Land Tax for Australian Property Investors: 2026 Report

A current, sourced report on Australian land tax, thresholds, ownership dates, exemptions, foreign and absentee surcharges, settlement timing, and portfolio cash-flow modelling.

Guides

Tax · 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 land tax for australian property investors: 2026 report for Australian property investors as at 24 June 2026. It uses state and territory revenue pages for New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania, the ACT, Northern Territory revenue-office navigation, ATO property-expense guidance, Moneysmart investment-property risk guidance, and forum-search question discovery.

The main finding is that land tax should be modelled by jurisdiction, owner, ownership date, land value, exemption status, and surcharge status. A national shortcut is not reliable because each revenue office uses different thresholds, dates, valuation methods, and owner rules.

Simple explanation

Land tax is a state or territory ownership cost. It is usually based on land value, not rent, sale price, or the building value. It can change when values, owners, use, exemptions, or surcharge status change.

Figures

Figure 1 Land tax assessment dates The first control point is the date used by each jurisdiction. A portfolio can be exposed even when a sale or move happens soon after that date.

Selected official assessment dates. ACT is quarterly, with status dates on 1 July, 1 October, 1 January, and 1 April.

Figure 2 Selected 2026 threshold comparison Thresholds are not directly interchangeable because each jurisdiction defines owners, exemptions, valuation, and aggregation differently.

Selected general or individual thresholds where verified from current official pages. Use only as a workflow comparison.

Figure 3 Selected top marginal land tax rates The rate shape matters because a new property can push existing land into a higher marginal band.

Selected top marginal rates from official rate tables. These are not whole-bill effective rates.

Figure 4 Foreign and absentee surcharge rates Surcharges are separate from ordinary land tax and can change the result more than the base threshold.

Selected verified surcharges. Other foreign-owner charges may apply but are not graphed unless the current rate was checked.

Figure 5 Owner type gates Land tax should be attached to the owner and legal capacity, not only to the address.

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

Figure 6 Common exemption gates Most investor errors start by assuming an exemption without checking the state rule and the use of the land.

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

Figure 7 Valuation evidence horizon The value used for land tax is usually not the sale price and not the building value.

Selected valuation evidence periods or annual valuation points from official guidance.

Figure 8 ACT quarterly land tax structure ACT land tax can affect cash flow differently because it is assessed quarterly rather than as one annual state bill.

ACT guidance says land tax uses four status dates, a fixed charge, and a valuation charge based on AUV.

Figure 9 Illustrative annual cash-flow bridge Land tax is a cash bill before it is a tax planning line. The bridge keeps it separate from rent and loan costs.

Illustrative only. Assumes $38,000 rent, $24,000 loan interest, $6,000 other holding costs, and $5,500 land tax.

Figure 10 Aggregation risk map The same purchase can have a different land tax effect depending on what the owner already holds in that jurisdiction.

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

Figure 11 Assessment notice workflow The notice is a control document. It should be reconciled to owner, land, value, exemption, surcharge, and payment date.

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

Figure 12 Forum question discovery Forum searches are used to identify recurring confusion, then official sources are used to answer it.

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

Figure 13 PropRetire model checks The useful model treats land tax as a yearly state-specific cash-flow line, not as a single national rule.

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][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34]

Evidence typeUse in this reportLimitRefs
Official guidancestate and territory revenue pages for New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania, the ACT, Northern Territory revenue-office navigation, ATO property-expense guidance, Moneysmart investment-property risk guidance, and forum-search 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][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34]
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][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34]
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 land tax should be modelled by jurisdiction, owner, ownership date, land value, exemption status, and surcharge status. A national shortcut is not reliable because each revenue office uses different thresholds, dates, valuation methods, and owner rules.

