Things to know
Complete this section for rental income earned and expenses incurred when you rent out your rental property located in Australia.
Co-ownership
The way rental income and expenses are divided between co-owners varies depending on whether the co-owners are joint tenants, tenants in common or whether there is a partnership carrying on a business of letting rental properties.
Co-ownership of rental property provides more information on how to work out your share of the rent and expenses that you can claim, including:
- dividing income and expenses according to legal interest
- co-owners of an investment property (not in business)
- partners carrying on a business of letting rental properties.
Renting out part or all of your home
If you rented out part, or all, of your home, the rent money you received is assessable income. This means you:
- must declare the rental income in your tax return
- can claim deductions for associated expenses, such as part or all of the interest on your home loan
- may not be entitled to the full main residence exemption from capital gains tax (CGT) when you sell your home.
If you rented out part, or all, of your home at:
- normal commercial rates, the tax treatment of income and expenses is the same as for any residential rental property
- less than normal commercial rates, you limit the deductions you can claim.
Payments from a family member for board or lodgings are considered to be domestic arrangements and are not rental income. You can't claim income tax deductions.
Related page
Sharing economy and tax – Renting out all or part of your home
What you need to know if you rent out part of home or your entire home through the sharing economy.
Renting out your holiday home
If you have a holiday home that you rent out, you must include the rent money you received in your assessable income. You can also claim deductions for the associated expenses. In deducting your expenses, you must ensure that you are apportioning expenses to account for any private use of the property. You can only claim expenses for periods that your holiday home was being rented or was genuinely available for rent.
Rental deductions for vacant land
You can no longer claim rental deductions for the cost of holding vacant land. This applies to land you held both before and from 1 July 2019.
If your rental property was destroyed by a natural disaster or circumstances beyond your control, you can still claim deductions for the cost of holding the land for 3 years from the time the property was destroyed. You may apply to the Commissioner for an extension to the 3-year limit.
Don’t show at this section
Don't show the following at this section:
- a deduction for the decline in value of a low-value pool, go to Low-value pool deduction
- foreign source rental income, that is, rental income from properties outside Australia, go to Other foreign income
- expenses incurred in earning rental income from properties located outside Australia, go to Other foreign income
- income earned, or expenses incurred, from peer-to-peer sharing of your car, caravan or car parking space, go to Any other income
- capital gains or losses if you disposed of your property (for example, by selling it, gifting it or transferring it to someone else), go to Capital gains or losses
From 1 July 2021 no CGT event arises to eligible individuals on certain granny flat arrangements
Video tutorials
The following video shows you how to include rental income and expenses in myTax.
Media: How to include rental income and expenses in myTax
https://tv.ato.gov.au/ato-tv/media?v=bd1bdiubtjsfhwExternal Link (Duration: 1:59)
The following video shows you how to use the Depreciation and capital allowances tool.
Media: How to use the Depreciation and capital allowance tool
https://tv.ato.gov.au/ato-tv/media?v=bd1bdiuboi7hkiExternal Link (Duration: 3:18)
Completing this section
You must have the right records for the claims that you make. You will need details of:
- all rental income earned
- interest charged on money you borrowed for the rental property
- other expenses relating to your rental property
- if applicable, the period your property was genuinely available for rent
- any expenditure on capital works to your rental property.
For useful guidance on how to show your income and expenses, see simple steps when preparing your return.
To personalise your return to show Australian rental income and expenses, at Personalise return select:
- You had Australian interest, or other Australian income or losses from investments or property
- Rent (Australian properties)
To show your Australian rental income and expenses, at Prepare return select 'Add/Edit' at the Rent banner.
At the Rent banner:
We may pre-fill your tax return with some rental property details from your last year's tax return.
- For each rental property you own or have an interest in that
- has pre-filled, check them and add rental property details not pre-filled into the corresponding fields.
- has not pre-filled, select Add and enter rental property details into the corresponding fields.
- Property name
- Address
In the Search address field, start entering an address and select your property address from the drop-down menu.
If your rental property address is not listed in the drop-down menu, select Use entered address and enter the full rental property address in the fields provided. - Date property first genuinely available for rent
Enter the first date that the property was genuinely available for rent - Number of weeks property was rented this year
Enter the number of weeks the property was rented out during the income year - Ownership percentage
Enter the percentage amount of your ownership.
