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Why does Australia let you deduct home phone and internet only through work-use evidence instead of the feeling that modern jobs obviously depend on connectivity?
Workers in Australia often assume that because they answer messages, join calls and use the internet constantly for work, their household phone and internet costs should be broadly deductible. Please explain why the ATO still wants work-use apportionment and records, and why bundled plans make the story less obvious rather than more obvious.
Related Questions
Why do seminars, conferences and training courses in Australia become deductible only when they serve your current job instead of your hoped-for next one?
Employees in Australia often feel that professional development should obviously be deductible because it makes them better at work. Please explain why the ATO still asks how directly the seminar or training course connects to current employment, why private components matter, and why career ambition alone does not finish the claim.
Why does Australia still treat removal and relocation costs as private even when the move was clearly for work?
People in Australia are often shocked that a move required by a transfer or a new job can still be non-deductible. Please explain why the ATO treats relocation costs as too remote from earning income, why an employer allowance does not fix that, and why this remains one of the more counter-intuitive work-expense rules.
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