- Jurisdiction
- Australia
- Review date
- 24 June 2026
- Document type
- Evidence report, not advice
- Source posture
- Current checked sources only
Abstract
This report reviews renovation versus repair tax checks: 2026 evidence report for Australian property investors as at 24 June 2026. It uses ATO rental expense guidance updated in May 2026, ATO repair and maintenance guidance updated in May 2026, ATO capital expense guidance updated in May 2026, ATO depreciation and record guidance, ATO CGT guidance, ABS Building Activity, ABS Producer Price Indexes, ABS CPI, RBA rates, Moneysmart insurance and investment-property material.
The main finding is that renovation spending should not be treated as one deduction bucket. Each invoice line should be classified by rental status, cause of work, timing, asset type, and evidence before any immediate deduction, capital works deduction, depreciation claim, or CGT cost-base treatment is assumed.
A repair fixes rental damage. An improvement makes the property better. A new asset may need depreciation. The tax model should classify each invoice line before it claims the cost.
Figures
Repairs, maintenance, and assets costing $300 or less where rules fit
Capital works, borrowing expenses, and assets costing more than $300
Private costs, some capital costs, and most second-hand asset decline
ATO rental expense guidance separates costs into three timing categories: claim now, claim over several years, and cannot claim.
Generally 40 years
Generally 25 years where rules fit
ATO capital expense guidance says capital works are generally deducted at 2.5% or 4% per year over 40 or 25 years respectively.
Example construction cost
2.5% after completion
ATO example: a $3,500 carport completed on 1 July 2025 gives a $87.50 deduction at 2.5% in the completion year.
Where all conditions fit
For eligible low-value assets
Outdoor table example over 5 years
ATO depreciation guidance: assets costing $300 or less may be immediately deductible, assets over $300 decline over effective life, and assets under $1,000 may enter a low-value pool.
First-year claim in ATO example
First-year claim in ATO example
ATO example for a $1,500 asset with a 5-year effective life in 2025-26: diminishing value $600 and prime cost $300.
245 divided by 365
14 divided by 365
335 divided by 365
Area method times time method
Selected ATO examples: 245 rental days, 14 rental days, 335 rental or held days, and a combined area and time method result of 11.99%.
Years from standard or later lodgment date
Percent to withhold if required and no ABN is quoted
ATO record guidance says rental income and expense records should generally be kept for 5 years from 31 October or from later lodgment.
Annual change
Annual change
Annual change
Annual change
ABS Producer Price Indexes, March Quarter 2026: input to house construction rose 2.5% annually, output of building construction rose 4.2%, house construction rose 4.1%, and other residential building construction rose 4.2%.
$m, up 0.6% quarterly
$m, down 0.2% quarterly
$m, up 0.3% quarterly
ABS Building Activity, December Quarter 2025, seasonally adjusted chain volume measures in millions of dollars.
Annual change
Annual change
Annual change
Annual change
ABS CPI May 2026: housing rose 6.5% annually, new dwellings 5.6%, rents 3.6%, and insurance 5.5%.
June 2026
April 2026
April 2026
RBA cash-rate target was 4.35% in June 2026. Selected RBA investor housing lending rates were around the low 6% range in April 2026.
May support decline in value
Usually no decline claim unless exception applies
ATO depreciation guidance says, in most cases, a deduction cannot be claimed for second-hand depreciating assets after 1 July 2017.
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]
| Evidence type | Use in this report | Limit | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Official guidance | ATO rental expense guidance updated in May 2026, ATO repair and maintenance guidance updated in May 2026, ATO capital expense guidance updated in May 2026, ATO depreciation and record guidance, ATO CGT guidance, ABS Building Activity, ABS Producer Price Indexes, ABS CPI, RBA rates, Moneysmart insurance and investment-property material | 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] |
| 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] |
| 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 renovation spending should not be treated as one deduction bucket. Each invoice line should be classified by rental status, cause of work, timing, asset type, and evidence before any immediate deduction, capital works deduction, depreciation claim, or CGT cost-base treatment is assumed.
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]
| Topic | Checked position | Model action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Three expense timing categories | ATO rental expense guidance separates expenses into costs claimed now, costs claimed over several years, and costs that cannot be claimed. | Classify each line as immediate, over-time, or non-deductible before the cash-flow model uses a tax benefit. | [1] |
| Correct expense type | ATO guidance states that it is important to claim each rental expense under the correct expense type so it is treated correctly for tax purposes. | Do not enter one combined renovation number into the model without a classification table. | [1] |
| Repair and maintenance purpose | ATO repair guidance says repair and maintenance expenses keep a property tenantable, fix rental-period wear and tear or damage, or prevent deterioration. | Link the cost to a condition problem, tenant issue, inspection report, or rental-period wear and tear. | [3] |
| Repair must relate to rental damage | ATO repair guidance says repairs must relate directly to wear and tear or other damage that occurred while renting out the property. | Record when the damage happened and whether the property was rented or genuinely available for rent. | [3] |
| Maintenance timing | ATO repair guidance says maintenance generally keeps the property in tenantable condition and may be claimed in the income year incurred. | Treat routine maintenance as a separate class from renovations that improve or replace an asset. | [3] |
| Initial repairs are capital | ATO guidance says initial repairs to rectify damage, defects, or deterioration existing at purchase are not immediately deductible, even if the buyer was unaware of them. | Run a purchase-condition test before treating early post-purchase works as a repair deduction. | [3] |
| Initial repair capital works treatment | ATO guidance says initial repairs to property such as a fence or building can generally be claimed as capital works over 40 years. | Move pre-existing building defects into the capital works schedule rather than the immediate expense line. | [3][4] |
| Initial repair CGT link | ATO repair guidance says the cost of initial repairs forms part of the CGT cost base, reduced by capital works deductions claimed or claimable. | Keep the CGT cost-base entry and the capital works deduction record together. | [3][13][11] |
| Improvement definition | ATO repair guidance says an improvement makes part of the property better, more valuable, more desirable, or changes the character of the item being worked on. | Use a character-change check for bathroom, kitchen, flooring, fencing, roof, and structural works. | [3][4] |
| Improvement tax path | ATO capital expense guidance says improvements can be capital works where structural, or capital allowances where the item is a depreciating asset. | Split each improvement into building work and separate plant or equipment where the facts support it. | [4][5] |
| Mixed repair and improvement invoice | ATO repair guidance says when repairs and improvements are done at the same time, only the repair cost can be claimed if it can be separated from improvement cost. | Ask contractors for itemised invoices before work starts, not after tax time. | [3] |
| Entirety replacement | ATO repair guidance gives a toilet replacement example where replacing an entirety is not a repair and the new toilet is claimed as capital works. | Check whether the work replaces a separately identifiable item with its own useful function. | [3] |
| Own labour | ATO repair guidance says an owner who does repair or maintenance work cannot claim the value of their own labour, but can claim materials where the deduction rules fit. | Exclude owner labour from deductible expenses and keep receipts for materials. | [3] |
| Post-rental repairs | ATO repair guidance says repair expenses after renting may still be claimable where the need relates to the income-producing period and the property was income producing in that income year. | Keep exit inspection evidence, tenant damage evidence, and the income year timing. | [3] |
| Capital expense definition | ATO capital expense guidance says capital expenses include capital works and depreciating assets and are claimed over several years. | Do not treat a large project as deductible now just because the cash was paid this year. | [4] |
| Capital works scope | ATO capital expense guidance says capital works include building the property and structural improvements, alterations, and extensions. | Route structural work, extensions, major room renovations, fences, driveways, and retaining walls into capital works review. | [4] |
| Capital works rate | ATO capital expense guidance says capital works are generally deducted at 2.5% or 4% per year over 40 or 25 years respectively. | Model the annual deduction rate and do not assume full year-one deductibility. | [4] |
| Capital works completion gate | ATO capital expense guidance says capital works deductions can be claimed only once construction is fully completed and the property is rented or available for rent on commercial terms. | Record completion date, availability date, and rental status before starting the capital works claim. | [4][1] |
| Construction expense inclusions | ATO capital expense guidance says architect fees, engineering fees, surveying fees, foundation excavation, and building permit costs can form part of construction expenses. | Capture professional fees and permits inside the capital works file rather than leaving them unclassified. | [4] |
| Substantial renovation test | ATO capital expense guidance says substantial renovations involve all or substantially all of a building being removed or replaced and must directly affect most rooms. | Do not call a project substantial merely because it is expensive or concentrated in one room. | [4] |
| Substantial renovation tax treatment | ATO guidance says, apart from replacing depreciating assets, renovation costs in a substantial renovation are deductible as capital works. | Keep a separate asset list for appliances, carpets, and other plant items inside a larger renovation. | [4][5] |
| Depreciating asset definition | ATO depreciation guidance says depreciating assets are items described as plant that do not form part of the building premises. | Test whether the item is separately identifiable, not permanent, and not likely to be replaced with the building. | [5][8] |
| Decline in value rule | ATO depreciation guidance says a deduction may be claimed for decline in value of depreciating assets used for income-producing purposes. | Record first use, installation-ready date, private-use adjustment, cost, and effective life. | [5] |
| Assets costing $300 or less | ATO depreciation guidance says assets costing $300 or less can be claimed immediately in the income year used for a taxable purpose, subject to conditions. | Check sets and related items before applying the immediate deduction rule. | [5] |
| Low-value pool | ATO depreciation guidance says depreciating assets valued at less than $1,000 can be grouped in a low-value asset pool and depreciated together. | Add a low-value pool option only after the immediate deduction and asset-set tests are checked. | [5] |
| Second-hand depreciating assets | ATO depreciation guidance says, in most cases, a deduction cannot be claimed for second-hand depreciating assets after 1 July 2017. | Ask whether the asset is new, second-hand, acquired with a property, or covered by an exception. | [5][6] |
| New asset in new property | ATO depreciation guidance allows decline-in-value claims for certain new depreciating assets in newly built or substantially renovated property where conditions are met. | Keep settlement evidence, completion evidence, occupancy facts, and asset schedule evidence. | [5][4] |
| Rental property item tables | ATO rental property item tables classify many common items as depreciating assets or capital works. | Use the ATO item table before assuming an appliance, fixture, floor, air-conditioning component, or outdoor item is one category. | [9] |
| Quantity surveyor schedule | ATO depreciation guidance recommends keeping a spreadsheet as a minimum and notes that a quantity surveyor can prepare a report when a rental property is purchased. | Update the depreciation and capital works schedule after major works, acquisition, and sale planning. | [5] |
| Record content | ATO record guidance says rental expense records should include supplier name, expense amount, nature of goods or services, date incurred, and document date. | Store source documents in the model and keep missing payment dates supported by bank statements. | [7] |
| Record retention period | ATO record guidance says rental income and expense records should generally be kept for 5 years from 31 October, or for 5 years from later lodgment. | Set the document-retention reminder from the tax return date, not from the renovation completion date only. | [7] |
| Supplier ABN | ATO rental expense guidance says if a contractor does not provide an ABN when required, the payer may need to withhold 47% and may not be able to claim deductions if they fail to withhold. | Add ABN checking to the renovation workflow before paying contractors. | [1] |
| Apportionment triggers | ATO rental expense guidance lists apportionment triggers including part-year income use, private use, holiday home use, partial property rental, below-market rent, and private loan use. | Apply time, area, and loan-purpose apportionment before final deductions are used in the model. | [1] |
| Below-market rent | ATO guidance says where rent is below market for private or domestic reasons, deductions may need to be limited to the amount of rent received. | Flag family or discounted leases before allowing a rental loss from renovation-related ownership costs. | [1] |
| Holiday home condition | ATO guidance says ownership and use expenses for a holiday home are not deductible unless it is used or held for use mainly to produce rental income. | Run the holiday-home test before claiming repair, maintenance, capital works, or depreciation amounts. | [1][3] |
| Vacant land limit | ATO rental expense guidance says vacant land provisions can prevent deductions for holding costs before a property can be occupied and held to produce rental income. | Separate vacant-land holding costs from repair and renovation costs before modelling tax timing. | [1] |
| CGT sale interaction | ATO CGT rental-property guidance links capital costs and cost-base records to the sale outcome. | Keep capital improvements, capital works deductions, and cost-base adjustments in the exit model. | [10][11][13] |
| Construction cost context | ABS Producer Price Indexes show input prices for house construction rose 2.5% annually and output of building construction rose 4.2% annually in March Quarter 2026. | Use higher contingency buffers for quoted works but do not let cost inflation decide the tax category. | [16] |
| Alterations and additions context | ABS Building Activity shows alterations and additions to residential building work done were $3.7b in December Quarter 2025, down 0.2% quarterly and up 4.9% annually. | Treat renovation capacity and timing as a market constraint in the cash-flow model. | [15] |
| Rent and vacancy context | ABS CPI says rents rose 3.6% annually in May 2026, while SQM reported a 1.2% national vacancy rate in May 2026. | Do not assume a renovation automatically earns higher rent. Compare the cost to local lease evidence and vacancy risk. | [17][18] |
| Insurance context | ABS CPI says insurance rose 5.5% annually in May 2026 and Moneysmart says insurance should be checked against risks, cover, and exclusions. | Update sum insured, landlord cover, vacancy clauses, and exclusion checks after works. | [17][22] |
| Funding context | RBA data shows a 4.35% cash-rate target in June 2026 and investor housing lending rates around the low 6% range in April 2026. | Model renovation debt interest and holding costs separately from the tax classification benefit. | [19][20] |
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]
| Current issue | Observed position | Report action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hot topic: invoice quality as tax defence | ATO repair guidance says repairs and improvements can be separated only if repair costs can be identified, and recommends itemised invoices. | Make itemised trade quotes and invoices mandatory for mixed works. | [3][7] |
| Hot topic: initial repair disputes | ATO guidance says damage existing at purchase is an initial repair and is capital in nature, even where the buyer did not know about it. | Use pre-purchase photos, building reports, settlement disclosures, and first inspection records to classify early works. | [3] |
| Hot topic: full bathroom and kitchen replacements | ATO capital guidance treats substantial or major renovations and structural improvements differently from ordinary repairs. | Treat full-room projects as capital-works candidates until the itemised facts prove otherwise. | [4][3] |
| Hot topic: replacing an entirety | ATO repair guidance says replacing an entirety, such as the toilet example, is not a repair. | Ask whether the item provides a useful function independent of the rest of the premises. | [3] |
| Hot topic: DIY investor works | ATO repair guidance says the owner cannot claim the value of their own repair or maintenance labour. | Keep materials receipts, but do not capitalise or deduct notional labour. | [3] |
| Hot topic: contractor ABN and cash jobs | ATO rental expense guidance says missing ABNs can require 47% withholding and may affect deductions if withholding rules are not followed. | Reject unverified contractor payment records from the tax model until ABN and payment evidence are complete. | [1][7] |
| Hot topic: second-hand asset confusion | ATO depreciation guidance says most second-hand depreciating assets cannot be claimed after 1 July 2017. | Ask whether each asset is new, second-hand, included in a property purchase, or replaced during works. | [5][6] |
| Hot topic: new asset within old property | ATO depreciation guidance allows decline in value for new depreciating assets used for income-producing purposes. | Separate new appliances, blinds, furniture, and equipment from structural renovation costs. | [5][9] |
| Hot topic: capital works completion timing | ATO capital expense guidance says capital works deductions begin after construction is fully completed and the property is rented or available for rent. | Avoid claiming a deposit-year deduction where completion happened in the next income year. | [4] |
| Hot topic: depreciation schedule updates | ATO depreciation guidance recommends asset records and notes that a quantity surveyor can prepare a report. | Trigger a schedule update after acquisition, full renovation, major asset replacement, or sale planning. | [5][8] |
| Hot topic: CGT record reconstruction | ATO CGT guidance requires cost-base records and capital works adjustments when a property is sold. | Do not wait until sale year to find renovation invoices and capital works claims. | [10][12][13] |
