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Tax Guide — New Zealand

What Is Rental Income Tax in New Zealand?

A complete guide to rental property tax rules, deductions, ring-fencing, the bright-line test, and everything landlords need to know — updated for 2025.

18 min read Updated for FY 2025–26 Elite Taxation NZ
Modern New Zealand rental property exterior Property keys rental property owner Rental property tax documents and accounting
NZ Rental Property Guide 2025–26

Rental income is the money you receive from tenants when you own and rent out property in New Zealand. And like most income in this country, it's taxable — there's no getting around it.

The Inland Revenue Department (IRD) treats your rental income as part of your total income for the year. So it gets added on top of your salary, wages or any business income and taxed accordingly. Many rental property owners do not realise this until they get a tax bill that's bigger than expected.

It's important to know that New Zealand doesn't have a seprate "landlord tax" or anything like that. Rent money is just income, same as anything else. What makes rental property different is that there is a whole set of deductions, rules and special tests that apply specifically to it.

The good news is you don't pay tax on every dollar of rent you collect. You can subtract your legitimate rental expenses first, which can make a real difference to the final tax figure. If you want help working through what applies to your situation, our Rental Tax services page is a good place to start.

How Much Tax Do You Pay on Rental Income?

New Zealand has a progressive tax system, means that the more money you make, the higher the rate on each extra dollar. Your rental income gets added to everything else you earn, and tax is calculated on the total.

Here are the current personal income tax rates:

Taxable IncomeTax Rate
Up to $14,00010.5%
$14,001 – $48,00017.5%
$48,001 – $70,00030%
$70,001 – $180,00033%
Over $180,00039%
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Quick Example

Suppose if your salary is $60,000 and your net rental income after deductions comes to $10,000, your total taxable income for the year is $70,000. You don't pay a flat 33% on everything, instead, you pay tax on each part at the rate that applies to it. This is why getting your deductions right really imporatnt. An expert rental property accountant can often reduce your taxable rental income quite significantly, so you can save your money.

What Rental Expenses Can You Claim? (Tax Deductions for Landlords)

This is the part most landlords are most interested in, and rightly so. The IRD lets you deduct a wide range of expenses from your rental income before working out how much tax you owe. These are commonly called rental property tax deductions or allowable deductions. The official rules are on the IRD's residential rental income page if you want to go straight to the source.

Here's a rundown of the most common deductions for NZ landlords:

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Mortgage Interest
For most landlords, this is by far the biggest deduction. The interest portion of your mortgage repayments is deductible — the principal repayment is not. As of 1 April 2025, 100% of mortgage interest is deductible again after a few years of restrictions. More on this below.
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Insurance Premiums
Building insurance, landlord contents insurance, loss of rent cover — these are all fully deductible. Worth keeping your policy documents handy at tax time.
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Council Rates
Property rates paid to your local council are a straightforward deductible expense. Keep the rates invoices filed away.
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Property Management Fees
If you use a property manager or real estate agent to look after your rental, their fees are deductible. That includes tenant-finding fees, rent collection charges, and costs for arranging maintenance.
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Repairs and Maintenance
Fixing a leaking tap, repainting the exterior, replacing a broken window — these kinds of day-to-day repairs are deductible. Just be careful not to confuse repairs with improvements. They're treated differently and this is one of the most common mistakes we see.
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Accounting and Professional Fees
The fees you pay an accountant to prepare your rental accounts and file your return are themselves deductible. So hiring a good accountant actually costs less than it looks on paper.
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Body Corporate Levies
If your rental is in an apartment complex with a body corporate, your regular levies are deductible. Special one-off levies for capital improvements may not be — worth checking with your accountant on those.
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Depreciation on Chattels
Chattels are movable items in the property — heat pumps, carpets, curtains, appliances, hot water cylinders. These wear out over time and you can claim depreciation on them each year. It's an easy one to miss if you don't have a proper chattels valuation in place.
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Vehicle Costs for Property Visits
Travel to and from your rental property for inspections or maintenance is claimable. You'll need to keep a record of the trips though — IRD takes record-keeping seriously.
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Advertising to Find Tenants
Whether you're listing on TradeMe, paying for a social media ad or putting something in the local paper, those advertising costs are deductible.
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Healthy Homes Compliance
A lot of NZ landlords have spent money meeting the Healthy Homes Standards — insulation, heating, ventilation and so on. Some of these costs are deductible as repairs and maintenance, but it really depends on what was done and whether it counts as improving the property beyond its original condition. Best to get advice on this one case by case.

