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brown_deer(Newbie)Newbie
10 Jan 2026

Hello, I'm a PostDoctoral research fellow working full-time at a University.

I'd like to attend an academic conference overseas in Europe to present my research, and I was curious; what is eligible to be claimed and how much is a deduction?


Specifically;

  • The ATO website states I can "claim a deduction" for Registration Costs, Accomodation, Meals, 'fares to attend the venue'

Does this mean, if I pay personally, I can claim 100% of the cost of flights, ubers to-from airport, accomodation, meals and registration fees, or is claiming a deduction getting some other percentage of costs back (i.e the GST?). This would be a 100% work trip. I just want to ensure I adhere to the rules as it isn't fully clear.


Also, I'd like to attend a 5-day Space Resource Fundamentals course offered by Adelaide University - I'm a Robotics Engineer working on Space Resources. What sort of evidence would I need to provide/retain to be able to claim the course fees, flights, accomodation, ect as a training course / self-education expense?


Do I need to pay for an accountant and run the proposed expenses past them first?

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brown_deer(Newbie)Newbie
10 Jan 2026

Also, are there limits to claiming deductions?

What is stopping people from buying First-Class tickets and 5-star hotels and claiming it all back? How are these expenses managed?


KaraATO(Community Support)Community Support
12 Jan 2026

Hi @brown_deer,


Yes, there are limits to claiming deductions. The basic rule is that you can only claim the work-related portion of an expense, and it must be directly related to earning your income. The expense can't be private, domestic or capital in nature.


When it comes to travel expenses like flights and accommodation, you can only claim what you actually incurred for work purposes. If you're travelling overnight for work and choose first-class tickets or five-star hotels, you can technically claim these costs – but only if they're genuinely work-related and you weren't reimbursed. However, you need to be able to prove the expense was necessary and directly related to earning your income.


The key safeguards are:

  • you must have spent the money yourself and not been reimbursed
  • you need written evidence (receipts) if your total deductions exceed $300
  • you can only claim the work-related portion of any expense that has both work and private elements
  • if you include private travel or luxury elements beyond what's necessary for work, you can only claim the amount that would've been incurred for the work purpose alone.

For example, if you book a two-bedroom apartment to accommodate family members during a work trip, you can only claim what a single-room accommodation would've cost. We will review the claims to make sure they're reasonable and directly connected to earning income.


I'd recommend having a read through the myTax work-related travel for 2025 financial year. Even if your question is for 2025-26 financial year, it has links to other relatable pages and overall should help you work out what you can claim and records you must keep.

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Deductions for Academic Conference and Training Courses | ATO Community