Skip to content
Government Federal, Taxation

ATO shifts non-compliant small businesses to monthly GST

Australian Taxation Office 3 mins read

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) has announced that from 1 April 2025, it will be moving around 3,500 small businesses with a history of non-payment, late or non lodgment, or incorrect reporting from quarterly to monthly GST reporting to improve their compliance.

Moving to a monthly reporting and payment cycle can help small businesses to keep on top of their obligations and remain viable. Small businesses that report monthly will be better able to address their past unmet tax obligations in a structured way, rather than falling further behind.

The ATO will contact small businesses and their tax professionals when their GST reporting cycle is changed from quarterly to monthly.

The move is designed to improve compliance with GST obligations and build good business habits. Changes to reporting cycles will remain in place for a minimum of 12 months as part of the ATO’s ‘Getting it right’ campaign.

Small businesses that voluntarily moved their GST reporting and payment cycle to monthly have found it easier to manage their cash flow and meet their obligations with smaller, more manageable payments. For many, reporting and paying GST monthly aligns better with their reconciliation process, which is more efficient and saves time.

Small businesses struggling to meet their tax obligations need to not ignore the problem but act early, whether that’s seeking assistance from their registered tax professional, a business adviser or the ATO.

Quotes attributable to ATO Deputy Commissioner Will Day:

‘Running a small business is serious business – so it pays to keep on top of your tax obligations, and we know that when GST is reported monthly rather than quarterly, this reduces the risk of falling behind.’

‘We recognise most small businesses try to do the right thing. Our goal is to help small business owners get their tax and super obligations right by providing transparency on the areas we are focused on.’

‘The ATO has a responsibility to level the playing field, as small business owners rightfully expect us to ensure fair competition and compliance.’

‘We take our role seriously and are committed to supporting viable small businesses to comply with their ATO obligations, while also taking firmer action on those who are deliberately not complying to ensure they aren’t getting an unfair advantage.’

‘If you’re a small business who continues to deliberately disregard your obligations, you can expect the ATO to move you to more frequent GST reporting.’

As part of our ‘Getting it right’ campaign, this quarter the ATO is also focused on:

  • contractors in the building and construction, cleaning, courier and road freight, information technology (IT), or security, investigation or surveillance industries omitting income
  • compliance in relation to small business boost measures (the small business skills and training boost and the small business technology investment boost).

A review process is available for small businesses who don't believe they have a history of poor compliance and should be able to remain on their current GST reporting cycle.

The ATO will continue to publish new focus areas quarterly to ensure all small businesses have an equal chance at success.

ENDS

Notes to journalists


Contact details:

ATO Media Unit | 02 621 61901 | [email protected]

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Immigration
  • 11/06/2026
  • 16:42
Sustainable Population Australia

Australia needs a compassionate and practical plan for 77,700 visa overstayers

Media release: 11th June 2026 Sustainable Population Australia (SPA) is calling on the Federal Government to substantially expand and promote assisted voluntary return for people living in Australia after their visas have expired. The Department of Home Affairs estimated that 77,700 unlawful non-citizens were living in Australia as of 30 June 2025, excluding people already in held or community detention. Only 467 people departed through the government’s Return and Reintegration Assistance Program during 2024–25. SPA argues that the disparity raises serious questions about whether Australia is doing enough to help people resolve their immigration status before they become homeless, vulnerable…

  • Government Federal, Manufacturing
  • 10/06/2026
  • 11:19
Manufacturing Industry Skills Alliance

Australia knows what it wants to make. The question is who will make it.

Australia has set bold ambitions for what it makes and builds, in defence, in advanced manufacturing, and in the industries it wants to grow…

  • Contains:
  • Government Federal, Youth
  • 09/06/2026
  • 11:39
Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence Commission

New report urges action for children and young people experiencing violence – not just listening.

In December 2025, at a roundtable convened by the DFSV Commission and Australia’s National Research Organisation for Women’s Safety (ANROWS), a group of children and young people with lived and living experience of DFSV spoke directly to the Minister for Social Services, Tanya Plibersek, and the Assistant Minister for Social Services and Prevention of Family Violence, Ged Kearney, about their experiences and ideas for the future. The clear message of the report is that it is time to move beyondlistening, andstarttaking actionbased onwhat children and young people are saying needs to change. The young advocatesidentifiedsix priorities for government action in…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.