Mathematics Standard • Year 11 • Module 3 • Lesson 7

Taxable Income and Allowable Deductions

Build fluency in sorting deductible from non-deductible expenses, calculating gross and taxable income, and reversing the formula to find the deductions total.

Build · Skill Drill

1. Quick recall

Answer each question in the space provided. 1 mark each

Q1.1 Complete the formula: Taxable income = ____________ − ____________.

Q1.2 List three examples of assessable income that go into gross income.

(i) ____________________   (ii) ____________________   (iii) ____________________

Q1.3 Tick (✓) the items below that are usually allowable deductions and cross (×) those that are not.

____ Union fees    ____ Daily train to your regular workplace    ____ Conventional business clothes    ____ Donation to a registered charity    ____ PAYG tax withheld

Stuck? Revisit lesson § Allowable Deductions — What Qualifies?

2. Worked example — taxable income with a mixed expense list

Follow each line of working. Every step has a reason on the right.

Problem. Hamish, a registered nurse, earns a salary of $74,800 and $290 in bank interest. His expenses for the year include: $420 union fees, $680 nursing textbooks and professional resources, $260 conventional business clothes, $1,140 train travel home-to-hospital, and a $180 donation to a registered DGR. Calculate his taxable income.

Step 1 — Gross income (sum all assessable income).

Gross income = $74,800 + $290 = $75,090

Reason: salary plus bank interest — both are assessable income.

Step 2 — Sort each expense (✓ or ×).

Union fees $420 ✓   Textbooks $680 ✓   DGR donation $180 ✓
Conventional clothes $260 ×   Home-to-work train $1,140 ×

Reason: ordinary commuting and conventional clothing are NOT deductible. Mark each one before adding.

Step 3 — Sum only the allowable deductions.

Total allowable = $420 + $680 + $180 = $1,280

Reason: ignore the crossed-out items completely.

Step 4 — Subtract for taxable income.

Taxable income = $75,090 − $1,280 = $73,810

Reason: apply the formula on its own line so a marker can see it.

Conclusion. Hamish's taxable income is $73,810.

3. Faded example — fill in the missing steps

Tahlia is a high-school teacher. She earned $86,200 in salary and $410 in bank interest. Her expenses were: $390 professional registration, $520 work-related textbooks, $290 conventional work clothes, $940 commuting costs to her usual school, $150 donation to a registered charity. Fill each blank. 4 marks

Step 1 — Gross income:

Gross income = $86,200 + $410 = $ ____________

Step 2 — Tick or cross each expense (write ✓ or ×):

Professional registration $390 ____   Textbooks $520 ____   Donation $150 ____
Conventional clothes $290 ____   Commuting $940 ____

Step 3 — Total allowable deductions:

Total = $ ________ + $ ________ + $ ________ = $ ____________

Step 4 — Taxable income:

Taxable income = $ ____________ − $ ____________ = $ ____________

Conclusion. Tahlia's taxable income = $ ____________

Stuck? Revisit lesson § Worked Example 4 — Mixed Deduction List.

4. Graduated practice — Taxable income calculations

Show your working in the space below each part. Keep all dollar amounts to the nearest cent.

Foundation — single-step recall and identification (4 questions)

QProblemAnswer
4.1 1Salary is $58,400 and bank interest is $360. Calculate gross income.
4.2 1Gross income is $72,500 and allowable deductions total $2,140. Calculate taxable income.
4.3 1Circle the allowable deduction: (a) gym membership, (b) gift to a friend's fundraiser, (c) union fees, (d) commute to office.
4.4 1Circle the item that is NOT an allowable deduction: (a) work boots, (b) PAYG tax withheld, (c) donation to a registered DGR, (d) safety glasses.

Standard — typical HSC difficulty (6 questions)

Show at least one line of substitution and clearly label your final answer.

