Debt Recycling, Property, and Shares: 2026 Evidence Report

A current Australian report on debt recycling, borrowing-to-invest risk, loan-purpose evidence, property-versus-shares trade-offs, tax records, and 2026 lending settings.

Guides

Strategy · 24 June 2026 · 8 min read

Reviewed against source material on 24 June 2026.

Jurisdiction
Australia
Review date
24 June 2026
Document type
Evidence report, not advice
Source posture
Current checked sources only

Abstract

This report reviews debt recycling, property, and shares: 2026 evidence report for Australian property investors as at 24 June 2026. It uses ATO guidance on investment income deductions, owning shares, rental interest, redraw facilities, and CGT records; Moneysmart guidance on borrowing to invest, investing and tax, diversification, offsets, and investment property; RBA June 2026 cash-rate data; RBA April 2026 housing-lending-rate data; APRA May 2026 macroprudential settings; ASIC responsible-lending guidance; Budget 2026-27 tax-reform material; and Reddit search themes used only for question discovery.

The main finding is that debt recycling should be treated as a borrowing-to-invest model with strict evidence gates: loan purpose, apportionment, cash-flow stress, asset diversification, current lending settings, and exit records all need to be checked before any tax benefit is counted.

Simple explanation

Debt recycling means replacing some private home debt with investment-purpose debt. The label does not make the interest deductible. The use of the borrowed money, the records, and the risk all matter.

Figures

Figure 1 Cash-rate path for debt-recycling stress Borrowing to invest needs the rate path in view because the interest cost is both a cash-flow risk and a possible tax item.
3.6%3.7%3.8%3.9%4%4.1%4.2%4.3%Feb 2025May 2025Aug 2025Dec 2025Feb 2026Mar 2026May 2026Jun 2026
Selected RBA cash-rate target entries from February 2025 to June 2026.

RBA Cash Rate Target, checked 24 June 2026

Figure 2 Borrowing-rate context The debt cost should be tested using investor and interest-only rates where the strategy uses those products.

RBA lenders interest rates, April 2026, new housing loans.

Figure 3 Lending guardrails to include Debt recycling often starts with a home loan review, so lending buffers and high-DTI limits should be visible before any tax scenario is accepted.

APRA macroprudential settings confirmed on 28 May 2026.

Figure 4 Deduction evidence gates The core tax test is not the label debt recycling. It is whether each borrowing has a traceable income-producing purpose.

Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.

Figure 5 Borrowing-to-invest risk gates The investment case should survive a loss, lower income, higher rates, and a forced-sale scenario before tax effects are counted.

Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.

Figure 6 Margin-loan LVR example Margin loans have a distinct forced-action risk that is different from using a home loan split to invest.

Moneysmart example structure: $15,000 loan, $25,000 investments, agreed LVR 70%, post-fall LVR 75%.

Figure 7 Illustrative cash-flow bridge A tax deduction can reduce after-tax cost, but the household still has to fund the cash gap and debt balance.

Illustrative only. Assumes $40,000 interest, $12,000 investment income, and a 37% marginal tax rate before Medicare levy or offsets.

Figure 8 Loan split hygiene Clean loan splits and records reduce the chance that private and investment debt are mixed in one account.

Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.

Figure 9 Property versus shares comparison The asset choice changes liquidity, income timing, concentration, transaction costs, and record keeping.

Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.

Figure 10 Record evidence horizon The strategy depends on evidence that can still be read when a loan is refinanced, an asset is sold, or a tax return is reviewed.

Selected Moneysmart and ATO record-keeping guidance.

Figure 11 Policy-risk dates to keep separate Current-law modelling and announced-reform modelling should not be merged until final enacted rules are available.

Budget 2026-27 and ATO tax-reform material.

Figure 12 Forum question discovery Forum searches are useful for finding repeated confusion, but they are not used as proof of tax treatment or investment outcomes.

Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.

Figure 13 PropRetire model checks A usable model keeps tax evidence, debt serviceability, asset risk, cash buffers, and exit tax in the same report.

Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.

1. Scope and Method

This section explains the source base and the limits of the report.

This report is limited to Australian property, lending, tax, and retirement planning material checked on 24 June 2026. It states general decision rules only. It does not calculate a personal advice outcome.

Official and public sources are used for rule statements and current data. Reddit, forums, and search themes are used only to identify common questions. They are not used as proof of law, tax treatment, or market fact.

References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25]

Evidence typeUse in this reportLimitRefs
Official guidanceATO guidance on investment income deductions, owning shares, rental interest, redraw facilities, and CGT records; Moneysmart guidance on borrowing to invest, investing and tax, diversification, offsets, and investment property; RBA June 2026 cash-rate data; RBA April 2026 housing-lending-rate data; APRA May 2026 macroprudential settings; ASIC responsible-lending guidance; Budget 2026-27 tax-reform material; and Reddit search themes used only for question discoveryUsed for rule statements, definitions, and current settings.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25]
Market and statistical dataRBA, ABS, APRA, Services Australia, and state revenue pages are used where relevant.Used as current context, not as a forecast.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25]
Forum and search themesUsed to find common investor questions and confusing terms.Not used as factual authority.
Table 1. Evidence standard. The report separates verified source facts from question discovery and illustrative modelling.

2. Evidence Snapshot

The main finding is that debt recycling should be treated as a borrowing-to-invest model with strict evidence gates: loan purpose, apportionment, cash-flow stress, asset diversification, current lending settings, and exit records all need to be checked before any tax benefit is counted.

The evidence is read conservatively. A claim is included only when it can be linked to a checked source or is clearly labelled as an illustrative modelling step.

References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25]

