Annual returns for registered political parties
An annual return is a summary of money a political participant receives, spends, and owes in a financial year (1 July to 30 June inclusive).
We use annual returns to check that political parties and other entities are complying with funding and disclosure laws. This includes disclosing relevant political donations.The Part 12 of the Electoral Act 2002 (Vic) (Electoral Act) outlines annual return requirements.
The following information will help you understand your obligations. Please refer to the legislation for the full requirements or seek independent legal advice.
Annual returns for registered political parties (RPP)
Registered officers must lodge an annual return for their registered political party with us. You must do this even if you did not receive any political donations or incur any political expenditure.
Registered officers of a registered political party must also submit an annual return for the party's nominated entity, if it has one.
Due date for annual returns
Annual returns must be submitted no later than 20 October each year.
Submissions open 1 July each year.
We do not have the power or discretion to extend due dates prescribed in Part 12 of the Electoral Act. This includes when dates fall on a weekend or a public holiday.
How to submit a return
You must submit your annual return through VEC Disclosures.
Read how to submit an annual return for instructions and help.
You may complete your annual return over more than one session. You can export and print your annual return for your records.
Information you must submit
These details are required for all registered political parties for the financial year (including GST):
Audit requirements
Your party's annual return must be audited by a registered company auditor within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). It must also include a completed audit certificate.
Your auditor must use our RPP audit certificate form (PDF), which includes guidance notes. This is the only format of audit certificate we will accept.
Political donations
Donations must be up to date before you start your return
You must disclose all donations your party received that are equal to or greater than the disclosure threshold in VEC Disclosures. These include candidates' or elected members' contributions to their own election campaign.
The field 'Total disclosed political donations (inc. GST)' auto-populates with donations disclosed in VEC Disclosures. If you start your return before ensuring your donation disclosures are up to date, it may include incorrect data and you will have request to resubmit your return.
Political donations are not just money
Political donations may be money, services (including paid labour), loans, guarantees, or property (including a loan of assets). A payment made on your party's behalf by another person or organisation for a service provided to it may also constitute a gift.
When an item is donated to a registered political party (RPP) for auction at a fundraiser, 2 political donations arise:
- the initial donation of the item itself to the RPP
- the amount paid above market value by the bidder.
Each of these is subject to the applicable requirements for political donations.
Silent electors
We publish address details in your annual return as follows:
- organisation: full address details
- natural person: suburb and state
- silent elector: no address details.
We check silent elector status to ensure we do not publish suppressed addresses. You must provide full and accurate name and address details in your annual return to enable these checks.
State campaign accounts
Under section 207F(1) of the Electoral Act, you must keep a state campaign account for state elections. These accounts must be separate, with an authorised deposit-taking institution. This separation helps identify relevant transactions that must be disclosed.
Offences
It is a serious offence to breach the Electoral Act. Consequences for breaches of Part 12 may include, but are not limited to:
- fines
- prison sentences
- forfeiture of prohibited donations to the state.
A person who:
- fails to provide an annual return as required under Part 12 of the Electoral Act is guilty of an offence under section 218A(1), with a penalty of 200 penalty units
- provides an annual return that contains particulars that are, to the knowledge of the person, false or misleading in a material particular is guilty of an offence under section 218A(2), with a penalty of 300 penalty units or 2 years imprisonment or both.
See Division 4 of Part 12 for a full description of offences and related penalties.
Our role
We provide information in relation to the operation of the Electoral Act. This information does not constitute legal advice, an indication of liability, or an exemption of liability for offences under the Electoral Act. We take no responsibility for decisions made by recipients, donors, agents, or other entities with obligations under the Electoral Act. The VEC lawfully cannot and will not exempt any person from prosecution for any offence under the Electoral Act.
What happens after you submit your annual return
We will check you have supplied all the information required by the Electoral Act. We may contact you or your auditor for more information or clarification.
If you have made an error in a submitted return, please request an amendment in VEC Disclosures or by contacting us at disclosures@vec.vic.gov.au. If we grant the request, we will email you to submit an amended return.
We publish all annual returns by 31 December on our website. This information is available to the general public.
Contacting us
If you have any questions, please email us at disclosures@vec.vic.gov.au or call 131 832.