🍽️
🍴 Hospitality & Tourism

Hospitality Worker Tax Deductions
Australia 2026

Wait Staff, Baristas & Bartenders — your complete ATO-aligned 2026 guide.

Last updated: May 2026

13 Fully deductible
5 Partial
2 Not deductible

If you work as a hospitality worker in Australia, you're entitled to claim a deduction for many of the costs you incur doing your job. The ATO has specific rules about what counts and what doesn't — and getting it right can mean a meaningfully bigger refund. This guide covers every tax deduction available to Australian hospitality workers for the 2025–26 financial year, based on published ATO guidance for the Hospitality & Tourism sector. We break down what's fully deductible, what's partially deductible (and how to apportion it), and what to avoid claiming.

The 3 ATO golden rules

To claim a work-related deduction, you must meet all three:

  1. You paid for it personally and weren't reimbursed.
  2. The expense directly relates to earning your income.
  3. You have a record (usually a receipt).

💡 Tap any deduction below to expand the full ATO reasoning, claiming guidance, and records you need to keep.

Fully deductible13 items

These expenses are claimable at 100% of the cost. Keep your receipts and claim them on your return.

👕

Compulsory branded uniform

Distinctive hospitality uniforms with venue branding are deductible.

📋 Why this matters

The ATO accepts deductions for clothing that is 'occupation specific' (clearly identifies you as belonging to a particular profession), 'protective' (provides protection from work-related risks), or a 'compulsory uniform' (distinctive to your employer, registered on the ATO Register of approved uniforms, and enforced by a strict workplace policy). Conventional clothing — even if your employer requires it — is never deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full purchase cost in the year of purchase. Keep your receipt. If you bought items in multiple transactions, total them on your return under 'Work-related clothing, laundry and dry cleaning expenses' (item D3).

📁 Records to keep

Receipt showing date, vendor, item and amount. Photo of the item (showing logo/distinctive features) helps in an ATO review.

💡 Pro tipIf your total work-related clothing, laundry and dry cleaning claim is $300 or less for the year, you don't need written evidence — but the ATO can still ask you to explain how you calculated it.

👟

Non-slip closed-in shoes

Protective non-slip footwear required by venue safety policy is deductible.

📋 Why this matters

Protective footwear required for workplace safety is deductible because it has a specific protective purpose. The ATO accepts this under TR 2003/16 when the footwear is genuinely required by occupational health & safety rules (steel-cap boots, non-slip clinical shoes, anti-static safety shoes). Regular shoes worn to work — even if your employer specifies black leather — are conventional clothing and not deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full cost in the year of purchase under item D3. If they cost over $300, technically depreciate them — but in practice the ATO accepts immediate write-off because footwear has a short effective life.

📁 Records to keep

Receipt and ideally a photo showing the safety features (steel cap, slip-resistant sole, etc.).

💡 Pro tipThe ATO will sometimes challenge this — keep evidence the footwear is genuinely protective (a workplace policy email, the manufacturer's spec sheet showing safety standards like AS/NZS 2210).

🧺

Laundry of compulsory uniform

Laundry of compulsory uniforms is deductible.

📋 Why this matters

The ATO accepts deductions for clothing that is 'occupation specific' (clearly identifies you as belonging to a particular profession), 'protective' (provides protection from work-related risks), or a 'compulsory uniform' (distinctive to your employer, registered on the ATO Register of approved uniforms, and enforced by a strict workplace policy). Conventional clothing — even if your employer requires it — is never deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full purchase cost in the year of purchase. Keep your receipt. If you bought items in multiple transactions, total them on your return under 'Work-related clothing, laundry and dry cleaning expenses' (item D3).

📁 Records to keep

Receipt showing date, vendor, item and amount. Photo of the item (showing logo/distinctive features) helps in an ATO review.

💡 Pro tipIf your total work-related clothing, laundry and dry cleaning claim is $300 or less for the year, you don't need written evidence — but the ATO can still ask you to explain how you calculated it.