TopicChecked positionModel actionRefs
Debt recycling labelNo official source makes debt recycling a separate approval category. The source facts are borrowing purpose, income production, investment risk, and records.Use the term only as a plain-language strategy label and keep the rule tests separate.[1][10]
Borrowed money for sharesATO guidance says interest on money borrowed to buy shares or other investments can be deductible where the investment earns dividends or other assessable income.Require a direct trail from loan drawdown to the income-producing investment before allowing an interest line.[1][2]
Income-producing purposeATO guidance limits deductible interest to interest incurred for an income-producing purpose.Record the expected income source for every drawdown and keep it separate from capital-growth assumptions.[1]
Mixed-purpose borrowingATO guidance says interest must be apportioned where borrowed money is used for both private and income-producing purposes.Block a full deduction until the private and investment portions are calculated and documented.[1][4][5]
Exempt income limitATO guidance says interest is not deductible where the borrowed money is used to earn exempt dividend or other exempt income.Ask the tax adviser to confirm income character before including interest in the model.[1]
Capital protected borrowingATO guidance notes that part of the interest on some capital-protected borrowing arrangements is treated as the cost of capital protection.Do not model structured or protected products as ordinary interest without adviser review.[1]
Brokerage and transaction costsATO guidance says brokerage fees and transaction costs are generally not deductible, but may be included for CGT purposes when selling.Put brokerage in the cost-base ledger rather than the current-year deduction bucket.[1][3][8]
Dividend incomeATO share guidance says dividend income must be declared, including where dividends are reinvested through a dividend reinvestment plan.Include cash dividends and reinvested dividends in taxable income and records.[2]
Dividend reinvestment plansATO guidance says reinvested dividends form part of the cost base of the shares acquired under the reinvestment.Keep dividend statements and DRP parcel records for later CGT calculations.[2][3]
Joint share ownershipATO share guidance says joint ownership is generally treated as equal unless unequal proportions can be demonstrated.Allocate dividends, franking credits, deductions, and gains using ownership evidence.[2]
Share CGT eventsATO share CGT material identifies selling shares and some distributions as events that can trigger capital gains tax.Add an exit-tax section for every share or ETF strategy rather than modelling only annual deductions.[3][7]
CGT discount current ruleATO CGT discount guidance says eligible individuals can reduce a capital gain by 50% if the asset has been owned for at least 12 months.Run current CGT rules separately from the announced reform case and keep the acquisition date visible.[7][20]
Capital lossesMoneysmart investing-tax guidance explains that capital losses do not reduce income such as wages and may be used against capital gains or carried forward.Do not use a capital-loss scenario to offset salary income in the household cash-flow case.[11]
Record keepingMoneysmart says investment records should show purchase cost, sale proceeds, income, and expenses, and should be kept for five years after the relevant tax return item.Require a record folder for loan statements, dividend statements, contracts, receipts, and sale documents.[11][3]
Investment income categoriesMoneysmart investing-tax guidance lists investment income for the tax return, including interest, dividends, rental income, managed investment trust income, and capital gains.Map each income source to a tax-return line before calculating the after-tax position.[11]
Investment deduction timingMoneysmart explains that costs of owning some investments may be deductible, but the rules differ on what can be claimed and when.Keep deduction timing separate from cash timing so the model does not overstate first-year benefit.[11][1]
Borrowing to invest riskMoneysmart says borrowing to invest is a high-risk strategy for experienced investors.Make the risk statement the first gate, not a footer after the tax calculation.[10]
Leverage effectMoneysmart explains that borrowing can increase gains when markets rise and increase losses when markets fall.Stress a fall in asset value before showing the upside case.[10]
Debt remains after lossMoneysmart says the loan and interest still need to be repaid even if the investment falls in value.Keep the loan balance in all downside scenarios and avoid netting it against expected tax benefits.[10]
Time horizonMoneysmart describes borrowing to invest as a medium to long term strategy, at least five to ten years.Show liquidity needs, retirement timing, refinance dates, and planned sale dates over the same horizon.[10]
Margin loan mechanicsMoneysmart says margin lenders require an LVR below an agreed level, usually 70%, and a margin call can require action within a short period.If margin lending is used, show LVR, buffer to call, and sale-at-loss risk separately from home-loan recycling.[10]
Margin forced saleMoneysmart says a lender may sell investments if the investor cannot reduce the LVR after a margin call.Model forced sale as a stress event, not a voluntary rebalancing decision.[10]
Investment income riskMoneysmart says investment income can be lower than expected, including a renter moving out or a company not paying a dividend.Stress no rent, no dividend, delayed dividend, and partial income cases.[10][15]
Interest-rate riskMoneysmart asks whether repayments would remain affordable if variable rates rose by 2% or 4%.Include 2 percentage point and 4 percentage point rate shocks in the cash-flow bridge.[10]
Home as securityMoneysmart warns that using the home as security can put the home at risk if the investment performs badly and repayments cannot be kept up.Surface home-security risk as a decision gate before implementation.[10][13]
