Hi all
I'm not sure how interesting you will find this but for Australians it may be important information.
You can claim a tax offset of 20% (20 cents in the dollar) of your net medical expenses over $1,500. There is no upper limit on the amount you can claim. So, if surgery costs $20,000, less the $1,500 the tax offset would be 20% of $15,000, ie $3,700.
You can claim expenses relating to an illness or operation paid to legally qualified doctors, nurses or chemists and public or private hospitals. However, expenses for some cosmetic operations are excluded. You and your dependants must be Australian residents for tax purposes but you can claim medical expenses paid while travelling overseas.
Payments for the following items do not qualify for the net medical expenses tax offset:
- cosmetic operations for which a Medicare benefit is not payable, and
- dental services and treatment which is solely cosmetic.
Now all I have to do is convince Medicare that FFS is medically necessary for me to live a normal life

.
Incidentally, laser eye surgery is performed to correct a person's vision, and since it changes the function, but not the appearance of the eye,
the procedure is not considered cosmetic and the expenses are eligible for the net medical expenses tax offset.
----------------
Do any of you have any suggestions as to how I would go about convincing someone that FFS is not done for the beauty aspect but for the passability aspect?