- Jurisdiction
- Australia
- Review date
- 24 June 2026
- Document type
- Evidence report, not advice
- Source posture
- Current checked sources only
Abstract
This report reviews negative gearing in australia: 2026 property investor report for Australian property investors as at 24 June 2026. It uses ATO rental-property guidance, ATO interest-expense guidance, ATO repair and capital-expense guidance, ATO CGT guidance, Australian Government Budget 2026-27 tax reform material, RBA June 2026 cash-rate data, RBA April 2026 housing-lending-rate data, and forum-search question discovery.
The main finding is that negative gearing should be modelled as a tax-loss bridge, not as a slogan: current ATO deduction rules, loan-purpose evidence, announced reform risk, interest-rate stress, rental cash flow, and the after-tax sale outcome all need to be checked before relying on the loss.
Negative gearing is not a special tax button. It is the result when allowable rental deductions are higher than rent, and the investor still has to fund the cash shortfall.
Figures
RBA Cash Rate Target, checked 24 June 2026
New housing loans
New interest-only loans
New housing loans
New interest-only loans
RBA lenders interest rates, April 2026, new loans.
7:30pm AEST, 12 May 2026
Announced from 1 July 2027
Announced from 1 July 2027
Announced from 1 July 2028
Australian Government Budget 2026-27 and ATO new legislation material.
Interest, rates, repairs
Capital works and borrowing costs
Private and some capital costs
Private use or mixed loans
Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.
Rental income purpose
Requires apportionment
Character follows use
Legal and payment evidence
Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.
Gross rent
Allowed annual deductions
Costs above rent
37% of loss
Still funded by household
Illustrative only. Assumes $34,000 rent, $50,000 deductible costs, and a 37% marginal tax rate before Medicare levy or offsets.
$100 or less
Years, if shorter than loan term
Use shorter of 5 years or term
Selected ATO borrowing-expense thresholds and timing rules.
Income-year claim when eligible
2.5% over 40 years
Spread over time
Keep for 5 years
Selected ATO repair, maintenance, and capital-expense guidance.
Current discount if eligible
Current discount if eligible
Current discount if eligible
No CGT discount
Minimum tax on gains
Current ATO CGT discount settings and announced Budget reform benchmark.
Years from lodgment timing
After CGT event timing
Life-of-loan evidence need
ATO rental-property records and CGT record guidance.
Definition and tax-loss questions
Grandfathering and new-build questions
Redraw and refinance questions
Cash flow versus tax questions
Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.
Income and deduction timing
Before tax refund
Current law and reform scenario
CGT and sale proceeds
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]
| Evidence type | Use in this report | Limit | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Official guidance | ATO rental-property guidance, ATO interest-expense guidance, ATO repair and capital-expense guidance, ATO CGT guidance, Australian Government Budget 2026-27 tax reform material, RBA June 2026 cash-rate data, RBA April 2026 housing-lending-rate data, and forum-search question discovery | Used 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] |
| Market and statistical data | RBA, 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] |
| Forum and search themes | Used to find common investor questions and confusing terms. | Not used as factual authority. |
2. Evidence Snapshot
The main finding is that negative gearing should be modelled as a tax-loss bridge, not as a slogan: current ATO deduction rules, loan-purpose evidence, announced reform risk, interest-rate stress, rental cash flow, and the after-tax sale outcome all need to be checked before relying on the loss.
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]
| Topic | Checked position | Model action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative gearing definition | The ATO rental-expense framework explains the deduction categories that determine whether rental deductions exceed rent. | Calculate negative gearing only after rent, allowable deductions, timing, ownership, and private-use adjustments are classified. | [1][5] |
| Claim-now expenses | ATO rental-expense guidance identifies expenses that can be claimed in the income year they are incurred, including interest on loans, council rates, repairs and maintenance, and depreciating assets costing $300 or less. | Create a claim-now bucket and require invoice, rent, ownership, and purpose evidence for every item. | [1] |
| Claim-over-time expenses | ATO rental-expense guidance identifies expenses claimed over several years, including capital works, borrowing expenses, and decline in value for assets costing more than $300. | Spread these deductions over the relevant period rather than treating the cash outflow as an immediate deduction. | [1][4][7] |
| Cannot-claim expenses | ATO rental-expense guidance identifies costs that cannot be claimed, including private-use costs, personal costs, some capital costs, and some second-hand depreciating assets. | Remove non-deductible costs from the annual tax-loss bridge and keep them in the cash-flow model. | [1][9] |
| Held to produce rent | ATO guidance says some pre-rental costs can be deductible if the property is being held to produce assessable rental income and evidence is kept. | Store leasing evidence such as agent messages, listing records, rent appraisals, and rental-manager instructions. | [1] |
| Vacant land limit | ATO guidance says deductions for vacant-land holding costs are generally not available before the property can be occupied and held to produce assessable rental income. | Exclude vacant-land holding costs unless the tax adviser confirms a supported exception. | [1] |
| Holiday-home limit | ATO guidance says holiday-home ownership and use expenses may not be deductible unless the property is used or held mainly to produce rental income. | Require availability, blocked-date, market-rate, and booking evidence for mixed-use or holiday-home assets. | [1] |
| Fair apportionment | ATO rental-expense guidance says expenses need to be apportioned on a fair and reasonable basis where the property has more than one use. | Add an apportionment schedule for private use, owner stays, family use, and non-commercial periods. | [1] |
| Interest on rental loans | ATO interest-expense guidance says interest can be deductible where the principal is used to buy a rental property and the property is rented or held to produce assessable income for the income year. | Trace borrowed funds to the rental-income purpose before treating interest as deductible. | [2] |
| Partial interest deduction | ATO interest-expense guidance says only a portion of interest may be deductible where only part of the principal is used for the rental property or the property is rented for only part of the year. | Split interest by use and period before calculating the net rental loss. | [2] |
| Principal repayments | ATO interest-expense guidance says additional payments made to reduce the principal amount of the loan cannot be claimed as interest deductions. | Keep principal repayments in cash-flow and debt-reduction schedules, not in rental deductions. | [2] |
| Private-use interest | ATO interest-expense guidance says interest is not deductible for periods of private use or for the portion of a loan used for private purposes. | Flag any redraw, offset sweep, personal purchase, or mixed account as an apportionment issue. | [2] |
| Mixed loan account | ATO guidance says accurate records are needed when a loan account is used for both private purposes and rental-property expenses. | Avoid mixed-purpose loans where possible and keep a life-of-loan purpose schedule where mixing has occurred. | [2][3] |
| Security property is not enough | ATO examples show that interest deductibility follows the use of funds, not only the property securing the loan. | Record what the borrowed money paid for, not just which property sits behind the mortgage. | [2] |
| Redraw purpose | ATO interest-expense guidance includes redraw examples where private redraws require interest apportionment for the life of the loan. | Model every redraw as a new purpose event and retain bank statements showing the use of funds. | [2][3] |
| Refinance character | ATO interest guidance includes examples where refinancing can retain the character of the original borrowing where funds refinance an income-producing purpose. | Keep the refinance trail from original drawdown through new loan settlement and linked repayment. | [2] |
| Borrowing expense spread | ATO borrowing-expense guidance says eligible borrowing expenses are claimed over five years or over the loan term, whichever is shorter, unless total deductible borrowing expenses are $100 or less. | Spread eligible borrowing expenses and avoid overstating the first-year rental loss. | [4] |
| Borrowing expense exclusions | ATO borrowing-expense guidance says principal repayments, some title-transfer stamp duty, and private-purpose loan portions are not deductible borrowing expenses. | Separate borrowing-cost deductions from title cost base, loan principal, and private-purpose funding. | [4][15] |
| Repair versus improvement | ATO repair guidance distinguishes ordinary repairs and maintenance from capital work, improvements, initial repairs, and replacement of an entirety. | Do not allow renovation spend to inflate the current-year deduction until repair, capital, and asset categories are separated. | [6][7] |
| Initial repairs | ATO repair guidance says initial repairs for damage or defects that existed when the property was acquired are capital in nature and not immediately deductible. | Review pre-purchase defects, inspection reports, and first-year repair invoices before claiming immediate repairs. | [6] |
| Capital works rate | ATO capital-expense guidance says capital works deductions are generally 2.5% or 4% per year over 40 or 25 years, and cannot exceed construction expenses. | Use a capital-works schedule rather than deducting the full structural cost in the year paid. | [7] |
| Completion timing | ATO capital-expense guidance links the start of capital-works deductions to completed capital works where conditions are met. | Record completion date, not only invoice date, before starting the deduction schedule. | [7] |
| Second-hand assets | ATO second-hand depreciating-asset guidance says, in most cases, deductions for second-hand depreciating assets in residential rental properties are not available after 1 July 2017 unless specific conditions apply. | Do not include vendor-supplied or previously used plant and equipment without checking the 9 May 2017 and 1 July 2017 conditions. | [9] |
| New assets | ATO guidance allows decline-in-value deductions for new depreciating assets bought for the rental property where other conditions are met. | Separate new plant and equipment from second-hand assets and capital works. | [8][9] |
| Rental records | ATO rental-record guidance says rental income and expense records must be kept, generally for five years from lodgment timing, and records must be in English or readily translatable. | Require receipts, statements, rent ledgers, invoices, and loan-purpose evidence in the property file. | [10] |
| CGT records | ATO CGT and property record guidance supports keeping cost base, improvement, sale, and ownership records for later capital-gains calculations. | Keep purchase, improvement, capital-works, depreciation, sale, and ownership documents with the annual tax bridge. | [16][15][17] |
| Sale timing | ATO rental-property CGT guidance says the CGT event for a sale generally occurs when the contract is entered into, not settlement. | Use contract date for the CGT year and ownership-period tests. | [14] |
| CGT discount current rule | ATO CGT discount guidance says eligible individuals can reduce a capital gain by 50% if the asset has been owned for at least 12 months. | Model annual tax losses together with the after-tax sale case and the 12-month discount test. | [13] |
| Entity differences | ATO CGT discount guidance says companies cannot use the CGT discount, while eligible trusts and complying super funds have different discount settings. | Do not reuse the same after-tax exit model across individual, trust, company, and super ownership. | [13] |
| Co-owner allocation | ATO CGT rental-property examples allocate capital gains and losses in line with legal ownership interest. | Allocate rent, deductions, gains, and losses by ownership evidence rather than household convenience. | [14] |
| Main residence interaction | ATO main-residence and home-rental guidance shows that changing a home to income-producing use can affect CGT and deduction treatment. | For former homes, model main-residence choices, valuation evidence, rental dates, and private-use history. | [18][19] |
| Budget announcement | The Australian Government Budget 2026-27 tax reform page says the Government will limit negative gearing to new builds from 1 July 2027. | Keep current-law and announced-reform cases separate until enacted rules and transitional detail are confirmed. | [21][20] |
| Established property after announcement | Budget 2026-27 material says investors who buy established housing after Budget night will still be able to deduct losses against residential property income and carry forward unused losses, but not deduct them against other income like wages. | Add an announced-reform case for established dwellings bought after 7:30pm AEST on 12 May 2026. | [21][22] |
| Existing-property transition | Budget explainer material says the impact on existing arrangements depends on whether the property was purchased before the 7:30pm AEST 12 May 2026 announcement time. | Capture acquisition time, contract date, property type, and new-build status for reform-scenario modelling. | [22] |
| New-build treatment | Budget material says the reform targets negative-gearing support toward newly constructed properties that add supply. | For new builds, keep evidence of construction status, completion, first occupancy, incentives, and depreciation separately. | [21][22] |
| CGT announced reform | Budget 2026-27 material says the Government will replace the 50% CGT discount with cost base indexation and introduce a 30% minimum tax rate on capital gains from 1 July 2027. | Run both current CGT and announced post-1 July 2027 cases where a purchase or sale decision crosses the reform dates. | [21][22] |
| Announced CGT transition | Budget explainer material says CGT reforms apply to gains arising after 1 July 2027 and include transitional arrangements for earlier gains. | Split pre- and post-commencement gains in scenario modelling where the reform could apply. | [22] |
