Tradies Beware

Tradies Beware
On 28 November 2025, the Australian Taxation Office released Practice Compliance Guideline PCG 2025/5. It is long and complicated, but here is a summary.
This guideline sets out a tougher approach to common business structures used by tradies and contractors.
The ATO will focus on situations where –
· One person does all or most of the work
· The income is earned mainly (more than 50%) because of that person’s skill or labour
· The income is then split or re-directed to another person or entity (for example, a trust, company or family member)
· The outcome is less tax payable
The ATO refers to these as income splitting or income-diversion arrangements
The ATO focus will be on
· tradies operating through a company or trust
· Arrangements where profits are paid to a family member with little involvement
· Contactors working mainly for one client, but using a company or trust.
The ATO has flagged higher risk arrangements where –
· One person does most of the work
· That person is not paid a reasonable wage for the work
· Profits are distributed to someone else
· The business has the characteristics of a sole trader operation, but with a company or trust added
· There is no significant reason for the structure other than the tax saving
The ATO is less concerned where –
· The tradie pays employees or contractors to do a significant part of the work
· The contractor (not another entity) is paid a commercial, market-rate salary or wage
You are less likely to have an issue if –
· You operate from business premises
· You employ workers to perform part of the work
· You engage contractors to perform part of the work
· You are paid a contract rate rather than an hourly or daily rate
· You are responsible for remedying defects
· You advertise and have several customers as a result of advertising.
· You operate major equipment such as a grader.
None of this is new law. The ATO is simply forewarning that it will be taking a tough new approach to these arrangements.
Walsh Accounting can offer an opinion on whether your arrangement is high, medium or low risk.










