How ATO objection support usually works
A strong ATO objection follows a clear process. Your advisor will:
1) Check the decision and deadline. Identify what decision you’re objecting to (for example, an income tax assessment, penalty or GST decision) and confirm the time limit. Many assessments have a 2‑ or 4‑year period of review; some other decisions have a 60‑day limit. If needed, request an extension of time with reasons.
2) Gather evidence. Collect documents that support each point: invoices, contracts, bank statements, payroll and super records, asset and loan documents, working papers and calculations. Request ATO file notes or a copy of reasons if helpful.
3) Draft grounds of objection. Set out the facts, the points of law or guidance relied upon, and how the evidence supports your position. Each ground should be concise and supported by clearly labelled attachments.
4) Lodge and manage communication. File via Online services for business, the tax agent portal or the approved objection form. Keep a timeline of correspondence and escalate promptly when the ATO requests more information.
5) Manage debt and interest. Lodging an objection does not automatically pause payment or interest. Request a hold on recovery, enter a payment plan and, where appropriate, seek remission of penalties or interest charges.
6) Plan next steps. If the decision is not fully in your favour, consider internal review or external review with the AAT within the stated time. Update the strategy based on the ATO’s reasons for decision.
Australian context to keep in view
- Time limits matter. Missing a deadline can limit your options. When in doubt, lodge a protective objection and continue gathering evidence.
- Payment continues unless paused. Interest may accrue while an objection is considered. Ask the ATO to pause recovery or set a payment plan to manage risk.
- Evidence decides outcomes. Clear, contemporaneous records tied to each ground significantly improve your position.
- Right adviser fit. Look for registered tax agents with dispute experience, strong drafting skills, and familiarity with your tax type (income tax, GST, PAYG, FBT, super, penalties).
Related help: ATO correspondence help, ATO audit help, ATO review help.
What to compare before you commit
Scope
Confirm your package covers advice on deadlines, drafting grounds, compiling evidence, lodgement, ATO engagement, and requests for penalty/interest remission and debt management.
Expertise
Prefer registered tax agents with proven ATO dispute work in the tax type you’re dealing with, plus experience preparing for AAT where escalation is possible.
Turnaround and communication
Agree timeframes, who leads drafting, how evidence will be organised, and how urgent ATO requests are handled.
Fees
Seek clear stages (review, drafting, lodgement, follow‑up) with fixed or capped fees where possible. Confirm what’s included if the ATO asks for more information.
Best next steps
Move quickly and keep it organised:
1) Locate the decision or assessment and note the date received. 2) List the disputed items and amounts. 3) Gather supporting documents. 4) Decide whether to request a hold on recovery or a payment plan. 5) Draft concise grounds of objection with evidence. 6) Lodge within time and track all correspondence.
If you need help triaging, we can review your position, confirm deadlines and map the fastest path to a complete objection.
Frequently asked questions
What does ATO objection support usually involve?
It includes a decision review, confirming time limits, drafting grounds of objection, compiling and indexing evidence, lodging through the correct channel, managing ATO communication, and advising on payment, interest and escalation options.
How long do I have to lodge an objection?
Time limits depend on the decision. Many assessments have a 2‑ or 4‑year period of review from when the notice of assessment is issued. Some other decisions carry a 60‑day deadline. If you’re close to a deadline, lodge promptly and request an extension of time if needed.
Do I have to pay while objecting?
Lodging an objection doesn’t automatically stop payment or interest. You can request that the ATO pause recovery, set up a payment plan, and apply for remission of penalties or interest where appropriate.
What evidence should I include?
Provide the documents that prove each point you’re making—contracts, invoices, bank statements, payroll and super records, loan and asset schedules, workpapers and calculations. Label each attachment and link it to a specific ground.
What if my objection is disallowed or only partly allowed?
You can usually seek external review with the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) within the time limit in the decision. A specialist can help refine your grounds and prepare for review.