Negative Gearing in Australia: Is It Still Worth It in 2026?
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Negative gearing gets spoken about like it’s the big secret to building wealth through property. It’s not.
It matters. Of course it does. But a lot of investors give it way too much weight, way too early.
They get excited that a property is “tax deductible” before they’ve even worked out whether it’s actually a good buy.
That’s where people get themselves into trouble. Because negative gearing does not make a bad property good. It does not fix an average asset.
And it definitely should not be the main reason you buy.
In 2026, the topic is getting more attention again. Rates are still higher than they were a few years ago. Holding costs are up. There’s more noise around possible future tax changes. So naturally, more investors are asking the question:
Is negative gearing still worth it?
My answer is simple: Yes, sometimes.
But only if the property is worth owning in the first place. And only if you can afford to hold it without putting yourself under too much pressure.
That second part gets ignored way too often.
What negative gearing actually means
At a basic level, negative gearing just means your investment property costs you more to hold than it brings in.
So the rent coming in is not enough to cover the interest, property management fees, rates, insurance, maintenance, and everything else that comes with owning it.
You run at a loss. That loss may reduce your taxable income, depending on your personal setup and tax position.
That’s all negative gearing is. It is a tax outcome. It is not a strategy on its own. And that’s where I think a lot of people get confused. They start talking about negative gearing like it’s the investment thesis. It’s not. The property still has to be good enough to justify owning.
Because at the end of the day, you are still losing money each month. You might get some tax relief on part of that loss, sure, but you are still carrying the shortfall.
That’s why I think people need to be careful not to romanticise it. The biggest mistake is thinking:
“If it’s negatively geared, it must be a smart investment.” No. That’s just not true.
Plenty of rubbish properties are negatively geared. An overpriced apartment in an oversupplied pocket can be negatively geared. A poor-quality property in a weak location can be negatively geared. A compromised asset with no scarcity can be negatively geared.
The tax result tells you nothing by itself about whether the property is actually worth buying. That’s why I think too many investors focus on the wrong thing.
They’re asking:
- How much can I claim?
- How much will I get back at tax time?
- Is the loss deductible?
- Before they’ve properly asked:
- Is this actually a good asset?
- Is the location strong?
- Is there scarcity?
- Is there owner-occupier appeal?
- Can I hold it comfortably?
- Would I still want this property if there was no tax benefit?
That last question is a big one. Because if the answer is no, that should tell you something.
A tax deduction is not free money. This is another part people need to hear more clearly. A tax deduction is not a bonus. It is not some little reward for buying property. You are still spending real money and carrying a real loss.
So if someone says, “It’s okay, it’s negatively geared,” my first thought is usually, okay… but is it actually a strong asset? Because losing $10,000 to get some tax relief on part of that loss is still losing money.
That doesn’t automatically make it dumb. Sometimes it absolutely can be the right move. But only when the asset is strong enough to justify it and the investor can genuinely afford the holding cost.
That is a very different mindset from just chasing deductions.
When negative gearing can make sense
Negative gearing can make sense when someone is buying a quality property and the shortfall is manageable.
That’s the key word. Manageable. Not tight. Not stressful. Not “I should be okay unless something goes wrong.” Manageable.
If you are buying a quality house in a quality area with strong fundamentals, and you are comfortable carrying a bit of shortfall each month, that can be completely fine.
Why? Because you are not buying it for the tax benefit. You are buying it because it is a strong asset and you believe it has a solid long-term future. The deduction just softens the holding cost a bit. That is the right order. Asset first. Tax second. Not the other way around.
When it usually doesn’t make sense
Where I see people go wrong is when they buy something average and use tax language to make themselves feel better about it.
That’s usually a bad sign.
- Maybe the property is low quality.
- Maybe the location is weak.
- Maybe there’s too much supply.
- Maybe there’s no scarcity.
- Maybe they’ve stretched too hard just to get into the market.
Then they say, “That’s okay, it’s negatively geared.” No. That’s not okay by default. That’s just a cashflow-negative property. And if the asset is poor, you’ve now got the worst of both worlds: weak holding costs and a weak property.
That’s not strategy. That’s just rationalising a bad buy. I also think some investors underestimate the mental side of holding a cashflow-negative property. It’s easy to sound confident when nothing has gone wrong yet.
Different story when you get hit with a vacancy, repairs, insurance increases, rates, interest costs, and your own life expenses rising at the same time. That’s why holding power matters so much.
A property can be fine on paper and still be the wrong buy for you if it puts too much pressure on your life.
What I’d focus on before negative gearing
If I was talking to an investor about this, the questions I’d care about first would be:
- Is it a quality asset?
- Is it in a quality location?
- Is there scarcity?
- Is there strong demand?
- Would owner-occupiers want it too?
- Can you hold it without stress?
Because over the long term, those things matter more than the deduction. The asset does the heavy lifting. Not the accountant. Not the tax return. Not the phrase “negative gearing.” That’s the bit people forget. Property investing is still about buying well and holding well.
The tax treatment matters, yes. But it is not the thing that rescues a poor decision.
What about future tax changes?
This is why the topic keeps coming back. Every time politicians, economists or the media start talking about negative gearing or capital gains tax, people get nervous. Fair enough. Policy can change.
That’s exactly why I would never want someone building their whole strategy around one tax setting staying untouched forever. That’s fragile.
The stronger approach is to buy a good asset, keep solid buffers, and make sure the deal still broadly makes sense even if conditions change. You can’t control policy. You can control whether you over-stretch. You can control whether you buy quality or compromise. You can control how much buffer you keep. That matters more.
A simple real-world example
I’d rather see someone buy a strong house in a solid regional city or metro fringe area, even if it costs them a bit each month to hold, than buy a shiny average property with weaker fundamentals just because the numbers look “clever” at tax time.
Why? Because the first investor is backing the asset. The second investor is often backing the spreadsheet. And property doesn’t reward spreadsheet theory the way people think it does. Over time, quality usually wins.
So is negative gearing still worth it in 2026?
Yes, it can be. But it is not the hero. It is not the reason to buy. It is just one part of the broader picture. If the property is strong, the shortfall is manageable, and you can hold it properly, negative gearing can still have a place.
If the only thing making the deal sound attractive is the tax deduction, I’d be very careful. Because that usually means you’re trying to make an average deal sound smarter than it is.
Final word
Negative gearing still matters in 2026.
But the main game has not changed. Buy quality. Don’t over-stretch. Keep buffers. Understand your cash flow.
And stop treating tax deductions like they can fix a bad property decision. They can’t. Negative gearing is a tax outcome. That’s it. The real money is still made by buying the right asset and holding it long enough for the asset to do its job.
That’s the part that matters most.
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