Fixed Rate vs Actual Cost: Home Office Deduction Guide

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For the 2025–26 financial year, the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) continues to offer two primary methodologies for claiming work-from-home (WFH) deductions: the Fixed Rate Method and the Actual Cost Method. Choosing between them requires a cost-benefit analysis of your household expenses versus your record-keeping capacity.


The Fixed Rate Method: 70 Cents of Streamlined Compliance

The Fixed Rate Method is a simplified accounting approach that allows taxpayers to claim a set rate for each hour worked from home. For the 2025–26 period, this rate is 70 cents per hour.

Coverage: This hourly rate is an all-in figure representing additional running costs, specifically electricity, gas, home and mobile phone usage, data/internet, and stationery or computer consumables.

Excluded Claims: Because these costs are baked into the 70-cent rate, you cannot claim them separately. However, you can still claim the decline in value (depreciation) of office furniture and technology (e.g., a MacBook) as a separate deduction.

Strict Record-Keeping: To utilize this method, you must maintain a contemporaneous record of all hours worked, such as a timesheet, logbook, or diary, for the entire year. Estimates are strictly prohibited by the ATO.

The Actual Cost Method: Granular Deduction Strategy

The Actual Cost Method allows for the deduction of specific, work-related portions of incurred expenses. This is often the preferred route for power users or those with high overhead costs that exceed the standard 70-cent threshold.

Eligibility: While a dedicated home office isn’t mandatory for the Fixed Rate Method, the Actual Cost Method generally requires a dedicated work area to accurately apportion costs like cleaning or lighting.

Calculations: You must calculate the actual cost per unit of power for appliances or the work-related percentage of phone and internet bills.

Documentation: This method carries a high administrative burden, requiring receipts for all purchases and a four-week representative diary to justify work-related usage percentages.

Comparative Analysis: Choosing Your Method

FeatureFixed Rate Method (2026)Actual Cost Method
Current Rate70 cents per hourVariable (Actual costs)
Primary RecordsLog of all actual hoursReceipts and usage diaries
InfrastructureNo dedicated office neededDedicated space recommended
Best ForLow-overhead employeesHigh utility users/Home-based businesses

Example Calculation of depreciation for a High-Value Asset

For a professional workstation costing more than $300, the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) requires you to claim the decline in value over its effective life. Unlike running expenses, depreciation is a separate claim you can make regardless of whether you use the Fixed Rate or Actual Cost method.

Key Concepts for 2025–26

Asset Threshold: Items costing $300 or less can be claimed as an immediate deduction. Items over $300 must be depreciated.

Effective Life: This is the period the ATO expects the asset to last. For a professional workstation (computer), the standard effective life is typically 4 years.

Taxable Use Percentage: You can only claim the portion of the depreciation that relates to your work. If you use your workstation 80% for work and 20% for personal gaming, you can only claim 80% of the calculated depreciation.

Taxpayers generally choose between two primary methods to calculate this decline in value:

1. Prime Cost Method (Straight Line):

The Logic: Assumes the asset’s value decreases by the same amount every year.

Formula: Cost × (Days Held / 365) × (100% / Effective Life) × Taxable Use %.

Best For: Stability and simplicity in your tax planning.

2. Diminishing Value Method:

The Logic: Front-loads the deduction, claiming more in the early years when the asset is newest.

Formula: Base Value × (Days Held / 365) × (200% / Effective Life) × Taxable Use %.

Best For: Maximising immediate tax relief, especially for fast-depreciating tech.

2026 Comparison Table: $4,000 Workstation

Assuming a $4,000 workstation, a 4-year effective life, and 100% work use for the full year.

YearPrime Cost (Fixed)Diminishing Value (Accelerated)
Year 1$1,000$2,000
Year 2$1,000$1,000 (Remaining value $2,000 × 50%)
Year 3$1,000$500 (Remaining value $1,000 × 50%)
Year 4$1,000$250 (Remaining value $500 × 50%)

Low-Value Pooling Alternative

If your asset’s value falls below $1,000 (either at purchase or after a few years of depreciation), you can choose to allocate it to a Low-Value Pool. This allows for a simplified 37.5% annual deduction (18.75% in the first year) using a diminishing value rate.

To ensure compliance with ATO Record-Keeping Standards, you must keep the original invoice and a record of how you determined your work-use percentage.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I switch methods between financial years?

Yes. You can choose the method that provides the highest deduction each year. For instance, you might use the Fixed Rate Method in a year with low utility costs and switch to the Actual Cost Method in a year where you have high energy consumption or extensive mobile phone usage.

Do I need a dedicated home office to use the Fixed Rate Method?

No. Unlike the Actual Cost Method, which generally requires a dedicated area for expenses like cleaning and lighting, the Fixed Rate Method allows you to claim deductions even if you work from a communal space like a kitchen table or lounge.

Can I claim my phone bill separately if I use the Fixed Rate Method?

No. The 70-cent hourly rate for 2025–26 already covers all home and mobile phone usage. If you want to claim the specific work-related portion of your mobile phone bill, you must use the Actual Cost Method for all your work-from-home expenses.