Get organised early to make the end of the financial year straightforward. This short guide sets out the must‑know obligations if you run a business as an individual. It covers lodging requirements, record keeping and steps that help you save time and reduce your tax bill legally.
As a sole trader you are taxed at personal rates and must lodge a return each year, even if your income sits below the tax‑free threshold. Keep clean, digital records for at least five years and separate business and personal transactions from day one.
Plan before 30 June to maximise deductions and avoid surprises. PAYG instalments may apply after your first return showing tax payable, so forecasting helps protect cash flow. Seek professional advice if you’re unsure — a quick chat with an accountant can clarify next steps.
Key Takeaways
- Begin planning before year‑end to lock in the best outcomes.
- Maintain digital records and keep business accounts separate.
- Expect to lodge annually and watch PAYG instalment triggers.
- Know what deductions you can claim and document them.
- Contact Kingsman Accountants for tailored professional advice.
Start strong: what sole traders should focus on this financial year
Begin the year with a simple financial roadmap to protect cash flow and spot deductions. Small actions now make the end financial year easier and can reduce what you pay.
Why planning early reduces stress and your tax bill
Plan income and expenses and list documents you will need for your return. Use tech to snap receipts and store clean, labelled records so reconciliations stay quick.
Bring forward genuine deductible expenses where appropriate. This gives more options than leaving decisions until the last week of the year and lowers audit risk.
“A short pre‑EOFY review often reveals missed deductions and cash‑flow fixes.”
Contact Kingsman Accountants for tailored advice before 30 June
Speak with a certified tax agent or accountant if your turnover is rising. They can check thresholds, instalment exposure and registration needs.
- Map expected income and expenses.
- Snap and store receipts weekly.
- Book a pre‑EOFY review with Kingsman Accountants.
| Action | Why it matters | When to do it |
|---|---|---|
| Record receipts digitally | Speeds lodgement and proves deductions | Weekly |
| Forecast income | Prepares you for instalments and cash flow | Quarterly |
| Pre‑EOFY review | Identifies last‑minute opportunities | Before 30 June |
Set up right: structure, registrations and tax basics for sole traders
Correct registrations and a clear structure make it easier to run your business and meet your obligations.
TFN, ABN and GST registration
Keep your individual TFN and apply for an ABN if you invoice customers or want to avoid PAYG withholding on some payments.
If your annual turnover reaches the $75,000 threshold you must register for GST. Missing that window can lead to penalties, so track turnover closely.
PAYG instalments
The ATO usually brings you into PAYG instalments after your first personal return shows tax payable above a trigger level.
Plan for instalments to smooth cash flow and avoid surprises during the year.
Sole trader vs company
A sole trader pays tax at personal marginal rates on net business income included in the personal return. A company pays corporate tax and distributes profits separately.
Keep business and personal costs separate. Only include genuine business expenses in your claim and apportion mixed-use items with records.
“Register correctly from day one and review structure as your business grows.”
- Apply for an ABN, keep your TFN private, and monitor the GST threshold.
- Record all business income and only business expenses in your return.
- Ask Kingsman Accountants whether your structure still suits growth and risk plans.
| Requirement | When it applies | Practical action |
|---|---|---|
| ABN | When invoicing or trading | Apply online and use on invoices |
| GST registration | Annual turnover ≥ $75,000 | Register promptly to avoid penalties |
| PAYG instalments | After a return shows tax payable | Forecast instalments and set aside funds |
Records that save you tax: banking, receipts and accounting software
Treat record-keeping as a regular habit to protect claims and streamline BAS and returns. Small, consistent actions make end-of-year work lighter and reduce risk when the ATO reviews your files.
Use a dedicated business bank account to separate business and personal
Open a business bank account and use it for every sale and purchase. A single bank account keeps reconciliations quick and makes it easier to prove business income and expenses.
Digital record-keeping: what to keep for five years and how to store it
Keep digital copies of receipts, invoices and contracts for at least five years. Without records you generally can’t claim an expense if asked to show evidence.
Logbooks and mixed-use items
Keep a vehicle logbook or a usage diary for phones and other mixed-use items. Record the business proportion clearly so you can justify claims.
Save time with accounting software
Adopt simple accounting software that scans receipts, auto-matches bank transactions and produces BAS and return reports. Set aside a short weekly admin slot to reconcile and label documents so you save time at lodgement.
- Reimburse any business expense paid personally from the business bank account to create an audit trail.
