Negative Gearing While Abroad
Does negative gearing still work for non-residents? Short answer: it depends on whether you have other AU-source income to offset.
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How Negative Gearing Works
When your rental property expenses exceed rental income, the loss (negative gearing) can be offset against your other assessable income, reducing your total tax. This is one of Australia's most widely used tax strategies.
The Non-Resident Problem
Non-residents are only taxed on Australian-source income. If you earn no other AU income besides the rental property, the rental loss has nothing to offset. It carries forward as a prior year loss until you have AU-source income to offset it against — which may be years (or never, if you don't return).
Travel Deduction Restriction
Since 1 July 2017, travel to inspect or maintain rental property cannot be claimed as a deduction (for any taxpayer, not just non-residents). This closed a significant loophole for expats who used to deduct flights back to Australia to "inspect" their property.
When to Consider Selling vs Holding
| Factor | Hold | Sell |
|---|---|---|
| Rental loss building up? | Useful if you'll return to AU with income | Loss is "wasted" if no AU income |
| CGT discount? | May recover if you return as resident | No discount as non-resident (post-2012) |
| FRCGW withholding? | N/A | 12.5% of sale price withheld |
| Cash flow? | Negative — property costs money each year | Positive — capital released |