| Current cash rate | RBA 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 interest-stress bridge and do not treat the tax benefit as a cash reserve. | [23] |
| Investor borrowing rate | RBA April 2026 lenders-rate data records new investment housing loans at 6.15% and new investment interest-only loans at 6.23%. | Stress the tax bridge using investor-specific rates and interest-only settings where relevant. | [24] |
| Interest-only repayment risk | Moneysmart interest-only guidance treats the end of an interest-only period as a repayment step-up risk. | Do not model negative gearing only during the interest-only period. Add the principal-and-interest reset case. | [28][24] |
| Borrowing volume context | ABS lending indicators provide current lending context for housing credit and investor activity. | Use lending data as market context only. Property-specific feasibility still comes from the cash-flow model. | [25] |
| Rental-market context | SQM May 2026 data in the source catalog records tight national vacancy and advertised-rent pressure. | Use rent pressure as a scenario input, not as proof that a property can absorb any interest or tax-policy shock. | [26] |
| Investment-property risk | Moneysmart investment-property guidance lists property costs and risks, including relying on rental income to cover mortgage costs. | Read a tax loss beside vacancy, repairs, insurance, finance, land tax, and sale risk. | [27] |
| Concentration risk | Moneysmart diversification guidance explains that concentrated exposure can increase risk. | Check whether several negatively geared properties rely on the same salary, suburb, lender, tenant segment, or tax rule. | [29] |
| Forum definition questions | Reddit searches show recurring investor questions about what negative gearing means and whether it is a tax strategy or a cash-flow problem. | Use these questions to make the report answer definition, cash shortfall, refund timing, and loan-purpose evidence clearly. | [30][31] |
| Forum reform questions | Reddit searches show recurring questions about reform, grandfathering, new builds, and established properties. | Use forum themes for checklist design only. Verify the answer against Budget and ATO reform material. | [32][21][22] |
| Forum interest-tracing questions | Public forum questions often confuse redraw, refinance, offset, and loan-purpose rules. | Add an explicit loan-purpose and redraw evidence section before any tax-loss estimate. | [33][2] |
| Tax refund timing | The source base supports deductions and tax-return treatment but does not make the annual tax effect available at the same time as the cash expense. | Model monthly cash flow before any annual refund, withholding variation, or adviser-approved tax adjustment. | [1][27] |
| Slogan risk | No official source turns negative gearing into a stand-alone investment approval test. | Require hold, sell, refinance, debt-reduction, and new-build comparison before calling a tax loss acceptable. | [27][1][14] |
| Advice boundary | The official sources provide general rental, interest, CGT, and policy information but do not calculate a personal investor outcome. | Use the report to prepare evidence and adviser questions, not to replace tax, credit, legal, or financial advice. | [1][2][14] |
3. Current Trends and Hot Topics
This section records issues that are current enough to change a buyer workflow, while avoiding forecasts.
A trend is included only when it changes a document check, cash buffer, timing assumption, or adviser question.
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]
| Current issue | Observed position | Report action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Announced reform is now a live scenario | Budget 2026-27 and ATO material describe announced negative-gearing and CGT reforms. | Every model should show current law and announced-reform cases separately. | [20][21] |
| 1 July 2027 is the key reform date | Budget material describes negative-gearing and CGT changes from 1 July 2027. | Flag any hold, buy, or sell plan that crosses 1 July 2027. | [21][22] |
| Budget night timing matters | Budget explainer material refers to 7:30pm AEST on 12 May 2026 as the announcement time for transition questions. | Capture contract and acquisition timing before applying a reform scenario. | [22] |
| New build versus established is a hot topic | Budget material says negative-gearing reform is designed to focus support on new builds. | Add property-type evidence, completion evidence, and first-use evidence to the acquisition file. | [21] |
| Established-property losses may become quarantined | Budget material says post-announcement established-housing losses would be deductible against residential property income and carried forward, not deducted against wages. | Model wage-offset and property-income-only cases side by side. | [21][22] |
| CGT reform changes the exit model | Budget material proposes cost base indexation and a 30% minimum tax rate on gains from 1 July 2027. | Run after-tax sale proceeds under current and announced CGT treatment. | [21] |
| Current CGT rules still need modelling | ATO CGT discount guidance still describes the 50% discount for eligible individuals and different treatment for companies, trusts, and super funds. | Use entity-specific exit modelling rather than a generic discount assumption. | [13] |
| Contract date can move tax year | ATO rental-property CGT guidance says sale timing is contract date, not settlement date. | Use contract date in retirement, tax, and liquidity timing plans. | [14] |
