What can you claim on tax without receipts?

What can you claim on tax without a receipt?

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) usually requires you to keep receipts or records to prove your tax deductions. This is called substantiation. Itโ€™s their way of making sure your claims are fair, accurate, and only include what you’re truly entitled to.

Hereโ€™s the good news: there are some exceptions. Sometimes, the ATO allows you to claim deductions without receipts if you meet specific conditions. That might mean using a reasonable estimate, a diary, or a bank statement instead.

In this blog, Iโ€™ll explain what you can legally claim on your tax return without needing a physical receipt or formal documentation, while staying compliant. If youโ€™ve ever asked, โ€œCan I claim that coffee meeting or home office setup without paperwork?โ€ this oneโ€™s for you.

Can I claim tax deductions for expenses under $10 without a receipt?

Yes, the ATO allows you to claim small work-related expenses under $10 each without a receipt, as long as the total stays under $200 for the financial year. This rule is so helpful for those frustrating little costs that you probably forgot to grab a receipt or never got one for.

Think quick coffee meetings with clients, a few tolls between job sites, or some pens and notebooks you rushed to buy between customer calls. Even if those purchases are small, claiming them back adds up.

What does the ATO actually accept as proof instead of receipts?

This could be any of the following:

  • A diary entry that includes what you bought, when, how much it cost, and what it was for
  • Bank or credit card statements 
  • Invoices or apps with purchase records, even if you donโ€™t have a paper copy

What is the most you can claim on tax without a receipt?

The ATO allows you to claim up to $300 for work-related expenses without providing written evidence like receipts. But hereโ€™s the kicker: even though you donโ€™t need a receipt, you still need to prove you spent the money and that it relates to earning your income.

What can I claim on tax without receipts? (Updated for 2025)

Think of items you use every day for work, or small purchases that didnโ€™t come with a receipt (like parking meters or notepad refills).

Uniforms and protective clothing

If your job includes specific workwear (logo-branded polos, steel-capped boots, high-vis gear) or laundry costs for cleaning it at home, you can claim those. No receipts are needed if the claim is under $150.

Laundry expenses

If you wash your uniform or protective gear at home, you can use the ATOโ€™s standard rate of $1 per load if only work clothes are washed, or 50c per load with mixed clothing. No receipts are required, but you need to estimate the number of washes.

Union fees and membership dues

These are usually found on your payslip if you donโ€™t have a receipt. You can claim fees to trade unions or professional memberships tied to your work.

Stationery and low-cost tools

Did you grab a pack of pens, sticky notes or a new USB from the local shop and forget the receipt? You can still claim small stationery costs or low-value tools (under $10 each), up to a combined total of $200.

Minor travel expenses for work

Parking fees at a meter? Tolls? Short taxi or Uber rides between job sites? These kinds of incidental travel costs can be claimed up to $200 total, even if you donโ€™t have a receipt, as long as you didnโ€™t get reimbursed.

Mobile phone and internet use

You can claim a portion of your phone or internet bill based on work usage. If you donโ€™t have itemised bills, the ATO allows a โ€œreasonable basisโ€ like a 4-week estimate of typical usage.

Home office costs

If youโ€™re running your business from home or working remotely, you can use the ATOโ€™s fixed rate method (67c per hour from 1 July 2022) to claim electricity, internet, and furniture depreciation. No receipt trail needed, but you do need to track your hours.

Learn more about what you can claim from the ATO website.

How many kilometres can you claim on tax without receipts?

You can claim up to 5,000 kilometres per car, per year, using the ATOโ€™s cents per km method, no receipts or logbook required. But donโ€™t just guess the number. The ATO expects a โ€œreasonable estimate,โ€ and theyโ€™re known to question vague or round numbers. Keeping some form of record is still a smart move.

What does the ATO mean by a โ€œreasonable estimateโ€?

Think about how often you use your car for work. That might include:

  • Running errands for your business
  • Driving between job sites
  • Meeting clients (outside of your regular workplace)
  • Delivering goods or picking up supplies
  • Personal trips like commuting from home to your usual office? Those donโ€™t count. But if you drop off stock at a supplier on your way? That part can be claimable.

Even when youโ€™re using the cents per km method, the ATO wants to see how you worked out your number. Hereโ€™s how to back up your claim without needing a pile of paperwork:

  • A written log or calendar showing dates, locations and purpose of trips
  • Odometer readings from the start and end of each year (or quarter if youโ€™re tracking more often)
  • Google Maps printouts or digital trip planners to track distances
  • Diary entries from your working week that show travel frequency

You’ll need a logbook to claim actual running costs rather than using the cents per km method. That means recording every business tripโ€™s start and end time, kilometres travelled, and the reason for the journey for a continuous 12-week period.

When can’t you claim car expenses as a business deduction?

Using your car to get to and from work? Thatโ€™s not claimable.

This one surprises a lot of people. The daily drive to your usual workplace doesn’t count as business use, even if youโ€™re listening to work podcasts or taking work calls. Itโ€™s still considered a regular commute, and the ATO doesnโ€™t allow deductions. 

Stopping for supplies on the way to work? Still counts as commuting.

Going to a second job straight after the first? That leg might be deductible. But from home to your first workplace is not.

How much childcare can you claim on your taxes without receipts?

The ATO requires written evidence for any childcare-related deductions. That means no receipts, no claim. Thereโ€™s no substantiation-free threshold like there is for things like small business expenses or car travel.

As a small business owner or an accountant helping clients, you might have heard people talk about writing off childcare costs. Most childcare expenses are considered personal and canโ€™t be claimed as a tax deduction, with or without receipts.

Learn more about childcare claims here.

Donโ€™t leave legit tax deductions on the table

If youโ€™re a small business owner wondering what can I claim on tax without receipts, hereโ€™s the big takeaway: Yes, the ATO allows deductions without receipts, but there are limits, rules, and smart ways to do it right. 

If youโ€™re ready to take the guesswork out of payroll and stay on top of your tax and reporting obligations all year round, sign up to Payroller today! Weโ€™ve built it for small business owners who donโ€™t want to stress about things like STP, pay runs, and super compliance.

Claim confidently, track smarter, and keep more of what you earn, without second-guessing your deductions.

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