If you buy and sell shares, options, ETFs, CFDs or crypto, this distinction determines how your gains and losses are taxed. Getting it wrong in either direction creates risk.
The core difference
| Investor | Share Trader | |
|---|---|---|
| How gains are taxed | Capital gains (CGT) | Ordinary business income |
| Where reported | Capital gains schedule | Item 15 โ business schedule |
| 50% CGT discount | Yes โ if held 12+ months | Never available |
| Capital losses | Only offset capital gains | N/A โ revenue losses |
| Revenue losses | N/A | Can offset other income (if Div 35 met) |
| Trading expenses | Reduce cost base only | Fully deductible in year incurred |
| Division 35 | Does not apply | Applies โ gateway tests required |
How the ATO decides โ the six factors from TR 2005/15
There is no single test. The ATO (and AAT/Federal Court) assess the totality of circumstances using six factors set out in Tax Ruling TR 2005/15:
- Repetition and regularity โ Are transactions regular and repeated, or sporadic? Daily/weekly trading is a strong trader indicator.
- Profit-making purpose โ Is the dominant intention to profit from price movements (trader) or from dividends and long-term growth (investor)?
- Organised in a businesslike manner โ Do you have a trading plan, risk management rules, a trade journal, dedicated infrastructure?
- Volume and scale โ Number of transactions, total turnover, proportion of total investments being traded.
- Same kind as commercial trading businesses โ Does your activity resemble what a professional trading firm does?
- Taxpayer's own characterisation โ How you describe your own activity (not determinative, but considered).
Options and CFDs โ almost always revenue
Options (ASX listed or OTC), CFDs, warrants and similar instruments are typically treated as revenue account items regardless of whether the holder is otherwise an investor. Their short-term, speculative, leveraged nature takes them outside the typical investor framework. Even relatively infrequent options trades can be revenue account.
Cryptocurrency
Crypto is a CGT asset for investors. High-volume automated or systematic crypto trading can constitute a business. The ATO data-matches with all major Australian exchanges (Coinbase, Binance, CoinSpot, Independent Reserve). Every disposal โ including crypto-to-crypto swaps and using crypto to pay for goods โ is a CGT event (or revenue event for traders).