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Negative gearing and tax benefits for investors explained

As Tasmania's property market heats up, investors are increasingly turning to negative gearing strategies—but experts warn the maths must stack up before you buy.

By Tasmania Property Desk · Published 28 June 2026 at 4:41 am

3 min read

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Negative gearing and tax benefits for investors explained
Photo: Photo by olia danilevich on Pexels

Tasmania's median house price of $560,000 has created a new class of small investors, many drawn by the state's lifestyle migration boom. But with mortgage rates holding firm, a growing number are exploring negative gearing—a strategy that deserves careful scrutiny before committing capital in suburbs like Battery Point or Sandy Bay.

Negative gearing occurs when an investment property's annual expenses exceed its rental income. The difference becomes a tax-deductible loss that can offset other income, reducing your overall tax bill. For a Hobart investor with a property in New Town earning $400 a week in rent but facing $25,000 in annual costs (mortgage interest, rates, insurance, maintenance), that $8,000 shortfall theoretically reduces taxable income.

The appeal is obvious. An investor on the 45 per cent marginal tax rate could claim $3,600 back from the ATO. Multiply that across multiple properties, and the tax benefit feels substantial. Yet this is where the strategy becomes dangerous.

"Negative gearing only works if you believe capital growth will exceed your annual losses," explains property economist David Chin, who closely monitors Tasmanian market data. "In suburbs like Launceston's emerging inner-north, where median prices hover near $480,000, you need that growth trajectory to justify the annual cash drain."

The hidden costs are often underestimated. A Battery Point terrace purchased for $750,000 might generate $1,100 weekly rent—but vacancy rates, unexpected plumbing in a 1950s cottage, or a body corporate levy shock can quickly turn modest negative gearing into financial stress. The tax deduction doesn't pay the bank; your savings account does.

The ATO's stance matters too. Negative gearing is legitimate, but the property must generate genuine rental income with a realistic expectation of eventual profitability. "Hobby losses"—properties purchased with little intent to rent competitively—invite scrutiny.

Rising interest rates have already exposed weak negatively geared portfolios nationally. Tasmania's slower price growth compared to Melbourne or Sydney means investors here can't always rely on capital gains to bail out underperforming properties.

Smart investors treat negative gearing as a temporary tax tool, not a permanent income strategy. If you're considering a rental in South Hobart or Riverside, model five-year scenarios including interest rate rises, vacancy periods, and major repairs. Only then does the maths—and the tax benefit—make real sense.

The bonus: positive cash flow builds wealth faster than any tax deduction ever will.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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This article was produced by the The Daily Tasmania editorial desk and covers property in Tasmania. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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