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][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34]

TopicChecked positionModel actionRefs
State and territory tax, not one national ruleRevenue offices publish separate land tax rules for NSW, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, WA, Tasmania, and ACT. The NT Revenue Office navigation lists own-source revenue topics, but no land tax page was identified in this source check.Keep a jurisdiction column in the property register and do not reuse a threshold from another state.[1][6][11][18][22][24][26][28]
Land value baseOfficial guidance generally ties land tax to site value, unimproved value, assessed land value, or AUV rather than purchase price or rent.Store land value separately from total property value and building replacement value.[2][7][13][18][23][25][27]
NSW taxing dateRevenue NSW calculates land tax and surcharge land tax on land owned at midnight on 31 December each year.Run a 31 December snapshot for every NSW property before year-end purchases, sales, and use changes.[2]
NSW three-year averageRevenue NSW uses a three-year average of land values when calculating land tax and surcharge land tax.Use the official average land value from the notice or calculator rather than a single current estimate.[2]
NSW fixed thresholdsFrom 1 January 2025, NSW land tax thresholds are fixed at a $1,075,000 general threshold and a $6,571,000 premium threshold.Use $1,075,000 and $6,571,000 for the current NSW threshold test until Revenue NSW publishes a change.[3]
NSW general rateRevenue NSW states that the current general rate is $100 plus 1.6% of land value above the $1,075,000 general threshold.Do not count every dollar of NSW land value as taxable under the general threshold case.[2][3]
NSW premium rateRevenue NSW applies a premium rate above the premium threshold, with example material using a 2% premium rate.Add a high-value case for NSW portfolios near or above $6,571,000 average taxable land value.[2][3]
NSW aggregationRevenue NSW states that the threshold is applied to the combined value of all taxable land owned, not to each property separately.Aggregate NSW taxable land by owner before testing whether a new property crosses the threshold.[2][3]
NSW trustsRevenue NSW says the tax-free threshold does not apply to land owned as part of special or discretionary trusts.Treat NSW trust-owned land as a separate adviser review item before settlement.[2][3]
NSW foreign owner surchargeForeign persons who own residential land in NSW must pay surcharge land tax unless eligible for an exemption, and no tax-free threshold applies.Create a foreign-owner flag and calculate surcharge separately from ordinary land tax.[5]
NSW surcharge rateRevenue NSW states that the surcharge land tax rate is 5% of the land value of the residential property owned by a foreign owner.Do not hide NSW surcharge exposure inside the normal land tax estimate.[5]
NSW exemption examplesRevenue NSW lists principal place of residence and primary production land as exemption areas.Keep use evidence and exemption application evidence in the NSW property file.[4]
Victoria annual land taxVictoria describes land tax as an annual tax on the total value of taxable land owned in Victoria, excluding exempt properties like your home.Test Victorian landholdings as one owner-level taxable land value, not as isolated property yields.[6]
Victoria taxable property typesVictorian guidance says land tax applies to investment residential properties, commercial properties, and vacant land.Include commercial and vacant Victorian holdings in the land tax register.[6]
Victoria ownership dateVictorian current rates are applied to all taxable land owned as at midnight on 31 December of the year before assessment.Run a Victorian 31 December check before settlement timing decisions.[7]
Victoria general thresholdVictorian general rates from the 2024 land tax year start with nil below $50,000 of total taxable land holdings.Use a low-threshold stress case for Victorian investors rather than assuming the threshold is similar to NSW or SA.[7]
Victoria trust surcharge ratesVictorian current rates publish separate land tax trust surcharge rates, with nil below $25,000 from the 2024 land tax year.Model trust-owned Victorian land using the trust schedule before comparing with individual ownership.[7]
Victoria absentee owner surchargeVictorian current rates publish land tax schedules with an absentee owner surcharge, and the absentee owner page states extra land tax may apply to absentee owners.Add an absentee-owner status check for non-resident individuals, companies, and trusts.[7][9]
Victoria vacant residential land taxVictorian guidance says vacant residential land tax may apply to homes left vacant in the previous year and can apply to existing, uninhabitable, under-construction, renovation, and undeveloped land.Track occupancy days and vacant status separately from ordinary land tax.[10]
Victoria exemptionsVictoria lists principal place of residence, primary production land, charitable organisations, build-to-rent discount, family violence relief, and bushfire relief as exemption or concession areas.Keep a Victorian exemption checklist and evidence file instead of relying on the asset label.[8]
Queensland annual state taxQueensland says land tax is an annual state tax on freehold land, whether vacant or built on, residential, commercial, or investment, and occupied or not.Model Queensland land tax for freehold investment and commercial land even if the property is vacant.[11]
Queensland ownership dateQueensland land tax is levied on the value of freehold land owned at midnight on 30 June each year.Run a 30 June Queensland owner and taxable value snapshot.[11]