| Hot topic: cost inflation and scope creep | ABS PPI shows building construction output prices rose 4.2% annually in March Quarter 2026. | Add contingency, delay, and repricing buffers, but keep tax classification separate from budget pressure. | [16] |
| Hot topic: alterations market capacity | ABS Building Activity shows residential alterations and additions work done was $3.7b in December Quarter 2025. | Use practical completion and contractor availability as cash-flow assumptions, not afterthoughts. | [15] |
| Hot topic: rent uplift claims | ABS CPI says rents rose 3.6% annually in May 2026 and rental inflation reflects sustained low vacancy in most capital cities. | Require local comparable lease evidence before using a renovation rent uplift. | [17][18] |
| Hot topic: insurance after works | ABS CPI says insurance rose 5.5% annually in May 2026 and Moneysmart recommends checking cover, risks, and exclusions. | Reprice insurance and check vacancy, malicious damage, storm, flood, and underinsurance issues after works. | [17][22] |
| Hot topic: debt-funded renovations | RBA rates show renovation funding should be tested against current investor debt costs. | Separate the loan-purpose, interest, cash-flow, and tax-classification tests. | [19][20][24] |
| Hot topic: pre-rental works | ATO guidance distinguishes expenses incurred while holding a property to produce assessable rental income from costs where the property is not yet able to be occupied or rented. | Record when the property was tenantable, advertised, available, occupied, or vacant. | [1][3] |
| Hot topic: part-year and room rental apportionment | ATO guidance uses time-based, area-based, and combined apportionment examples for mixed-use rental property. | Use time and floor-area evidence before accepting a full-year deduction. | [1] |
| Hot topic: family and discounted rent | ATO guidance says below-market rent for private reasons can limit deductions to the rent received. | Flag discounted leases before projecting negative gearing from renovation costs. | [1] |
| Hot topic: holiday home renovations | ATO guidance says holiday home expenses may not be deductible unless the property is used or held for use mainly to produce rental income. | Check booking availability, personal-use blocks, and commercial rental evidence before claiming ownership or works-related costs. | [1][3] |
| Hot topic: Budget 2026 tax reform questions | Budget 2026-27 material distinguishes future tax treatment of new builds and established residential property in announced negative gearing and CGT reforms. | Do not let a renovation page imply that announced new-build treatment applies to all established-property renovation spending. | [23] |
| Hot topic: repair after tenant exit | ATO repair guidance allows some post-rental repairs where the need relates to the income-producing period and income-year conditions are met. | Keep lease end date, condition report, bond claim, and invoice date in the same evidence pack. | [3][7] |
| Hot topic: asset table SEO questions | ATO rental property item tables list many items and their treatment as depreciating assets or capital works. | Use item-specific pages for carpet, appliances, fixtures, air conditioning, fencing, and flooring rather than one generic renovation answer. | [9] |
| Hot topic: forum questions as discovery only | Forum themes commonly ask whether a renovation can be written off, whether tenant damage is deductible, and whether a replacement is a repair. | Use those themes to write better checklists, but link the answers to ATO and market sources. | [3][4][5][7] |
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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| One invoice, many tax treatments | What if one invoice contains repair labour, improvement work, new assets, permits, and owner-chosen upgrades? | Split the invoice or classify conservatively until the supplier itemises the work. | [3][4][7] |
| Pre-existing defect | What if the defect existed when the property was acquired, even if it was discovered later? | Treat as initial-repair risk and move the cost into capital works or cost-base review. | [3][11] |
| Replacement of an entirety | What if the work replaces a complete item with its own separate function? | Do not call it a repair without checking the entirety test and the ATO item tables. | [3][9] |
| Improvement hidden in repair scope | What if the replacement is better, more valuable, more desirable, or changes character? | Reclassify the improved component as capital works or depreciation where supported. | [3][4] |
| DIY labour | What if the owner does the work themselves? | Exclude notional labour and keep only eligible material costs or capital records. | [3] |
| Second-hand assets | What if the asset was already used before acquisition or installation? | Assume no decline-in-value deduction unless a documented exception applies. | [5][6] |
| Asset set under $300 | What if several related items each cost less than $300 but together form a set? | Do not apply the $300 immediate deduction until set and related-item rules are checked. | [5] |
| Capital works not complete | What if a deposit is paid before 30 June but the work is completed after 30 June? | Start capital works deductions in the completion year, not the deposit year. | [4] |
| Property not available for rent | What if the property is unavailable, not tenantable, privately used, or blocked from commercial rent? | Apportion or defer deductions according to rental-use evidence and vacant-land rules. | [1][4] |
| Holiday home use | What if the property is also used by the owner, family, or friends? | Run the holiday-home and private-use tests before claiming ownership or works costs. | [1][3] |
| Below-market rent | What if the property is rented to family or friends below market rent? | Limit deductions where required and avoid modelling a private arrangement as a commercial rental loss. | [1] |
| Missing ABN | What if a contractor does not quote an ABN? | Check withholding and deduction risk before paying or claiming the expense. | [1] |
| Insurance recovery | What if insurer payments reimburse some work and the owner upgrades beyond reinstatement? | Separate recovery, repair, upgrade, excess, private component, and capital component. | [22][3][4] |
| Rent uplift fails | What if the renovation does not achieve the higher rent assumed in the model? | Stress the project using current rent evidence, vacancy time, and no uplift. | [17][18][21] |
| Cost blowout | What if labour and materials rise between quote and completion? | Add contingency and delay assumptions using current construction price indicators. | [16][15] |
| Debt funding stress | What if renovation costs are debt-funded at current investor rates? | Add interest, redraw purpose, holding costs, and delayed rent to the renovation case. | [19][20][24] |
| CGT double count | What if a capital cost is both deducted as capital works and later included in cost base without adjustment? | Reduce the cost base for capital works amounts claimed or claimable as required. | [13][11] |
| Record file fails review | What if the taxpayer has no photos, no itemised invoices, no supplier details, and no payment evidence? | Downgrade the claim confidence and prepare adviser review before lodgment. | [7][3] |
| Adviser classification disagreement | What if the owner, accountant, quantity surveyor, and builder classify the work differently? | Use the most conservative supported treatment or obtain tailored tax advice before claiming. | [3][4][5][14] |
| Sale soon after works | What if the investor renovates, claims deductions, and sells before long-run deductions are realised? | Run after-tax sale modelling with capital works adjustments and selling costs. | [10][13][12] |
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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Confirm rental status | Record whether the property is rented, available for rent, privately used, vacant, a holiday home, or below-market rented. | Keep lease, listing, booking, vacancy, and inspection records. | [1][3] |
| 2. Record condition before work | Photograph and document the defect, damage, age, tenant issue, or maintenance need before work starts. | Keep photos, inspection report, tenant request, strata notice, and quote. | [3][7] |
| 3. Test purchase condition | Ask whether the issue existed at acquisition or was caused during the rental period. | Keep purchase report, entry condition report, and first rental inspection. | [3] |
| 4. Get itemised quotes | Ask the contractor to split labour, materials, new assets, structural work, permits, and optional upgrades. | Reject combined invoices from the model until the classification is supportable. | [3][7] |
| 5. Classify each line | Allocate each cost to maintenance, repair, initial repair, improvement, capital works, depreciating asset, private cost, or non-deductible cost. | Use the classification table as the input to tax and cash-flow reports. | [1][3][4] |
| 6. Check asset treatment | Use the ATO depreciation page and rental property item tables for appliances, fixtures, flooring, air conditioning, furniture, and outdoor items. | Keep asset name, cost, new or second-hand status, effective life, and method. | [5][6][9] |
| 7. Check capital works | For building work, structural improvements, alterations, extensions, and major renovations, record construction cost and completion date. | Start deductions only after completion and rental availability conditions are met. | [4] |
| 8. Check ABN and payment evidence | Confirm supplier ABN, date incurred, document date, payment evidence, and nature of goods or services. | Keep invoice, receipt, bank statement, and supplier ABN record. | [1][7] |
| 9. Apportion if needed | Apply time, area, below-market, holiday-home, and private-use apportionment where relevant. | Keep floor areas, days rented, days available, rent evidence, and private-use notes. | [1] |
