As a small business owner, keeping your commercial vehicle or personal car safely on the road is just part of doing business. But when your vehicle starts making that dreaded squealing noise, or the gears begin to slip, you aren’t just thinking about safety—you’re thinking about the hit to your cash flow.
When you roll out of the mechanic’s shop with a fresh set of brakes and a brand-new clutch, a natural question follows: Can I write this entire bill off on my next tax return?
The short answer is yes, but it depends entirely on how you claim your vehicle.
Let’s break down exactly how the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) treats heavy maintenance like brake and clutch repairs, and how to maximize your deduction without raising any red flags.
The Two Paths: How Are Repairs Treated?
To know if you can deduct that mechanic bill, you first need to look at which vehicle tracking method your small business uses.
1. The Logbook Method (Actual Expenses)
If you track your vehicle using the Logbook Method, you claim a percentage of the actual running costs of the vehicle based on your business-use percentage.
- How repairs fit in: Under this method, things like new brakes, clutches, tyres, and routine servicing are fully claimable operating expenses (apportioned to your business use).
- The Math: If your 12-week logbook proves you use your car 75% for business, and your major clutch replacement costs $2,000, you can claim $1,500 as a direct tax deduction.
⚠️ Crucial Rule: You must keep the actual tax invoice from the mechanic to claim this. No receipt, no deduction.
2. The Cents-per-Kilometre Method
If you use the simplified Cents-per-Kilometre Method, you claim a flat rate for every business kilometre driven (capped at 5,000 km per year). For the 2025–26 tax year, this rate sits at 88 cents per km.
- How repairs fit in: The ATO’s flat rate already incorporates the cost of fuel, insurance, depreciation, and all maintenance and repairs.
- The Catch: You cannot double-dip. If you use this method, you cannot claim your brake or clutch bill as a separate expense, even if it was incredibly expensive. The 88c rate is designed to visually “absorb” those costs over time.
Quick Comparison Table
| Feature | Cents-per-Kilometre Method | Logbook Method |
| Brake & Clutch Repairs | Included in the flat rate (Cannot claim separately) | Deductible based on business-use % |
| Max Distance | 5,000 business km per vehicle | Unlimited business kilometres |
| Receipts Required | No mechanic receipts needed | Yes, all invoices must be saved |
| Best For… | Casual business travel | High business use or high repair costs |
“Repair” vs. “Improvement”: Don’t Get Tripped Up
The ATO draws a very strict line between a repair (fixing wear and tear) and an improvement (upgrading the asset).
- Brakes and Clutches are Repairs: Replacing worn brake pads or a burnt-out clutch with standard parts restores the car to its original working condition. This is an immediate operating deduction (under the Logbook Method).
- Upgrades are Capital Expenses: If you decide to install a heavy-duty, high-performance racing clutch or a custom oversized brake kit to heavily modify the vehicle, the ATO may view this as an improvement. You would have to add that cost to the vehicle’s value and depreciate it over time rather than claiming it all at once.
The Three Golden Rules for Vehicle Claims
To ensure your vehicle deductions clear an audit smoothly, always abide by these three core rules:
- You must have spent the money yourself (and not been reimbursed by an insurance claim or an employer).
- It must directly relate to earning your business income (commuting from home to your regular warehouse or office generally does not count as business use).
- You must have the records to prove it (logbooks, diary entries, and clear, itemised tax invoices).
If your small business vehicle requires significant work this year, tracking your actual expenses with a valid logbook could save you thousands at tax time.