Menu
Key Insights:
From 1 July 2023, SMSFs must pay general expenses on arm’s-length terms to avoid NALI.
New rules cap NALI at twice the underpaid expense instead of taxing all fund income at top rates.
Key costs like audit, actuarial and trustee fees must be managed to prevent assets being tainted.
Exposure draft legislation proposes a change to the rules where NALI income would be limited to two times any general expense that is not paid at arm's-length.
An unintended consequence of the 2018 law change was that all income of an SMSF would become NALI, and taxed at the top marginal rate, if a general expense was not paid at arm's-length. The NALI measure, announced by the Coalition government in 2022, will be amended to provide greater certainty to taxpayers.
The intention of the proposal is to include a factor-based approach for trustees to be able to adequately calculate the amount of SMSF income that is NALI income. This factor-based approach applies to a situation where general expenses of the fund are not at arm's-length amounts.
Examples of the types of general expense include:
Amending (and limiting) the non-arm’s-length income provisions which apply to expenditure incurred by superannuation funds was an important Budgetary measure.
SMSFs must transact on an arm's-length basis. The purchase and sale price of fund assets should always reflect the true market value of the asset, and the income from assets held by your fund should always reflect the true market rate of return. NALI tax rate is set at the highest marginal tax rate.
Broadly, income is NALI for a complying SMSF if it is: