The Orchard

Kevin Orchard

Sydney based Kevin Orchard's finance focused discussions around property, loans and mortgages, business and anything else that goes.

  1. Australia Government Update - Property Negative Gearing and Capital Tax Changes

    May 18

    Australia Government Update - Property Negative Gearing and Capital Tax Changes

    From 1 July 2027, the Government will introduce a fundamental tightening of negative gearing for residential property. The reform pivots decisively toward boosting housing supply: only "new builds" will retain the ability to offset rental losses against salary and wage income. Importantly, the policy does not abolish deductions for established properties. Instead, it ring‑fences them. For an investor like Yoonseo, who purchases an existing dwelling after the May 2026 announcement, rental losses can no longer reduce tax on her $100,000 salary. Those losses remain deductible, but only in the future — against rental profits or the eventual capital gain. The tax benefit is preserved in value but deferred in timing, which is the key liquidity impact for investors. To qualify as a new build and retain immediate salary‑offsetting benefits, a property must genuinely add to supply. Under the Budget's criteria: Eligible: Homes constructed on vacant land; a duplex replacing a single dwelling. Ineligible: Knock‑down rebuilds that do not increase dwelling count; substantial renovations; secondary dwellings such as granny flats attached to existing homes. As the Budget papers highlight, current settings can encourage leveraged investment strategies that deliver greater tax advantages to investors than to owner‑occupiers. By narrowing these advantages for established properties, the Government aims to reduce investor competition for the same stock sought by first‑home buyers and redirect capital toward new housing supply. Book a session to find out more - https://orchardlending.com.au/contact-us/

    21 min
  2. The Structural Shift: Australian Budget Tax and Property Reforms

    May 14

    The Structural Shift: Australian Budget Tax and Property Reforms

    The Albanese government has announced major tax reforms in the 2026 federal budget, breaking its election promise not to touch negative gearing or capital gains tax. From budget night, negative gearing will only apply to newly built investment properties, ending the long‑standing ability for investors to deduct losses on established homes. The government argues this shift will rebalance the housing market toward first‑home buyers, with Treasury estimating 75,000 investor‑owned properties will move to owner‑occupiers over a decade, though it will also reduce new housing supply by about 35,000 dwellings. Capital gains tax rules will also be overhauled from July 2027. The current 50% CGT discount will be replaced with a system that taxes only gains above inflation, paired with a new minimum 30% tax rate on capital gains to prevent high‑income earners from reducing their tax burden through timing or trust structures. Existing assets will be grandfathered into the old system for gains accrued before 2027, while gains after that date will fall under the new rules. Pensioners and income‑support recipients will be exempt from the minimum rate. The budget also introduces a minimum 30% tax on discretionary family trusts from 2028, closing what the government describes as a loophole used disproportionately by high‑wealth households. While the opposition argues the changes will worsen housing shortages and raise rents, the government says its broader housing package—including $2 billion for enabling infrastructure and an extended ban on foreign buyers—will offset supply impacts and add a net 30,000 homes over four years. Over a decade, the tax changes are expected to raise $77.2 billion in revenue, even as the government acknowledges the political cost of breaking another tax promise. Read more by following us here - Australia Budget Property Tax Changes

    21 min

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Sydney based Kevin Orchard's finance focused discussions around property, loans and mortgages, business and anything else that goes.