Before 30 June 2026, Melbourne SMEs should verify backups, reconcile the IT asset register with finance, audit software licences, decide on any pre-EOFY hardware purchases with your accountant, and decommission anything you’re paying for but not using. The rest is detail.
EOFY isn’t just a tax event. For most Melbourne businesses we look after, it’s the one time of year where finance and IT actually sit down together and tally up what’s been bought, what’s been retired, what’s still being paid for, and what needs replacing. If you skip that conversation, you end up paying for ghost subscriptions in July, missing depreciation entries in August, and scrambling to buy laptops in September when supply tightens.
This EOFY IT checklist is the same one our engineers run with clients across Hawthorn, Box Hill, Dandenong and the CBD every June. It mixes operational housekeeping with the finance-side items your bookkeeper or CFO will thank you for. Nothing fancy. Just the stuff that actually moves the needle before the books close.
Why EOFY matters for IT, not just finance
Two reasons. First, your tech estate drifts over a year. People leave, projects start and stall, trials become forgotten subscriptions, and hardware quietly ages past its useful life. EOFY is a natural forcing function to clean that up. Second, if you’re planning capital spend on technology, the timing of the purchase, the install, and the in-service date can matter for how your accountant treats it. We don’t give tax advice, but we do give you a clean asset list and accurate purchase dates so your accountant can do their job properly.
A Hawthorn accounting firm we work with had 47 active Microsoft 365 licences on the books in May last year. After we ran their EOFY audit, the real headcount needing licences was 38. Nine licences at $30+/month each had been quietly billing since two staff turnovers and a contractor project that wrapped in October. That’s around $3,200 a year in pure waste, caught in a 90-minute review.
The EOFY IT checklist: 10 items to work through before 30 June 2026
Work through these in order. Most can be done in a single afternoon with your IT provider; a few need finance involvement. If you’re a TechAssist managed client, your account engineer will already have most of this scheduled into your June service calendar.
1. Verify your backups actually restore
Having backups isn’t the same as having recoverable data. Before 30 June, pick at least one critical system (your file server, your accounting database, your shared mailbox) and do a test restore to an isolated location. Time how long it takes. Compare that to your recovery time objective. If you don’t have an RTO documented, this is the moment to write one down.
We see at least two or three clients a year discover their “working” backups had been silently failing for weeks because nobody read the alert emails. A test restore is the only proof that matters. More on our approach at data backup and recovery.
2. Reconcile the IT asset register with finance
Your finance team has a fixed asset register. Your IT provider has an inventory list. These almost never match. EOFY is when you sit them next to each other and resolve every discrepancy: laptop serial numbers, monitor counts, server hardware, network gear, even the licences attached to specific people.
The output is a single reconciled asset list with purchase dates, supplier invoices, current location, and assigned user. Your accountant uses this for depreciation. Your IT provider uses it for warranty and refresh planning. Both of you stop chasing ghosts.
3. Audit every software subscription and licence
Pull a report of every SaaS subscription you pay for. Microsoft 365, Adobe, Xero, Dropbox, ChatGPT Team, Canva, Zoom, the random Trello upgrade somebody bought in 2023. For each one, answer three questions: who uses it, do they still need it, and is the licence tier right?
Common findings: Microsoft 365 E3 seats assigned to people who only need Business Premium; per-user tools paid for ex-staff; duplicate tools (two project management apps, two e-signature platforms). Cancelling or right-sizing before 30 June means the saving starts in FY27 rather than mid-year.
4. Decommission unused services and shadow IT
This is the cousin of item 3. Subscription audits catch the things on your credit card. Decommissioning catches the things that aren’t, like that VPS somebody spun up four years ago, the test SharePoint site nobody touches, the legacy line-of-business app running on a Windows Server 2012 box in the corner. Each one is an attack surface, a compliance headache, and in some cases a recurring cost.
Make a list. Tag each item: keep, migrate, decommission. Set a date for each decommission. Get sign-off from a business owner so nothing critical disappears by surprise.
5. Plan your hardware refresh cycle
Walk your asset list and identify everything that’s three or more years old. Laptops on their fourth Windows feature update, servers past warranty, switches that haven’t had a firmware update since the Coalition was in power. These don’t all need replacing in June, but you need a plan with dates and budgets.
If you do intend to purchase hardware before 30 June 2026 for tax-timing reasons, talk to your accountant about the current instant asset write-off threshold and whether the asset must be installed and ready for use by 30 June to qualify. The rules change year to year and we won’t pretend to know yours. See the ATO website for current figures.