| Interest-rate stress remains central | RBA cash-rate data records 4.35% effective 17 June 2026. | Show tax saving and cash shortfall under the same interest-rate assumptions. | [23] |
| Investor interest-only rates require caution | RBA April 2026 lenders-rate data records new investment interest-only loans at 6.23%. | Add an interest-only reset and refinance-risk case. | [24][28] |
| Loan-purpose evidence is a common failure point | ATO interest-expense guidance requires apportionment where borrowed funds are used partly for private purposes. | Make loan-purpose evidence a required field in the model. | [2][3] |
| Redraw mistakes are still expensive | ATO redraw examples show private redraws can contaminate the deductible interest calculation. | Show a redraw-warning banner in any model that imports mixed loan activity. | [2][3] |
| Borrowing expenses are not always immediate | ATO borrowing-expense guidance spreads eligible borrowing expenses over time unless the $100 threshold applies. | Prevent settlement-cost cash outflows from being treated as current-year deductions by default. | [4] |
| Repairs versus improvements is still a live audit issue | ATO guidance distinguishes immediate repairs from improvements, initial repairs, and capital works. | Require invoice itemisation and adviser review for renovation-heavy properties. | [6][7] |
| Second-hand assets can be overclaimed | ATO guidance restricts decline-in-value deductions for many second-hand residential rental depreciating assets after 1 July 2017. | Use new-asset and second-hand-asset categories in depreciation schedules. | [9] |
| Former homes need special handling | ATO home-rental and former-home material can affect both deduction and CGT outcomes. | Record first rental date, valuation date, private-use periods, and main-residence choices. | [18][19] |
| Record evidence is a product feature | ATO rental-record guidance requires income and expense records, generally for five years from tax-return timing. | Treat document capture as part of the tax model, not as post-tax administration. | [10] |
| Rental tightness can mask weak gearing | SQM May 2026 source context records tight vacancy and advertised-rent pressure. | Model vacancy and rent separately from tax-loss logic. | [26] |
| A tax loss is not a liquidity plan | ATO and Moneysmart sources do not convert a deductible loss into immediate cash availability. | Use monthly cash-flow timing before annual tax-return effects. | [1][27] |
| Salary dependence is fragile | Moneysmart investment-property guidance cautions about relying on rent to cover mortgage costs and property risks. | Stress whether salary income can carry the shortfall through vacancy and rate shocks. | [27][24] |
| Portfolio stacking can amplify tax risk | Moneysmart diversification guidance supports checking concentrated exposure. | Group negatively geared assets by salary reliance, lender, suburb, tax rule, and settlement year. | [29] |
| New-build marketing needs verification | Budget reform material gives new-build relevance, but ATO rental rules still require deductible-cost evidence. | Do not accept a new-build label without construction, depreciation, rental, and cash-flow evidence. | [21][8] |
| Entity choice is not cosmetic | ATO CGT guidance and rental deduction allocation can differ by ownership and entity type. | Show individual, joint, trust, company, and SMSF logic as separate advice questions. | [13][14] |
| Capital works affect CGT | ATO repair guidance notes capital works deductions can affect the CGT cost base. | Carry capital-works claims into the exit model. | [6][17] |
| Interest deductibility is not set and forget | ATO loan-purpose examples show the deductible percentage can persist across the life of the loan after private use occurs. | Keep an ongoing loan-purpose ledger, especially after redraws and refinances. | [2][3] |
| Policy debate is not current law by itself | The report has official Budget and ATO reform sources, but the current-law case still uses current ATO deduction guidance. | Do not overwrite current rules in the base case until implementation evidence is available. | [1][20] |
| Refund chasing can distort strategy | The tax-loss bridge shows that a tax effect can reduce but not remove the household cash shortfall. | Compare debt reduction, offset use, sale, refinance, and buy-new-build alternatives. | [27][2] |
| Forum questions show confusion about reform | Reddit searches show recurring questions about negative-gearing reform and whether investors are grandfathered. | Use the question as a prompt, then cite ATO and Budget material for the answer. | [32][22] |
| Forum questions show confusion about interest tracing | Reddit searches show recurring questions about interest deductibility and rental deductions. | Surface loan-purpose tracing as a top-level SEO section and model step. | [33][2] |
| A defensible model should be falsifiable | The source base contains dated official rules, dated reform announcements, and dated rate data. | Show review dates and rerun the model when ATO, Budget, RBA, or lender sources change. | [1][21][23] |
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 test | Question answered | Conservative action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interest rate plus 1% | What if the loan rate rises by 1 percentage point from the current investor rate? | Recalculate cash shortfall, deductible interest, and after-tax shortfall. | [24] |
| Interest rate plus 2% | What if refinancing or repricing lifts the loan rate by 2 percentage points? | Test whether salary, rent, and cash buffer can fund the pre-tax shortfall. | [24][27] |
| Interest-only reset | What if the loan moves from interest-only to principal-and-interest repayments? | Model the repayment step-up separately from the tax deduction effect. | [28][24] |
| Vacancy for 3 months | What if rent stops for one quarter while interest continues? | Run the tax bridge with zero rent and full loan cost for that period. | [26][27] |
| Vacancy for 6 months | What if leasing, repairs, or tenant turnover removes half a year of rent? | Check cash reserve before tax and then after annual tax effect. | [27] |
| Established property reform case | What if post-announcement established-property losses cannot be deducted against wages under the announced reform case? | Carry losses forward against residential property income in the scenario model. | [21][22] |
| New-build case fails evidence | What if the asset is marketed as new but does not satisfy the required new-build evidence? | Run the established-property reform case until adviser evidence supports new-build treatment. | [21] |
| CGT reform case | What if the sale occurs after 1 July 2027 and gains are partly under announced CGT reform? | Run current 50% discount, indexation, and 30% minimum-tax cases. | [22][13] |
| Contract date earlier than settlement | What if the tax year changes because the contract date differs from settlement? | Use contract date for CGT timing and cash settlement date for liquidity timing. | [14] |
| Private redraw | What if the investor redraws $20,000 for private use from the rental loan? | Apportion interest for the life of the loan and keep the redraw record. | [2][3] |
| Mixed refinance | What if refinance funds pay both rental debt and private costs? | Split the refinance by purpose before claiming interest. | [2] |
| Principal counted as deduction | What if the model accidentally treats principal repayments as deductible interest? | Remove principal from deduction rows and keep it in cash-flow and balance-sheet rows. | [2][4] |
| Borrowing costs deducted upfront | What if more than $100 of eligible borrowing costs are claimed in year one? | Spread eligible borrowing costs over the shorter of five years or loan term. | [4] |
| Initial repairs claimed immediately | What if pre-existing damage is repaired after settlement and claimed as a repair? | Treat as capital until adviser review confirms the correct treatment. | [6] |
| Improvement treated as repair | What if a renovation improves the property but is entered as maintenance? | Split repair, capital works, and depreciating-asset components. | [6][7] |
| Second-hand assets overclaimed | What if a depreciation schedule includes second-hand assets that do not qualify? | Remove unsupported decline-in-value claims and update the tax-loss bridge. | [9] |
| Owner stay | What if the owner or family uses the property for a short private period? | Apportion expenses and keep calendar, booking, and market-rate evidence. | [1] |
| Below-market family rent | What if the property is rented below market to a related party? | Limit deductions where required and keep comparable market rent evidence. | [1] |
| Former home rented out | What if the investor turns a main residence into a rental property? | Model main-residence exemption, valuation, first rental date, and private-use history. | [18][19] |
| Entity mismatch | What if a company model uses the individual CGT discount? | Run entity-specific CGT and deduction outcomes. | [13] |
| Co-owner mismatch | What if deductions are split by payment behavior rather than title ownership? | Reconcile title, loan documents, bank statements, and adviser allocation. | [14][2] |
| Salary loss | What if the household salary that funds the shortfall falls or stops? | Stress the property without wage support and without assuming a timely tax refund. | [27] |
| Tax rate lower than expected | What if the investor marginal tax rate is lower than assumed? | Recalculate the tax effect and show the larger after-tax cash shortfall. | [1] |
| Refund timing delay | What if the tax effect is not available until after lodgment or adviser review? | Carry the full cash shortfall until refund timing is confirmed. | [10] |
| No adviser evidence | What if the model has no adviser-reviewed classification for repairs, capital works, or mixed loans? | Mark the deduction bridge as provisional and do not use it for acquisition approval. | [6][2] |
| Portfolio policy concentration | What if multiple properties depend on the same announced reform interpretation? | Limit exposure until current-law and announced-reform outcomes are clear. | [21][29] |
| Sale price flat | What if annual tax relief is followed by a weak capital-growth outcome? | Compare cumulative cash shortfall with after-tax sale proceeds. | [14][27] |
| Capital works reduce cost base | What if claimed capital works need to be reflected in the CGT cost base? | Carry annual capital-works claims into the sale model. | [17][6] |
| Policy date stale | What if the ATO or Budget guidance changes after the report date? | Rerun the current-law and reform cases before acting. | [20][21] |
| Forum advice followed | What if an investor relies on forum statements about grandfathering or deductions? | Treat forum content as a question list and verify with official sources. | [30][1] |
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.
| Step | Do this | Evidence to keep | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Define the property case | Record property type, contract date, settlement date, new-build status, and intended rental use. | Acquisition facts file with dated source documents. | [22][1] |
| Build the rent ledger | Record gross rent, vacancy, incentives, arrears, related-party rent, and management fees. | Lease, rental ledger, agent statements, and market-rent evidence. | [10][1] |
| Trace the loan purpose | Match every drawdown, redraw, refinance, and repayment to an income-producing or private purpose. | Loan-purpose ledger and bank-statement trail. | [2][3] |
| Classify deductions | Split costs into claim-now, claim-over-time, and cannot-claim categories. | Deduction bridge with source category for each item. | [1] |
| Review repairs | Separate repairs, maintenance, improvements, initial repairs, and capital works. | Itemised invoices, inspection reports, photos, and adviser notes. | [6][7] |
| Review assets | Separate new depreciating assets from second-hand assets and capital works. | Depreciation schedule and asset acquisition evidence. | [8][9] |
| Spread borrowing costs | Apply the borrowing-expense timing rule rather than deducting all settlement loan costs upfront. | Borrowing expense schedule with $100 threshold and five-year logic. | [4] |
| Calculate the tax-loss bridge | Calculate gross rent, deductible costs, net rental loss, estimated tax effect, and cash shortfall. | Bridge table by owner and by income year. | [1][2] |
| Run current-law base case | Use current ATO deduction and CGT settings for the base case. | Base case dated 24 June 2026 with linked sources. | [1][13] |
| Run announced-reform case | Apply Budget 2026-27 announced negative-gearing and CGT scenarios where relevant. | Policy-risk case with transition dates and assumptions stated. | [21][22] |
| Stress interest and vacancy | Run investor rate, investor interest-only rate, rate shocks, and vacancy shocks. | Cash-flow table before and after estimated tax effect. | [24][26] |
| Check refund timing | Record when any tax benefit is expected and whether a withholding variation or adviser step is required. | Liquidity plan before annual tax adjustment. | [10] |
| Build the CGT exit model | Use contract date, ownership period, entity type, cost base, capital works, and sale costs. | Current and announced-reform after-tax sale model. | [14][13][22] |
| Review ownership allocation | Allocate rent, deductions, losses, and gains by legal ownership and adviser-supported loan evidence. | Title, loan, payment, and adviser allocation file. | [14][2] |
| Check concentration | Group properties by tax rule, lender, salary reliance, tenant segment, and policy exposure. | Portfolio concentration table. | [29] |
| Compare alternatives | Compare buy, sell, refinance, debt reduction, offset use, new build, and established property options. | Decision table with tax, cash, debt, and exit columns. | [27][24] |
| Attach records | Keep rent, expenses, invoices, loan documents, depreciation, capital works, and CGT records. | Evidence folder aligned to each model line. | [10][16] |
| Scan public questions | Use forum searches to identify confused questions about reform, redraw, and deductions. | Question-discovery note marked as non-authoritative. | [30][32][33] |
| Review with adviser | Escalate mixed loans, reform assumptions, former-home treatment, repairs, capital works, and CGT issues. | Adviser questions list with unresolved assumptions. | [2][6][21] |
| Decision memo | State whether the property is acceptable under current law, reform scenario, cash stress, and exit model. | One-page decision memo with pass, fail, or conditional status. | [27][1][21] |
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]
| Claim | Evidence used | Status | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative gearing is a result, not a stand-alone rule. | ATO rental-expense categories determine which deductions can be used in calculating the rental result. | Supported as a modelling definition. | [1] |
| Interest must be traced to the use of borrowed funds. | ATO interest-expense guidance ties deductibility to use of the principal and requires apportionment for private use. | Supported as a core rule statement. | [2] |
| A bigger tax loss can still be a weaker investment. | Moneysmart property-risk guidance and RBA rate context show cash-flow and debt-service risk remain outside the deduction calculation. | Supported as a modelling caution, not a prediction. | [27][24] |
| Principal repayments are not interest deductions. | ATO interest and borrowing-expense guidance excludes principal repayments from deductible interest or borrowing expenses. | Supported. | [2][4] |
| Repair timing can materially change the tax result. | ATO repair and capital-expense guidance separates repairs, improvements, initial repairs, and capital works. | Supported. | [6][7] |