🪪

RSA / RSG certifications

Mandatory hospitality certifications are deductible.

📋 Why this matters

This expense is fully deductible because it directly relates to earning your income as a hospitality worker and meets the three ATO tests: (1) you paid for it personally, (2) it's directly connected to your work, (3) it's not private or domestic in nature. Mandatory hospitality certifications are deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full amount in the year of purchase under the appropriate item on your tax return (typically D5 'Other work-related expenses' for most items).

📁 Records to keep

Keep your receipt or invoice for at least 5 years from the date you lodge your return. The ATO can request substantiation at any time during that window.

💡 Pro tipIf you weren't reimbursed by your employer and the expense relates to earning your income, claim it. Better to claim small amounts than miss out — Australians collectively under-claim by hundreds of millions each year.

🪪

Food handling certificate

Food safety training required for your role is deductible.

📋 Why this matters

This expense is fully deductible because it directly relates to earning your income as a hospitality worker and meets the three ATO tests: (1) you paid for it personally, (2) it's directly connected to your work, (3) it's not private or domestic in nature. Food safety training required for your role is deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full amount in the year of purchase under the appropriate item on your tax return (typically D5 'Other work-related expenses' for most items).

📁 Records to keep

Keep your receipt or invoice for at least 5 years from the date you lodge your return. The ATO can request substantiation at any time during that window.

💡 Pro tipIf you weren't reimbursed by your employer and the expense relates to earning your income, claim it. Better to claim small amounts than miss out — Australians collectively under-claim by hundreds of millions each year.

⛑️

First aid certificate

First aid training required for your role is deductible.

📋 Why this matters

First aid certificates and safety training are deductible when (a) required by your employer or industry, OR (b) you're a designated first aid officer at work. The connection to your income-earning role is direct.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full course fee in the year you paid. Under D4 (self-education) or D5 depending on duration. Travel to the course location is also claimable.

📁 Records to keep

Course receipt and the resulting certificate showing the date.

💡 Pro tipIf your employer pays for the course, you cannot claim it. If they reimbursed you AFTER you paid, also no claim.

🎓

Skill-maintenance training (barista, mixology)

Training that maintains or improves your current hospitality skills is deductible.

📋 Why this matters

Self-education expenses are deductible when the course (a) maintains or improves the skills you currently use to earn your income, OR (b) is likely to result in increased income from your current role (Taxation Ruling TR 2024/3). It's NOT deductible when the course leads to a new career, new field, or just 'general' knowledge.

✅ How to claim

Claim under item D4 (Work-related self-education expenses). Includes course fees, textbooks, stationery, internet, depreciation on a computer used for study, and travel from work (NOT home) to the place of study.

📁 Records to keep

Course enrolment confirmation, receipts, and ideally a written statement from your employer or in your records showing how the course relates to your current role.

💡 Pro tipGovernment-subsidised courses (HECS/HELP) — the loan repayments themselves are NOT deductible. But upfront fees you paid (not loaned) are. Also, the $250 'non-deductible' threshold was abolished from 1 July 2022 — every dollar of self-education is now claimable from day one.

📄

Union fees (UWU and similar)

Hospitality union fees are deductible.

📋 Why this matters

Subscriptions and memberships to industry bodies, unions, and professional associations are deductible when they relate to your current employment under Section 8-1 of ITAA 1997. Mandatory licences and registrations required to perform your job (AHPRA, electrical licence, real estate licence, etc.) are also fully deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full annual fee in the year you paid it. Claim under item D5 (Other work-related expenses).

📁 Records to keep

Invoice or receipt from the association/regulator showing the amount and period of cover.

💡 Pro tipIf you joined mid-year, claim only the portion you paid (not the full annual fee). If your employer reimbursed you, you cannot claim — even partially.

Watch with second hand

A watch required for shift work and timing is deductible.

