All you need to know about single touch payroll
Single touch payroll (STP) is a new regulation that changes when and how small businesses report payroll activity to the Australian Tax Office (ATO). Businesses used to report this information to the ATO once a year. Now, they need to send a report after each payday. And those reports must be submitted digitally, using a very specific format.
Changes to when you report payroll
Small businesses used to finalise their payroll records at the end of the financial year and produce:
a payment summary annual report for the ATO, stating how much the business had paid in salary or wages, the PAYG withheld, and some superannuation contributions theyβd made
a payment summary for each employee, stating what each employee received in wages or salary, the payroll taxes collected from their pay, and some superannuation contributions made on their behalf.
No more payment summary annual reports
Because youβll be updating the ATO on a pay-by-pay basis, you wonβt need to prepare a payment summary annual report anymore. Youβll just let the ATO know when youβve made your last pay run of the financial year for your employees.
Payment summaries wonβt need to be sent to employees anymore, so employers wonβt be required to produce them. The ATO will use single touch payroll reports as the sole record of salary/wages paid, taxes collected, and superannuation contributed.
Your employees will be able to see the information that would normally be on their payment summary by logging on to myGov.
Youβll need to report payroll online
Thereβll be no more paper forms for reporting your payroll activity to the ATO. Youβll need to submit the information online, using a specific format known as SBR (Standard Business Reporting). Depending on how you do payroll now, you may need to change software or find a service provider who can produce compliant reports for you.
When is the single touch payroll deadline?
Small businesses with fewer than 20 employees donβt have a confirmed deadline for switching to single touch payroll. However, small business advisors expect it to be compulsory from 1 July 2019. Businesses with more than 20 employees switched to single touch payroll on 1 July 2018.
Your options for switching to single touch payroll
To be ready for the switch, youβll need to make sure you can submit compliant reports every payday.
Hereβs what it means:
If you use online payroll software, it should be able to handle the job. Just make sure it produces ATO-compliant reports.
If you use desktop payroll software, youβll need to find a service that can upload your payroll reports, convert them into the ATOβs required format and submit them on your behalf.
If you use spreadsheets or pen and paper, youβll need to find a service to convert the data into a compliant digital report format and submit it on your behalf.
We can answer your questions about single touch payroll. Book an appointment now by phoning our office on (03) 5445 4777.
Publisher: XERO