| Second-hand asset claims require caution. | ATO guidance restricts many second-hand depreciating-asset claims in residential rental properties after 1 July 2017. | Supported. | [9] |
| Announced tax reform should be modelled separately from current law. | ATO and Budget 2026-27 material describe announced negative-gearing and CGT reforms with future commencement dates. | Supported as a scenario-design rule. | [20][21] |
| Established property bought after Budget night may need a different reform case. | Budget material describes different announced treatment for established housing bought after the 12 May 2026 announcement time. | Supported for scenario modelling. | [22] |
| New-build status has become more important. | Budget material says announced negative-gearing reform focuses tax support on new builds. | Supported as a documentation requirement, not as investment advice. | [21] |
| CGT can offset the apparent benefit of annual tax losses. | ATO CGT guidance explains discount eligibility, entity limits, contract-date timing, and rental-property CGT calculations. | Supported as an exit-model requirement. | [13][14] |
| The contract date matters for CGT timing. | ATO rental-property CGT guidance says the event occurs when the sale contract is entered into, not settlement. | Supported. | [14] |
| Records are part of the tax model. | ATO rental-record guidance requires rental income and expense records, generally for five years from lodgment timing. | Supported. | [10] |
| Forum content is question discovery only. | Reddit searches show recurring investor questions but do not establish tax law, policy status, or market fact. | Supported as a method limitation. | [30][31][32] |
| PropRetire can position negative gearing as an evidence workflow. | The report converts official tax, rate, reform, and record sources into model inputs, stress tests, and document checks. | Supported as a product framing claim, not as personal advice. | [1][24][21] |
| The page is not tax, credit, legal, or financial advice. | The source base provides general public guidance and market context, not personal recommendations. | Supported as the governing limitation. | [1][27] |
| Every key claim is linked to a source or labelled as a scenario. | The report separates current rule statements, announced reform scenarios, stress tests, and forum-derived questions. | Supported by structure and source map. | [1][22][23] |
References
- [1] ATO: How to claim rental expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [2] ATO: Interest expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [3] ATO: TR 2000/2, line of credit and redraw facilities Checked 24 June 2026
- [4] ATO: Borrowing expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [5] ATO: Rental properties guide 2025 Checked 24 June 2026
- [6] ATO: Repair and maintenance expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [7] ATO: Capital expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [8] ATO: Depreciating assets in rental properties Checked 24 June 2026
- [9] ATO: Second-hand depreciating assets Checked 24 June 2026
- [10] ATO: Keeping rental property records Checked 24 June 2026
- [11] ATO: Residential rental property assets Checked 24 June 2026
- [12] ATO: Residential rental property items Checked 24 June 2026
- [13] ATO: CGT discount Checked 24 June 2026
- [14] ATO: Capital gains tax when selling your rental property Checked 24 June 2026
- [15] ATO: Cost base of assets Checked 24 June 2026
- [16] ATO: Keeping records for property Checked 24 June 2026
- [17] ATO: Cost base adjustments for capital works Checked 24 June 2026
- [18] ATO: Treating your former home as your main residence Checked 24 June 2026
- [19] ATO: Using your home for rental or business Checked 24 June 2026
- [20] ATO: Reforming negative gearing and capital gains tax Checked 24 June 2026
- [21] Australian Government Budget 2026-27: Tax reform Checked 24 June 2026
- [22] Australian Government Budget 2026-27: Negative gearing and CGT explainer Checked 24 June 2026
- [23] RBA: Cash Rate Target Checked 24 June 2026
- [24] RBA: Lenders Interest Rates Checked 24 June 2026
- [25] ABS: Lending Indicators, March Quarter 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
- [26] SQM Research: National Vacancy Rate, May 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
- [27] Moneysmart: Buying an investment property Checked 24 June 2026
- [28] Moneysmart: Interest-only home loans Checked 24 June 2026
- [29] Moneysmart: Diversification Checked 24 June 2026
- [30] Reddit r/AusFinance search: negative gearing Checked 24 June 2026
- [31] Reddit r/AusProperty search: negative gearing Checked 24 June 2026
- [32] Reddit r/AusFinance search: negative gearing reform Checked 24 June 2026
- [33] Reddit r/AusFinance search: rental deduction interest Checked 24 June 2026