What Can You NOT Claim?

It's just as important to know what you can't claim as it is to know what you can. Getting this wrong can cause real headaches down the track.

Capital Improvements

Adding a new deck, renovating the kitchen, putting in a second bathroom — these are capital improvements because they increase the value or extend the life of the property. They're not deductible as a regular expense. Some may be depreciable through other rules, but you can't simply write them off as you would a repair.

Principal Loan Repayments

Only the interest on your mortgage is deductible. The part of your repayment that actually reduces the loan balance — the principal — isn't. This is a common source of confusion for new landlords.

Personal Use Expenses

If you use the property yourself at any point during the year, you can only deduct expenses for the period when it was rented out or genuinely available to rent. The personal-use portion is not claimable.

Pre-Rental Costs

Work done on a property before it's ever put on the rental market — to get it ready for tenants — is usually treated as capital expenditure rather than a deductible expense. There are exceptions, but this catches a lot of first-time landlords off guard.

The Big One: Mortgage Interest Deductibility Changes (2021–2025)

If you've owned a rental property in the last few years, you probably already know a lot about it. There have been some big & important changes back and forth, so it's important to know what's going on now.

What Happened in 2021?

In March 2021, the Labour-led government made rules that took away the ability to deduct mortgage interest on rental properties. Interest deductions were completely removed for properties who bought after March 27, 2021. For older properties, they were being progressively phased out. The policy was meant to cool off the real estate market slightly. Whether it worked is debatable, but many landlords were not happy about it.

How Has It Changed Since Then?

When the new government took office, they reversed the changes. Here's how the reinstatement happened:

2023/24 Tax Year
50% of interest was deductible for properties that were already partially eligible
From 1 April 2024
80% of interest became deductible across all residential rental properties
From 1 April 2025
100% of interest is now fully deductible — regardless of when you bought or when you took out the loan
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Good News for Property Investors

From 1 April 2025, full interest deductibility is back. If you bought a rental property between 2021 and 2024 and missed out on those deductions, the full amount is now claimable going forward. This is probably the most significant positive change for landlords in recent years.

Ring-Fencing: What Happens When Your Rental Makes a Loss?

This is the one that catches a lot of landlords out, especially people who bought their first rental property in the last five or six years. Let me explain what it means in plain terms.

Sometimes the costs of running a rental — mortgage interest, rates, insurance, repairs — add up to more than the rent you actually receive. When that happens, you've made a rental loss for the year. Before April 2019, you could use that loss to offset your salary or other income, which was a handy tax advantage. It was commonly called negative gearing.

But the government changed the rules in April 2019, introducing what's called ring-fencing (also referred to as the residential property deduction rules). Under these rules, rental losses can no longer reduce your other income.

So What Happens to the Loss?

Instead of being written off against your salary, the loss is "ring-fenced" — kept separate from your other income and carried forward to future tax years. Once your rental property starts making a profit, you can use those accumulated losses to reduce the rental income you pay tax on. The money isn't gone, it just has to wait.

Simple Example — Ring-Fencing in Practice
Year 1 — Rental Loss −$5,000
Can you offset against salary income? No
Loss carried forward to Year 2 →
Year 2 — Rental Profit +$12,000
Less: carried-forward loss applied −$5,000
Taxable rental income (Year 2) $7,000

The loss doesn't vanish. It carries forward and gets used when the property turns profitable.

Which Properties Does Ring-Fencing Apply To?

Ring-fencing covers most residential rental properties, whether held personally, through a trust, a company, or in a partnership. There are a few exceptions — your main home isn't subject to ring-fencing, nor are revenue account properties (those you'd fully pay tax on when you sell), some holiday homes, and employee accommodation. If you're not sure where your property sits, talking to a rental property accountant in Auckland or elsewhere in NZ is probably the quickest way to get clarity.