Queensland individual thresholdQueensland individuals are liable when total taxable freehold land value at 30 June is $600,000 or more.Use $600,000 as the current individual threshold and update if QRO publishes a change.[13]
Queensland company and trustee thresholdQueensland companies and trustees are liable when total taxable freehold land value is $350,000 or more, subject to special disability trust treatment.Use a separate $350,000 threshold case for companies, trustees, SMSFs, and most trusts.[14]
Queensland absentee surchargeQueensland absentee individuals are liable from $350,000 and an absentee surcharge of 3% applies on taxable land valued at $350,000 or more.Add a residency and visa status input before calculating Queensland land tax for overseas owners.[15]
Queensland foreign company and trust surchargeQueensland foreign companies and foreign trusts are liable from $350,000, and a 3% foreign surcharge applies on taxable land valued at $350,000 or more.Add foreign entity control and trust-interest review before entity purchases in Queensland.[16]
Queensland exemptionsQueensland exemption guidance includes home, trustee home, transitional home, primary production, charitable institutions, other exemptions, deceased estates, subdivider discount, and build-to-rent concessions.Record each exemption by property and review eligibility at 30 June.[17]
Queensland assessment noticeQueensland states that assessment notices include taxable value, amount due, and due date, and that owners may receive a letter when land value approaches the threshold.Use the assessment notice as the source of truth for payment timing and store it with the model.[11]
South Australia annual site-value taxRevenueSA says land tax is an annual state tax based on the total taxable site value of land owned at midnight on 30 June each year.Use total taxable site value, not market value or building value, for South Australian land tax modelling.[18]
South Australia 2026-27 general thresholdRevenueSA publishes a 2026-27 general land tax threshold of $936,000 and a trust threshold of $25,000.Set SA 2026-27 general and trust threshold inputs separately.[19]
South Australia tiered ratesRevenueSA states that land tax is calculated using a tiered system based on total taxable site value of all land under an ownership.Aggregate SA land by ownership before applying the tiered schedule.[19]
South Australia trust landRevenueSA states that land held on trust may be taxed at trust land tax rates or general rates, and trustees must notify RevenueSA within one month of acquiring land on trust.Add a one-month notification control for SA trust acquisitions.[18][21]
South Australia assessmentsRevenueSA says assessments are issued from October each financial year and may be separate for different ownership structures, trusts, or corporate groups.Do not assume one SA bill covers every related ownership. Reconcile all ownership numbers.[18]
South Australia settlement timingRevenueSA says land tax is assessed on ownership at midnight 30 June and the vendor remains liable if a property is sold after that date.Check settlement adjustment clauses and certificates when buying after 30 June.[18]
South Australia exemptionsRevenueSA exemption categories include principal place of residence, primary production, new housing opportunities, not-for-profit institutions, retirement villages, and aged or supported residential care.Require a written exemption basis and supporting use evidence before excluding SA land.[20]
Western Australia annual land taxWA says land tax is an annual tax on land not used as the principal place of residence and is assessed for land owned at midnight on 30 June.Run a WA 30 June snapshot and keep principal-residence evidence if an exemption is claimed.[22]
Western Australia thresholdWA says land tax must be paid if land value exceeds $300,000, with nil land tax at $0 to $300,000 in the published rate table.Use a $300,000 threshold in WA stress tests, then confirm against the official assessment.[23]
Western Australia aggregationWA says land holdings are aggregated where the same owners hold more than one lot, while different ownership capacities may be assessed separately.Group WA properties by exact ownership capacity before estimating liability.[23]
Western Australia valuation capWA says the taxable value is the lesser of current unimproved value and 150% of the previous year unimproved value.Use official assessed taxable value rather than a market-value proxy.[23]
Western Australia MRITWA says metropolitan region improvement tax may also apply where land tax applies in the Perth metropolitan area.Add MRIT as a separate WA cost line when relevant.[23]
Tasmania annual land taxTasmania says land tax is payable by the owner of land classified as General Land as at 1 July each year.Store Tasmanian land classification and 1 July owner status for every property.[24]
Tasmania taxable examplesTasmania lists vacant land, commercial properties, rental properties, and shacks as taxable examples where classified as General Land.Do not assume a Tasmanian shack or vacant lot is outside the land tax model.[24]
Tasmania principal residenceTasmania states that land classified as Principal Residence Land is not subject to land tax or foreign investor land tax surcharge.Keep classification evidence before removing a Tasmanian property from the taxable base.[24]
Tasmania current ratesTasmania rates from 1 July 2025 are nil below $125,000, then $50 plus 0.45% above $125,000 up to $499,999.99, and $1,737.50 plus 1.5% above $500,000.Use the 1 July 2025 scale for current Tasmanian stress tests unless a later rate table is published.[25]