- Track debtors, creditors and asset purchases to support depreciation claims.
- If in doubt, contact Kingsman Accountants for a tailored checklist and storage system.
| Record | Why keep it | How long |
|---|---|---|
| Receipts & invoices | Prove expenses claimed | 5 years |
| Bank statements | Audit trail for income | 5 years |
| Logbooks | Show business use of vehicles | Continuous records as required |
2025 tax time tips for sole traders
A clear list of deductible items helps you spot genuine claims and avoid mistakes at year‑end. You can claim most costs that directly relate to earning assessable income, such as depreciation, software, travel, memberships and accountant fees.
Home-based claims and methods
Use the fixed rate of 67c per hour for electricity, internet and phone, or the actual cost method with bills, floor plans and hour logs. Be careful: claiming occupancy costs under actual expenses can affect CGT when you sell your home.
Super contributions and timing
Personal super can be deductible if you lodge a Notice of intent and get acknowledgement from your fund. Contributions must be received by 30 June in the relevant year to count.
Avoid non-deductible items
- List common business items: tools, software subscriptions, travel and interest on business loans; claim only the portion genuinely used business.
- Client entertainment is usually non‑deductible. Private use and business personal items must be apportioned and recorded.
- Keep detailed records to support deductions and protect your taxable income position.
For help deciding what you can claim tax or to avoid common errors, speak with Kingsman Accountants before you finalise your return this tax time. They can review claims and ensure compliance for a sole trader.
Cash flow, payments and lodging your tax return
A clear plan for payments, GST and instalments helps you manage cash and meet lodgement dates without panic.
Set aside amounts throughout the year
Move a set amount into a separate savings account each week or month. This builds a buffer for GST, PAYG instalments and your year‑end bill.
Pay super early so contributions clear by 30 June if you want them counted in that year. When unsure about the right amount, ask an accountant to calculate percentages based on your income and expenses.
Key lodgement windows
Note the big dates and mark them in your calendar.
- 21 July — monthly BAS due.
- 28 July — quarterly BAS and Super Guarantee Q4 due.
- 31 October — lodgement deadline if you file your own tax return.
Reconcile records monthly and keep a short cash flow forecast. Use light accounting software to automate invoices, track GST and generate reports so you can claim tax accurately.
“Regular small actions beat last‑minute scrambling at the end of the year.”
| Action | Why | When |
|---|---|---|
| Set aside funds | Protects cash and meets instalments | Weekly or monthly |
| Reconcile accounts | Keeps records tidy for lodgement | Monthly |
| Engage an agent | May extend your lodgement window | Early in the year |
If you want personalised advice, contact Kingsman Accountants to check amounts and avoid surprises when you lodge your return.
What’s new and time-sensitive in 2025
Important changes affect instant asset deductions, interest rules and which payments must clear by 30 June. Read these points and act early to protect deductions and cash flow.
$20,000 instant asset write-off: eligibility and the deadline
Claim the $20,000 instant asset write‑off if your business turnover is under $10 million. The allowance applies per asset and the item must be acquired and installed ready to use by 30 June.
Progressive rates and the tax‑free threshold
As a sole trader you pay progressive personal rates on net income. The $18,200 tax‑free threshold still applies, so timing of income and expenses can change what you keep after tax.
Heads-up: non-deductible ATO General Interest Charges
From 1 July the ATO General Interest Charge will no longer be deductible. That raises the real cost of late payments, so pay on schedule or seek alternative finance if needed.
EOFY checklist: what must clear by 30 June
- Ensure super contributions are received by the fund by 30 June to claim deductions.
- Install assets and document readiness to use before year‑end.
- Send outstanding invoices and record expenses so you capture eligible tax deductions.
“Small timing moves can change your taxable outcome — act before key dates close.”
Need help? Contact Kingsman Accountants to confirm eligibility, the per‑asset rule and the best timing for claims.
Conclusion
Finish the year with a short checklist so you keep deductions, records and cash flow in order.
Lock in urgent moves: ensure the $20,000 instant asset write-off is claimed by 30 June and that super contributions reach funds in time to be deductible.
Keep business bank account reconciliations up to date, use simple accounting software and label receipts so your personal return and business schedule are quick to assemble.
If you want certainty about what you can claim and to avoid costly mistakes, contact Kingsman Accountants for professional advice or to book a pre-EOFY review.
Act now and you’ll lodge with confidence, protect income and minimise surprises at tax time.






