Tax Commissioner
responds to High Court decision that the Working Holiday
Makers tax is unfair by making tax residency claims harder
Introduced in the name of fairness, the Working Holiday
Makers tax, known as the ‘backpacker tax’, has been ruled to
be unfair to working holiday makers from 8 countries: the
United Kingdom, Chile, Finland, Germany, Israel, Japan,
Norway and Turkey.
The ruling was made by the High Court of Australia in
Addy v Commissioner of Taxation [2021] HCA 34 (Keifel CJ,
Gageler, Gordon, Edelman and Gleeson JJ, jointly) (3
November 2021).
In this article we consider the tax, the ruling and the
Tax Commissioner’s response
The Working Holiday Makers
tax
The Working Holiday Makers tax was legislated by the
Commonwealth Government and applies from 1 January 2017. It
is a new tax.
It provides that “working holiday makers” pay a flat tax
rate of 15% on the first AU$37,000 of “working holiday
taxable income” – see s 3A and Sch 1 Pt III Income Tax Rates
Act 1986 (Cth).
“Working holiday makers” are defined as persons holding a
Subclass 417 (Working Holiday) visa; or a Subclass 462 (Work
and Holiday) visa under the Migration Act 1958 (Cth).
The Subclass 417 visa program is a cultural exchange
program which allows young adults (aged 18 to 30/35) from 19
eligible partner countries to work in Australia while having
an extended holiday (3 months work in agriculture /
healthcare sectors is a requirement).
When the Treasurer introduced the law, he cited fairness:
“The working holiday-maker reform package will ensure
working holiday-makers pay their fair share of tax …
working holiday-makers who were residents for tax
purposes and earning below the $18,200 tax-free
threshold were effectively having not just a working
holiday but a tax holiday as well” [the Honorable Scott
Morrison: Second Reading, Income Tax Rates Amendment
(Working Holiday Maker Reform) Bill 2016]
At the initial tax rate proposed of 32.5₵ in the dollar,
the estimated additional revenue was $540 million. At the
legislated rate of 15₵ in the dollar, the revenue would be
$249 million.
An indication of the popularity of the visa program is
found in the 2016 Census statistics: there were 129,442
Working Holiday Makers of which 78,763 said they were
residents and 50,680 visitors. No details are available of
how many claimed to be ‘tax residents’, but it would be
substantial to justify the revenue estimate.
The facts in Addy’s case
Catherine Addy is a United Kingdom national. She held a 1
year working holiday visa (Subclass 417), which was extended
for another year. Upon her arrival on 20 August 2015, she
travelled around Australia and Southeast Asia, and worked on
a horse farm for 3 months.
From July 2016 until her departure on 1 May 2017, she
lived in a share house in Sydney and worked casually as a
food and beverage waitress at two Sydney hotels.
During the 2017 income year, her taxable income was
$26,576, upon which she paid tax of $3,986 (a flat tax rate
of 15% on every dollar of income). By comparison, an
Australian national would have paid tax on that income of
$1,591 (mainly because of a tax-free threshold of $18,200).
Ms Addy claimed she was entitled to a tax refund of
$2,395, because she satisfied the 183-day test for
residency, as defined in subsection 6(1)(a)(ii) of the
Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth).
That is, she was a “resident or resident of Australia”
because she was:
(a) a person … :
- ...
- who has actually been in Australia, continuously
or intermittently, during more than one half of the
year of income, unless the Commissioner is satisfied
that the person’s usual place of abode is outside
Australia and that the person does not intend to
take up residence in Australia;”
Note: The definition operates as a ‘deeming’
provision, that is, a person is deemed a resident if
they have been in Australia for 183-days in a year. The
Commissioner bears the onus to prove that the person’s
usual abode is outside of Australia and that they do not
intend to take up residence in Australia.
The Commissioner considered Ms Addy to be a ‘temporary
resident’, that is, a resident for tax purposes because the
183-day test was satisfied. The Commissioner did not argue
the proviso to the 183-day test, even though there was a
good argument that Ms Addy’s ‘usual abode was in the UK
because ‘before her stay in Australia, she had lived in the
family home” and “She left a substantial portion of her
possessions at that family home and expected to, and did,
return there after her stay in Australia”. Perhaps it was
because there was insufficient evidence for the second limb
- that she did not intend to take up residence in Australia.
But for the “backpacker tax” law, Ms Addy would have been
taxed at the lower tax rate because she satisfied the
183-day test for tax residency.
The ruling: the UK-Australia Double-Tax Treaty prohibits tax
discrimination
The question the High Court of Australia decided was
whether the ‘backpacker tax’ law was inconsistent with the
non-discrimination clause in UK-Australia Double-Tax Treaty.
