Positive vs Negative Geared Properties: Cash Flow Reality

Positive vs Negative Geared Properties: Cash Flow Reality

Investment Properties

“Negative gearing” gets thrown around as if it’s a free tax hack. It’s not. Here’s what actually happens to your money in each scenario.

Positive Gearing Explained

Annual rental income > annual property expenses (interest, council rates, insurance, repairs, management fees, depreciation).

Cash flow: Money in your pocket each year (after tax). Tax impact: You pay tax on the surplus at your marginal rate.

Negative Gearing Explained

Annual rental income < annual property expenses. The loss can be deducted against your other income (salary), reducing your overall tax bill.

Cash flow: Money out of pocket each year. Tax impact: You save some tax — but never as much as you’re losing in cash.

The Math People Don’t Run

Property cost: $700,000

  • Loan at 6%: $42,000/year interest
  • Other expenses (council, insurance, mgmt, repairs): $8,000/year
  • Total expenses: $50,000

Rental income: $36,000/year (about $700/week)

Annual loss: $14,000

If you’re in the 37% tax bracket:

  • Tax saved: $5,180
  • Net out-of-pocket: $14,000 – $5,180 = $8,820/year

So you’re paying $8,820 annually for capital growth.

When Negative Gearing Works

  • High capital growth markets where 5%+ annual appreciation outpaces your annual loss
  • You’re in a high tax bracket (32.5%+ marginal rate)
  • You can comfortably absorb the negative cash flow without lifestyle disruption
  • Long hold period (10+ years) allowing growth to compound

When It Fails

  • Flat or declining market — you bleed cash for years with no gain
  • Job loss or income drop — suddenly you can’t service the loss
  • Higher interest rates — the loss balloons
  • Vacancies — even 4 weeks of no rent destroys the cash flow assumption

Positive Gearing Math

Property in regional area at $400k:

  • Loan: $360k at 6% = $21,600/year interest
  • Other expenses: $7,000
  • Total: $28,600
  • Rent: $32,500/year ($625/week)

Annual gain: $3,900 Tax owed: $1,440 (37% bracket) Net: $2,460/year positive

The 2026 Reality

Capital growth has been the historical bet for negative gearing. But:

  • Slower growth in major capitals
  • Higher interest rates making losses bigger
  • More regulatory attention on negative gearing as policy

Many advisors now recommend hunting for neutral or slightly positive cash flow properties — boring but resilient.

Strategy by Income Bracket

  • Under $90k income: Avoid negative gearing entirely. Positive cash flow only.
  • $90k–$180k: Marginal benefit from negative gearing. Consider neutral cash flow.
  • $180k+: Maximum tax benefit. Negative gearing optimization may make sense.

⚠️ Reality Check: “Tax savings” never beat “actual cash gains.” Negative gearing is a bet on capital growth, not a discount.

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