📋 Why this matters

This expense is fully deductible because it directly relates to earning your income as a hospitality worker and meets the three ATO tests: (1) you paid for it personally, (2) it's directly connected to your work, (3) it's not private or domestic in nature. A watch required for shift work and timing is deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full amount in the year of purchase under the appropriate item on your tax return (typically D5 'Other work-related expenses' for most items).

📁 Records to keep

Keep your receipt or invoice for at least 5 years from the date you lodge your return. The ATO can request substantiation at any time during that window.

💡 Pro tipIf you weren't reimbursed by your employer and the expense relates to earning your income, claim it. Better to claim small amounts than miss out — Australians collectively under-claim by hundreds of millions each year.

🔧

Bottle openers, wine keys and work tools

Tools required for hospitality work are deductible if self-funded.

📋 Why this matters

Tools and equipment that are necessary for performing your work are deductible. Items costing $300 or less each are immediately deductible (Division 40 of ITAA 1997). Items costing more than $300 must be depreciated over their 'effective life' as set by the ATO (Taxation Ruling TR 2024/1 publishes effective lives).

✅ How to claim

Under $300: claim the full cost in the year of purchase. Over $300: divide the cost by the effective life and claim that amount each year. Claim under D5 (Other work-related expenses) or D6 if it's a low-value depreciating asset.

📁 Records to keep

Receipts for every tool over $50 (the ATO can ask for any record). Keep a depreciation schedule for items over $300.

💡 Pro tipIf you have multiple tools over $300 each, consider the 'instant asset write-off' rules in years it applies. Also: tools you owned BEFORE starting the job can still be depreciated if you brought them into work use (claim the 'opening adjustable value' = market value at the time work-use began).

📚

Industry reference books

Hospitality reference works are deductible.

📋 Why this matters

This expense is fully deductible because it directly relates to earning your income as a hospitality worker and meets the three ATO tests: (1) you paid for it personally, (2) it's directly connected to your work, (3) it's not private or domestic in nature. Hospitality reference works are deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full amount in the year of purchase under the appropriate item on your tax return (typically D5 'Other work-related expenses' for most items).

📁 Records to keep

Keep your receipt or invoice for at least 5 years from the date you lodge your return. The ATO can request substantiation at any time during that window.

💡 Pro tipIf you weren't reimbursed by your employer and the expense relates to earning your income, claim it. Better to claim small amounts than miss out — Australians collectively under-claim by hundreds of millions each year.

✏️

Stationery and notebooks

Work-related stationery is deductible.

📋 Why this matters

This expense is fully deductible because it directly relates to earning your income as a hospitality worker and meets the three ATO tests: (1) you paid for it personally, (2) it's directly connected to your work, (3) it's not private or domestic in nature. Work-related stationery is deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full amount in the year of purchase under the appropriate item on your tax return (typically D5 'Other work-related expenses' for most items).

📁 Records to keep

Keep your receipt or invoice for at least 5 years from the date you lodge your return. The ATO can request substantiation at any time during that window.

💡 Pro tipIf you weren't reimbursed by your employer and the expense relates to earning your income, claim it. Better to claim small amounts than miss out — Australians collectively under-claim by hundreds of millions each year.

🧾

Cost of managing tax affairs

Tax agent fees paid last year are deductible on this year's return.

📋 Why this matters

Fees you pay a registered tax agent (or accountant) for preparing and lodging your tax return are deductible in the year you paid them. Set out in Section 25-5 of ITAA 1997.

✅ How to claim

Claim under item D10 (Cost of managing tax affairs). This is one of the few deductions claimed on the return for the SAME year you paid (not the year being lodged).

📁 Records to keep

Tax agent invoice and proof of payment.

💡 Pro tipThe fee you paid LAST YEAR to lodge LAST YEAR's return is claimable on THIS YEAR's return. Travel to your tax agent's office is also deductible. So is the cost of tax software (etax.com.au, TaxFox, etc.).

Partially deductible5 items

These costs are split between work and private use. You can only claim the work-use percentage — keep a 4-week diary or 12-week logbook to support the apportionment.

