Every asset in an SMSF must be valued at market value as at 30 June each year. Not optional. The ATO requires accurate market valuations in the fund’s financial statements and annual return. Wrong valuations distort member balances, pension calculations, contribution caps, and transfer balance cap reporting. And with Division 296 tax coming for funds above $3M, valuation accuracy will directly determine the tax bill.
What’s Included
Our valuation service covers:
- Listed securities. Automated market price sourcing from ASX closing prices at 30 June.
- Unlisted investments. Valuation methodology guidance for private company shares, unlisted trusts, and related-party investments.
- Real property. Coordination of independent valuations for residential and commercial property, including when a qualified valuer is required.
- Collectibles and personal use assets. Valuation of artwork, wine, jewellery, coins, and other collectibles held by the fund under regulation 13.18AA.
- Cryptocurrency and digital assets. Market value determination from recognised exchanges at 30 June.
- In-house asset monitoring. Tracking related-party investments against the 5% in-house asset limit.
- For funds approaching the $3M total super balance threshold, we flag where valuation accuracy becomes critical for Division 296 tax liability calculations (Division 296 readiness).
- Valuation documentation. A defensible audit trail is maintained for every asset class.
Our Process
- Asset register review. We obtain the fund’s current asset register and confirm every holding. Missing assets (common with crypto wallets or collectibles stored off-site) are identified and added.
- Classify each asset. We categorise holdings by asset class: listed securities, unlisted investments, real property, collectibles, cash, and digital assets. Each class has different valuation rules and documentation requirements.
- Source listed asset values. For ASX-listed shares, ETFs, and managed funds with published unit prices, we pull the closing price on 30 June directly from market data providers. No independent valuation is needed for these.
- Arrange independent valuations where required. For real property, we determine whether the ATO requires a qualified independent valuation. This is mandatory when the property is used to commence a pension, when there has been a significant event (renovation, rezoning, market shift), or when the last independent valuation is more than three years old. We coordinate with registered valuers and manage the engagement.
- Apply ATO-accepted methodologies for unlisted assets. For private company shares, we use net asset backing, capitalisation of earnings, or discounted cash flow methods as appropriate. For unlisted trusts, we obtain the latest audited financial statements and calculate the member’s proportionate share of net assets.
- Document everything. We prepare a valuation summary for each asset, recording the method used, the source of the valuation, the date, and the resulting market value. This documentation is retained for audit purposes.
- Reconcile to financial statements. We make sure the total market value of all assets reconciles to the fund’s balance sheet and that member account balances reflect accurate unit pricing or proportionate allocations.
Regulatory Context
The ATO’s Valuation Guidelines for Self Managed Superannuation Funds set out the rules. Section 17A(6) of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 (SISA) requires that fund assets be valued at market value for reporting purposes.
Key ATO Requirements
- All assets must be valued at market value, not cost, book value, or an estimate.
- Listed securities can be valued using the closing price on the relevant date. No independent valuation is needed.
- Real property must be independently valued by a qualified valuer at least every three years if the fund holds a pension. The ATO expects more frequent valuations where market conditions change materially.
- Collectibles and personal use assets (artwork, jewellery, wine, coins, vehicles) must be valued by a qualified independent valuer. The fund must also meet the strict storage, insurance, and arm’s-length use requirements under regulation 13.18AA of the SIS Regulations.
- Unlisted shares and units require a supportable valuation methodology. The ATO accepts net asset backing, capitalisation of future maintainable earnings, and discounted cash flow methods. Related-party transactions attract extra scrutiny.
Division 296 and Why Valuations Now Matter More
From 1 July 2025 (subject to legislation passing), members with a total super balance above $3M will face an additional 15% tax on earnings above that threshold, known as Division 296 tax. Earnings are calculated using a simple formula: closing balance minus opening balance, plus withdrawals, minus contributions.
Asset valuations directly determine the tax bill. An under-valuation at 30 June one year followed by a correction the next creates an artificial earnings spike and a larger Division 296 liability. Funds near the $3M threshold need defensible, consistent valuations every year.
Common Pitfalls
Some trustees carry property or unlisted assets at original purchase price year after year. The ATO treats this as a compliance failure. Market value must be assessed annually, even if the trustee is convinced nothing has moved. Auditors will flag it every time.
A real estate agent’s appraisal letter is not an independent valuation. The ATO expects qualified valuers (API-certified or equivalent) for real property, especially when the fund is paying a pension. An agent’s opinion might pass in limited cases, but it will not satisfy the auditor if there is a pension in place or the value is material.
Crypto must be valued at market value on 30 June using a recognised exchange. Trustees holding crypto across multiple wallets or decentralised platforms sometimes forget holdings exist. The ATO’s data-matching programs cross-reference exchange data, so gaps will be caught.
Using net asset backing one year and capitalisation of earnings the next for the same unlisted asset raises red flags, particularly if the switch produces a conveniently lower value. If there is a genuine reason to change method, document it. Otherwise, stay consistent.
Frequently Asked Questions
Every asset must be valued at market value as at 30 June each financial year. There is no exemption for any asset class. Real property held by pension-phase funds should be independently valued at least every three years.
No. Listed securities traded on a recognised exchange (such as the ASX) can be valued using the closing market price on 30 June. This is sourced directly from market data and does not require an independent valuer.
The ATO requires an independent valuation by a qualified valuer when the property supports a pension, when there has been a significant change to the property (renovation, change of use, or material market movement), or when the last independent valuation is more than three years old. For non-pension funds, a less formal approach may be acceptable, but documentation must still support the value reported.
Use the market price from a recognised cryptocurrency exchange as at 30 June. If the token is listed on multiple exchanges, use a reputable, high-volume exchange. Record the exchange name, the price, and the time of the quote. For tokens not listed on any exchange, a supportable methodology must be documented.
Division 296 taxes earnings above the $3M threshold. Because earnings are calculated from year-on-year changes in member balances, inaccurate or inconsistent valuations can inflate or deflate the tax liability. Funds with balances approaching $3M should make sure valuations are defensible and consistent to avoid unexpected tax outcomes.
In limited circumstances, the ATO may accept a trustee’s own estimate for a non-pension fund where the property value is not material. However, this carries significant audit risk. An independent valuation from a qualified valuer is always the safer approach and is required where a pension is in payment.
Related: SMSF Investment Strategy Requirements | SMSF Audit Coordination | Pension Management
Get Your Valuations Right
Call 02 8412 0086 or email [email protected]. We handle valuations across every asset class: listed, unlisted, property, crypto, collectibles.
Listed shares and cash values are updated automatically each day in line with the market.
RP Data valuations provided for audit for eligible properties.
Valuations obtained from real estate agents each year (or in line with audit requirements) where RP Data is not available.
Review of collectable items to ensure correct valuations are obtained and storage and insurance are adhered to as per SIS act requirements.