Select Transfer Pricing Method
Choose the method that best matches your transaction type and available data.
Transfer Pricing in Australia
Australia's transfer pricing regime is one of the most sophisticated and actively enforced in the Asia-Pacific region. Subdivision 815 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) provides the legislative framework, implementing the arm's length principle in a manner consistent with OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines. The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) follows the OECD's interquartile range methodology (25th–75th percentile) and has issued extensive practical guidance through Taxation Rulings (TR 97/20) and Practical Compliance Guidelines (PCGs) that provide detailed application guidance.
Australia distinguishes between Significant Global Entities (SGEs) — entities that are members of groups with global income of A$1 billion or more — and other taxpayers. SGEs must prepare a Country-by-Country Report, Master File, and Local File following the OECD Chapter V three-tiered framework. Smaller taxpayers must keep records sufficient to demonstrate arm's length pricing, with PCG 2017/2 providing a simplified record-keeping approach for taxpayers with cross-border related-party dealings below A$2 million. The ATO has taken a proactive approach to TP compliance, using CbCR data analytics to identify TP risk across the multinational taxpayer population and targeting audit resources on the highest-risk arrangements.
Australia has introduced several anti-avoidance measures that intersect with transfer pricing: the Multinational Anti-Avoidance Law (MAAL) targets arrangements that avoid Australian PE obligations, the Diverted Profits Tax (DPT) at 40% targets arrangements that divert profits from Australia through non-arm's length pricing, and Part IVA (the general anti-avoidance provision) can apply to transfer pricing schemes. The ATO has specific focus areas: intercompany financing (PCG 2017/4 provides safe harbour interest rates for inbound loans), marketing hubs, procurement hubs, and IP licensing arrangements. Australia's Advance Pricing Arrangement (APA) programme is well-established and handles both unilateral and bilateral APAs.
Australia TP Quick Reference
Common TP Audit Triggers in Australia
CbCR analytics showing low Australian profitability relative to global operations
Intercompany financing outside PCG 2017/4 safe harbour parameters
Significant IP royalty payments to group entities in low-tax jurisdictions
Marketing or procurement hub arrangements through Singapore or Hong Kong
Australian entity consistently loss-making or earning below-market margins
Business restructurings reducing Australian functions and risks
Australia vs. OECD Guidelines: Key Differences
Australia follows OECD IQR (25th–75th). Key features: (1) DPT at 40% for diverted profits; (2) MAAL targeting artificial PE avoidance; (3) PCG 2017/4 safe harbour for intercompany loans; (4) SGE concept (A$1B global income threshold); (5) active APA programme; (6) Part IVA general anti-avoidance applies to TP schemes.