Author: YEP(Devotee)Devotee 5 May 2024
@Richo71
The GST legislation makes you as the supplier responsible for paying GST to the government as soon as you make a GST taxable supply, and not from when you were actually registered for GST.
The GST registration is so you can submit activity statements and make the payment to the ATO.
As soon as you are required to be registered for GST because you hit that threshold you must pay GST to the government regardless of whether you were registered GST or whether you charged GST.
The legislation was enacted like this for very specific reasons.
The relevant legislation is as follows:
1/ A NEW TAX SYSTEM (GOODS AND SERVICES TAX) ACT 1999 - SECT 9.5
Taxable supplies You make a taxable supply if:
(a) you make the supply for consideration; and
(b) the supply is made in the course or furtherance of an enterprisethat you
* carry on; and
(c) the supply is connected with the indirect tax zone and
(d) you are registered for or required to be registered.
2/ A NEW TAX SYSTEM (GOODS AND SERVICES TAX) ACT 1999 - SECT 9.40
Liability for GST on taxable supplies
You must pay the GST payable on any taxable supply that you make.
You are not the only one that is getting this wrong and exposing yourself to paying GST when you have not charged it, because the ATO website is not clear on this issue.
The following is from the ATO website and it really needs to be clarified by the ATO.
About taxable sales
If you are registered for GST, or required to be, the goods and services you sell in Australia are taxable, unless they are GST-free or input-taxed.
- for payment of some kind
- made in the course of operating your business
- connected with Australia.
Paying GST on taxable sales
You pay GST on the taxable sales you make when you lodge your activity statement. For these taxable sales, you:
- include GST in the price
- issue a tax invoice to the buyer
- pay the GST you've collected when you lodge your activity statement.