Jim Chalmers didn’t muck around last night.
The 2026 Federal Budget is the biggest shake-up to Aussie tax in two decades. Negative gearing. Capital gains tax. Family trusts. The three big rocks Aussie tax planning has been built on for years all got a touch-up.
Here’s the breakdown of what this Budget means for families, employees, business owners, retirees and investors, plus the changes that affect everyone. Jump to the section that matters most to you.
The three big ones
What it means for families
What it means for employees
What it means for business owners
What it means for retirees
What it means for investors
Negative gearing reform
Capital Gains Tax reform
Reforms that impact everyone
Winners and losers
Key dates that matter
The bottom line
Negative gearing. From 1 July 2027, you can only negatively gear new builds. Established (existing) properties owned before 7:30pm AEST on 12 May 2026 are fully grandfathered, meaning you can keep negatively gearing them indefinitely. Established properties bought between Budget night and 30 June 2027 can be negatively geared during that window only, then lose the benefit from 1 July 2027 onwards. New builds keep negative gearing both before and after July 2027.
Capital Gains Tax. The 50% discount is being replaced with cost base indexation and a 30% minimum tax rate from 1 July 2027.
Discretionary trusts. A minimum 30% tax will apply to taxable income retained in family trusts from 1 July 2028.
These are big shifts. We’re not going to sugar-coat that. But there’s also an 18-month runway to plan, restructure where needed, and make moves with your eyes open.
If you’ve been making decisions based on family tax planning, three things stand out.
Since this post first went up, the government has softened its stance on trusts. On 18 June, the Prime Minister confirmed that income from discretionary trusts set up for genuine testamentary purposes (the kind created through a will) will be exempt from the new 30% minimum tax. It’s a direct response to the “death tax” worries that followed the Budget.
One thing to be clear on: this carve-out is for testamentary trusts only. If your family trust is set up to hold investments or run a business, the 30% minimum tax from 1 July 2028 still applies.
This one’s a mixed bag.
For most operating businesses run through a trust, this means the family income-splitting benefit gets capped. If your spouse and adult kids have been receiving distributions to use their lower marginal rates, that benefit goes away once the trustee has paid 30% off the top.
There’s a three-year rollover relief window from 1 July 2027 to restructure out of a trust into a company or fixed trust without triggering CGT. That window matters. If your business structure was built around trust distributions, the next 18 months is when you decide what to do about it.
Primary production income, certain minor’s income, and income from existing testamentary trusts are excluded.
Since this post first went up, there’s been a win for business owners. On 18 June, the government lifted the turnover threshold for the small business CGT concessions from $2 million to $10 million. That brings around 2.7 million more businesses within reach of these concessions when they sell an active business asset.
There’s also a new concession for start-ups. If you own a business, it’s worth checking with your adviser and accountant whether you now qualify, because the tax savings here can be substantial.
This is the section that’s getting the most attention.
From 1 July 2027, losses from established residential investment properties bought after 12 May 2026 (7:30pm AEST) will only be deductible against rental income or capital gains from residential property. Excess losses get carried forward to offset future residential property income.
The key word is grandfathering:
Properties held in widely-held trusts, superannuation funds (including SMSFs), and build-to-rent developments are also exempt.
From 1 July 2027, the 50% CGT discount disappears for individuals, trusts and partnerships. In its place:
This applies to all CGT assets, including pre-1985 assets that were previously CGT-exempt.
A few important details:
Fuel excise cut. Already in effect. Petrol and diesel excise was halved on 1 April 2026 (a 32 cent-per-litre reduction) for three months. The heavy vehicle road user charge went to zero for the same period.
Cheaper medicines. $5.9 billion over five years for new and amended PBS listings.
Foreign buyer ban extended for established homes until 30 June 2029.
Tax fraud protection. $86.3 million to modernise fraud detection in the tax and super systems, plus expanded ATO powers to chase fraud committed by tax intermediaries.
Digital ID system. $654 million over four years to maintain and expand Australia’s Digital ID infrastructure.
The big winners: PAYG employees, first home buyers and small business owners. Potentially worse off: future property investors, family trust users and high-balance super members. And the mixed bag: business owners, retirees and families with adult kids, who’ll feel both sides of the ledger.
If you’re in the mixed bag or on the losing side, your financial strategy will likely need a revisit to offset any downsides of the reforms.
This Budget moved a lot of the financial furniture.
For more of the reforms, there’s time to adjust your financial strategy to cushion the blow of any downside.
If you’d like to chat through what this Budget means for your specific situation, get in touch.
Cheering you on!
John Manserra Certified Financial Planner®, Director
Apex Advice – Geelong Financial Advisers and Geelong Mortgage Brokers for business owners and professionals who want to make work a choice before you’re 67. Book a 15 minute chat here.
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Important:
This is not tax advice. The information contained in this update has been provided as general advice only. The contents have been prepared without taking account of your personal objectives, financial situation or needs.
You should seek advice before making any decision regarding any information, strategies or products mentioned to consider whether that is appropriate to your own objectives, financial situation and needs.
Current at 27 March 2026
The information contained on this website has been provided as general advice only. The contents have been prepared without taking account of your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. You should, before you make any decision regarding any information, strategies or products mentioned on this website, consult your own financial advisor to consider whether that is appropriate having regard to your own objective, financial situation and needs. Apex Advice Pty Ltd ABN 14 655 779 187 is a Corporate Authorised Representative (ASIC 1296045) of Paragem Pty Ltd ABN 16 108 571 875 Australian Financial Services Licence 297276. Australian Credit Licence 389087.
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