The 2026 Federal Budget has given Australian property owners plenty to talk about, and not all of it sits neatly in the headlines. The Government plans to restrict negative gearing from 1 July 2027 so that future losses on established residential property will no longer receive the same tax treatment, while new builds continue to be favoured. However, the Budget materials also indicate that properties owned before the Budget cut-off will remain unaffected, creating an interesting outcome for existing owner-occupiers.
This is where the issue becomes practical. A property does not need to have been an investment property on Budget night to potentially fall within the grandfathering provisions. If you owned your home before the cut-off date and later move out and convert it into a rental property, that home may still sit within the protected pre-Budget ownership category. According to realestate.com.au, this has been described as a potential “loophole” that could allow millions of Australians to convert their existing homes into investment properties and retain access to negative gearing concessions after July 2027.
| Scenario | Property position | Likely negative gearing treatment | Key conveyancing issue |
| Current home owned before Budget night | Later converted into a rental | Potentially protected under grandfathering | Keep proof of ownership and contract timing |
| Established investment bought after the reform window | Used as a rental | Losses likely restricted under new rules | Get tax advice before exchange |
| Newly built investment property | Purchased as new housing supply | Negative gearing remains available | Confirm it qualifies as a new build |
| Selling your starter home to upgrade | Property leaves your ownership | Future tax shield may be lost | Compare sale proceeds against long-term strategy |
| Holding and renting your former home | Home becomes part of your portfolio | May preserve grandfathered status | Review loan structure, land tax and title details |
As a result, many homeowners may face a significant “hold or sell” decision. In the past, a family selling a townhouse in Quakers Hill to buy a unit in Parramatta or a larger home in Blacktown would typically sell, realise the equity and move on. Under the proposed framework, some owners may think differently. Selling could mean giving up a grandfathered asset, while retaining the property and renting it out may provide long-term tax advantages, subject to appropriate financial and tax advice.
There may also be broader market implications. If more owner-occupiers choose to keep their first home as an investment rather than sell it, fewer established homes may become available for first-home buyers. This could maintain competition in suburbs where supply is already constrained, including Marsden Park, Schofields, The Ponds, Kellyville Ridge, Rouse Hill and Box Hill. SQM Research reported that Australia’s national residential vacancy rate was just 1.1 per cent in February 2026, highlighting the ongoing shortage of available rental stock.
Buyers and sellers may need to become more strategic. Sellers will need to weigh the benefit of achieving a strong sale price today against the possibility of retaining a grandfathered asset for the future. Buyers may need to strengthen their finance position and move more quickly on contract reviews if established homes become more tightly held. A strong marketing campaign may attract interest, but informed decision-making remains critical.
This is where Flash Conveyancing comes in. Julian and Renee focus on the documentation that supports the transaction: contract dates, title records, settlement history, ownership structures, special conditions, discharge requirements and transfer obligations. If you are upgrading while retaining your existing home as a future investment property, the legal work needs to be structured correctly from the outset, particularly where one property becomes a rental and the other becomes your principal place of residence.

Flash Conveyancing Advice
Don’t assume selling a pre-Budget property is automatically the best next step. Before listing your property, consider the tax, lending, land tax and conveyancing implications of retaining it as an investment. What was once simply your family home may become one of your most valuable long-term assets.
Julian and Renee from Flash Conveyancing are specialists in property transactions throughout NSW. With extensive experience working with local councils including Blacktown, Hawkesbury, Blue Mountains, The Hills, Hornsby and Parramatta, they provide a personalised approach to every settlement across Acacia Gardens, Angus, Arndell Park, Blacktown, Colebee, Glendenning, Glenwood, Grantham Farm, Kellyville Ridge, Kings Langley, Marsden Park, Melonba, Oakhurst, Parklea, Quakers Hill, Riverstone, Schofields, Seven Hills, Stanhope Gardens, Tallawong, The Ponds, Baulkham Hills, Beaumont Hills, Bella Vista, Castle Hill, Kellyville, Kenthurst, North Rocks, Northmead, Rouse Hill, Vineyard, Windsor, Annangrove, Box Hill, Cattai, Dural, Gables, Galston, Glenhaven, Glenorie, Maraylya, Middle Dural, Nelson, North Kellyville, Norwest and Winston Hills.

