FY2025-26 · lodge your return 1 July – 31 October 2026

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Tax Deductions for Flight Attendants (2025-26)

A plain-English guide to the work-related deductions flight attendants can claim on their 2025-26 Australian tax return — what qualifies, what to watch out for, what you can claim without receipts, and how much flight attendants typically claim.

Quick answer

Most flight attendants earning around $80,000 claim roughly $1,000 to $5,000 in work-related deductions, with a typical claim near $2,500. The biggest categories for flight attendants are below. There are no fixed ATO limits — you claim what you genuinely spent and can prove.

Deductions specific to flight attendants

These are the deductions most closely tied to your line of work. You still need to have paid for each yourself, used it to earn your income, and kept a record.

Uniform, protective clothing and laundry

Compulsory or occupation-specific uniforms, protective gear, and laundry.

  • Compulsory uniform items and shoes you pay for
  • Laundry of work-only clothing (ATO flat rate: $1 per work-only load, 50c for mixed loads)

Watch out: Conventional clothing; everyday grooming and haircuts

Recurrent training and equipment

Recurrent safety training and work equipment you buy.

  • Recurrent training relevant to your current role
  • Luggage and equipment used for work (work-use share)

Watch out: Claiming everyday grooming, hairdressing or cosmetics

What every employee can also claim

On top of the role-specific items above, flight attendants can claim these work-related costs that apply to almost everyone.

  • Working from homeClaim 70c for every hour you work from home — no receipts, just an hours log.
  • Car and vehicle for work88c per km for work driving (up to 5,000 km) — or a logbook for bigger claims.
  • Self-education and coursesCourses that maintain or improve the skills for your current job.
  • Union and professional feesUnion dues and professional memberships are fully deductible.
  • Tools and equipment under $300Work items costing $300 or less are claimable in full this year.
  • Tools and equipment over $300Bigger items are claimed gradually as they decline in value (depreciation).
  • Phone and internetThe work-use share of your phone and internet bills.

How much do flight attendants typically claim?

These ranges are a guide to what flight attendants on different incomes commonly claim in total work-related deductions. Use them as a sanity check, not a target.

Annual incomeLowerTypicalHigher
$0 – $60,000$600$1,600$3,500
$60,001 – $100,000$1,000$2,500$5,000
$100,001+$1,500$3,500$7,000

The typical range is an estimate based on what people in your occupation commonly claim. The ATO does not publish fixed limits — your actual entitlement depends on what you genuinely spent. Claiming more than the typical range is fine if you have the receipts; claiming less than the low range may mean you're leaving money on the table.

The three golden rules for every claim

  1. 1You paid for it yourself and weren't reimbursed.
  2. 2It's directly related to earning your income — not personal, not 'just in case'.
  3. 3You have a record — a receipt, diary, log or bank statement.

Flight Attendants tax deductions: FAQs

See what flight attendants get back

Put these deductions against your own income in EOFYmate's free estimator and watch your refund update live — no account, no card.

Official reference: the ATO's guide for flight attendants.

Deductions for other occupations

See all occupations

This page is general information only and not personal tax advice. The claim ranges are illustrative, not ATO limits. EOFYmate is not a registered tax agent. Always confirm with the ATO at ato.gov.au or a registered tax agent before lodging.