What the Negative Gearing Changes Actually Mean for Property Investors

What the Negative Gearing Changes Actually Mean for Property Investors

The biggest tax shift in a generation

The May 2026 federal budget introduced changes to negative gearing that have not been seen in Australian property investment in decades. If you have spent the last few weeks reading headlines and trying to work out what it actually means for you, you are not alone. The noise has been loud and the clarity has been limited. That is what this article is for.

Let us start with the facts, because the facts are considerably less dramatic than the headlines suggest.

What actually changed

From 1 July 2027, negative gearing on established residential properties purchased after 12 May 2026 will be restricted. Rental losses on those properties can no longer be offset against your salary or other personal income. Instead, losses are quarantined and can only be offset against residential property income, or carried forward to reduce capital gains when you sell.

New builds remain fully exempt. If you buy a newly constructed property, negative gearing remains available and you can still offset losses against your wages. The government has explicitly designed this to encourage new housing supply rather than competition for existing stock.

Existing investors are grandfathered entirely. If you owned a property before budget night, nothing changes for you. Your tax treatment stays exactly as it was.

The capital gains tax discount is also changing. The existing 50 percent discount will be replaced with a cost base indexation approach and a 30 percent minimum tax on gains, applying from 1 July 2027.

Who this actually affects

This matters most to investors who were planning to buy an established property after 12 May 2026 and rely on negative gearing losses to reduce their income tax bill in the short term. That strategy, where you buy a property running at a loss and offset it against your salary, is effectively gone for new established property purchases from here.

What it does not affect is the fundamental case for property investment. It changes one specific tax lever. The drivers of property performance, supply constraints, population growth, rental demand, and compounding capital growth over time, remain unchanged.

What smart investors are doing right now

The investors who are not panicking are the ones who were already focused on the right things. Properties with strong rental yields. Markets where demand outstrips supply. Assets chosen for fundamentals rather than tax minimisation. Those investors are reviewing their strategy, not abandoning it.

There is also a real opportunity here. Some investors will overreact and exit the market. That creates less competition and better buying conditions for those who remain calm and deliberate.

brickstowealth works with investors to find properties that make sense on the numbers without depending on a specific tax treatment. That approach has always produced better long-term outcomes, and these changes reinforce exactly why. Buying a property that loses money has never made sense to me! Focusing on getting an investment property to a neutral and ultimately positive cash flow as quickly as possible has always made far more sense!

The rules have changed, but the opportunity has not. Book a free consultation with brickstowealth to review how the budget changes affect your situation and what your next move should be. Visit brickstowealth.com.au to get started.