Money · Negative gearing

Negative Gearing Reality Check

Is your investment property actually costing you money after tax? Run the full numbers: cash shortfall, tax benefit, and break-even capital growth.

Instant result Plain-English why Copyable takeaway
Money Under 3 minutes Result card

Negative gearing

Enter your rental income, mortgage, rates, insurance, management fees, maintenance, property value, depreciation, and tax rate.

What this means

No waffle. Just the number and how it was worked out.

Formula used

Calculates annual rental income, total ownership costs, cash shortfall, depreciation-enhanced tax loss, ATO tax benefit, after-tax net cost, gross yield, and capital growth break-even percentage.

Worked example

A$600/week rent, A$3,200/month mortgage, A$1,800 rates, A$1,500 insurance, 8% management, A$2,000 maintenance, A$750k property, A$4,000 depreciation at 32.5% tax: roughly A$8,000 after-tax annual cost requiring ~1.1% annual growth to break even.

Common questions

What is negative gearing?
Negative gearing occurs when the costs of owning an investment property exceed the rental income. The resulting loss can be offset against your other income, reducing your tax bill. The strategy relies on capital growth outpacing the ongoing cash shortfall.

Is negative gearing still worth it in Australia?
It depends on your marginal tax rate, property location, expected capital growth, and how long you plan to hold. High-rate taxpayers benefit more from the tax offset. This calculator shows your actual break-even growth requirement so you can judge whether it's realistic.

What counts as a deductible expense?
The ATO allows deductions for mortgage interest (not principal), council rates, landlord insurance, property management fees, maintenance and repairs, depreciation, and certain other costs. Capital improvements are generally not immediately deductible — check with your accountant.

How is the depreciation claim calculated?
Depreciation covers the wear and tear of the building structure (Division 43) and fixtures and fittings (Division 40). A quantity surveyor's report is the ATO-accepted way to maximise your claim. This tool uses the figure you enter — if you don't have a report, enter 0 and you'll see the conservative case.

Plain-English summary

The result summary for this calculator will live here.

This section translates the result into a short, direct takeaway rather than leaving the page at a bare number.

Disclaimer: This tool provides estimates only and is not financial or tax advice. Depreciation schedules should be prepared by a quantity surveyor. Consult a licensed financial adviser and tax professional before making investment decisions.

After this verdict

Try Percentage Change Engine next

Work out the percentage increase or decrease between two values with a clear result and worked explanation.

Open the next verdict

Related instruments

Keep going

Percentage Change Engine

Work out the percentage increase or decrease between two values with a clear result and worked explanation.

Open verdict

VAT Engine

Add or remove VAT from a price with clear totals, tax breakdown, and net versus gross context.

Open verdict

Subscription Shame Index

Find out how much your subscriptions are quietly costing you in money and attention.

Open verdict