This month has been one of the most significant in recent memory for Australian property owners and buyers. The RBA lifted the cash rate for the third time this year, and Treasurer Jim Chalmers handed down a Federal Budget that reshapes the rules for investors, first home buyers, and everyday Australians alike. We’ve pulled together the key updates below.
Federal Budget 2026–27
The Federal Budget was handed down on 12 May. Here’s what matters most if you own property, are looking to buy, or run your own business.
Negative gearing and capital gains tax
From 1 July 2027, two key changes will apply to new residential property investments:
- Negative gearing on established properties will no longer be deductible against your regular income. New builds will remain exempt and will continue to attract the existing 50% capital gains tax discount. Properties held before the announcement (7:30pm AEST, 12 May 2026) will be exempt from the negative gearing changes.
- Capital gains tax (CGT) treatment will also move to an inflation-adjusted model with a 30% minimum tax rate. The CGT reforms will only apply to gains accruing after 1 July 2027.
If you have questions about what this means for your situation, it’s worth speaking to your accountant or financial adviser.
First home buyers
The 5% deposit Home Guarantee Scheme continues, meaning eligible buyers can enter the market without paying Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI). The Budget also commits $2 billion to housing infrastructure, targeting 65,000 new homes, and extends the ban on foreign investors purchasing existing homes.
Cost-of-living relief
A new $1,000 instant tax deduction for work-related expenses removes the receipt burden for individuals and sole traders. A Working Australians Tax Offset (WATO) of up to $250 provides additional relief from 1 July 2027. Personal income tax rates will also fall – the 16% marginal rate drops to 15% from 1 July 2026, and to 14% from 1 July 2027.
Small business and self-employed
The $20,000 instant asset write-off is now permanent for businesses with a turnover up to $10 million – meaning eligible purchases can be fully deducted in the same year rather than depreciated over time. From 1 July 2026, companies with turnover up to $1 billion will also be able to carry back tax losses from the previous two years. Again, your accountant will be best placed to advise on how these changes apply to your circumstances.

Interest rate news
The RBA raised the cash rate by 0.25 percentage points to 4.35% on 5 May – the third consecutive rise for 2026. The decision was voted 8–1 by the Board, a decisive shift from the narrow 5–4 split in March.
Australia’s annual Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose to 4.6% in March, up from 3.7% in February and marking its highest level since September 2023. The RBA’s preferred measure, underlying inflation, held at 3.3%, still above its 2–3% target band.
RBA governor Michele Bullock attributed the surge in Australian inflation to the oil price shock linked to the Middle East conflict and warned more cash rate hikes could be needed.
“It’s a real income shock for Australia and the world,” she said. “Australians are poorer because of this shock to oil, energy and other commodity prices that are being impacted.”
The next cash rate decision will be announced on 16 June. Some economists are anticipating we could see two more cash rate hikes in June and August due to the persistent inflationary pressures.
If you’re curious where your home loan stands, talk to us for a review and we’ll let you know if there’s a more competitive option available.