Most ATO reviews don’t begin with fraud. They begin with a number that doesn’t match. As EOFY approaches, the Australian Taxation Office has become one of the most data-sophisticated tax authorities globally. With real-time Single Touch Payroll feeds, automated BAS cross-checks, and bank data matching, discrepancies that once went unnoticed are now flagged within weeks—sometimes days.
The businesses that come under scrutiny are rarely acting deliberately. More often, it’s rushed EOFY closing, missed reconciliations, or small classification errors that build up over time. As 30 June nears, the difference between a clean set of accounts and an ATO review often comes down to a few specific, avoidable mistakes. Below are seven of the most common—and how to fix them before EOFY closes.
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Bad debts are only deductible when they are formally written off before the end of the financial year. Identifying a debt as unrecoverable is not enough. It must be recorded in the accounts within the same financial year. If this step is missed, the deduction is deferred, and in some cases, disallowed.
Why it triggers scrutiny
The ATO examines the timing of income recognition and subsequent write-offs. If a deduction is claimed without a corresponding write-off entry dated before 30 June, it creates a mismatch.
Example
A business raises an invoice of $20,000 in December 2025 and reports it as income. By June 2026, the customer has not paid, and recovery attempts have failed. However, the business delays writing off the debt until July 2026. In this case, the bad debt deduction cannot be claimed for FY 2025–26.
What to do
GST errors are one of the most common reasons businesses come under ATO review. Incorrect coding affects Business Activity Statements and can lead to over-claimed credits or under-reported liabilities.
Why it triggers scrutiny
The ATO compares GST reported in BAS with underlying transaction data. Inconsistent patterns, especially repeated errors, raise compliance concerns.
Common issues
Example
A business claims GST credits on bank charges and interest expenses. These items do not include GST, resulting in inflated input tax credits.
What to do
Single Touch Payroll has made payroll discrepancies visible in real time. There is no longer anywhere to hide a mismatch. Since STP became mandatory, the ATO receives payroll data — wages, PAYG withholding, and superannuation — each time you process a pay run. That data is then cross-referenced against your financial statements and BAS lodgements.
Why it triggers scrutiny
Differences between STP submissions, payroll reports, and financial statements indicate reporting inaccuracies. These inconsistencies often lead to further investigation.
Common mismatches
Example
A company’s financial statements show total wages of $520,000, while STP reports only $495,000. This gap signals incomplete or incorrect reporting.
What to do
Blurring the line between personal and business expenses is a common EOFY issue, especially in closely held businesses.
Why it triggers scrutiny
The Australian Taxation Office uses data matching and behavioural analysis to flag expenses that don’t align with business activity. Repeated misclassification increases the risk of audits and penalties.
Common examples
Example
A director claims family holiday expenses as a business deduction without demonstrating a clear business purpose. These claims are typically disallowed and may attract penalties.
What to do

Inventory valuation directly impacts cost of goods sold and taxable income. Any change in valuation method must be justified and consistently applied.
Why it triggers scrutiny
Significant year-end adjustments that reduce taxable income can raise concerns, particularly if they lack supporting documentation or deviate from prior methods.
Common issues
Example
A retailer reduces inventory value by 30 percent at year-end without documenting damage, expiry, or slow-moving stock analysis. This adjustment is likely to be questioned.
What to do
Loans between a company and its directors or shareholders must be properly structured and documented in line with Division 7A rules—especially as EOFY approaches.
Why it triggers scrutiny
The Australian Taxation Office closely reviews director loan accounts. Non-compliant or undocumented loans can be treated as unfranked dividends, leading to unexpected tax liabilities.
Common issues
Example
A director withdraws funds from the company during the year without recording them as salary, dividends, or a formal loan. Without proper documentation, the ATO may treat these withdrawals as taxable income.
What to do
Adjustments relating to previous financial years must be handled carefully. Errors here can affect both current and historical reporting.
Why it triggers scrutiny
The ATO reviews amended figures and reconciles them with prior lodgements. Poorly documented adjustments create inconsistencies across reporting periods.
Common issues
Example
A business identifies an expense omission from FY 2024–25 but records it entirely in FY 2025–26 without disclosure. This distorts financial results and may require amended filings.
What to do
As EOFY approaches, many Australian businesses focus on closing their books quickly, often overlooking accuracy, reconciliation, and proper documentation before the 30 June deadline. This rushed EOFY approach can lead to inconsistencies, missed adjustments, and compliance risks that may attract ATO attention.
A structured EOFY close changes this completely. With timely reconciliations, accurate adjustments, and alignment across GST, payroll, and financial reports, your numbers are not just complete—they are reliable and audit-ready.
At Whiz Consulting, we help Australian businesses manage year-end accounting with precision and consistency; ensuring your records are clean, compliant, and fully aligned with ATO requirements, so you can close the year with confidence and step into the next with complete financial clarity.

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The ATO cross-checks data from bank feeds, payroll systems, Single Touch Payroll (STP), and BAS submissions to identify inconsistencies. Any mismatch between reported income, GST, or payroll figures can quickly trigger reviews or audits.
Regular bank reconciliation ensures your recorded transactions match actual bank activity. It helps catch missing income, duplicate entries, or misclassifications early, reducing the risk of discrepancies flagged by the ATO.
Automation tools minimise manual errors by streamlining data entry, categorisation, and reconciliations. They also create consistent audit trails, making it easier to maintain accurate records and respond to ATO queries.
Businesses should verify that all expenses are valid, properly documented, and correctly classified. This includes ensuring receipts are available, personal expenses are excluded, and GST treatment is accurate.
Use standardised accounting processes, consistent chart of accounts, and centralised reporting systems. Regular intercompany reconciliations and consolidation reviews also help maintain accuracy across entities.
Key documents include invoices, receipts, bank statements, payroll records, contracts, asset purchase details, and prior tax filings. Keeping organised, complete records ensures you can substantiate all claims if reviewed by the ATO.
Let us take care of your books and make this financial year a good one.