compounded daily.
Yes, if you are registered for GST, you must lodge your BAS even if you have no income or activity to report. In such cases, you can lodge a nil BAS.
The lodgement frequency typically depends on your annual GST turnover. Most businesses with a turnover under $20 million lodge quarterly, while those with a turnover of $20 million or more are required to lodge monthly. Some small businesses may elect to lodge annually if they are voluntarily registered for GST and fall under the turnover threshold.
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