| 10. Update depreciation schedule | Add new depreciating assets and remove or adjust replaced assets where supported. | Keep spreadsheet or quantity-surveyor report updates. | [5][8] |
| 11. Update capital works register | Add construction cost, professional fees, permit costs, completion date, rate, and annual claim. | Keep annual capital works claim and cost-base adjustment link. | [4][13] |
| 12. Update insurance and rent assumptions | Check whether the works change sum insured, cover, exclusions, vacancy risk, or market rent. | Keep insurance schedule, valuation, rent appraisal, and vacancy stress case. | [17][18][22] |
| 13. Stress cash flow | Add contingency, delayed completion, lost rent, funding cost, insurance changes, and no rent uplift. | Keep base, downside, and adviser-review cases. | [16][15][20] |
| 14. Run final claim review | Challenge every immediate deduction, capital works amount, depreciation claim, cost-base entry, and apportionment assumption. | Approve only claims linked to source evidence, or mark them as adviser-review assumptions. | [1][3][4][5][7][13] |
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]
| Claim | Evidence used | Status | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Renovation spending is not one deduction bucket | ATO rental expense guidance separates immediate deductions, over-time deductions, and non-claimable costs. | Supported as a classification claim. | [1] |
| A repair depends on cause and timing | ATO repair guidance links repairs to rental-period wear and tear or damage and separates initial repairs. | Supported as a timing and evidence claim. | [3] |
| Initial repairs should be treated cautiously | ATO repair guidance says initial repairs are capital in nature even where the buyer was unaware of the defect. | Supported as a conservative-tax-treatment claim. | [3] |
| Improvements can change both tax timing and sale records | ATO capital and CGT guidance links improvements, capital works, depreciating assets, and cost-base adjustments. | Supported as a capital-record claim. | [4][11][13] |
| Replacing an entire item is not automatically a repair | ATO repair guidance gives an entirety replacement example where the cost is capital works. | Supported as an entirety-risk claim. | [3] |
| Depreciating assets need separate treatment | ATO depreciation guidance separates plant from premises and applies effective life, $300, low-value pool, and second-hand asset rules. | Supported as an asset-classification claim. | [5][6] |
| Records are part of the model, not admin afterthoughts | ATO record guidance specifies required rental expense record details and retention periods. | Supported as an evidence-quality claim. | [7] |
| Cost pressure changes buffers, not tax law | ABS cost and building activity data show current market pressure, while ATO sources define tax treatment. | Supported as a methodology claim. | [16][15][3] |
| Reddit and forum themes are discovery only | Forum-style questions are useful for finding recurring confusion about repairs, initial repairs, and replacements, but official sources decide the report rules. | Supported as a source-discipline claim. | [3][4][5] |
| This page is a checklist, not a tax ruling | The source base supports general classification checks only. Personal tax treatment depends on facts, records, and advice. | Supported as a limitation claim. | [1][3][4][7] |
References
- [1] ATO: How to claim rental expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [2] ATO: Rental properties guide 2025 Checked 24 June 2026
- [3] ATO: Repair and maintenance expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [4] ATO: Capital expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [5] ATO: Depreciating assets in rental properties Checked 24 June 2026
- [6] ATO: Second-hand depreciating assets Checked 24 June 2026
- [7] ATO: Keeping rental property records Checked 24 June 2026
- [8] ATO: Residential rental property assets Checked 24 June 2026
- [9] ATO: Residential rental property items Checked 24 June 2026
- [10] ATO: Capital gains tax when selling your rental property Checked 24 June 2026
- [11] ATO: Cost base of assets Checked 24 June 2026
- [12] ATO: Keeping records for property Checked 24 June 2026
- [13] ATO: Cost base adjustments for capital works Checked 24 June 2026
- [14] ATO: TR 97/23 Income tax deductions for repairs Checked 24 June 2026
- [15] ABS: Building Activity, December 2025 Checked 24 June 2026
- [16] ABS: Producer Price Indexes, March Quarter 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
- [17] ABS: Consumer Price Index, May 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
- [18] SQM Research: National Vacancy Rate, May 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
- [19] RBA: Cash Rate Target Checked 24 June 2026
- [20] RBA: Lenders Interest Rates Checked 24 June 2026
- [21] Moneysmart: Buying an investment property Checked 24 June 2026
- [22] Moneysmart: Home insurance Checked 24 June 2026
- [23] Australian Government Budget 2026-27: Tax reform Checked 24 June 2026
- [24] ATO: Interest expenses Checked 24 June 2026