Portfolio Basis vs Property-by-Property

If you own more than one rental, you get to choose how the ring-fencing rules are applied across your properties. The default is the portfolio basis, where all your rentals are grouped together — so a loss on one can be cancelled out by a profit on another. The other option is to treat each property separately. For most investors with multiple properties, the portfolio basis works better, but it's worth reviewing with a professional.

New Zealand residential property investment house exterior
Residential rental property in NZ comes with specific tax obligations — but also smart deductions that can meaningfully reduce what you owe each year.

The Bright-Line Test: New Zealand's Property Gains Rule

New Zealand technically doesn't have a capital gains tax. But if you sell a rental property too soon after buying it, you may end up paying tax on the profit anyway — through a rule called the bright-line test.

How Does It Work?

The bright-line test is a holding period rule. Sell a residential property within the applicable bright-line period and any profit you make is taxable income. Hold it for longer than that, and you're generally in the clear. The period has changed a few times over the years, which has made it confusing for a lot of property owners.

What's the Current Bright-Line Period?

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Current Rule — From 1 July 2024

The bright-line period went back to two years on July 1, 2024. If your sale contract is dated on or after that date, you will only have to pay bright-line tax if you have owned the property for less than two years. You are free and clear after more than two years, with a few exceptions.

What If I Bought Before July 2024?

It depends on when you bought. The old rules still apply based on the purchase date and sale date combination. Here's a quick reference:

Purchase PeriodBright-Line Period That Applies
29 March 2018 – 26 March 20215 years
27 March 2021 onwards (sold before 1 July 2024)10 years (or 5 for new builds)
Sale contract on or after 1 July 20242 years

Note that the relevant date is when the sale contract is signed, not the settlement date.

Are There Exemptions?

Yes, the main one is the main home exemption. If you lived in the property most of the time that you have owned, then you generally do not pay the bright-line tax even if you sell within 2 years. From 1 July 2024, the exemption requires the property to have been your main home for more than 50% of the ownership period, and more than 50% of the land to have been used for that purpose. There are also exemptions for relationship property transfers and certain other circumstances.

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Worth Knowing — Claiming Back Denied Interest

If your property sale is taxable under the bright-line test, you may be able to claim back interest that was previously denied during the 2021–2024 restriction period. That disallowed interest isn't necessarily lost — it can potentially be added to the cost of the property when calculating your taxable gain. Talk to an accountant before you finalise any property sale.

How to File Your Tax Return as a Landlord

Once a year, you'll need to file a tax return that accounts for your rental income and expenses. For individual landlords, this means an IR3 Individual Income Tax Return. Full details are on the IRD's official rental income page.

1
Add Up All Your Rental Income for the Year
Include all rent received between 1 April and 31 March, plus anything else that counts as rental income — like bond money you kept, or any other payments from tenants. Don't leave anything out.
2
Total Up Your Allowable Expenses
Go through your records and add up everything you can legitimately claim — interest, insurance, rates, repairs, management fees, depreciation on chattels and so on. This is where being organised through the year really pays off.
3
Work Out Your Net Rental Income or Loss
Subtract your total expenses from your total income. If the result is positive, that's your net rental income and it gets added to your total taxable income. If it's negative, you have a rental loss — which gets ring-fenced and carried forward under the current rules.
4
File Your IR3 Return
The IR3 has sections specifically for rental income and rental deductions. The NZ tax year runs 1 April to 31 March. If you file yourself, the standard deadline is 7 July. If you file through a tax agent like Elite Taxation, the deadline is usually extended. If you own the property through a trust or company, different returns apply.
5
Pay Any Tax You Owe
If your overall income is high enough, you'll have a tax liability to settle by the due date. If you expect to owe more than $5,000 in residual income tax, you may also need to pay provisional tax in instalments throughout the year — rather than a single end-of-year lump sum.

Repairs vs Capital Improvements — Getting the Line Right

This is one of the most common areas where landlords make mistakes on their tax returns, and honestly it's not always obvious where the line sits. The general rule is that repairs restore something to its original condition, while improvements make it better than it was. Repairs are deductible. Improvements are not (at least not as a direct expense).

