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tiansen90904 发表于 2016-6-22 17:00 
You mentioned below point:
Employer is liable for the FBT payment, however, employer would seek t ...
The principle of salary sacrifice arrangements is that an employer is no better or worse off from having offered an employee a form of remuneration (such as novated lease) other than straight salary.
However as the leased car gives rise to an FBT liability, and as FBT is an employer's obligation, it is generally the case that any FBT amount arising as a result of the novated lease is charged to the employee's salary package post-tax.
The employer then remits the FBT to the Tax Office as required under the FBT rules.
Novated car lease employer outcomes:
• An employer will need to agree to the salary sacrifice arrangement that allows a staff member to obtain a vehicle through a novated lease
• The employer makes lease repayments to the finance supplier on behalf of the employee from their pre-tax salary
• Being a fringe benefit, the arrangement gives rise to an FBT liability, which the employer pays
• The amount of the FBT liability should have a nil dollar consequence for the employer where post-tax contributions are made
• Expenses incurred in arranging and maintaining the lease (not the lease repayments) are tax deductible for the employer for the period the lease is active
• The end of the employment relationship also ends the repayment commitment, as lease obligations revert to the (former) employee
• When you lease the vehicle from the finance company, you can claim a GST credit for the GST included in the lease charges. However you generally can't claim GST credits if you make input taxed supplies.
Employee outcomes:
• Salary sacrificing reduces one's taxable income, as the amount is assigned from pre-tax salary
• The vehicle is of the employee's choice, and exclusive use and ownership
• As the car is a fringe benefit, FBT must be paid. The employer is liable for this payment, which is then balanced-out within the arrangement
• FBT is based on the purchase price of the vehicle, and is calculated using one of two options, the more common one being determined by a percentage of the kilometres travelled over a year
• Making post-tax contributions to the costs of owning the vehicle can reduce the FBT liability by the same amount contributed, up to the statutory percentage of the vehicle's taxable value. This can reduce total tax paid if the employee's tax rate is less than the FBT rate.
• Usually the vehicle is obtained more cost effectively, as there is:
o No GST on purchase (claimed by employer)
o Leasing companies usually get fleet discounts
o The employer may also get a corporate discount.
You may refer to the following link from more general info:
https://www.strattonfinance.com. ... ackaging-guide.aspx
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