📱

Mobile phone (work-related use)

Work-related calls, messages and data are deductible at the work-use percentage based on a 4-week log.

📋 Why this matters

Your phone is a private asset that you sometimes use for work. The ATO requires you to identify the 'work-use percentage' based on actual usage records, and only that percentage of your bill is deductible. This is set out in TR 98/14 and PCG 2017/D7. The work-use must be 'reasonable and verifiable' — you can't just claim 50% because it feels right.

✅ How to claim

Keep a representative 4-week diary recording every work-related call, text and data session. Calculate the percentage of total usage. Apply that percentage to your annual bill. Claim under D5 (Other work-related expenses).

📁 Records to keep

Your phone bill plus a 4-week usage diary. The diary should record date, duration/data, and whether each item was work or private.

💡 Pro tipCommon mistake: claiming 100% work-use. The ATO almost never accepts this for employees because you'd need separate work and personal phones. Be realistic — 30-50% is typical for most jobs.

🌐

Home internet (work-related use)

The work-related proportion of your home internet is deductible based on usage records.

📋 Why this matters

Like your phone, your home internet is a shared private/work asset. Only the work-use percentage of the bill is deductible under TR 93/30. The ATO accepts apportionment based on time spent on work activities online, data usage logs, or other reasonable methods.

✅ How to claim

Track 4 weeks of typical internet use. Estimate the work-related percentage (work-from-home, CPD courses, work emails after hours). Apply to your annual internet bill. Claim under D5.

📁 Records to keep

Internet bill plus a usage diary or written estimation of work-related hours/data.

💡 Pro tipIf you use the ATO's 70c/hour 'fixed rate' method for working from home, you CANNOT separately claim internet — it's already included in the 70c rate. You'd need to use the 'actual cost' method to claim internet separately.

🍱

Overtime meals (eligible shifts)

Overtime meals are deductible only when an overtime meal allowance is paid under an award.

📋 Why this matters

Overtime meal expenses are deductible ONLY when (a) your employer pays you an 'overtime meal allowance' under an industrial agreement or award AND (b) the allowance is itemised separately on your payment summary AND (c) you actually spent money on food/drink during the overtime period. Set out in TR 2024/3 and the annual 'reasonable amounts' determination (TD 2025/D2 or current).

✅ How to claim

Claim under D5. The ATO publishes 'reasonable amounts' annually — if your allowance is up to the reasonable amount and you actually spent it on meals, you don't need to keep receipts.

📁 Records to keep

Payslip showing the meal allowance was paid as a separately itemised allowance. Receipts only required if claiming more than the reasonable amount.

💡 Pro tipJust buying a meal during overtime is NOT enough — your employer must have paid the allowance under an award. Without the allowance, the meal is a private expense.

🚗

Travel between venues

Travel between venues on the same workday is deductible; commute is not.

📋 Why this matters

This is a 'mixed-use' expense — partly for work, partly private. The ATO requires you to identify the work-use portion using a 'reasonable and verifiable' method (TR 93/30). Only the work portion is deductible. Travel between venues on the same workday is deductible; commute is not.

✅ How to claim

Determine the work-use percentage based on a representative period (typically a 4-week diary for ongoing costs like phone/internet, or a 12-week logbook for vehicle costs). Apply that percentage to the total cost.

📁 Records to keep

Keep both the original invoice/bill AND your diary or logbook showing how you calculated the work-use percentage. Both are required if the ATO asks.

💡 Pro tipThe ATO accepts reasonable estimates supported by your records. Don't claim 100% work use of shared assets — it's the #1 red flag in their review systems.

🏠

Home office running costs

Electricity, gas, and depreciation of office furniture used for work are deductible (70c/hr fixed rate or actual cost method).

📋 Why this matters

When you work from home, you incur additional running costs (electricity, gas, internet, phone, depreciation of office furniture and equipment). The ATO offers two methods to claim these under PCG 2023/1: the 'fixed rate' method (70c per hour worked from home, covers all running costs except depreciation of furniture/equipment) or the 'actual cost' method (calculate each cost individually, more work but often higher).

