Common Deductions for Truck Drivers — WA
Overnight travel allowance (ATO reasonable amounts), meals on the road (if travelling and no allowance), sunglasses (anti-glare for driving), log book, phone and GPS (work portion), work boots, high-vis, union fees, medical examination (commercial licence), vehicle cleaning (own truck)
Average Claim
The typical truck driver claims around $2,500 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 — WA
In Western Australia, the relevant union is TWU WA (~$520/yr). Union fees are fully tax deductible.
Registration
Heavy vehicle licence medical examination — deductible in all states
WA-Specific Claims
WA's vast distances mean higher fuel claims. Drivers on remote routes (Perth to Broome, Pilbara runs) may claim zone tax offsets. Road train drivers in the outback face extreme conditions — PPE replacement is frequent.
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 truck drivers claim on tax in WA?
Common deductions include: Overnight travel allowance (ATO reasonable amounts), meals on the road (if travelling and no allowance), sunglasses (anti-glare for driving), log book. The average claim is $2,500. Union fees (TWU WA (~$520/yr)) are fully deductible.
How much do truck drivers usually claim?
The ATO benchmark for truck drivers is around $2,500 in work-related deductions. Claims well above this attract ATO scrutiny — keep receipts.