AI for Tax Returns
Answer Technical Questions
While You Prep.

Cyter Tax is the AI for Australian tax return preparation — answer technical questions in minutes with cited Australian tax law, ready for the working paper.

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Organise Your Work

One folder per client, one project per matter. Everything stays structured and easy to find.

Client X Pty Ltd

3 projects

Change of Trust Beneficiary
CGT Main Residence Exemption
Division 7A Loan
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Choose Your Sources

Search the full tax corpus or narrow to statutes, case law, or specific ATO ruling types.

Statutes
  • Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
  • Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
  • A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999
  • Taxation Administration Act 1953
  • Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986
  • Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987
  • Income Tax (Transitional Provisions) Act 1997
  • International Tax Agreements Act 1953
  • Tax Agent Services Act 2009
ATO Rulings
  • Taxation Rulings
  • Taxation Determinations
  • GST Determinations
  • GST Rulings
  • Miscellaneous Tax
  • Law Companion Rulings
  • Practical Compliance
  • Practice Statements
  • Edited Private Advice
Case Law
  • High Court
  • Federal Court
  • Supreme Court
  • Administrative Review Tribunal
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Trust CGT

Ask questions here to get answers about laws, rules and how they've been applied.

Cyter works best over multiple questions
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Unfrankable Distributions from Share Capital Account: A distribution is unfrankable if it is sourced, directly or indirectly, from a company’s share capital account. 3 This applies to distributions that constitute a reduction or return of share capital, even if labelled as a dividend. 4 The definition of a share capital account includes an account a company keeps of its share capital, or any other account where the first amount credited was share capital. 5 Therefore, any portion of a selective buyback that is a return of share capital cannot be franked.

Benchmark Franking Percentage: A corporate tax entity franks a distribution by allocating a franking credit to it. 6 The benchmark franking percentage is a key concept in determining the maximum franking without penalty. If an entity franks a frankable distribution at a percentage that exceeds its benchmark franking percentage for the franking period, it is liable to pay over-franking tax. 7 This effectively sets the benchmark franking percentage as the maximum franking allowed without incurring a penalty.

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Trust CGT

If a trustee has a power to change the beneficiaries under a trust and exercises that power, does it cause a CGT event to occur?

In Short: A trustee's valid exercise of a power to change beneficiaries under a trust generally does not cause a Capital Gains Tax (CGT) event to occur, specifically CGT events E1 or E2, unless the change terminates the existing trust and creates a new one, or causes an asset to be held under a separate charter of obligations.

Relevant Legislation: Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth), s 104-5 — provides a summary of CGT events, including E1, E2, E5, E6, E7, E8, and A1.

Relevant Case Law and Ruling: TR 2018/6 — confirms that amending a trust's vesting date through a valid exercise of power in a trust deed or court approval does not trigger CGT event E1.

CGT Events E1 and E2: A change in the terms of a trust, including the addition or exclusion of beneficiaries, pursuant to a valid exercise of a power in the trust deed, will generally not cause CGT event E1 or E2 to happen.

CGT Event E5: CGT event E5 occurs if a beneficiary becomes absolutely entitled to a CGT asset of a trust as against the trustee. For a beneficiary to be absolutely entitled, they must have a vested and indefeasible interest in the entire trust asset and the right to call for its transfer.

CGT Events E6 and E7: CGT event E6 happens if a trustee disposes of a CGT asset to a beneficiary in satisfaction of an income right, and E7 happens for a capital right.

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the client wants to remove a beneficiary from their family trust. they are allowed to do so under the trust deed. they want to know whether this would cause a CGT event to occur in respect of the assets held in the trust.
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The Augmenter — Your Tax Advice Agent

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Update this section using my Cyter Tax research on CGT events E6 and E7. Tighten the wording and add citations to the rulings.
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Deep Dive

AI Research During Return Preparation

Tax return preparation is where most technical tax questions actually surface — specific deductions, unusual income items, capital transactions, Division 7A treatment of intra-group movements. Cyter Tax is the research assistant for exactly those moments: fast, cited, and confined to Australian tax law.

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Typical return-prep questions Cyter handles

  • Is this expense deductible under section 8-1, or is it capital?
  • Does this payment trigger Division 7A, and if so, what are the consequences?
  • Is the small business CGT concession available on this sale?
  • What is the GST treatment of this specific supply?
  • Does this benefit trigger FBT or is it exempt?
  • Is this trust distribution streaming effective?
  • What is the correct withholding rate for this payment?
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How it fits into return workflows

Cyter does not replace tax return software — it does not prepare returns, and it does not integrate with Xero Tax, MYOB, HandiLedger, CCH iFirm, or other practice management suites. It sits alongside the return preparation workflow as a reference tool. When a technical question arises — a reg 103 rollover, a TFN withholding question, a trust loss utilisation issue — the preparer asks Cyter, gets a cited answer, applies it to the return, and documents the basis in the working paper file.

Because the citation format is working-paper-ready, the research trail is automatically captured. This becomes particularly valuable if the return is later reviewed by the ATO — the working paper already contains the authority the position was taken on.

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Scope and boundaries

Cyter is strictly a research tool for Australian tax law. It does not provide tax agent services, does not review or sign returns, does not maintain client ledgers, and does not replace the professional judgement of the preparer or reviewer. The scope is intentionally narrow: accelerate the technical research phase so the preparer can focus on the client-specific application.

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