After-tax hurdleMoneysmart says borrowing to invest only makes sense if the return after tax is greater than all investment and loan costs.Compare after-tax return with interest, fees, transaction costs, vacancy, repairs, and advice costs.[10][11]
Tax is secondaryMoneysmart investing-tax guidance says lower tax can help, but investments should not be chosen based on tax benefits alone.Require the investment thesis before the tax benefit, not the other way around.[11]
Tax-driven schemesMoneysmart warns that tax-driven schemes can be high risk and some are scams.Flag adviser review where the main attraction is a deduction, guaranteed tax effect, or product tax claim.[11]
DiversificationMoneysmart diversification guidance supports checking concentration before relying on one investment or one income source.Group risks by salary, lender, property market, tenant, share sector, and tax rule.[12]
Investment property costsMoneysmart says investment property can produce rent but also requires interest and ownership costs such as council rates, insurance, and repairs.Read property debt recycling beside vacancy, repairs, insurance, land tax, rates, and sale costs.[10][15]
Rental interest tracingATO rental interest guidance says interest can be deductible where borrowed money is used for the rental property and the property is rented or held to produce assessable income.For property purchases, trace the loan to the rental purpose and keep rental availability evidence.[4][6]
Redraw characterATO redraw and interest guidance shows that the character of a redraw depends on the use of those redrawn funds.Treat each redraw as a new evidence event with purpose notes and matching bank statements.[5][4]
Offset versus redrawMoneysmart explains offset accounts as linked savings accounts that reduce home-loan interest, while redraw involves accessing extra repayments.Do not treat offset cash movement and redraw borrowing as the same evidence event.[14][5]
Current cash rateRBA cash-rate data records a 4.35% cash-rate target effective 17 June 2026, unchanged from the 6 May 2026 increase.Use current rate context in the base case and then run separate rate-shock cases.[16]
Investor borrowing rateRBA April 2026 lenders-rate data records new investment housing loans at 6.15% and new investment interest-only loans at 6.23%.Use investor-specific rates where the recycled debt funds an investment property.[17]
Owner-occupier comparisonRBA April 2026 lenders-rate data records new owner-occupier housing loans at 5.98% and new owner-occupier interest-only loans at 6.59%.Avoid assuming a single mortgage rate across owner and investor loan products.[17]
APRA serviceability bufferAPRA confirmed on 28 May 2026 that the mortgage serviceability buffer remains 3 percentage points.Treat lender serviceability as a live constraint even when the tax model looks acceptable.[18]
High-DTI guardrailAPRA said high-DTI lending limits remain unchanged, allowing banks to lend up to 20% of new owner-occupied and investment loans at DTI greater than or equal to six times.Track total debt-to-income after each recycling step, refinance, or investment purchase.[18]
Credit suitabilityASIC responsible-lending guidance says credit licensees must not assist with credit that is unsuitable and must make reasonable inquiries and verification.Keep credit suitability, advice, and household objectives separate from tax modelling.[19]
Announced negative-gearing reformBudget 2026-27 and ATO reform material describe announced negative-gearing changes from 1 July 2027, subject to implementation details.Keep current-law property modelling and announced-reform property modelling as separate cases.[9][20]
Announced CGT reformBudget material describes announced CGT reform from 1 July 2027, including replacing the 50% discount with cost-base indexation and a 30% minimum tax rate on gains.Run current and announced exit-tax cases for property and shares where timing crosses the reform date.[20][21]
Property liquidityThe source base identifies property ownership costs and sale-tax issues, while share guidance identifies parcel records and share-sale CGT events.Model property sale timing, agent costs, refinance risk, and share liquidity as different exit paths.[15][3][8]
Portfolio concentrationBorrowing against the home to buy a single property or a narrow share portfolio can concentrate household risk.Require a concentration table before relying on the tax effect.[12][10]
Cash reserveMoneysmart recommends having cash set aside or cash that can be accessed quickly when borrowing to invest.Set a cash-reserve rule before increasing investment debt.[10]
Limit the loan amountMoneysmart recommends borrowing less than the maximum offered and warns that more borrowing increases interest repayments and potential losses.Cap the recycling step by cash-flow resilience, not only available equity.[10]
Interest payment disciplineMoneysmart says paying the interest helps prevent the loan and interest payments getting larger each month.Do not capitalise interest in the base case without a separate high-risk scenario.[10]
Property versus shares scopeMoneysmart describes borrowing to invest through margin loans for shares or through investment property loans, but these products have different risks and controls.Compare asset, loan product, security, income, liquidity, and tax evidence before selecting the path.[10][15][2]
Advice boundaryOfficial sources give general rules and risk warnings, not a personal financial, tax, credit, or legal advice outcome.Use the report to prepare adviser questions and evidence, not to approve implementation.[10][1][19]
Forum question themesReddit searches show recurring confusion around debt recycling, borrowing to invest, margin loans, and offset versus redraw treatment.Use forum themes to make the report answer common questions, then verify answers against official sources.[22][23][24][25]
SEO answer postureSearch intent often asks whether debt recycling is smart, legal, deductible, or better for property than shares.Answer with evidence gates and trade-offs, not with a universal yes or no.[1][10]
Table 2. Checked positions. Each row turns a source point into a modelling action.

