Good news for small businesses, the $20,000 instant asset write-off has been approved by both houses of Parliament and is just awaiting Royal Assent for FY2025-26.
If you’ve been putting off buying that new machinery, tools, or equipment, now is the time to plan. With six months until 30 June 2026, smart planning could deliver significant tax savings.
The instant asset write-off threshold has been extended for the 2025-26 financial year.
This means eligible small businesses can immediately deduct the full cost of each asset costing less than $20,000, rather than depreciating it over several years.
Who’s eligible?
Per asset, not total: You can claim multiple assets the $20,000 limit applies to each individual asset, not your total purchases.
Example: Buy a $12,000 commercial generator, $8,000 computer software, and $6,000 printer in tools = $26,000 immediate deduction in FY26.
Timing matters:
GST exclusive: If you’re registered for GST, the $20,000 threshold is the GST-exclusive price. So a $22,000 including GST item ($20,000 + $2,000 GST) still qualifies.
Yes: ✓ Machinery and equipment ✓ Office furniture and computers ✓ Tools and work equipment ✓ Commercial kitchen equipment ✓ Retail fit-out items ✓ Technology and software (including purchased software, but not subscriptions) ✓ Manufacturing equipment ✓ Trade vehicles (utes, vans)
No: ✗ capital works, including buildings and structural improvements. ✗ Assets that are leased out, or expected to be leased out, for more than 50% of the time on a depreciating asset lease. ✗ Assets used in your R&D activities. ✗ Software allocated to software development pool.
If an asset costs $20,000 or more, it goes into your small business depreciation pool and is depreciated at 15% in the first year, then 30% each year after.
❌ Buying assets you don’t need – Tax savings don’t justify wasteful spending. A $20,000 deduction saves you $5,000 in tax (at 25% company tax rate) but costs you $20,000 in cash.
❌ Ordering too late – If delivery or installation slips to July, you miss FY26 entirely.
❌ Not keeping invoices and evidence – You need proof of purchase date and when it was ready for use.
❌ Claiming assets not yet in use – Delivered but sitting in a box unopened? Not deductible until it’s installed and ready for use.
❌ Not maintaining logbooks for work vehicles – If you provide an employee (including directors) with a vehicle that they can use for private, it is strongly recommended to maintain a logbook to maximise your tax savings (see above article re: logbooks).
Questions to ask yourself:
Businesses with turnover over $10 million use the standard depreciation rules:
Even without instant write-off, planning helps you maximise depreciation claims for FY26.