Tasmania aggregationTasmania says where two properties are held by one owner, assessed land values are aggregated for each land classification.Aggregate Tasmanian assessed land values by owner and classification.[25]
ACT residential investment focusACT land tax applies to residential properties that are not a principal place of residence, such as rented or vacant property.Flag ACT rented, vacant, and former-home properties for quarterly land tax review.[26]
ACT quarterly status datesACT assesses land tax quarterly based on property status at 1 July, 1 October, 1 January, and 1 April, with no daily pro-rating within a quarter.Review ACT status before each quarter date rather than only at financial year-end.[27]
ACT fixed and valuation chargeACT says land tax has a fixed charge and a valuation charge, with a fixed charge of $1,693 from 1 July 2025.Model ACT land tax as a fixed annual component plus valuation charge, divided across quarters.[27]
ACT AUVACT says the valuation charge applies to AUV, which is the average of unimproved values over up to five years.Use the ACT AUV from official sources rather than current sale value.[27]
ACT foreign ownership surchargeACT guidance says foreign persons who pay land tax must pay a foreign ownership surcharge.Add a foreign-owner flag for ACT residential land tax cases.[26]
Deductibility must be separateATO property-expense guidance treats council rates and land tax as common rental property expenses where the expense is incurred in earning rental income.Keep land tax deductibility as an income-tax record question. Do not use it to reduce the cash bill due to the revenue office.[29]
Investment property cost riskMoneysmart investment-property guidance warns that investors must consider ongoing costs and the risk that rental income may not cover mortgage and property costs.Include land tax in the pre-tax holding-cost model before relying on rent growth.[30]
Forum threshold questionsReddit searches show recurring land tax questions about thresholds, aggregation, trusts, foreign owners, settlement, and whether the main home is exempt.Use these questions to shape explanations, but answer them only with official source material.[31][32][33][34]
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
Land value up 20%What if official land value rises but rent and interest settings do not improve?Increase taxable land value by 20% and keep rent unchanged.[30]
Land value up 40%What if a high-growth land component moves the portfolio into a higher marginal bracket?Increase land value by 40% and apply the relevant top marginal rate schedule.[7][13][19][23]
New purchase crosses thresholdWhat if one extra property makes the combined taxable land value exceed the threshold?Run before and after acquisition aggregation by owner and state.[3][19][23]
Trust owns the propertyWhat if the property is bought through a discretionary trust or special trust?Use trust schedules and notification rules rather than individual thresholds.[3][7][21]
Company owns the propertyWhat if a company owner has a lower threshold or related-owner grouping exposure?Run company and individual cases side by side before deciding structure.[14][18][7]
Foreign owner NSWWhat if a NSW residential property is owned by a foreign person?Add the 5% NSW surcharge case with no threshold.[5]
Absentee owner QueenslandWhat if a Queensland owner becomes an absentee individual at 30 June?Run the $350,000 absentee threshold and 3% surcharge case.[15]
Foreign company QueenslandWhat if a Queensland company or trust is foreign controlled?Add the 3% foreign surcharge case and check exemption eligibility.[16]
Absentee owner VictoriaWhat if a Victorian owner is an absentee owner for land tax purposes?Use the Victorian rate table with absentee owner surcharge.[7][9]
Victorian vacancyWhat if a Victorian home is vacant for the previous year?Run vacant residential land tax review and keep occupancy evidence.[10]
Main home becomes rentalWhat if the principal place of residence is rented out after moving?Remove the automatic home assumption and test land tax from the relevant status date.[4][17][26]
Primary production claim failsWhat if rural land no longer meets the primary production exemption conditions?Add the land back into taxable value and keep use evidence.[4][17][20]
Settlement after liability dateWhat if the property is sold after the relevant annual ownership date?Model vendor liability and settlement adjustment separately.[18][23]
ACT quarter date missedWhat if an ACT property is rented or vacant on a quarterly status date?Apply the whole-quarter rule and avoid daily pro-rata assumptions.[27]
ACT fixed charge shockWhat if the ACT fixed charge is material relative to rent?Separate fixed and valuation charges in the cash-flow bridge.[27]
WA MRIT addedWhat if the WA land is in the Perth metropolitan area and MRIT also applies?Add MRIT as a separate cost line.[23]
WA ownership capacity splitWhat if some WA land is owned alone and some jointly?Separate ownership capacities before aggregating.[23]
Tasmanian classification changesWhat if Tasmanian land changes from principal residence to General Land?Use 1 July classification and add land tax from that point.[24]
Tasmanian two-property aggregationWhat if one Tasmanian owner holds two rental properties?Aggregate assessed land values for the classification before applying rates.[25]
SA trust notification missedWhat if a trustee does not notify RevenueSA within one month of acquiring trust land?Add notification compliance to the settlement checklist.[21]