4. Stress Tests

A useful report shows what can go wrong before it recommends a next step.

The stress tests below are deliberately simple. They are designed to stop a single attractive number, such as a low rate, tax deduction, or high rent estimate, from carrying the whole decision.

Stress testQuestion answeredConservative actionRefs
Two-point rate shockCould the household pay the investment loan if the rate rose by 2 percentage points?Keep the strategy only if monthly cash flow remains funded before any tax refund.[10][16]
Four-point rate shockCould the household pay the loan if the rate rose by 4 percentage points?Treat failure as a stop signal, not as a reason to assume future asset gains.[10]
Zero-dividend yearWhat if the share portfolio pays no dividends during a weak market?Remove dividend income and keep interest and principal obligations in the model.[10][2]
Rental vacancyWhat if a tenant leaves and rent stops for several months?Run vacancy months before assuming rental income covers property debt costs.[10][15]
Asset value fallWhat if the investment value falls while the debt remains unchanged?Show household net worth, LVR, and debt service after a 20% and 30% asset fall.[10]
Margin callWhat if a margin loan moves above its agreed LVR and the borrower cannot add cash or assets?Show forced sale and realised loss before allowing the margin-loan path.[10]
Home-security defaultWhat if the home secures the investment borrowing and repayments cannot be made?Show home-loss risk explicitly and require advice before proceeding.[10][13]
Mixed-purpose contaminationWhat if private spending and investment spending pass through the same loan account?Apply apportionment and remove unsupported interest from the deduction estimate.[1][5]
Private redrawWhat if extra repayments are redrawn for private use after an investment purpose was established?Create a new private-purpose layer and recalculate deductible interest.[5][4]
Offset sweep errorWhat if offset savings are moved in a way that is confused with a redraw?Separate offset movements, redraw movements, and new borrowing in the transaction file.[14][5]
No tax refund timingWhat if the household has to fund the costs monthly but only receives any tax effect later?Model monthly cash flow before annual tax return effects.[1][10]
Lower marginal tax rateWhat if income falls, retirement begins, or the marginal tax rate changes?Recalculate the tax effect rather than reusing the original deduction value.[11]
Capital loss on saleWhat if shares are sold for less than cost and the loss cannot offset wages?Carry the loss to the capital-gains schedule and do not treat it as salary relief.[11][3]
CGT reform timingWhat if the sale date crosses announced CGT reform timing?Show current-law and announced-reform outcomes separately.[20][21]
Negative-gearing reform timingWhat if property debt recycling relies on current negative-gearing treatment after announced reform dates?Run property cases under current law and announced reform, with contract timing recorded.[9][20]
Serviceability failureWhat if the borrower passes the tax model but fails lender serviceability under current buffer settings?Treat credit approval as a separate gate with ASIC and APRA context.[18][19]
High-DTI stackWhat if sequential recycling steps push total debt toward high-DTI territory?Stop the sequence unless adviser and lender review support the total debt level.[18]
Property repair shockWhat if a property investment has major repairs at the same time as higher interest costs?Add repair and insurance buffers before comparing property with shares.[15]
Insurance and rates shockWhat if property ownership costs rise faster than rent?Stress rates, insurance, strata, repairs, and land tax outside the interest deduction line.[15]
Share concentration shockWhat if borrowed funds are invested in a narrow sector or a small number of companies?Apply a concentration flag and compare with a diversified portfolio case.[12][10]
Property concentration shockWhat if the household balance sheet is already dominated by the home and one investment property?Show home, investment property, and salary concentration before adding more debt.[12][15]
Refinance blockWhat if a refinance is needed but serviceability or property valuation no longer supports it?Add a no-refinance case and avoid relying on future equity extraction.[18][13]
Record gapWhat if loan-purpose, dividend, or purchase records are missing at tax time?Downgrade unsupported deductions and mark adviser review as required.[1][11]
Advice mismatchWhat if the broker, accountant, and financial adviser make different assumptions?Create a shared assumptions page before execution.[19][10]
Retirement income fallWhat if salary falls before the investment strategy has produced enough income or gains?Stress the loan using lower income and a shorter time horizon.[10]
Forced property saleWhat if the property must be sold quickly in a weak market?Include agent costs, sale timing, CGT year, debt payout, and vacancy before sale.[15][8]
Product fee dragWhat if loan fees, brokerage, platform fees, and advice fees reduce the after-tax return?Subtract all product and transaction costs before testing the after-tax hurdle.[10][1]
Capital-protected productWhat if a product includes capital protection and the interest is not ordinary interest for tax purposes?Escalate to tax advice and model the capital-protection component separately.[1]
Tax benefit disappearsWhat if deductions are denied, reduced, apportioned, delayed, or less valuable than expected?Require the strategy to remain serviceable without the contested tax benefit.[1][11]
Forum advice errorWhat if the implementation relies on a forum answer rather than source guidance and adviser review?Use forums only for question discovery and cite official sources for the answer.[22][1]
Table 4. Stress-test checklist. Run these tests before relying on the base case.

5. Portfolio Workflow

The workflow keeps tax, debt, cash flow, and exit risk in the same file.

The same workflow should be repeated before acquisition, refinance, renovation, sale, or retirement planning. This keeps the report predictable across the full portfolio.

