Aspen Corporate Pty Ltd
Aspen Corp • 7 November 2023

The ATO estimates that incorrect reporting of rental property income and expenses is costing around $1 billion each year in forgone tax revenue. A big part of the problem is how taxpayers are claiming interest on their investment property loans.


We’ve seen an uptick in ATO activity focussing on refinanced or redrawn loans. This activity is a result of a major data matching program of residential property loan data from financial institutions from 2021-22 to 2025-26. This data is being matched to what taxpayers have claimed on their tax returns. Those with anomalies can expect contact from the ATO to explain the discrepancy.


If you have an investment property loan and redraw on the loan for a different purpose to the original borrowing, the loan account becomes a mixed purpose account. Interest accruing on mixed purpose accounts need to be apportioned between each of the different purposes the money was used for.         

           

On the other hand, if the redrawn funds are used to produce investment income, then the interest on this portion of the loan should be deductible.


For example, if you have redrawn on the loan to pay for a private holiday, or pay down personal debt, then the interest relating to this portion of the loan balance is not deductible. Not only will the interest expenses need to be apportioned into deductible and non-deductible parts, but repayments will normally need to be apportioned too.


Withdrawals from an offset account are treated as savings rather than a new borrowing. If you have a loan account and an interest offset account is attached to this account that reduces the interest payable on the loan, withdrawing funds from the offset account will typically increase the amount of interest accruing on the loan, but won’t change the deductible percentage of the interest expenses. That is, when you withdraw funds from the offset account this is really a withdrawal of savings and won’t impact on the extent to which interest accruing on the loan account is deductible.


If you have a home loan that was used to acquire your private home and you have funds sitting in an offset account, withdrawing those funds to pay the deposit on a rental property won’t enable you to claim any of the interest accruing on the home loan. However, if you redraw funds from the home loan to acquire a rental property then interest accruing on this portion of the loan should be deductible. The tax treatment always depends on how the arrangement is structured.



Think you might have a problem? Contact us and we can investigate the issue before the ATO contact you.

Electric and Plugin Hybrid car FBT exemptions.
by Zane Walsh 24 October 2024
Electric and Plugin Hybrid car FBT exemptions for business
by Aspen Corp 22 October 2024
Aspen Corp looks at Succession - the tax consequences of inheriting property.
by Aspen Corp 15 October 2024
‘Payday super’ will overhaul the way in which superannuation guarantee is administered. We look at the first details and the impending obligations on employers.
Genetic testing
by Aspen Corp 11 October 2024
The ability for life insurers to discriminate based on adverse predictive genetic test results will be banned under a new Government proposal.
Deciding to put proceeds of sale of your house into your Superfund
by Aspen Corp 10 October 2024
If you are aged 55 years or older, the downsizer contribution rules enable you to contribute up to $300,000 from the proceeds of the sale of your home to your superannuation fund (eligibility criteria applies).
by Rob Lo Presti 10 September 2024
Simple steps to improve your security and protect sensitive data, ATO and MyGov accounts
More posts
Share by: