Over the past few weeks, speculation has intensified that the Federal Government could adjust the tax settings that shape property investment returns — not by banning investment, but by changing the rules on how profits are taxed, particularly capital gains.
The clearest thread running through both ABC and Australian Financial Review coverage is a possible shift to the Capital Gains Tax (CGT) discount ahead of the May 2026 Federal Budget. ABC reporting, citing a “well-sourced leak”, said changes to CGT discounts could form a budget centrepiece, noting the government has publicly downplayed it but has not ruled it out.
The AFR has similarly reported that scaling back the 50% CGT discount is under consideration as part of a “reform” budget narrative, and has explored several design options that are being discussed in policy circles.
So what does “moving the goal posts” mean in practice? The reporting points to a handful of plausible mechanisms:
Reducing the discount (e.g., from 50% to something lower).
Replacing the discount with an indexation-style approach (a return to a pre-1999 method where inflation is accounted for differently).
Potentially applying changes in a way that targets housing investors more directly (a key question in the debate).
The argument for change, as framed in this reporting, is budget repair and perceived fairness — with the AFR highlighting claims about the large long-run fiscal cost of the discount under current settings.
The argument against is behavioural and supply-driven: industry groups warn changes could reduce investor appetite or alter selling behaviour, and some claim landlords may try to protect yields — with the AFR reporting warnings that rents could rise if investor tax settings are tightened.
For property owners and investors, the most important takeaway is this: nothing is legislated yet, but the reporting suggests the policy conversation has moved from “never” to “not ruled out”. Watch for concrete signals in the lead-up to the budget — especially any language around “housing fairness”, “tax integrity”, or “budget repair” tied specifically to CGT.