StepDo thisEvidence to keepRefs
Define the aimWrite whether the aim is debt reduction, long-term investing, retirement income, tax efficiency, or portfolio diversification.Keep the aim in the report header so the strategy is not judged only by a tax effect.[10][11]
Get advice scopeSeparate tax advice, credit advice, financial advice, and legal advice.Store adviser names, scope letters, assumptions, and limits.[19][1]
Map existing debtList private home debt, investment debt, offset balances, redraw balances, and loan splits.Create a starting debt ledger before any new drawdown.[13][14]
Open clean splitsUse separate splits where possible to make purpose tracing easier.Keep account numbers, settlement statements, and drawdown dates.[1][5]
Write a purpose memoFor each drawdown, state what asset was bought and why it is expected to produce assessable income.Attach contract notes, property settlement documents, and bank transfer evidence.[1][4]
Check asset choiceCompare property, shares, ETFs, and other assets by income, risk, liquidity, cost, and record burden.Use a comparison table only where two paths are genuinely being compared.[10][12]
Build the cash bridgeShow investment income, interest paid, possible deduction, tax effect, and cash gap.Run the bridge before any implementation instruction.[10][1]
Apply rate stressRun current rate, 2 percentage point shock, and 4 percentage point shock.Show monthly and annual cash impact.[10][16]
Apply income stressRun lower dividends, zero dividends, rental vacancy, and delayed rent.Keep debt repayments active in every income-stress case.[10][15]
Apply asset stressRun property value and share portfolio falls before assuming long-term growth.Show LVR, equity buffer, and forced-sale risk.[10]
Check serviceabilityReview lender serviceability and total DTI after the proposed transaction.Keep APRA buffer and high-DTI context in the file.[18][19]
Set cash reserveHold emergency cash or accessible cash before increasing investment debt.Do not count expected tax refunds as the only reserve.[10]
Create tax recordsKeep income, expenses, loan statements, ownership evidence, and purchase and sale records.Store documents in the same structure for property and shares.[11][2][3]
Track DRP parcelsRecord reinvested dividends as income and cost-base evidence.Keep dividend statements and parcel-level cost records.[2]
Track brokerageTreat brokerage and transaction costs as CGT records rather than current deductions where relevant.Add transaction costs to the cost-base ledger.[1][8]
Track property costsRecord rent, interest, council rates, insurance, repairs, land tax, and sale costs separately.Do not let the interest deduction hide property operating costs.[15][6]
Model current and reform casesWhere property tax treatment or sale timing crosses announced reform dates, keep current and announced cases separate.Record contract date, property type, sale date, and entity.[20][9]
Review annuallyReview debt cost, asset performance, income received, tax records, and household cash flow each year.Keep annual review notes and update stress tests.[10][11]
Review before refinanceRefinance can change loan accounts, evidence trails, rates, and serviceability.Carry the old purpose trail into the new loan file.[4][5][18]
Set exit planShow how debt is repaid if shares are sold, property is sold, income falls, or retirement begins.Include CGT, sale costs, debt payout, and remaining cash buffer.[3][7][11]
Table 5. Practical workflow. The rows are written as actions so the report can be turned into a model checklist.

6. Limits and Claim Map

The report supports analysis, not personal financial, tax, legal, or credit advice.

The safest reading is cautious. Use this report to structure questions, identify missing evidence, and prepare adviser conversations. Do not treat it as an approval, forecast, valuation, or tax ruling.

References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25]

