|
此文章由 cycwong21 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 cycwong21 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
Personal Opinion:
From three years ago, people are starting to receive a letter from ATO about overseas remittance. The first letter is normally a reminder, don't have to give any reply. They simply remind you that you should include these amounts in your tax return if they were assessable income.
If that was really not an assessable income, then you don't have to amend your tax return. Leave it, be quiet.
If ATO still had further queries and wanted to audit you, they would contact you again for specific transaction. Then, you would have to get your tax agent to reply on behalf of you. Don't do it by yourself in order to save a penny. Because you may get trouble if you are using wrong language.
------------
If you were really bad luck and got ATO audit, you should ask your tax agent to write a formal letter to ATO, let them know these amount of money were given by your parents to pay for instalment of the house purchased, and the rest for your living expenses because you have just completed your studies no long ago. Financially, you are not indedepent straightaway.
Also, your tax agent should mention that you have never worked in your own country, nor holding any business or property in your own country. Outlined your age when you came to Australia. It was impossible for you to earn so much money in overseas at your age and with your capacity. Money was given by parents should be tax free.
[ 本帖最后由 cycwong21 于 2012-4-19 14:15 编辑 ] |
评分
-
查看全部评分
|