Property Investment

3 min read

Private property issue #76 - What each political party is offering property investors

Hereā€™s your election update with what each political party is offering property investors.

Share

LinkedInFacebookTwitter
Copy to clipboard

Copied

Hereā€™s your election update with what each political party is offering property investors.

On Tuesday, Ed and I hosted our monthly webinar. It was an election special. And we covered party policies that impact property investors.

Hereā€™s a summary of the 4 main policies.

Remember ā€“ Iā€™m not here to tell you who to vote for.

Youā€™ll decide that based on lots of policies. Health, education, transport ā€¦ and more.

This newsletter lets you know what the property-based policies are. Itā€™s not here to tell you which box to tick on election day.

Policy #1 ā€“ Interest deductibility

Interest deductibility

Labour, the Greens, and Te Pāti Māori will leave interest deductibility as is.

Property investors wonā€™t be able to claim interest as a tax deduction.

So most property investors will pay more tax.

But, National said itā€™ll reverse this. That means most property investors will pay less tax.

But, while National want to phase these changes in. ACT wants to cancel it straight away.

Policy #2 ā€“ Bright-line test / capital gains tax

Bright line test

Labour wants to leave the bright-line test at 10 years. But they have ruled out a Capital Gains Tax (CGT).

Thatā€™s the same for the Greens and Te Pāti Māori. Thereā€™s nothing about a CGT or changing the bright-line in their policies.

National wants to cut back the bright-line to 2 years. And that would apply to properties you already own.

Even if you bought your property when the bright-line was 10 years.

ACT wants to do away with it entirely. No bright-line.

Though, of course, even under ACT, traders and flippers still need to pay tax.

Interesting that no party (currently in parliament) want to introduce a CGT this term.

Will this impact the property market?

I think so.

A lot of people have been sitting on the sidelines. Caught between a rock (painful cash flow) and a hard place (canā€™t sell without being taxed).

I often hear: "As soon as I'm out of the bright-line I'm getting rid of this property!"

So, if the bright-line test comes off, you'll initially see a flood of sales.

But then, it probably won't have that much impact over the long term.

Most investors want to hold onto their properties for the long term anyway.

Policy #3 ā€“ New Rental rules

Rental rules

This is where we see the largest changes between the left-leaning parties.

The Greens want to introduce:

  1. A maximum rent increase of 3% (linked from tenant to tenant).
  2. A rental warrant of fitness

The 2nd change is different to Healthy Homes. A rental WOF puts the onus on the property investor to show their houses comply.

Thatā€™s like car owners who have to stick a WOF sticker on their windshield, proving itā€™s roadworthy.

With Healthy Homes, the onus is on the tenant to complain.

Te Pāti Māori want to have a vacant house tax. If your house hasnā€™t had a tenant in the past 6 months, you have to pay 33% of the property value.

National and ACT want to overturn Labour's changes to the Residential Tenancies Act.

So, they want to bring back:

  • No-cause terminations (the 90 days rule)
  • Fixed terms (so they wonā€™t automatically switch to a periodic tenancy).

Policy #4 ā€“ Wealth tax

Wealth tax

Labour, National and ACT have all said ā€œnoā€ to a wealth tax.

Both left-leaning parties, Greens and Te Pāti Māori, want one.

Greens are looking at a tax of 2.5% of any wealth above $2 million.

If youā€™re single and have $3 million of wealth, youā€™d pay 2.5% on $1 million. So you have to pay the IRD an extra $25,000 a year.

There are differences based on whether youā€™re single, in a couple or have a trust. But thatā€™s the crux of it.

For Te Pāti Māori, they have a sliding scale:

  • 2% for net wealth over $2 million.
  • 4% for net wealth over $5 million.
  • 8% for net wealth over $10 million.

These wealth taxes grab the headlines. But in my view, theyā€™re unlikely to come in.

A majority of the bigger parties have already ruled the policy out.

Who should I vote for?

Iā€™m not going to tell you who to vote for.

Some parties do have policies that are better for property investors. Thatā€™s clear.

But voting for a party is about the direction of the whole country. Ultimately, youā€™ll decide based on all the policies.

I'm only covering the different policies that affect property investors.

If youā€™d like to learn more about some of these policies discussed, check out our full webinar.

Download 5

Andrew Nicol

Managing Director, 20+ Years' Experience Investing In Property, Author & Host

Andrew Nicol, Managing Director at Opes Partners, is a seasoned financial adviser and property investment expert with 20+ years of experience. With 40 investment properties, he hosts the Property Academy Podcast, co-authored 'Wealth Plan' with Ed Mcknight, and has helped 1,894 Kiwis achieve financial security through property investment.

View Profile
Related Private Property Newsletter