
Property Investment
Property Investment
3 min read
Hereās 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.
Hereās a summary of the 4 main policies.
Remember ā Iām not here to tell you who to vote for.
Youāll decide that based on lots of policies. Health, education, transport ā¦ and more.
This newsletter lets you know what the property-based policies are. Itās not here to tell you which box to tick on election day.
Labour, the Greens, and Te PÄti MÄori will leave interest deductibility as is.
Property investors wonāt be able to claim interest as a tax deduction.
So most property investors will pay more tax.
But, National said itāll 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.
Labour wants to leave the bright-line test at 10 years. But they have ruled out a Capital Gains Tax (CGT).
Thatās the same for the Greens and Te PÄti MÄori. Thereās 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 (canāt 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.
This is where we see the largest changes between the left-leaning parties.
The Greens want to introduce:
The 2nd change is different to Healthy Homes. A rental WOF puts the onus on the property investor to show their houses comply.
Thatās like car owners who have to stick a WOF sticker on their windshield, proving itās roadworthy.
With Healthy Homes, the onus is on the tenant to complain.
Te PÄti MÄori want to have a vacant house tax. If your house hasnāt 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:
Labour, National and ACT have all said ānoā to a wealth tax.
Both left-leaning parties, Greens and Te PÄti MÄori, want one.
Greens are looking at a tax of 2.5% of any wealth above $2 million.
If youāre single and have $3 million of wealth, youād 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 youāre single, in a couple or have a trust. But thatās the crux of it.
For Te PÄti MÄori, they have a sliding scale:
These wealth taxes grab the headlines. But in my view, theyāre unlikely to come in.
A majority of the bigger parties have already ruled the policy out.
Iām not going to tell you who to vote for.
Some parties do have policies that are better for property investors. Thatās clear.
But voting for a party is about the direction of the whole country. Ultimately, youāll decide based on all the policies.
I'm only covering the different policies that affect property investors.
If youād like to learn more about some of these policies discussed, check out our full webinar.
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.