✓ Repairs — Deductible
  • Replacing a broken fence section
  • Patching and fixing a leaking roof
  • Repainting interior or exterior walls
  • Fixing a burst pipe or blocked drain
  • Swapping worn carpet for similar carpet
✗ Improvements — Not Deductible
  • Adding an extra bathroom
  • Building a new extension or sleepout
  • Replacing an entire old fence with a new one
  • Installing a full modern kitchen where there wasn't one
  • Upgrading from single to double glazing throughout

The tricky bit is that some jobs land in a grey area. Replacing a whole roof might be a repair in some circumstances and a capital improvement in others, depending on the scope of work and what condition it was in. When in doubt, ask your accountant before you decide how to treat it. Getting it wrong both ways can cost you — either through missed deductions or an IRD audit adjustment.

Mixed-Use Properties — Holiday Homes and Airbnb

What if the property isn't a straight rental? What if you use it yourself part of the year, or rent it out short-term through Airbnb or Bookabach? The rules here are a little different.

Under the mixed-use asset rules, you can only deduct expenses in proportion to the time the property was actually rented out or genuinely available for rental. Time you spent there yourself is private use and can't be claimed.

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Example — Holiday Home

Say you own a bach. You rent it out for 60 days and use it yourself for 30 days. The rest of the year it sits empty. You can only claim expenses for the 60 rented days as a proportion of the total year. If the property earns less than $4,000 in rental income and you used it privately for more than 14 days, there are different simplified rules that may apply instead.

Short-term Airbnb-style income is treated the same as standard rental income from a tax perspective — same deduction rules apply. But if your Airbnb earnings go over $60,000 per year, you may also need to register for GST. That threshold catches more people than you'd expect, especially in popular tourist areas.

GST and Residential Rentals

Most property owners don't have to worry about GST at all. New Zealand tax law says that long-term residential rentals don't have to pay GST. This means that:

  • You don't charge GST on rent you receive.
  • You can't claim back GST on your expenses either (no input tax credits).
  • You don't need to register for GST just because you have a rental property.

Commercial property is a different story — commercial rent is subject to GST and registration is required once you exceed the $60,000 threshold. If you have a mix of residential and commercial properties in your portfolio, the GST treatment of each needs to be handled separately.

Short-term vacation rentals — Airbnb, Bookabach and similar — can be a bit of a grey area when it comes to GST, particularly once your turnover gets close to that $60,000 mark. If that's your situation, it's worth getting specific advice.

Depreciation of Chattels — Don't Leave Money on the Table

We mentioned this earlier in the deductions list, but it's worth going into more detail because it's an area where a lot of landlords leave fairly easy money unclaimed.

The residential building itself can't be depreciated (that was removed back in 2010). But the chattels inside the property can — and when you add them all up, it can be a meaningful annual deduction. Chattels are movable items that can be valued separately from the building: heat pumps, hot water cylinders, carpets, curtains, kitchen appliances and so on.

Common Chattels and Indicative Depreciation Rates

ItemDiminishing Value Rate (approx.)
Heat pump / air conditioning unit20% DV
Hot water cylinder12.5% DV
Carpet and vinyl flooring25% DV
Curtains and blinds25% DV
Dishwasher20% DV
Oven and stove20% DV
Refrigerator20% DV
Washing machine20% DV
Light fittingsUsually part of the building — not separately depreciable

(Rates are indicative — use IRD's depreciation rate finder for accurate current figures)

Getting a Chattels Valuation

To properly claim depreciation on chattels, you ideally need a registered chattels valuation done at the time of purchase. This separates each item's value from the total property price so you can depreciate them individually each year.

If you bought your rental property years ago and never got a chattels valuation, it may not be too late — but it does get more complicated the further back you go. A tax accountant who knows property can advise on what's still possible.

Low-Value Assets

Items costing less than $1,000 each can usually be written off entirely in the year of purchase rather than depreciated over multiple years. This works well for smaller appliances and minor chattels — handy to know if you're replacing things around the property.

Accountant helping property owner with rental tax return NZ
A specialist rental property accountant can help you claim every legal deduction correctly — from chattels depreciation to full interest deductibility.

Does It Matter Whether You Own the Property Personally or Through a Company or Trust?

A lot of NZ property investors hold their rentals through a company, a trust, or a look-through company (LTC) for various reasons — asset protection, succession planning, or tax structuring. And yes, the ownership structure does affect how the tax works, though the core rules around deductions, ring-fencing, and the bright-line test apply regardless.

