Property Tax

So you think you can’t afford it

A number of our articles have covered a variety of individual topics in isolation but in reality they’re all inextricably linked providing the platform for balance and maximum return from your property investments.

 

Our affordability index provides an amalgamation of a variety of property information to provide a balanced look at how your asset might perform over a period of time and how you can influence that performance.

 

Whether the investment is residential or non residential the same basics apply –

 

§          How much is it going to cost me

§          What risks are involved

§          What return will I secure

 

These questions then have multiple layers – how much is it going to cost me initially and in the short and long term, what kind of costs are they, capital, repairs and maintenance, refurbishment or compliance costs. What must I do legally, what must I spend to benefit and retain the tenant.

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What you need to know at tax time

If during the current financial year you owned an investment property and earned an assessable income from it then you are entitled to tax deductions for wear and tear or depreciation as it is more commonly known.

 

Over the last 22 years Napier & Blakeley has analysed many thousands of properties, preparing depreciation schedules for owners of virtually every type of property ranging in value from a few hundred thousand dollars to in excess of one billion dollars in value.

 

There are well in excess of one million property investors within Australia and we suspect that the majority of property owners in Australia do not fully maximise the deductions which can significantly affect and increase their after tax yields.

 

In a recent analysis of a five year old commercial office building with a purchase price of $5m, a land value of $1m and an income of $500,000 we found the following.

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