December 2024 Newsletter

December 2024 Newsletter

Tax & super changes

Foreign resident capital gains withholding changes on sale of property

One of the Bills pushed through Parliament at the end of 2024 changes how capital gains withholding applies to foreign residents from 1 January 2025.

Currently, residents selling taxable Australian property must provide a clearance certificate to the purchaser at or before settlement to avoid having 12.5% withheld from a property sale where the value of the property is $750,000 or more. If applicable, the withholding is then made available as a credit against any tax liability. The vendor only receives any refund due after their next income tax return is processed at tax time.

From 1 January 2025 however, the threshold will be removed and the withholding rate increased so that:

· The withholding is increased from 12.5% to 15%; and

· The withholding applies to the sale of all Australian land and buildings by foreign residents, regardless of the value of the assets.

The reforms apply to acquisitions made on or after 1 January 2025.

Superannuation rate increases to 12%

The Superannuation Guarantee (SG) rate will rise from 11.5% to 12% on 1 July 2025 – the final legislated increase.

Super on Paid Parental Leave

From 1 July 2025, superannuation will be paid on Paid Parental Leave payments. Eligible parents will receive an additional payment based on the superannuation guarantee (i.e. 12% of their PPL payments), as a contribution to their superannuation fund.

Interest rates

At the last Reserve Bank Board (RBA) meeting, RBA governor Michele Bullock recognised the easing of headline inflation from 5.4% to 2.8% over the year to September 2024 but suggested that the economy still has some way to go before inflation is sustainably within the 2% to 3% target range. The RBA appears wary of volatility and wants to see inflation sustainably trending down before making any move. Commbank is predicting a February 2025 rate cut, ANZ and Westpac May 2025, and NAB June 2025.

Cost of living pressures

The National Accounts released in early December took economists by surprise with living standards growing by a mere 0.2% in the September quarter – the expectation was much higher. Discretionary spending only increased by 0.1%.

The personal income tax cuts that came into effect from 1 July 2024 helped households, as did energy subsidies, but the impact is still working its way through the system. At the same time, mortgage costs continue to rise as past increases continue to impact.

Through the year, Australia’s economy grew 0.8%, the lowest rate since the COVID-19 affected December quarter 2020. Economic activity in the Australian economy right now is heavily dependent on Government spending.

Slow and steady is the expectation for 2025.

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