Objections

If a customer disagrees with a tax assessment, reassessment or certain decisions, they can lodge a formal objection.

While most of our assessments and decisions are undisputed, a small percentage of customers object to their tax liability or whether a concession or exemption applies.

When a customer disagrees with a tax assessment or certain types of tax decisions we have made, they can lodge a formal objection to challenge its legal basis. Objections must be based on legal grounds. Claims such as the tax being too high, financial hardship or personal circumstances are not considered valid.

Objections are determined by our review officers and specialists, who are independent of the officers responsible for the original assessments and decisions.

We advise customers of the outcome of their objection in writing, and when an objection is disallowed, we provide detailed written reasons explaining why.

Table 23: Managing objections 2024–25

2024–25 CGL Duties FHOG HBR LTX PTX UCM WBT CPVSL GAIC WGT SSL Total %
Objections received* 4 455 122 17 5,055 495 2 19 0 0 18 1 6,188  
Objections processed* 4 439 135 25 4,707 442 2 0 0 1 18 1 5,774  
Allowed in full 0 76 30 3 581 32 0 0 0 0 2 0 724 12.54%
Allowed in part 0 49 4 0 611 68 0 0 0 0 1 0 733 12.69%
Disallowed in full 2 234 93 16 2,602 249 2 0 0 0 10 0 3,208 55.56%
Withdrawn by taxpayer prior to decision 0 9 2 1 65 8 0 0 0 0 2 0 87 1.51%
Closed/invalid 2 71 6 5 848 85 0 0 0 1 3 1 1,022 17.70%
Objections pending 30 June 2025 0 121 22 0 1,934 266 0 19 0 0 5 0 2,367  

* In this table, the number of objections refers to the total number of assessments objected to. Some objections, particularly for payroll tax and land tax, relate to multiple assessments.

CGL – congestion levy, FHOG – First Home Owner Grant, HBR – HomeBuilder grant, LTX – land tax, PTX – payroll tax, UCM – unclaimed money, WBT – wagering and betting tax, CPVSL – commercial passenger vehicle service levy, GAIC – growth areas infrastructure contribution, WGT – windfall gains tax, SSL – short stay levy.