If you own an investment property, the 2026 Budget just changed the game on you.
Negative gearing on secondhand residential property is gone — but only for whoever buys it next. If you already own your property, nothing has changed for you. You keep every dollar of that benefit for as long as you hold it.
Here’s the part that actually affects you. The investor who might buy your property from you doesn’t get that benefit. Which means the pool of people willing to pay a premium for what you’re holding just shrank, roughly two thirds overnight — not because your tax position changed, but because theirs did.
None of that is your fault. You built your strategy around rules that had been in place for decades. You did the research. You made smart decisions. Then in one budget announcement, the rules changed on you mid game.
Here is the question worth asking today.
Not “how do I get back to where I was.” That strategy is gone. It is not coming back.
The question is, what is the new vehicle?
Because while the budget took something away from investors, it handed something else to a completely different group. Property developers. And becoming one is not the leap you think it is.
Here Is What Actually Happened
Every investor who might have bought your property from you just lost their reason to pay a premium for it. So investor demand for established stock has dropped. Sites that could be turned into small developments are now sitting with far less competition at the table, and vendors are more motivated than they have been in years.
At the same time, new residential stock still gets the tax benefits. Which means every investor who just walked away from existing property is now hunting for new builds instead. Add in first home buyers being pushed toward new stock, and foreign buyers who can only purchase new stock — and you have three separate buyer groups all chasing the same thing.
What developers build.
So while investors are fighting over a shrinking set of tax breaks, developers are sitting in a market where sites are cheaper to acquire and finished product is more in demand than it has been in years.
That is not a small shift. That is a structural change in who makes money in Australian property, and it happened in a single afternoon.
The Gold Rush Every Investor Is Missing
In 1848, when gold was discovered in California, hundreds of thousands of people rushed to the goldfields to dig. Most of them went broke.
The ones who got rich were the ones who supplied the rush. Levi Strauss did not pan for gold. He sold trousers to the men who did, and built one of the most enduring brands in history.
The 2026 Budget just started a property gold rush. Every investor in the country is now rushing toward the same asset: new residential stock.
You can join that rush and compete with everyone else for the same shrinking supply. Or you can be the one supplying it, and name your price.
That is the difference between an investor and a developer.