ClaimEvidence usedStatusRefs
Debt recycling is an evidence problem, not a magic label.ATO deduction guidance is based on use of borrowed money, income-producing purpose, and apportionment.Supported as a cautious framing claim.[1][5]
Interest on borrowed money for income-producing shares can be deductible.ATO says interest can be claimed where borrowed money buys shares or other investments that earn dividends or other assessable income.Supported with purpose and income limits.[1][2]
Mixed private and investment use requires apportionment.ATO guidance requires interest to be apportioned where borrowed money has both private and income-producing use.Supported as a hard evidence gate.[1][4]
Borrowing to invest is high risk.Moneysmart directly describes borrowing to invest as high risk for experienced investors.Supported and placed near the top of the report.[10]
Leverage can magnify losses as well as gains.Moneysmart explains that larger returns in rising markets come with larger losses when markets fall.Supported as a risk claim.[10]
A tax deduction does not remove the cash-flow shortfall.The source base supports interest and tax analysis, while Moneysmart still requires repayment and affordability.Supported as an illustrative cash-flow claim.[1][10]
The home can be at risk if it secures investment borrowing.Moneysmart warns that borrowers can lose the home if they cannot keep up repayments after using it as security.Supported as a plain-language warning.[10]
Property and shares need different risk tests.Moneysmart separates margin loans, investment property loans, property costs, and investment income risks.Supported as a comparison claim, not a recommendation.[10][15]
Tax benefits should not drive the investment choice by themselves.Moneysmart says lower tax can help but investments should not be chosen based on tax benefits alone.Supported as a decision-ordering claim.[11]
Current 2026 rates make the after-tax hurdle visible.RBA records a 4.35% cash-rate target from 17 June 2026 and April 2026 investor loan rates above 6%.Supported as current context, not as a forecast.[16][17]
Serviceability is separate from tax deductibility.APRA settings and ASIC responsible-lending guidance address credit standards and suitability, not tax treatment.Supported as a workflow separation claim.[18][19]
Share records must include dividends, DRP parcels, purchase costs, and sale records.ATO and Moneysmart share-tax material require income and capital-gains records.Supported as a record-keeping claim.[2][3][11]
Capital losses are not salary deductions.Moneysmart explains that capital losses cannot reduce income such as wages.Supported as a limit claim.[11]
Announced tax reform should be modelled separately from current law.Budget and ATO material describe announced reform dates, while current guidance still supplies current-law rules.Supported as a scenario-separation claim.[20][9]
Reddit is useful for finding questions, not for proving rules.Forum search themes show common user confusion, but official sources provide the rule evidence.Supported by the method standard in this report.[22][1]
The safest conclusion is conditional.Every major source point adds a condition: income purpose, records, risk, affordability, serviceability, and adviser review.Supported as the final report posture.[1][10][18]
Table 6. Claim and evidence map. Major claims are mapped to evidence so weak claims stay visible.

References

  1. [1] ATO: Interest, dividend and other investment income deductions Checked 24 June 2026
  2. [2] ATO: Owning shares Checked 24 June 2026
  3. [3] ATO: Shares and similar investments Checked 24 June 2026
  4. [4] ATO: Interest expenses Checked 24 June 2026
  5. [5] ATO: TR 2000/2, line of credit and redraw facilities Checked 24 June 2026
  6. [6] ATO: How to claim rental expenses Checked 24 June 2026
  7. [7] ATO: CGT discount Checked 24 June 2026
  8. [8] ATO: Cost base of assets Checked 24 June 2026
  9. [9] ATO: Reforming negative gearing and capital gains tax Checked 24 June 2026
  10. [10] Moneysmart: Borrowing to invest Checked 24 June 2026
  11. [11] Moneysmart: Investing and tax Checked 24 June 2026
  12. [12] Moneysmart: Diversification Checked 24 June 2026
  13. [13] Moneysmart: Home loans Checked 24 June 2026
  14. [14] Moneysmart: Mortgage offset accounts Checked 24 June 2026
  15. [15] Moneysmart: Buying an investment property Checked 24 June 2026
  16. [16] RBA: Cash Rate Target Checked 24 June 2026
  17. [17] RBA: Lenders Interest Rates Checked 24 June 2026
  18. [18] APRA: Macroprudential policy settings, June 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
  19. [19] ASIC: Responsible lending Checked 24 June 2026
  20. [20] Australian Government Budget 2026-27: Tax reform Checked 24 June 2026
  21. [21] Australian Government Budget 2026-27: Negative gearing and CGT explainer Checked 24 June 2026
  22. [22] Reddit r/AusFinance search: debt recycling Checked 24 June 2026
  23. [23] Reddit r/AusFinance search: borrow to invest Checked 24 June 2026
  24. [24] Reddit r/AusFinance search: margin loan Checked 24 June 2026
  25. [25] Reddit r/AusFinance search: offset redraw debt recycling Checked 24 June 2026

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Offset Accounts, Redraw, and Loan Purpose: 2026 Evidence Report

A current Australian report on offset accounts, redraw facilities, loan-purpose tracing, mixed-purpose debt, deductible interest, refinancing splits, debt recycling questions, feature fees, and record keeping.

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