The non-discrimination clause is Article 25(1) of the
Treaty, which provides:
"Nationals of a Contracting State [the United
Kingdom] shall not be subjected in the other Contracting
State [Australia] to any taxation or any requirement
connected therewith, which is other or more burdensome
than the taxation and connected requirements to which
nationals of that other State [Australia] in the same
circumstances, in particular with respect to residence,
are or may be subjected." [emphasis added by the High
Court]
The High Court of Australia considered that if a United
Kingdom national is “doing the same work, earning the same
income, under the same ordinary taxation laws” as an
Australian national, then if they are a resident for tax
purposes, they are entitled to be taxed on income at the
same rate as Australian nationals (not at a higher rate)
because of the non-discrimination provisions in the
Australia-UK Double-Tax Treaty (United Kingdom- Australia
International Convention).
The High Court found that:
“In the present case, the application of the ordinary
taxation laws – the basis of the charge and the method of
assessment in relation to the taxable income of Australian
nationals and nationals of the United Kingdom in the same
circumstances – was the same, but the tax rate was not.”
[judgment, paragraph 34]
And:
“the more burdensome taxation imposed on those holding a
working holiday visa, which depends upon being not an
Australian national, contravenes Art 25(1)” [judgment,
paragraph 31].
The High Court of Australia concluded that the ‘backpacker
tax’ was inconsistent with the Treaty, and that the Treaty
‘prevailed over’ the ‘backpacker tax’ because the tax was
more burdensome than the taxation imposed on an Australian
national.
It was an unfair tax.
As a result, the backpacker tax did not apply to Ms Addy
and she was entitled to be taxed as Australian resident and
receive a tax refund.
The Tax Commissioner’s
response
The Commissioner has made clear in the ATO Decision
Impact Statement (17 December 2021) that it will limit
the significance and impact of decision:
“Most holders of working holiday visas will not be
residents of Australia. … But for unusual circumstances,
the taxpayer in this case would not have been a resident
of Australia.”
Note that Ms Addy’s Australian residency for tax
purposes was ‘largely not disputed’ by the Commissioner
in the proceedings and so no explanation was given for
why Ms Addy’s circumstances were unusual.
This table of Working Holiday Maker tax returns
processed, 2018–19 to 2020–21 extracted from the
Commissioner of Taxation Annual Report 2020-2021, shows that
substantial amounts of tax were withheld and assessed from
working holiday makers at the 15% flat rate:
TABLE 3.14 |
2018–19
tax returns |
2019–20
tax returns |
2020–21
tax returns |
Number of tax returns lodged by
working holiday makers |
99,895 |
81,182 |
287 |
Average taxable income |
$22,891 |
$25,095 |
$19,049 |
Average income tax withheld |
$3,975 |
$4,560 |
$3,089 |
Average income tax assessed as
payable |
$3,886 |
$4,322 |
$2,982 |
The ATO has given no estimate of how many of these
working holiday makers claimed residency for tax purposes.
In the Impact Statement, the Commissioner makes clear
that residency claims (for tax purposes) by working holiday
makers will now be harder to make:
“Regarding the 183-day test, the Commissioner
considers that for most people entering and remaining in
Australia on a working holiday visa their usual place of
abode will remain outside Australia and they will not
have an intention to take up residence in Australia. The
latter is not shown by merely holding an intention to
stay in Australia for a length of time much less by
having some intention to stay for an undetermined
period. Credible evidence will be needed to show that
the taxpayer is not a temporary visitor. The securing of
a different type of longer-term visa may be such
credible evidence.”
“Should a taxpayer wish to contend that they are a
resident … the Commissioner will expect an explanation
as to why they consider that they are a resident and may
ask for supporting evidence.”
The ATO has issued a practice note to employers: Do you
employ working holiday makers? on 21 December 2021 which
sets out its guidance:
If you employ working holiday makers, regardless of
the country they are from, you must continue to withhold
15% tax from their pay – unless you receive a pay as you
go variation notice from the ATO.
This follows the recent decision by the High Court in
the matter of Addy v Commissioner of Taxation. The
decision means an eligible working holiday maker may be
tax assessed the same as an Australian resident, if they
are both:
- an Australian resident for tax purposes, and
- from Chile, Finland, Germany (for 2018 and later
income years), Israel (for 2021 and later income
years), Japan, Norway, Turkey or United Kingdom.
If your employee is a working holiday maker from one
of the above countries and an Australian resident for
tax purposes, they can lodge a tax return at the end of
the income year to receive a tax refund (where
eligible).
Summary
Nationals from 8 tax treaty countries can take advantage
of the decision in Addy’s case if they can prove Australian
residency for tax purposes. The countries are: United
Kingdom, Chile, Finland, Germany, Israel, Japan, Norway and
Turkey. Nationals from these countries represented more than
35% of Subclass 417 visas granted in 2020-21.
To be taxed at the same rate as Australian nationals,
nationals of these 8 countries need to satisfy the
Commissioner either that their usual place of abode is not
outside Australia or that they intend to take up residence
in Australia, so as to take advantage of the lower rate of
tax available to Australian nationals. The Commissioner will
require an explanation and credible evidence.
If not, the tax treaties provide no special protection
and the tax treaty nationals will be taxed on income at the
same rate as working holiday nationals of other countries: a
flat 15₵ in the dollar.
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