Misinformation is rife when it comes to (not) paying tax. People earning money from the “gig” or “sharing” economy are often particularly confused. They may earn money via platforms such as Fiverr, Uber, Lyft, Airbnb or directly from language schools or boarders. They may do , accounting, UX design, charge rideshare scooters overnight and many more paid tasks.
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Earning that money from overseas clients, on overseas platforms and paid into overseas banks doesn’t get someone off the hook if they’re domiciled in New Zealand. Nor in theory does earning cash from babysitting or dog walking, he says.
As of January 1 this year, the big overseas platforms are required to report information to our Inland Revenue Department [IRD] about income earned by New Zealand residents. That means the money people fail to declare from their gig work will show up in the IRD’s systems anyway and some tax evaders will start getting letters to get their tax affairs in order or be fined.
“IRD just finished a $2 billion transformation project,” adds Fuller. “I would say a large amount of that is to mitigate non-compliance, particularly in sectors that have been deliberately non-compliant for a period of time.”
One of the very confusing areas with declaring gig income is renting rooms out via short-term rental platforms, or to students and boarders. Each has its own set of rules. But all are taxable. So too is income from flatmates if you’re the homeowner. Income from homes let on short-term rental platforms must also be declared. In each case, taxpayers can claim costs against the income, but over and above that, they pay tax.
Fuller says that on the other hand, plenty of gig/sharing economy workers are not claiming their full costs against the income they declare to the IRD. “A lot of people aren’t that well-educated about what they might be able to claim as a business expense to offset some of that tax liability.”
For example, HNRY has clients who drive courier vehicles by day, but make extra income out of hours by rounding up, recharging and redeploying rideshare scooters. “One of the things that they don’t often do is track and claim the amount of their home electricity that they’re spending charging these scooters.”
Another tax rule that is changing this year and will affect some taxpayers is that from April 1, 2024, online overseas operators who facilitate these sharing economy services must collect GST on sales when the service is performed, provided or received in New Zealand.
This is proving to be a great source of confusion on discussion forums. It means the company, eg Uber or Airbnb, needs to collect GST on the services they sell from the customer. It doesn’t mean that individual drivers or Airbnb hosts need to be GST registered if they’re earning below $60,000 per annum. Individuals earning over $60,000 from these platforms do need to register, but need to take very good accounting advice.
GST can be a minefield. You may have to pay GST on the sale of your home.