Common Deductions for Construction Workers — NSW
Tools and equipment (under $300 instant, over $300 depreciate), steel-cap boots, high-vis clothing, hard hat, safety glasses, sun protection (outdoor workers), union fees, White Card (construction induction), first aid certificate, vehicle/travel between sites
Average Claim
The typical construction worker claims around $1,800 in work-related deductions per year. If your claim is significantly above this, make sure your records are solid — the ATO data-matches your claim against others in your occupation.
Union Fees — NSW
In New South Wales, the relevant union is CFMEU NSW (~$520/yr). Union fees are fully tax deductible.
Registration
White Card (construction induction) — ~$75, deductible. Required in all states.
NSW-Specific Claims
Sydney construction is booming — many workers travel long distances between sites. Keep a logbook of site-to-site travel (not home-to-site commuting, which is not deductible). SafeWork NSW White Card required.
How to Claim
Report your deductions at Item D1–D5 in your tax return. Use myTax (free) or a tax agent. Keep receipts for 5 years. Items under $300 get an instant deduction. Items over $300 are depreciated over their effective life.
From 2026–27: The new $1,000 standard deduction means you can claim a flat $1,000 without receipts — or itemise if your actual expenses are higher. Details →
Frequently Asked Questions
What can construction workers claim on tax in NSW?
Common deductions include: Tools and equipment (under $300 instant, over $300 depreciate), steel-cap boots, high-vis clothing, hard hat, safety glasses, sun protection (outdoor . The average claim is $1,800. Union fees (CFMEU NSW (~$520/yr)) are fully deductible.
How much do construction workers usually claim?
The ATO benchmark for construction workers is around $1,800 in work-related deductions. Claims well above this attract ATO scrutiny — keep receipts.