✅ How to claim

Keep a record of hours worked from home (a timesheet, calendar entries, or work-from-home log). For the fixed rate: hours × $0.70 = deduction. For actual cost: apportion each utility bill by % of home used for work + work hours.

📁 Records to keep

Hours worked from home is MANDATORY from 1 March 2023 — estimates are no longer accepted. Use a diary, app log, or work calendar.

💡 Pro tipFor most employees, the 70c/hour fixed rate is simpler and gives a similar result to actual cost. But if you have a dedicated home office and high electricity bills (FIFO workers, content creators), actual cost can be substantially more — worth the extra paperwork.

Not deductible2 items

Common audit traps. Claiming these can trigger ATO review and penalties. Knowing what NOT to claim is just as important.

👔

General clothing (non-uniform)

Conventional clothing worn to work is not deductible, even if your employer requires it.

📋 Why this matters

The ATO accepts deductions for clothing that is 'occupation specific' (clearly identifies you as belonging to a particular profession), 'protective' (provides protection from work-related risks), or a 'compulsory uniform' (distinctive to your employer, registered on the ATO Register of approved uniforms, and enforced by a strict workplace policy). Conventional clothing — even if your employer requires it — is never deductible.

✅ How to claim

Claim the full purchase cost in the year of purchase. Keep your receipt. If you bought items in multiple transactions, total them on your return under 'Work-related clothing, laundry and dry cleaning expenses' (item D3).

📁 Records to keep

Receipt showing date, vendor, item and amount. Photo of the item (showing logo/distinctive features) helps in an ATO review.

💡 Pro tipIf your total work-related clothing, laundry and dry cleaning claim is $300 or less for the year, you don't need written evidence — but the ATO can still ask you to explain how you calculated it.

🚇

Home-to-work commute

Travel from home to your regular workplace is private and not deductible under ATO rules.

📋 Why this matters

Travel from your home to your regular place of work is private travel under ITAA 1997 and the landmark case Lunney v FCT (1958). Even if you work irregular hours, carry a phone, or check emails on the train, your commute is private. The only exceptions: (a) carrying bulky tools with no secure storage at the workplace, (b) travelling between two workplaces on the same day, (c) you have no fixed workplace and travel directly to varying client sites.

✅ How to claim

DON'T claim home-to-work travel unless you genuinely meet one of the narrow exceptions above. The ATO consistently audits this and recovers the money plus penalties.

📁 Records to keep

N/A — not deductible.

💡 Pro tipThe 'bulky tools' exception is narrow. The ATO has rejected claims for laptops, document folders, and even small toolboxes. Only genuine heavy/awkward equipment that can't be carried on public transport qualifies.

Want us to lodge it for you?

ALI Tax handles returns Australia-wide. Registered tax agents, average refund $2,847. Start online in 60 seconds.

Lodge your return →

Frequently asked questions

What's the simplest way to track hospitality worker deductions during the year?

Keep a separate folder or app (like Receipt Bank or your phone's notes) and capture every work-related receipt as you spend. The 'shoebox approach' costs most hospitality workers thousands in lost refunds each year.

Can I claim something my employer reimbursed?

No. If you've been reimbursed (or it was salary-packaged), you can't claim a deduction for it as well.

Do I need receipts for everything?

You need a receipt or written record for any deduction. For laundry up to $150 and small expenses up to $300 in total, you can use the ATO simplified methods without keeping every receipt.

What's the difference between deductible and partial?

Fully deductible means you can claim 100% of the cost. Partial means it's split between work and private use — you can only claim the work-use percentage based on a diary or logbook.

How long do I need to keep my receipts?

Five years from the date you lodge your tax return. The ATO can ask for records anytime in that window.

Source: This guide is based on published ATO occupation guidance, current tax rulings, and the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997. For your specific circumstances, consult a registered tax agent. Always verify rules at ato.gov.au.