Key Takeaways
- You can claim lounge memberships if your travel is purely for work.
- Apportionment is mandatory for personal vs work travel.
- Keep records of your flight usage during the membership period.
- Both joining fees and annual fees are tax-deductible under the right conditions.
The Short Answer
Generally, yes, but it depends on your work-related travel habits. If you travel for business on a regular basis, the ATO recognizes an airport lounge membership (e.g., Qantas Club or Rex Lounge) as a legitimate business expense.
Who CAN Claim Lounge Membership?
A deduction is available to anyone who is required to travel for work and uses the lounge facilities for business-related activities (e.g., working on a laptop between flights). This includes:
- Sales professionals and business developers
- Consultants traveling to client sites
- Tradespeople traveling for mining or remote projects
- Executive managers visiting multiple office locations
Apportionment: Work vs Private Travel
The most important part of claiming a lounge membership is demonstrating the work-to-private usage ratio. For example, if you took 20 flights this year, and 15 were for work and 5 were for personal holidays, you should claim 75% of the membership cost.
Supporting Evidence
Keep your tax invoice for the membership fee. You must also be able to produce flight records or a travel diary that proves your work-related trips. The ATO will compare your flight history with your business calendar to ensure the claim is valid.
The 2026 Audit Ready Tip
Create a short spreadsheet or logbook showing the number of business flights vs personal flights each year. This makes calculating the apportionment at tax time a breeze and provides clear proof if the ATO ever asks.
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