
What to do if you exceed your super contribution caps
September 3, 2025
What happens if you don’t have a valid will?
September 3, 2025The first thing to note is that assuming the
off-the-plan purchase does proceed to settlement, then the completed property
is considered to have been acquired for CGT purposes at the time (and in the
income year) in which the original contract was signed – and not in the year of
settlement.
And this has some important practical consequences.
The first is that for the purposes of accessing the
50% CGT discount (in the case where the property does not become your
CGT-exempt home), you are taken to have acquired the property when the
off-the-plan contract was signed.
And this gives you ample time to satisfy the 12-month
holding rule – including where you may even sell the property within 12 months
after settlement of the contract.
Secondly, and importantly, any capital gain or loss
will arise in the income year in which you enter the sale contract (eg, the
2023 income year) and not in the income year that you settle that contract (eg,
the 2025 income year). And this is the case even if, as is not uncommon, this
contract of sale is entered into before the original off-the-plan purchase is
even settled.
In short, as long as the contract is settled, the key
date for determining when property is acquired (or disposed of) is the date
(ie, the income year) the contract is entered into – regardless of whether
settlement takes place in the next income year or in a later income year.
This means that the income year in which any capital
gain or loss is returned on the sale of the property is the income year in
which you enter the off-the-plan contract – even though the settlement does not
take place until another income year.
However, in this case the Commissioner has a generous
policy so that the taxpayer does not have to immediately return any gain in
that income year – but only once the proceeds on settlement are received. And
then they can go make and amend that prior year return accordingly.
Also, in the case where the off-plan purchase is to
become your home, the requirement of the “building concession” must be met in
order for the property to eventually be considered your CGT-exempt home.
Finally, it is important to understand that the CGT
rules that apply in off-the-plan purchases are different from those that apply
to an option agreement – which instead is treated a separate legal transaction
with separate CGT consequences. It is only if the option is exercised that the
transaction is merged into one transaction and the CGT rules then apply in a
different way.
Disclaimer: This update is intended as general information and is not tailored to individual circumstances. Please get in touch with us if you would like specific advice.