Get ASX Price
LATEST FINANCIAL PLANNING NEWS
Hot Issues
Minimum pension drawdown not the only thing to consider as 30 June approaches
ASIC urges Aussies to check for unclaimed money
PAYDAY SUPER STARTS 1 JULY 2026 – Planning guides
Commercial v residential: Be aware of ‘nuanced’ changes
Six strategic investment moves for mid-career women
Your 30 June superannuation checklist
What’s your risk profile?
Check out what Uses the Most Internet Traffic: Data from 1994 to 2026
SMSF commercial property owners and Div 296 ‘misconceptions’
7 simple steps to get on the investment ladder
Can I access my super early?
Magnificent Seven: More diverse than they may appear
Look for the red flags that signal unscrupulous advice
Carer responsibilities don’t meet interdependency criteria: PBR
LRBA stability has been understated
From Bricks to iPhones: The Evolution of the Telephone
Interest rates likely to stay higher for longer
Iran conflict: Keeping perspective on market risk
Most Valuable Industries in the World 2026
In turbulent times, stick to your long-term wealth strategy
SMSF trustees acting badly – further disqualification cases
Know the difference between death benefit pension and normal pension or pay the price
View Division 296 as two-stage event
Rise in SMSF inflows indicate more people are moving into the sector
Super versus trusts: What is the best option with Div 296?
Thinking of establishing an SMSF? Don’t skip reading the rules
Investment and economic outlook, February 2026
Coercive control in SMSF becoming a hot issue
Are downsizer contributions losing steam?
Articles archive
Quarter 1 January - March 2026
Quarter 4 October - December 2025
Quarter 3 July - September 2025
Quarter 2 April - June 2025
Quarter 1 January - March 2025
Quarter 4 October - December 2024
Quarter 3 July - September 2024
Quarter 2 April - June 2024
Quarter 1 January - March 2024
Quarter 4 October - December 2023
Quarter 3 July - September 2023
Quarter 2 April - June 2023
Quarter 1 January - March 2023
Quarter 4 October - December 2022
Quarter 3 July - September 2022
Quarter 2 April - June 2022
Commercial v residential: Be aware of ‘nuanced’ changes

The proposed capital gains tax changes announced in the budget are far more nuanced than the headlines suggest, the commercial director of a property valuation firm said.

 


.


Dan Hill, national director, commercial for Opteon, said the federal Budget is likely to accelerate a reallocation of capital, with tighter tax settings on residential investment pushing more investors to seriously consider commercial property for its relative tax efficiency and income profile.


“But the CGT story is more nuanced than the headlines suggest, and that nuance matters particularly for clients holding commercial assets in personal or trust structures,” Hill said.


In a recent analysis, Opteon said there has been little focus on what the announced changes mean specifically for property held inside SMSFs, and what June represents for property-holding funds from a valuation compliance perspective.


It stated that much post-Budget analysis has noted that commercial property benefits comparatively from the Budget’s residential focus.


“The negative gearing restrictions are residential-specific: commercial property (office, industrial, retail, and alternative assets) retains full deductibility of losses against other income, with no restriction based on asset type or acquisition date,” it stated.


“For SMSF clients already holding commercial property, including business real property leased to a member’s business, that comparison matters. But there is a distinction most of the commentary has glossed over, and it matters particularly for clients holding commercial property in personal or trust structures outside superannuation.”


According to Opteon, commercial property is not shielded from the CGT changes: “Unlike residential property, where new builds retain the choice of the existing 50 per cent CGT discount or the new indexation regime, commercial property has no equivalent concession. 


“Commercial assets held by individuals, trusts, and partnerships face the full 30 per cent minimum CGT tax from 1 July 2027, with no new-build carve-out and no alternative treatment available. The picture is more nuanced than a simple ‘residential bad, commercial good’ framing.”


Opteon noted that in regard to negative gearing, commercial property is unaffected by the restrictions. Established residential property acquired after Budget night is restricted. On this dimension, commercial has improved comparatively.


For CGT, the analysis continued, both established residential and commercial property face the new 30 per cent minimum tax from 1 July 2027. New residential builds retain flexibility (choice of old or new treatment).


“Commercial has no equivalent. On this dimension, commercial has not improved, and is in one respect less flexible than new residential,” Opteon said. 


“Furthermore, inside an SMSF the existing one-third CGT discount appears preserved for both residential and commercial property held within the fund, pending legislation. This is where the structural advantage is most clearly expressed.”


According to Opteon, commercial property’s advantage is most cleanly expressed inside the SMSF, where the CGT treatment appears more favourable than for individual or trust investors.


Additionally, business real property leased to a related party continues to offer a legitimate and tax-efficient structure, provided the lease is conducted at arm’s length and at market rent.


“Independent rental assessments and regular market value certifications are the documented foundation that makes those arrangements defensible under existing NALI rules,” it stated.


“This year’s 30 June 2026 valuation carries additional weight for two compounding reasons. First, it serves simultaneously as the annual compliance figure and, for trustees making the Division 296 cost base reset election, the reference point for that once-only, irrevocable decision.


“Second, commercial property valuations require additional lead time: income capitalisation methodology, lease evidence analysis, and capitalisation rate benchmarking cannot be compressed without compromising quality and defensibility.”


 


 


 


 


 


Keeli Cambourne
May 26, 2026
smsfadviser.com


 


 



20th-June-2026
Hawthorn Financial Planning Pty Ltd ABN 47 011 910 918
Corporate Authorised Representative
Charter Financial Planning Limited ABN 35 002 976 294
Australian Financial Services Licensee Licence number 234665
Registered address Level 24, 33 Alfred Street Sydney NSW 2000
Legal Disclaimer | Privacy Policy



Hawthorn Financial Planning 67 King William Road UNLEY SA 5061 Ph: (08) 8339 7973

IMPORTANT INFORMATION | Site By PlannerWeb