Australia Negative Gearing Calculator 2024-25

Calculate your rental property tax benefit from negative gearing. Rental loss Γ— marginal tax rate = ATO subsidy. Before/after tax comparison with full cash flow analysis.

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Your income excluding the property
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Gross rent received
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Interest component only (not principal)
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Non-cash deduction β€” get a depreciation schedule
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Not tax deductible β€” for cash flow only
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Annual Tax Refund (ATO subsidy)
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Rental Loss (tax deductible)
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Net Annual Cash Position
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Your Marginal Tax Rate

Rental Property Tax Computation

How Negative Gearing Tax Benefits Work

When a property is negatively geared, the rental loss reduces your total taxable income. The ATO effectively subsidises part of your holding costs through a lower tax bill β€” but you are still out-of-pocket for the remaining loss. The key formula is straightforward.

Tax Benefit Formula

Rental Loss = Rental Income βˆ’ (All Deductible Expenses inc. depreciation)
Tax Benefit = Rental Loss Γ— Marginal Tax Rate
Net Cash Outflow = Rental Loss βˆ’ Depreciation βˆ’ Tax Benefit + Mortgage Principal
(Depreciation is added back as it is non-cash)

Example: A$120K income, A$6,000 rental loss

Rental income: A$24,000  |  Total deductible expenses: A$43,000
Rental loss: A$43,000 βˆ’ A$24,000 = A$19,000
Marginal rate at A$120K: 37%
Tax benefit: A$19,000 Γ— 37% = A$7,030 refund
But still out-of-pocket for A$19,000 βˆ’ A$7,030 = A$11,970 per year (excluding depreciation benefit)
Extended

Positive vs Negative Gearing Cash Flow Comparison

Side-by-side cash flow analysis β€” net position with and without the property over multiple yield scenarios

Full cash flow comparison β€” your financial position with and without the investment property. Includes the non-cash depreciation benefit in tax, but shows real cash movement separately.

ItemWithout PropertyWith PropertyDifference

Yield Scenarios β€” Net Cash Position at Different Rent Levels

Weekly RentAnnual RentRental ResultTax BenefitNet Cash/Year

Frequently Asked Questions

What is negative gearing in Australia?
Negative gearing occurs when the costs of owning a rental property β€” mortgage interest, depreciation, maintenance, management fees, rates, and insurance β€” exceed the rental income. The resulting loss can be deducted against your other income (e.g., salary), reducing your overall taxable income and creating a tax refund. Australia is one of the few countries that allows this broad offset against non-rental income, making it a popular investment strategy.
How is the tax benefit of negative gearing calculated?
The tax benefit equals the rental loss multiplied by your marginal tax rate. For example, a $10,000 rental loss at a 37% marginal rate saves $3,700 in tax. However, this is only a partial offset β€” you are still out-of-pocket for the remaining $6,300 of the loss. The hope is that capital growth will eventually outweigh the ongoing cash outflow. At a 45% marginal rate, the ATO effectively subsidises 45 cents of every dollar lost.
What expenses can I claim for a rental property?
Immediately deductible: mortgage interest, property management fees, landlord insurance, council rates, water rates, land tax, repairs and maintenance, advertising for tenants, stationery and accounting. Capital works deduction (2.5%/year for 40 years on construction costs post-September 1987). Depreciation on plant and equipment (assets like carpets, appliances β€” subject to rules for properties bought after 9 May 2017 where only new assets qualify for depreciation claims by investors).
What is the difference between negative gearing and positive gearing?
Negative gearing: rental expenses exceed rental income β†’ creates a tax-deductible loss β†’ ATO partially subsidises holding cost β†’ relies on capital growth for profit. Positive gearing: rental income exceeds expenses β†’ generates taxable profit β†’ no ATO subsidy but provides positive cash flow β†’ can work in high-yield, lower-growth markets. Which is better depends on your income tax rate, the property market, and your cash flow needs. High-income earners benefit most from negative gearing due to their higher marginal rates.
Can I claim depreciation on a second-hand property bought after 2017?
As of 1 July 2017, investors purchasing second-hand residential properties cannot claim depreciation deductions on existing plant and equipment (carpets, appliances, blinds etc). This change applies to properties where the contract was exchanged after 9 May 2017. Capital works (the building structure and fixed assets) can still be claimed at 2.5%/year if the construction started after 15 September 1987. New properties are not affected β€” investors can still claim depreciation on new plant and equipment.