6. Review your IT spend: capex vs opex
Sit with finance and categorise your IT spend from the past 12 months. How much was capital (hardware purchases, major project work, software licences treated as assets)? How much was operating expense (managed services, subscriptions, cloud)? Most Melbourne SMEs we work with are gradually shifting from capex-heavy to opex-heavy as cloud and managed services replace owned infrastructure.
Whether that shift is right for your business is a tax and cashflow conversation with your accountant. Our job is to give them clean numbers. A per-user fixed monthly model like ours makes the opex side predictable, which is what finance teams want when they’re forecasting FY27.
7. Confirm depreciation schedule with your accountant
Your IT assets depreciate. Laptops, servers, network equipment, sometimes software. The schedule depends on the asset class, the effective life the ATO publishes, and any small business concessions your accountant elects to use. You don’t need to understand the maths. You do need to give your accountant the reconciled asset list from item 2 with accurate purchase dates and disposal dates.
If you disposed of equipment during the year (e-waste, sold a server, scrapped old phones), document it. Disposals affect the depreciation schedule and the asset register both. Photos of the e-waste pickup or the disposal certificate are good evidence to keep.
8. Check renewal dates for the next 12 months
Pull every renewal date that hits between July 2026 and June 2027. Microsoft 365 anniversaries, antivirus, firewall licences, domain renewals, SSL certificates, broadband contracts, your MSP agreement. Put them in a single spreadsheet sorted by month.
This gives finance a cashflow forecast and gives IT a heads-up for negotiation windows. Multi-year deals often have better pricing if you can commit, but only commit on tools you’ve confirmed you still need (item 3).
9. Review cyber security posture and insurance
Cyber insurance renewals usually ask the same questions: MFA on everything, EDR on every endpoint, backup tested in the last 90 days, patching cadence, admin account separation. If you haven’t been measuring yourself against a framework, EOFY is a sensible time to start. The Essential Eight from the ACSC is the practical baseline for Australian SMEs.
Even if you’re not pursuing formal compliance, the Essential Eight maturity levels give you and your insurer a common language. Most cyber policies now ask explicitly about MFA coverage and backup testing. Having documented answers makes renewal cheaper and faster.
10. Set the FY27 IT budget and roadmap
You can’t do this properly without items 1-9. Once you have the asset list, the subscription audit, the renewal calendar, and the refresh plan, the budget almost writes itself. Three buckets: recurring (subscriptions, managed services), planned capex (hardware refreshes, projects), and contingency (10-15 percent for the things you can’t predict).
For most SMEs we work with, IT spend lands between 3 and 6 percent of revenue depending on industry. Professional services and finance firms run higher because of compliance and software costs. Trades and retail tend to run lower. There’s no universal right answer, only what’s right for your business and what’s enabled the year ahead. We help clients build this through IT strategic planning sessions, usually run in late June or early July.
A quick reference table
| Item | Owner | Deadline | Effort |
|---|---|---|---|
| Backup restore test | IT / MSP | Mid-June 2026 | 2-3 hours |
| Asset register reconciliation | IT + Finance | 20 June 2026 | Half day |
| Subscription and licence audit | IT / MSP | 15 June 2026 | 1-2 hours |
| Decommission unused services | IT / MSP | 25 June 2026 | Variable |
| Hardware refresh planning | IT + Business owner | End May 2026 | Half day |
| Capex vs opex review | Finance + IT | 20 June 2026 | 1-2 hours |
| Depreciation schedule handover | Finance + Accountant | 30 June 2026 | Brief |
| Renewal calendar build | IT / MSP | 15 June 2026 | 1 hour |
| Cyber posture review | IT / MSP | End June 2026 | Half day |
| FY27 budget and roadmap | Business owner + IT | 15 July 2026 | Half day |
How TechAssist runs EOFY for our managed clients
We’ve been doing this since 2014. The standard EOFY cycle for our managed IT services in Melbourne clients runs across May and June. Your account engineer schedules the backup test, pulls the licence and subscription report from our PSA, generates the reconciled asset list, and books a 60-minute review with you and your finance lead. We hand the asset register and the FY26 IT spend summary directly to your accountant if you want us to.
For context: TechAssist has 13 engineers, all employed in Australia (no offshoring), and our 24/7 Network Operations Centre runs from Tecoma in the Dandenong Ranges. Our P1 response target is under 15 minutes and we publish it openly in our pricing and SLA. The model is per-user, fixed monthly — which makes the EOFY conversation about value delivered, not surprise invoices.