SA corporate groupWhat if several related corporations own South Australian land?Run a corporate group review before assuming separate thresholds.[18]
NSW three-year average lagWhat if a recent value rise is only partly reflected in the current NSW average?Stress both current official average and future higher-average cases.[2]
NSW holiday homeWhat if a NSW holiday home is not eligible for a principal place exemption?Include it in combined taxable land value unless exemption evidence exists.[2][4]
Interstate expansionWhat if the next purchase is in a state with a much lower threshold?Compare net cash flow after land tax by state.[7][23][25]
Rent flat, land tax upWhat if rent cannot be increased enough to offset a higher annual bill?Hold rent flat for two years and increase land tax by the official valuation stress case.[30]
Vacant period before leasingWhat if the property is vacant during assessment or quarterly status dates?Model vacancy, land tax, loan interest, and other holding costs together.[26][10][30]
Deduction timing misunderstandingWhat if the investor treats tax deductibility as if it pays the land tax bill?Keep land tax cash due date separate from income-tax return timing.[29]
Notice arrives after model is builtWhat if the official assessment uses a different taxable value from the model estimate?Replace estimates with notice values and record the variance.[11][18][23][25]
NT property assumptionWhat if an NT acquisition is modelled from assumptions rather than official NT revenue checks?Confirm current NT revenue treatment and local council rates separately before settlement.[28]
Source page changesWhat if a revenue office updates rates after this report date?Recheck source pages before settlement, refinance, sale, or annual review.[3][7][12][19][23][25][27]
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
Create property registerList property, state, owner, ownership capacity, use, land value source, exemption, and surcharge status.One register row per property and owner capacity.[2][23]
Add assessment datesRecord 31 December, 30 June, 1 July, or ACT quarterly status dates as relevant.Calendar reminders before each jurisdiction date.[2][7][11][18][23][24][27]
Collect valuation evidenceUse official site value, unimproved value, assessed land value, AUV, or notice value.Store notice, valuation reference, and calculator output date.[18][23][25][27]
Run aggregation by ownerCombine taxable land where the relevant state requires aggregation.Group by legal owner, joint owner group, trust, company, and capacity.[3][19][23]
Check owner typeIndividual, joint owner, company, trust, SMSF, special disability trust, and related entity can change the result.Use the correct owner table before comparing structures.[13][14][21]
Check home exemptionMost jurisdictions have a principal residence or home exemption, but conditions vary.Keep occupancy, address, electoral, lease, and move-date records where relevant.[8][17][20]
Check primary production exemptionPrimary production exemptions appear in multiple jurisdictions but are not automatic.Keep land-use, income, lease, and activity evidence.[4][17][20]
Check foreign or absentee statusForeign and absentee owner rules can create separate surcharge liabilities.Record citizenship, visa, residency, foreign control, and trust-interest evidence.[5][15][16][9][26]
Check vacancy statusVictoria and ACT have specific rules where vacancy or non-principal-residence status can matter.Keep lease, advertising, occupation, renovation, and vacancy records.[10][26]
Use official calculators cautiouslySeveral revenue offices provide calculators or estimators, but notices and current rules remain controlling.Save calculator inputs, output, date, and source URL.[12][18][23][24]
Build acquisition memoA purchase can change land tax on existing properties through aggregation.Write before and after annual land tax estimate into the acquisition file.[3][19][23]
Build settlement memoSettlement timing can differ from liability timing.Review contract adjustments, certificates, and owner-at-date liability.[18][23]
Build annual reviewRates, thresholds, values, exemptions, and owner status can change.Repeat every year before assessment dates and after receiving notices.[3][7][11][19][23][25][27]
Connect to cash-flow modelLand tax is a cash bill that may not align with rent timing or tax refund timing.Show monthly reserve requirement and annual payment due dates.[30][29]
Connect to tax recordsATO guidance can allow land tax as a rental expense where incurred for income-producing property.Keep revenue-office notices and payment records with the rental tax file.[29]
Review entity structureTrusts, companies, and special ownership capacities can materially alter thresholds and rates.Run adviser review before changing ownership, not after assessment arrives.[7][14][21]
Review refinance caseLand tax can reduce serviceability cash flow even when loan terms do not change.Include latest assessment in refinance cash-flow documents.[30]
Review sale caseA sale after a liability date may not remove that year of land tax exposure.Add expected land tax and adjustment treatment to sale proceeds modelling.[18][23]
Review retirement planHolding several properties in retirement can create land tax bills before rent and pension cash flow are stable.Stress retirement cash reserves with land tax paid on assessment timing.[30]
Keep source dateThis report was checked on 24 June 2026 and land tax pages can change.Record source date on every report export and recheck before decisions.[1][6][11][18][22][24][26]
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][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34]

