Are medical reports GST-free? Yes if covered by Medicare. Maybe if not.
Medical Reports and GST
Medical reports live in a world of their own. There is the legislation as it stands. But then the ATO introduces a specific rule just for medical reports.
All legal references in this article are to the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 – in short GST Act – unless otherwise specified.
Exemptions in Subdiv 38-B
If a medical report is provided in a hospital, aged care or disability setup, the relevant rules are s38-20 to s38-40. All these refer to other health legislation, making the whole thing very complex.
But outside of these, it all depends on whether the medical report counts as a medical service under s38-7. Under s38-7 any medical service is GST-free. Any – apart from the exceptions in s38-7 (2).
Medical Services
You find the definition of medical services in s195-1. There are two ways to qualify as a medical service. Two tests.
Test # 1 – Covered by Medicare
The easy way is to be covered by Medicare. Anything covered by Medicare qualifies as a medical service and is hence GST-free.
But if the service is not covered by Medicare, then there is another option. Less straight forward but doable nevertheless. Test # 2.
Test # 2 – Meeting Specific Conditions
This tests lists three conditions for a health service to qualify as a medical service.
1 – The service is provided by a medical or approved pathology practitioner or on their behalf. A referral is not good enough.
2 – The service is accepted in the profession as being necessary for the appropriate treatment of the recipient. Since the GST Act doesn’t define ‘appropriate treatment’, you refer to this definition in a legally binding public ruling.
10. …’appropriate treatment’ will be established where the recognised professional assesses the recipient’s state of health and determines a process to pursue, in an attempt to preserve, restore or improve the physical or psychological wellbeing of that recipient …
3 – The recipient of the supply is the one receiving treatment or otherwise you need s38-60 to save the day. If a health service would have been GST-free under Subdiv 38-B apart from the issue of supply, then s38-60 fixes this if an insurance, compulsory third party scheme or government agency is the recipient of the supply.
So these are the rules for medical services in general.
Medical Reports
The logical thing would be to now apply these rules to medical reports. But the ATO slightly changed the rules for medical reports by introducing a different rule on their website. It threw test # 2 out of the window and instead introduced test # 3.
It is easy to see why the ATO doesn’t like test # 2 for medical reports. Medical reports usually assess a patient’s health and determine a process to preserve, restore or improve the patient’s wellbeing. That is what pretty much every medical report is about. You don’t discuss the weather or rugby in a medical report. And so medical reports would find it easy to pass test # 2. Most medical reports prepared by medical practitioners would pass. And so test # 2 is out and instead test #3 applies.
GST Status of Medical Reports
So to determine the GST status of medical reports, you run test #1. And if the report fails # 1 since not covered by Medicare, you run test # 3.
# 1 Is the medical report covered by Medicare?
# 3 Or otherwise an ordinary and natural part of the performance of a GST-free medical service?
If you can say Yes to either of these, the report is GST-free.
Test # 1
Always start with this one. Is the report covered by Medicare? Medicare is your get-out-jail card. If Medicare pays for the report, it is GST-free.
There is usually a clear Yes or No answer. Medicare either pays or it doesn’t pay. So this is straight forward.
Test # 3
If Medicare doesn’t pay, you go to test # 3 – the one the ATO introduced when it threw test # 2 out of the window.
Is the report an ordinary and natural part of the performance of a GST-free medical service?
That’s it. Sounds simple. But the crux is that you now need a GST-free service connected to the report. Writing the report alone is not enough under test # 3. It was under test # 2 but that one is no more. Under test # 3 the report must be part of a GST-free medical service.
Who actually receives the report is not important though. It could be the patient or a third party who directly or indirectly receives the report.
Examples
Does this make sense so far? Have a look at the following examples to determine the GST status of a medical report.
Example # 1
A doctor orders some blood tests and upon review identifies a health issue. The doctor writes a report outlining the issue in the current test results and sends the patient with this report to a nearby hospital. If Medicare doesn’t pay for the report, it would still be GST-free under test # 3.
Example # 2
An approved pathology practitioner performs a blood test for an overseas visitor and submits a report to the referring GP. The patient pays for the blood test since not covered by Medicare and is hence the recipient of the supply. The report is GST-free under test # 3 since an ordinary and natural part of the treatment.
Example # 3
A patient receives treatment for a work injury, which worker’s comp pays for. The doctor submits a progress report to workers comp, which they requested and pay for. The report fails both tests and is hence subject to GST.
Example # 4
A doctor provides a report to a lawyer about a patient’s injuries from a car accident. The lawyer pays for the report. The report fails both tests and is hence subject to GST.
MORE
Allied Health Services and GST
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Last Updated on 17 August 2019