
Home Equity Access Scheme: What you need to know
November 5, 2025
Using your home to produce income
November 5, 2025With summer around the corner and beach holiday homes
back on the agenda, perhaps it is time to revisit a few tax matters about their
use.
And the big issue is how you claim expenses if your
holiday home is only rented for part of the year.
Well, the ATO takes the view that you can claim
expenses for the property based on the extent that they are incurred for the
purpose of producing rental income, but that you'll need to apportion your
expenses if your property is available for rent for only part of the year.
Moreover, it has to be genuinely available for rent! The
ATO says that factors that may indicate a property isn't genuinely available
for rent include:
· It's advertised in ways that limit its exposure to
potential tenants; eg, the property is only advertised at your workplace or on
restricted social media groups.
· The location, condition of the property, or
accessibility of the property mean that it's unlikely tenants will seek to rent
it.
· You place unreasonable or stringent conditions on
renting out the property that restrict the likelihood of renting out the
property; eg, setting the rent above the rate of comparable properties in the
area, requiring prospective users to give references for short holiday stays
and conditions like “no children” and “no pets”.
· You refuse to rent out the property to interested
people without adequate reasons.
The ATO also requires you to apportion your expenses
if you charge less than market rent to family or friends to use the property.
And in this case, the general rule is that you can only claim expenses up to
the amount of rent derived – so that you have a tax neutral outcome
Importantly, the ATO also says that it may not be
appropriate to apportion all expenses on the same basis. For example, expenses
that relate solely to the renting of your property are fully deductible and you
don't need to apportion them based on the time the property was rented out.
Such expenses include real estate commissions and the costs of advertising for
tenants
And again you can't claim a deduction for expenses
that relate to periods when the property is not genuinely available for rent or
periods when the property is used for a private purpose or for the part of the
property that isn't rented out; eg, the cost of cleaning your holiday home
after you, your family or friends have used the property for a holiday or a
repair for damage.
Oh, and finally just a word on selling the property.
If you have never lived in it as your home, then you will
be subject to CGT if you sell it (unless you bought it before 20 September
1985). And this will be the case regardless of whether you only used it as a
holiday home or you partly rented it as well
Importantly, in calculating the capital gain you can
include in its cost all the non-deductible costs of owning or holding the
property such as mortgage interest, insurance, repairs, council rates etc, –
and even those costs of having the lawns mown regularly. However, you will need
to have kept appropriate records of these expenses to do use them.
And of course, you are entitled to the 50% CGT discount to reduce the amount of any assessable gain.
These then are some of the
important things about tax and holidays homes. But there are a lot more things
that you need to know. So, come have a chat to us about it if you want.