ClaimEvidence usedStatusRefs
Land tax is jurisdiction-specific.Supported by separate official revenue-office pages and separate rate, threshold, date, and exemption settings.Supported.[1][6][11][18][22][24][26]
A single national threshold is not defensible.Official thresholds differ materially across NSW, Victoria, Queensland, SA, WA, Tasmania, and ACT structures.Supported.[3][7][13][19][23][25][27]
Owner type can change the result.Queensland, Victoria, NSW, and SA publish different treatment for individuals, companies, trusts, or special ownership types.Supported.[14][7][3][21]
Aggregation is a core modelling issue.NSW, SA, WA, and Tasmania source pages describe combined or aggregated land value logic.Supported.[3][19][23][25]
Surcharges must be modelled separately.NSW, Queensland, Victoria, ACT, and Tasmania publish surcharge or foreign/absentee-owner material.Supported.[5][15][16][9][26][24]
A home exemption should not be assumed after rental use starts.Several sources exempt a home or principal residence but connect the exemption to use or eligibility conditions.Supported as a caution.[4][8][17][26]
Land tax is not based on gross rent.Official sources use land value, site value, unimproved value, assessed land value, or AUV.Supported.[2][18][23][27]
Purchase price is not a reliable land tax proxy.Official valuation methods separate land or site value from the full property transaction value.Supported as a modelling caution.[23][18][25]
Annual assessment dates can create settlement traps.SA and WA sources explicitly connect liability to ownership at the annual date even where a sale happens afterward.Supported.[18][23]
ACT should be treated as a quarterly case.ACT assesses land tax quarterly and uses four status dates.Supported.[27]
Forum material is not authority.Forum searches are used only for question discovery in the report method.Supported by method, not used for law.[31][32][33][34]
Land tax can change cash flow without a loan change.The bill is driven by jurisdiction rules and land value, while Moneysmart highlights ongoing property cost risk.Supported as a cash-flow claim.[30][7][19]
Tax deductibility does not remove payment risk.ATO guidance may allow land tax as a rental expense, but revenue-office payment timing is separate.Supported as a cash-flow caution.[29]
NT treatment should be confirmed from current official sources.The NT Revenue Office page checked here did not identify a land tax page, but the report avoids giving personal advice from absence alone.Supported as a source-boundary caution.[28]
Exact liability needs official calculator or assessment notice.Revenue offices publish calculators, notices, valuation inputs, and rate schedules that can change with facts and dates.Supported.[12][18][23][25][27]
The report supports workflow, not personal tax advice.The source base is public guidance and current pages, not a private ruling or personal adviser review.Supported as a limit.[29]
Table 6. Claim and evidence map. Major claims are mapped to evidence so weak claims stay visible.

