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If we’re not renting out our holiday home, do we still pay tax?

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If we’re not renting out our holiday home, do we still pay tax?

July 1, 2026 — 5:01am

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My husband and I purchased a holiday home 14 years ago. We used it ourselves and also rented it out through a holiday letting agent until 2022. During that time, and since then, we have carried out substantial renovations. Our main residence remains in Brisbane, although we divide our time between the two properties.

A friend told me that capital gains tax (CGT) only applies when you are receiving rental income. Does that mean CGT would not apply for the period since we stopped renting it out? Also, does the fact that it was rented for only about 90 days a year affect the CGT outcome?

The information you were given is incorrect. You’ll need to work with your accountant on this one because the capital gains tax will be apportioned between the periods when the property was used privately and when it was producing rental income.

If there were times when it was available for rent but not actually rented, or periods when it was neither rented nor available for rent, that may also affect the calculation. The fact that it was rented for only about 90 days a year does not, by itself, determine the outcome. I hope you’ve been keeping good records.

My spouse and I are self-funded retirees in our mid-60s. We own our home and a modest 1970s villa unit that we bought outright five years ago for $325,000. We have since renovated it, and before the budget believed it was worth about $425,000, although it now appears many investors are selling. The unit is rented to an excellent tenant for $430 a week, who has just signed a further 12-month lease. Our income comes from our super pensions, the rent and........

© The Sydney Morning Herald