So what is accrued director fees all about?
This is when you delay the actual payment of the directors’ fees to a following income year. There are a few advantages in doing this and some of these are:
In order to claim a deduction it must be able to demonstrate this and if the fees were actually incurred. The term ‘definitely committed’ refers to the company making a resolution on or before the 30th of June to make a payment.
Doing this is all perfectly legal and the ATO supports it with its Income Tax Ruling 2534. What was all the fuss about?
The ATO were concerned that some companies were using this as a way to keep claiming deductions despite not having any intention at all to pay the directors’ fees in its full amount. This wasn’t a new issue but the ATO likely encountered an increase in the amount of cases that were involved in this practice. This triggered the release of Taxpayer Alert TA 2011/4 which aimed to clarify their position and to serve as a warning as there will be further scrutiny. TA 2011/4 applies to arrangements with the following features:
This essentially means that the ATO is only targeting those who are claiming the deduction but have no intention of paying the directors’ fees or only expecting to make a part payment.
Also contained in TA 2011/4 is this statement:
“The ATO is not concerned with normal business practice where a company passes a resolution that creates an unconditional commitment to pay directors fees and the payment occurs within a reasonable time period which could extend outside the immediate year of income.”
The line ‘reasonable time period’ has caused some debate as there is no guidance on what the ATO considers a reasonable time period. The common interpretation is that the company has until the 30th of September of the following income year to pay the directors’ fees, i.e. if fees were accrued in June 2013, the ATO will expect it to be paid by the 30th of September 2013.
The last thing that must not be forgotten is if you accrue directors’ fees, you must have your accountant/bookkeeper make Journal Entries.
Here are the entries when you’re first entering it. | |
Directors’ fees (P&L) | DR |
Accrued salary payable (Balance Sheet) | CR |
These are the entries you make when reversing it | |
Accrued salary payable | DR |
Directors’ loan account | CR |
PAYG withholding liability | CR |