Single Touch Payroll Phase 2 is coming


STP Pjhase 2

The STP program is being rolled out in stages so it’s easier to manage and this next phase is the natural expansion of the STP you’re use to with a few more changes.
Where phase One was a way of reporting employees’ tax and super to the ATO. STP Phase 2 expands the program to capture more information. This will reduce the compliance burden for employers and individuals and help the administration side of things for social support services like Centrelink. When you interact with government services, these changes will make that process easier.

Under Phase 2 you will be required to report additional information to the ATO under a few new areas.

The main ones are
• Tax file number declaration: Currently, these declarations capture details on employment type (full time, part time or casual) and different tax factors that influence PAYG withholding, like a HELP debt, as well as the TFN itself. This will all be included in your STP report via an automated six-character tax treatment code for each employee and means TFN declarations will no longer need to be sent to the ATO after collection.

• Termination reason: The reason why someone leaves a business will need to be provided in your STP report, such as if it was voluntary or a redundancy. This means no more employee separation certificates.

• Employment basis: Previously optional, it will become mandatory to report an employee’s work type. This includes full-time, part-time or casual, along with new categories like labour hire, volunteer agreement or non-employee.

• Income stream collection: Phase 2 will require employers to break down payments into more detail under a new grouping called income stream collection.

This has three main areas:
o Income types: Where before income was classified under one label, in Phase 2 each amount paid to an employee will now be assigned to an income type. These include salary and wages, closely held payees (e.g., family members), working holiday makers, and labour hire, among others.

o Country code: You will have to include a country code for employees who report to tax jurisdictions outside of Australia. This is most relevant for businesses with staff on certain visas (like working holiday) as you will need to provide their home country.

o Disaggregation of gross: Currently, STP reports include a gross (total) amount which is the sum of a number of payment types. This will now be broken into more detail to include: allowances (all must be separate); bonuses and commissions; directors’ fees; overtime; paid leave; salary sacrifice. Paid leave will also be categorised using leave type codes.

• Salary sacrifice: Since these contributions can no longer be used to reduce ordinary earnings or count towards superannuation obligations, they need to be separately reported in STP. You can no longer report the post-sacrificed amount via payroll.
• Lump sum E payments: This is used when you make lump sum payments for back pay from previous income years. Previously, it was shown on a separate line item in an employees’ payment summary. In Phase 2 it must be included in STP reports before finalising an employees’ records. This will remove the need to provide employees with Lump Sum E letters

If you have any queries regarding STP Phase 2 call me on 0400 102 358 Jaleana from Bookkeeping Fairy Perth


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