4.5 A worker earns $61,300 salary and $480 in bank interest. Allowable deductions total $1,820. Calculate the taxable income.    2 marks

4.6 A teacher earns $79,400 salary. Their expenses are: $410 union fees, $620 professional development course, $290 conventional business clothes. Calculate the taxable income.    2 marks

4.7 A consultant earns $94,600 salary and $1,720 in rental income. Allowable deductions total $3,540. Calculate the taxable income.    2 marks

4.8 A worker's taxable income is $54,200. Their gross salary is $56,800 and bank interest is $290. Calculate the total allowable deductions.    2 marks

4.9 A tradesperson earns $68,400 salary and $185 in interest. Expenses are: $580 work tools, $360 protective clothing, $240 train fare home-to-yard (regular workplace), $120 donation to a registered DGR. Calculate the taxable income.    2 marks

4.10 A worker has a gross income of $82,500 and PAYG tax withheld of $16,200. Their allowable deductions total $2,300. Calculate the taxable income.    2 marks

Extension — combine multiple steps (2 questions)

4.11 A registered nurse earns $76,200 salary, $620 in bank interest, and $1,840 in rental income from a granny flat. Her expenses are: $510 union fees, $720 work-related textbooks, $940 conventional uniform laundering at home, $300 donation to a registered DGR, and $1,180 home-to-hospital train fare. Calculate her taxable income.    3 marks

4.12 A worker's taxable income is $67,890. Their salary is $69,400, they received $310 in bank interest, and $1,260 in rental income. Calculate the total allowable deductions, then state the percentage of gross income that the deductions represent (round to 1 d.p.).    3 marks

Stuck on 4.11? Sort each expense first with a tick or cross — laundering of conventional clothing and home-to-regular-workplace travel are NOT deductible.

5. Self-check the easy 3

Tick the first three once you've checked your method works.

How did this worksheet feel?

What I'll revisit before next class:

Answers — Do not peek before attempting

Q1.1 — Formula

Taxable income = Gross incomeAllowable deductions.

Q1.2 — Assessable income examples

Any three of: salary or wages; bank interest; rental income; certain government payments; investment dividends.

Q1.3 — Tick/cross

Union fees   Daily train to regular workplace ×   Conventional business clothes ×   Donation to registered charity   PAYG tax withheld × (it's a prepayment of tax, not an expense in earning income).

Q3 — Faded example (Tahlia)

Step 1: Gross = $86,200 + $410 = $86,610.
Step 2: Prof. registration , textbooks , donation , conventional clothes ×, commuting ×.
Step 3: Total allowable = $390 + $520 + $150 = $1,060.
Step 4: Taxable income = $86,610 − $1,060 = $85,550.

Q4.1 — Gross income

Gross = $58,400 + $360 = $58,760.

Q4.2 — Taxable income

Taxable income = $72,500 − $2,140 = $70,360.

Q4.3 — Allowable

(c) Union fees. Gym membership, gifts to friends' fundraisers, and ordinary commuting are not deductible.

Q4.4 — Not allowable

(b) PAYG tax withheld. It's a prepayment of tax. Work boots, DGR donations and safety glasses are deductible.

Q4.5 — Taxable income with bank interest

Gross = $61,300 + $480 = $61,780. Taxable income = $61,780 − $1,820 = $59,960.

Q4.6 — Teacher with mixed expenses

Allowable: union fees $410 + PD course $620 = $1,030. Conventional clothes $290 not allowable. Taxable income = $79,400 − $1,030 = $78,370.

Q4.7 — Consultant with rental income

Gross = $94,600 + $1,720 = $96,320. Taxable income = $96,320 − $3,540 = $92,780.

Q4.8 — Reverse the formula

Gross = $56,800 + $290 = $57,090. Deductions = $57,090 − $54,200 = $2,890.

Q4.9 — Tradesperson

Gross = $68,400 + $185 = $68,585. Allowable: tools $580 + protective clothing $360 + DGR donation $120 = $1,060. Train fare to regular workplace not allowable. Taxable income = $68,585 − $1,060 = $67,525.

Q4.10 — PAYG trap

PAYG tax withheld is NOT a deduction from income. Taxable income = $82,500 − $2,300 = $80,200. (Common error: subtracting the $16,200 PAYG as if it were a deduction.)

Q4.11 — Nurse, multi-source

Gross = $76,200 + $620 + $1,840 = $78,660.
Allowable: union fees $510 + textbooks $720 + DGR donation $300 = $1,530.
Not allowable: conventional uniform laundering $940; commuting $1,180.
Taxable income = $78,660 − $1,530 = $77,130.

Q4.12 — Reverse + percentage

Gross = $69,400 + $310 + $1,260 = $70,970. Deductions = $70,970 − $67,890 = $3,080.
Percentage = $3,080 ÷ $70,970 × 100 ≈ 4.3% of gross income.