Recent changes to how Australia treats negative gearing on established properties are beginning to reshape Melbourne's property market dynamics, with early evidence suggesting the tax shift is working as intended. According to The Courier, a young investor couple won an auction in Wendouree while purchasing within the new negative gearing tax reforms, illustrating how the policy is already influencing buyer composition at auctions.
The negative gearing changes, which now restrict losses on established properties from reducing tax on other income, were designed to slow investor dominance in the property market and improve first-home buyer competitiveness. Early Melbourne auctions suggest the policy is having a measurable effect on who can afford to compete for properties, potentially opening doors for owner-occupiers and younger couples to win auctions that might have previously gone to experienced property investors.
For Melbourne's broader property market, the shift signals a recalibration of buyer incentives that could ease pressure on entry-level and mid-market segments. The implications remain unfolding, but if the Wendouree result is emblematic of a wider trend, the reform could meaningfully alter Melbourne's investor-to-owner-occupier ratio over the coming years, with consequences for rental supply and overall market stability.
Sources: thecourier.com.au.
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