Insights · Small Business

BAS Basics: What Every Small Business Owner Should Know

Osem Tax · Tax & Advisory Specialists, Sydney

If your business is registered for GST, the Business Activity Statement is the form that keeps coming back — usually every quarter. Most of the stress around BAS comes from two things: not knowing what it covers, and leaving the bookkeeping until the week it is due. Both are fixable.

What a BAS actually reports

When is it due?

Most small businesses lodge quarterly. The standard due date is about four weeks after each quarter ends — but lodging through a registered tax or BAS agent generally gives you extra weeks on most quarters. Monthly lodgers (larger businesses) have tighter deadlines.

Worth knowing: even in a quarter with no activity, a registered business must still lodge — a "nil BAS" takes two minutes, but ignoring it triggers ATO follow-up and possible failure-to-lodge penalties.

The GST mistakes we fix most often

  1. Claiming GST on things that don't have it — bank fees, residential rent, many insurances (the stamp duty portion), overseas software subscriptions without Australian GST.
  2. Claiming the full GST on mixed-use purchases — a vehicle or phone used partly for private purposes needs apportioning.
  3. Cash vs accrual confusion — reporting on a different basis than your registration says.
  4. Missing GST on unusual income — selling business equipment or a vehicle is still a taxable sale.
  5. No tax invoice — for purchases over $82.50 you need a valid tax invoice to claim the credit.

How to make BAS painless

This article is general information only and does not take your personal circumstances into account. It is not tax, legal or financial advice. Speak to a registered tax agent about your own situation before acting.

Tired of BAS season?

We prepare and lodge quarterly BAS and IAS for small businesses across Sydney — accurately, on time, with extended agent deadlines.

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