If you’re not on a managed agreement and you’d like to run a one-off EOFY IT review before 30 June 2026, we offer that too. It’s a fixed-scope engagement that gives you the reconciled asset list, the subscription audit, the backup verification, and a written summary your accountant can use. Call 1300 028 324 or use the form at contact.
Common mistakes we see at EOFY
A few patterns repeat every year. Worth flagging so you can avoid them.
- Buying hardware on 28 June without checking install-by dates. If the asset has to be installed and ready for use by 30 June for a particular tax treatment, a laptop sitting in a delivery van doesn’t qualify. Order earlier.
- Cancelling subscriptions on the last day of the month. Most SaaS billing runs monthly anniversaries, not calendar months. You’ll often still be billed for July. Cancel mid-month with explicit confirmation of when access ends.
- Treating the asset register as IT’s problem. If finance doesn’t have an accurate fixed asset register, your accountant is guessing. This is a joint exercise, not a handoff.
- Skipping the backup test because backups “looked green”. A green dashboard isn’t a restore. Test the restore.
- Promising a major rollout starts 1 July. Nothing major should start on day one of the financial year. Your team is exhausted, suppliers are slow, and finance is busy. Start mid-July at the earliest.
What good looks like on 1 July
If you’ve done the work, here’s what your first week of July 2026 looks like. Backups tested and documented. Asset register matches finance’s books. Every active subscription is justified and right-sized. Decommissioned services no longer billing. Renewal calendar visible 12 months out. Cyber posture documented against the Essential Eight. FY27 budget signed off with three buckets and a contingency. Your accountant has clean numbers. Your team isn’t scrambling.
That’s the standard. It’s not glamorous and it doesn’t make headlines. It does mean July starts calm instead of chaotic, and that’s worth a fortnight of June effort.
Frequently asked questions
What’s the instant asset write-off threshold for FY26?
The instant asset write-off rules change regularly. As of mid-2026 the threshold has been adjusted several times in recent years by federal budget announcements. Rather than quote a figure that may be out of date by the time you read this, check the current threshold on the ATO website or ask your accountant. The principle stays the same: assets under a certain dollar value, installed and ready for use by 30 June, may be eligible for immediate deduction rather than depreciation over multiple years. Your accountant will tell you whether it applies to your situation.
How does depreciation work for IT assets like laptops and servers?
The ATO publishes effective life schedules for different asset classes. Laptops and desktops typically have an effective life around three to four years; servers and network equipment longer. Your accountant chooses between prime cost (straight-line) and diminishing value methods, and may apply small business depreciation concessions if you qualify. Your job is to give them an accurate asset list with purchase dates, prices, and disposal dates. The maths is their job.
When’s the best time to budget IT spend for the new financial year?
May and June, before 30 June. You want the FY27 budget signed off before the new financial year starts so July doesn’t begin with uncertainty. The inputs are the items in this checklist: reconciled asset list, subscription audit, renewal calendar, refresh plan, cyber posture review. With those in hand, a half-day workshop with your business owner and IT lead is usually enough to land a defensible FY27 number.
Should I buy laptops before 30 June 2026 for tax reasons?
Talk to your accountant. If the asset is genuinely needed and you’re going to buy it anyway, timing the purchase before 30 June may have tax benefits depending on the current rules and your business structure. If you’re buying purely to chase a deduction, that’s a worse decision than it sounds, because you’ve spent real cash to save a fraction of it in tax. We can help you decide whether the hardware is genuinely needed; your accountant decides whether the timing helps your tax position.
How long does an EOFY IT review take?
For a typical 20-50 user Melbourne SME, the review itself is half a day of work from your IT provider plus a 60-90 minute joint session with finance. Remediation (cancelling subscriptions, scheduling decommissions, organising hardware orders) is usually another half day across the month. Start in mid-May and you’ve got comfortable runway. Start on 25 June and you’ll be cutting corners.
Closing thought
EOFY IT prep is one of those tasks where the value isn’t in any single item, it’s in doing all of them properly. A clean asset register makes depreciation accurate. An honest subscription audit makes the FY27 budget defensible. A tested backup means the next ransomware incident is a Tuesday inconvenience instead of a business-ending event. None of it is exciting. All of it compounds.
If you’d like a hand running through this before 30 June 2026, get in touch via our contact page or call 1300 028 324. We’ll tell you straight whether you need our help or whether you’ve already got it sorted.