References

  1. [1] Revenue NSW: Land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  2. [2] Revenue NSW: How land tax is calculated Checked 24 June 2026
  3. [3] Revenue NSW: Land tax thresholds and rates Checked 24 June 2026
  4. [4] Revenue NSW: Land tax exemptions and concessions Checked 24 June 2026
  5. [5] Revenue NSW: Surcharge land tax for foreign owners Checked 24 June 2026
  6. [6] State Revenue Office Victoria: Land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  7. [7] State Revenue Office Victoria: Land tax current rates Checked 24 June 2026
  8. [8] State Revenue Office Victoria: Exemptions and concessions for land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  9. [9] State Revenue Office Victoria: Absentee owner surcharge Checked 24 June 2026
  10. [10] State Revenue Office Victoria: Vacant residential land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  11. [11] Queensland Revenue Office: Land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  12. [12] Queensland Revenue Office: Calculating land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  13. [13] Queensland Revenue Office: Land tax rates for individuals Checked 24 June 2026
  14. [14] Queensland Revenue Office: Land tax rates for companies and trusts Checked 24 June 2026
  15. [15] Queensland Revenue Office: Land tax rates for absentees Checked 24 June 2026
  16. [16] Queensland Revenue Office: Land tax rates for foreign companies and trusts Checked 24 June 2026
  17. [17] Queensland Revenue Office: Land tax exemptions and relief Checked 24 June 2026
  18. [18] RevenueSA: Land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  19. [19] RevenueSA: Land tax rates and thresholds Checked 24 June 2026
  20. [20] RevenueSA: Land tax exemptions, waiver or relief Checked 24 June 2026
  21. [21] RevenueSA: Land held on trust Checked 24 June 2026
  22. [22] WA Department of Treasury and Finance: About land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  23. [23] WA Department of Treasury and Finance: Land tax assessment Checked 24 June 2026
  24. [24] State Revenue Office Tasmania: Land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  25. [25] State Revenue Office Tasmania: Rates of land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  26. [26] ACT Revenue Office: Land tax Checked 24 June 2026
  27. [27] ACT Revenue Office: How land tax is calculated Checked 24 June 2026
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