If you co-own the rental property, you need to be aware of the way that rental income and expenses are divided between co-owners. To learn more, see Co-ownership of rental property.
Rental income
- For each rental property, complete the rental income fields
- Total rental income
Enter the total amount of rent payments received for the property - Total other rental-related income
Enter the total of other rental-related income.
- Total rental income
If your ownership percentage is less than 100%, myTax will use your ownership percentage to calculate your share of the income amounts. You may alter your share of the amounts. If you do, keep a record of how you worked out your share.
MyTax will calculate Total gross rent. If your ownership percentage is less than 100%, myTax will also calculate Your share of gross rent.
Rental expenses
- For each rental property, complete the rental expenses fields.
The Depreciation and capital allowances tool can help you work out any decline in value. It can also work out any deductible balancing adjustment when you stop holding a depreciating asset. Access this tool when you enter your rental income or expense details.
Fields from this tool can’t be adjusted in myTax. To make any adjustments or to add new assets to the tool, select the ‘Use the depreciation and capital allowances tool’ link.
If your ownership percentage is less than 100%, myTax will use your ownership percentage to calculate your share of the expense amounts. You may alter your share of the amounts. If you do, keep a record of how you worked out your share.
MyTax will calculate Total expenses. If your ownership percentage is less than 100%, myTax will also calculate Your share of total expenses.
MyTax will calculate Net rent based on the calculated amounts in Total gross rent and Total expenses. If your ownership percentage is less than 100%, myTax will also calculate Your share of net rent.
- Select Save.
- Select Save and continue when you have completed the Rent section.
Related pages
Keeping rental property records
Keep records of both income and expenses relating to your rental property.
Rental properties guide 2024
A guide on how to treat rental income and expenses, including how to treat many residential rental property assets and items.
More information
More information about completing the rent section of your return using myTax.
Rental income
Rental income is the full amount of rent and rental associated payments you earn when you rent out your property (including renting out a room). If payment is made in goods or services, you will need to work out the monetary value of these. Your gross rental income amount includes:
- Rental income – rent paid to you
- Other rental-related income – such as
- any bond money you
- retained in place of rent
- kept because of damage to the property requiring repairs
- an insurance payout for lost rent, or a reimbursement of any rental expenses, you claimed in 2023–24 or in an earlier year
- fees retained from cancelled booking.
- any bond money you
You must declare all the income you receive for your Australian rental property in this section. Rental income you must declare includes more information, including types of rental income.
If your holiday home is rented out, you need to include the rental income you receive as income in your tax return.
You need to keep records of all rental income earned and declare it in your tax return. GST is not payable on amounts of residential rent you earn.
Rental expenses
Rental expenses are deductible to the extent that they are incurred for the purpose of producing rental income.
You can claim most expenses relating to your rental property but only for the period your property was rented or genuinely available for rent – for example, where you have advertised for rent without limiting its exposure to potential clients.
If you were renting out only part of your home – for example, a single room – you can claim expenses related to renting out only that part of the house.
You can’t claim the total amount of the expenses – you need to apportion the expenses. As a general guide, you should apportion expenses on a floor-area basis based on the area solely occupied by the renter (user) and add that to a reasonable amount based on their access to common areas.
You can claim expenses only for the period the room in your home was rented to a tenant. You can’t claim deductions for expenses when the room is not rented.
You can claim expenditure such as interest on loans, local council, water and sewerage rates, land taxes and emergency service levies you incurred during renovations to a property you intend to rent out. However, you can’t claim deductions from the time your intention changes, for example, if you decide to use the property for private purposes.
You can claim 100% of fees or commissions charged by a sharing economy facilitator or administrator.
If you own a holiday home, you can only claim tax deductions for expenses to the extent the home is rented out or genuinely available for rent.
If the co-owner of the property rents the property the nature of the arrangement affects the deductibility of the expenses.
There are 3 categories of rental expenses:
- expenses you can claim a deduction now (in the income year you incur the expense)
- expenses you can claim a deduction over several years
- expenses you can't claim a deduction.
Expenses you can claim a deduction now
You can claim an immediate deduction for these expenses in the income year you incur them. To claim a deduction you must actually incur the cost. You can't claim a deduction where the cost is paid by the tenant.
Expenses that you can claim now may include:
- Body corporate fees and charges
- Council rates and local government expenses
- Interest on loans
- Land tax
- Legal expenses (excluding acquisition, sale and borrowing costs)
- Agent fees or commissions
- Repairs and maintenance
- Travel and car expenses (in some cases only)
- Other expenses
Expenses you can claim a deduction over several years
There are 3 types of expenses you may incur for your rental property that may be claimed over several years:
- Borrowing expenses
- You claim a deduction for all eligible borrowing expenses for 5 years or spread it over the term of the loan, whichever is shorter. However, if the total deductible borrowing expenses are $100 or less, they are fully deductible in the income year you incur them.
- You can use the deductible borrowing expenses calculator (XLSX, 154KB)This link will download a file to work it out.
- Capital allowances
- Capital works
Expenses you can’t claim a deduction
Rental expenses you can't claim a deduction include:
- expenses not incurred by you, such as water or electricity usage charges borne by your tenant
- expenses where your property (including your holiday home) was not genuinely available for rent
- deductions unrelated to your investment property
- expenses related to holding vacant land.
Other rental expenses information
If you prepay a rental property expense, such as insurance or interest on money borrowed, that covers a period of 12 months or less and the period ends on or before 30 June 2025, you can claim an immediate deduction. A prepayment that does not meet these criteria and is $1,000 or more may have to be spread over 2 or more years.
Related pages
Guide to depreciating assets
Guide to claiming the decline in value of capital assets used in gaining assessable income.
Always check your supplier's ABN
From 1 July 2020, if you make a payment to a contractor (such as a tradesperson) for services connected with your rental property and they don't provide you with an ABN, you may have to withhold 47% from that payment and pay it to us.
Other tax considerations
There are some other tax considerations you may need to know about for your rental property.
In this section:
- Capital gains tax (CGT)
- Goods and services tax (GST)
- Negative gearing
- Pay as you go (PAYG) instalments.
Capital gains tax (CGT)
You may make a capital gain or capital loss when you sell (or otherwise cease to own) a rental property that you acquired after 19 September 1985. To learn more, see capital gains tax.
Granny flat arrangements
From 1 July 2021, provided certain conditions are met, no CGT event arises when you agree to an eligible arrangement that creates, varies or ends an eligible granny flat interest. The exemption does not apply to other CGT events that:
- happen with such transactions, and
- don’t relate to your granny flat interest's creation, variation or termination.
To learn more, see Granny flat arrangements and CGT.
Goods and services tax (GST)
If you are registered for GST and it was payable in relation to your rental income, do not include it in the amounts you show as income in your tax return.
Similarly, if you are registered for GST and entitled to claim input tax credits for rental expenses, you do not include the input tax credits in the amounts of expenses you claim. If you are not registered for GST, or the rental income was from residential premises, you include any GST in the amounts of rental expenses you claim.
Negative gearing
A rental property is negatively geared if it is purchased with the assistance of borrowed funds and the net rental income, after deducting other expenses, is less than the interest on the borrowings.
Pay as you go (PAYG) instalments
If you make a profit from renting your property, you will need to know about the PAYG instalments system. You will generally be required to pay PAYG instalments if you earn $4,000 or more of business or investment income, such as rental income, and the debt on your income tax assessment is more than $1,000.
Simple steps when preparing your return
Rental property owners should remember 3 simple steps when preparing their return:
- Include all the income you receive, including
- income from short term rental arrangements (for example, a holiday home)
- sharing part of your home
- other rental-related income such as insurance payouts and rental bond money you retain.
- Get your expenses right
- Eligibility – Claim only for expenses incurred for the period your property was rented or when you were actively trying to rent the property on commercial terms.
- Timing – Some expenses must be claimed over a number of years.
- Apportionment – Apportion your claim where your property was rented out for part of the year or only part of your property was rented out, where you used the property yourself or rented it below market rates. You must also apportion in line with your ownership interest.
- Keep records to prove it
You should keep records of both income and expenses relating to your rental property, as well as purchase and sale records.
And remember, renting property (including all or part of your own home) will usually give rise to a capital gain or loss when you sell the property – which you will need to include in your return in that year. For more information, see Capital gains or losses.
Related page
Top 10 tips to help rental property owners avoid common tax mistakes
If you lodge your tax return yourself or with a tax agent, avoid these top 10 common mistakes to save time and money.