Ownership StructureApplicable Tax Rate
Personal ownershipMarginal personal rates — 10.5% to 39%
Company28% flat company rate
Trust (trustee income)33%
Trust (income distributed to beneficiaries)Beneficiary's personal marginal rate

Which structure is most tax-efficient depends heavily on your personal circumstances — your income level, how many properties you own, your family situation, and longer-term goals. This is genuinely something to work through with a property tax accountant rather than trying to figure out on your own. Getting the structure wrong can be costly to unwind later.

Non-Residents Who Own NZ Rental Property

If you live overseas but own a rental property in New Zealand, your NZ rental income is still taxable here. Being a non-resident for tax purposes doesn't exempt you from NZ income tax obligations on income sourced from New Zealand.

As a non-resident landlord, you'll generally need to:

  • File an NZ income tax return each year
  • Report your rental income and claim your allowable deductions
  • Pay NZ income tax on the net rental income

Non-resident withholding tax (NRWT) doesn't apply to rental income you receive directly. But if you have a mortgage with an overseas bank, NRWT can apply to the interest payments on that overseas loan, which is a separate issue altogether.

New Zealand has double tax agreements (DTAs) with a number of countries, which can prevent you being taxed twice on the same income. The IRD's rental income guidance covers non-resident obligations. If this is your situation, getting proper advice is really worthwhile — the rules around non-residents can get complicated quickly.

Common Mistakes Landlords Make at Tax Time

We see the same errors come up year after year. A few of them are surprisingly easy to avoid once you know what to look out for.

  • 1
    Claiming improvements as repairsAdding a deck or modernising a kitchen is capital expenditure — not a repair. Claiming it incorrectly is one of the most common IRD audit triggers for landlords.
  • 2
    Not getting a chattels valuation at purchaseThis is easy money missed. Without a chattels valuation, you can't properly claim annual depreciation on items like carpets, heat pumps, and appliances. Most people only realise this years after buying.
  • 3
    Poor record keepingIRD can ask you to substantiate any expense you claim. Keep invoices, receipts, and bank statements for a minimum of 7 years. Seven years sounds like a lot — until the IRD comes asking questions.
  • 4
    Not declaring all rental incomeBond money you retained, casual letting income during a gap between tenants — it all counts. Under-reporting income, even accidentally, can lead to reassessments and penalties.
  • 5
    Mixing up personal and rental expensesIf you're using one credit card or bank account for both personal and property costs, you need to separate them carefully before filing. Only the rental-related portion is deductible.
  • 6
    Trying to offset rental losses against salarySome landlords still don't know that ring-fencing has been in place since 2019. You can't use rental losses to reduce your wage income. Doing this incorrectly can result in penalties and interest charges on the tax shortfall.
  • 7
    Forgetting the bright-line test before sellingSelling a property within 2 years of buying and not accounting for the bright-line test can lead to an unexpected and often large tax bill on the profit. Always check your bright-line position before you commit to a sale.

Frequently Asked Questions About Rental Property Tax in NZ

Do I have to pay tax on rental income in NZ?
Yes. Rental income is taxable in New Zealand regardless of how much you earn from it. You pay income tax on your net rental income — total rent minus deductible expenses — at your personal marginal rate. The IRD outlines all the obligations for residential landlords on their website.
How much tax will I pay on my rental income?
It depends on your total income for the year. Rental income is added to your salary and other earnings and taxed at the marginal rate it falls into. Rates range from 10.5% up to 39% depending on your total combined income. The more deductions you can legitimately claim, the less rental income you have to pay tax on.
Can I claim mortgage interest on my rental property?
Yes — as of 1 April 2025, full mortgage interest deductibility has been restored. The restrictions introduced in 2021 are now fully reversed. You can claim 100% of the interest component of your mortgage repayments. Speak to an Elite Taxation specialist if you want to make sure you're claiming correctly for the transitional years.
What is ring-fencing of rental losses?
Ring-fencing is the rule that keeps rental property losses separate from your other income. If your rental makes a loss in a given year, you can't use that loss to reduce your salary or other taxable income. Instead, the loss gets carried forward and applied against future rental income when the property becomes profitable.
What is the bright-line test in NZ?
The bright-line test taxes the profit on selling a residential property if you sell it within a set period after buying. As of 1 July 2024, that period is 2 years. Sell within 2 years and your gain is taxable income. Hold for longer and you generally won't pay tax on the gain (unless you're in the property business). An Elite Taxation accountant can help you understand your position before you decide to sell.
Can I depreciate my rental property?
You can't depreciate the residential building itself — building depreciation was removed in 2010. But you can depreciate chattels — moveable items like carpets, heat pumps, curtains, and appliances — at IRD's set rates. This is often an underutilised deduction.
What expenses can I claim for my rental property?
You can claim mortgage interest, insurance, council rates, property management fees, repairs and maintenance, accountant fees, chattel depreciation, and some vehicle travel costs. Capital improvements are not deductible as expenses. See the full list on the IRD website.
Do I need to register for GST on residential rental income?
No. Long-term residential rental is GST-exempt under NZ law. You don't charge GST on rent and don't need to register. The rules are different for commercial rentals and short-term accommodation like Airbnb once you exceed $60,000 in annual turnover.
What if I sell my rental property at a loss?
If the sale isn't taxable under the bright-line test, you generally can't claim a loss on the sale. Any ring-fenced rental losses you've been carrying are still ring-fenced and can only be used against future taxable property income — they can't suddenly be released just because you've sold.
Do I need an accountant for rental property tax?
There's no legal requirement to use one. But the rules around rental property tax — depreciation, ring-fencing, interest deductibility, bright-line — are genuinely complex and have changed quite a bit in recent years. In our experience, most landlords who use a good rental property accountant end up with a lower tax bill than they'd achieve on their own. The savings usually outweigh the fee.
What tax return do I file for rental income?
If you own the rental personally, you file an IR3 Individual Income Tax Return. Properties held through a company file a company return, and trusts file a trust return (IR6). The deadline for self-filers is 7 July. Tax agents get an extended deadline.
Can I claim expenses for a property that's sitting empty?
Generally yes, as long as the property is genuinely available for rent. If it's temporarily empty between tenants or while you do repairs, you can usually still claim ongoing running costs. If it's been taken off the rental market for personal use, that changes things.

How a Rental Property Accountant Can Help

The rules around rental property tax in New Zealand have changed more in the last five years than in the previous twenty. Interest deductibility on, off, and on again. Bright-line periods going from 2 to 5 to 10 and back to 2. Ring-fencing rules that a lot of landlords still don't fully understand. It's a lot to keep track of when you're also trying to manage the actual property.

A good property tax accountant can:

  • Identify every deduction you're legally entitled to — including ones you may not know about
  • Arrange or review chattels valuations to maximise annual depreciation claims
  • Set up proper depreciation schedules for all your rental assets
  • Prepare and file your IR3 return accurately each year
  • Keep you updated when the IRD makes changes that affect landlords
  • Advise on the bright-line position before you sell — so there are no surprises
  • Help you review ownership structures and whether your current setup is still the best option

At Elite Taxation, rental property tax is one of the things we do every day. Whether you own one property or a portfolio, we help Auckland landlords and property investors across New Zealand stay compliant, claim everything they're entitled to, and avoid the kind of mistakes that lead to IRD attention.

Wrapping Up

Rental property tax in New Zealand is genuinely more complex than it was ten years ago. The rules have shifted around a lot and there are more moving parts than most people expect when they first buy an investment property. But the core obligations haven't changed:

  • Your rental income is taxable income — declare all of it
  • Claim your legitimate deductions to reduce the taxable amount
  • If you make a rental loss, it's ring-fenced — don't try to offset it against your salary
  • Be aware of the bright-line test before you decide to sell
  • From 1 April 2025, mortgage interest is fully deductible again
  • Keep records for at least 7 years and file your IR3 every year

Get these basics right and rental property in NZ can still be a very solid long-term investment — both as an income source and from a tax efficiency perspective.

If you're unsure how the rules apply to your specific situation, or you just want to make sure you're not leaving deductions on the table, a conversation with a specialist rental property tax accountant is usually worth it. You can also refer to the IRD's official rental income guidance for the technical detail. Getting this right from the start tends to be a lot cheaper than fixing it later.

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