Investment property tax deductions in Western Australia
Western Australia runs one of the more stable property tax regimes in the country. Stamp duty rates have not changed since 2008, and the land tax threshold sits at $300,000. The recent additions are a 4% foreign-owner land tax surcharge (from 1 July 2024) and continued WA-specific concessions for owner-occupiers under the Keystart and FHB schemes (not available to investors). This guide covers every ATO deduction plus the WA-specific layers.
Federal vs state taxes: who charges what
Australian property investors are taxed by two levels of government. Understanding which level handles which tax is the first step in reading any expense correctly.
The federal layer is run by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) and applies identically in every state: income tax on rental income, deductions for holding costs, depreciation under Division 40 (plant and equipment) and Division 43 (capital works), and capital gains tax on sale. The brackets, rates and rules are the same whether your property is in Western Australia or anywhere else in Australia.
The state layer covers transfer duty (commonly called stamp duty), land tax, foreign-owner surcharges, and other state-specific levies. These vary sharply between states and get refreshed every year in state budgets. For a Western Australia investor, the layer you most need to understand is WA's land tax schedule and stamp duty brackets.
A simple rule of thumb: if it is a cost you pay to get into the property (purchase price, stamp duty, conveyancing legals), it is generally a capital cost - not deductible against rental income, but added to the cost base for CGT later. If it is a cost you pay to hold the property (rates, water, insurance, interest, land tax, maintenance), it is generally deductible in the year you incur it. Capital improvements - new kitchen, structural extension - fall into Div 43 capital works and are deducted slowly over 40 years.
The rest of this guide walks the two layers in turn, starting with the federal deductions every WA investor can claim, then drilling into Western Australia-specific land tax and stamp duty.
Common ATO deductions every investor can claim
These deductions are available to any Australian rental property owner under federal ATO rules. They apply in Western Australia the same way they apply in every other state. Track them throughout the year; do not try to reconstruct them at EOFY from a shoebox.
Loan interest
Interest on the loan used to acquire (or improve) the investment property is fully deductible. This is usually the single largest deduction on the rental schedule. If the loan is split between investment and personal use (e.g. a redraw for personal spending), only the investment portion is deductible. Mixing the two is a common audit flag - keep the investment loan clean.
Use the negative gearing calculator to estimate the tax saving when total expenses exceed rental income.
Council rates, water and waste
Council rates issued to the property owner (you, not the tenant) are deductible. So is the water service charge and any council waste/recycling fee billed to the owner. In states where the Fire Services Levy is bundled into council rates, the whole bill is treated as council rates for deduction purposes.
Worked example: a $1,900 council rates bill at a 37% marginal tax rate saves $703 in tax. Multiply across 3-4 quarterly bills a year and you are looking at $700-$1,500 in deductions just from rates.
Insurance
Building insurance, landlord insurance (covering loss of rent and tenant default), and public liability insurance on the property are deductible. Contents insurance is deductible only if the contents belong to you as the landlord (e.g. furniture in a furnished rental). Personal contents are not.
Repairs vs improvements
This is the most commonly misclassified expense. A repair restores the property to its prior condition - patching a hole in plaster, replacing a broken window with a same-sized window, fixing a leaking tap. Repairs are deductible immediately, in the year incurred.
An improvement takes the property beyond its original condition - new kitchen, structural extension, replacing a tin roof with a tiled one. Improvements are NOT immediately deductible - they enter the Div 43 capital works pool at 2.5% per year over 40 years.
Replacing a like-for-like item that is part of the building (e.g. swapping a worn-out hot water system for a similar new one) sits awkwardly between the two and is the most common ATO query. When in doubt, lean toward classifying as capital improvement - get a quantity surveyor or accountant to confirm at EOFY.
Depreciation - Division 40 and Division 43
Depreciation is the deduction most investors leave on the table. There are two streams:
- Div 40 (plant and equipment) - the removable assets in the property (ovens, dishwashers, carpets, blinds, aircon units). Each asset has its own effective life. For residential property contracts dated 9 May 2017 or later, only NEW assets you install yourself can be depreciated - second-hand plant left by the previous owner is excluded.
- Div 43 (capital works) - the building itself. 2.5% per year over 40 years for residential builds with a construction contract date from 16 September 1987 onwards. Builds from 18 July 1985 to 15 September 1987 use the transitional 4% rate over 25 years. Pre-18 July 1985 builds do not qualify for Div 43.
For any property less than 40 years old, a quantity surveyor (QS) depreciation schedule typically pays for itself many times over. Expect $5,000-$15,000 a year in combined Div 40/43 deductions on a modern apartment.
Property management fees
Property management commission (typically 6-9% of rent), letting fees, lease preparation fees, re-letting fees, and inspection costs are all deductible. So is advertising to find a tenant. The buyer's agent fee you paid to source the property in the first place is NOT deductible - it is a capital cost.
Accountant and tax agent fees
Fees paid to a registered tax agent or accountant to prepare the rental schedule and lodge your tax return are deductible. So is the cost of property investment tax software, depreciation reports, and other professional advice directly related to the investment.
Body corporate / strata levies
Quarterly body corporate fees (administrative fund AND sinking fund contributions) are deductible. Special levies raised for genuine capital works - new lift, structural waterproofing, facade replacement - are NOT immediately deductible. They go into the Div 43 capital works pool.
Advertising for tenants
Costs to advertise the property for rent - online listings, photography for the listing, signboards - are deductible. Costs to advertise for sale are capital.
WA-specific costs: deductible or not?
WA's state-specific layer is comparatively light. The main planning levers are land tax aggregation, the foreign-owner surcharge, and the stamp duty implications of buying just above bracket boundaries.
| Cost | Deductible? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| WA transfer duty (stamp duty) | Capital cost | Capital cost - added to the cost base. |
| WA land tax | Deductible | Holding cost. Deductible in the income year incurred. |
| Metropolitan Region Improvement Tax (MRIT) | Deductible | Charged on metropolitan land at 0.14% above the $300k threshold. Deductible as part of land tax. |
| Emergency Services Levy | Deductible | Billed via local council rates or directly by DFES. Deductible as part of property costs. |
| Foreign Buyers Duty | Capital cost | 7% surcharge on residential transfers to foreign persons. Capital cost. |
| Foreign owner land tax surcharge | Deductible | 4% additional land tax on residential land owned by foreign persons (since 1 July 2024). Treated as land tax for income tax purposes. |
The short version: stamp duty is a capital cost that goes into the cost base for CGT, and most ongoing state-imposed costs (land tax, fire services levies, ongoing surcharges on land) are deductible against rental income in the year you incur them. The exception is foreign-acquirer STAMP duty surcharges - those are capital, not holding costs.
Western Australia land tax: thresholds, rates, and how to plan
Land tax is an annual state tax on the unimproved (site) value of land you own above a state-set threshold. It is one of the most overlooked deductions in property investing because the assessment lands months after you would have updated your records.
Trusts, companies, and SMSF holdings
WA uses a single scale across individuals, companies and trustees. SMSF holdings are aggregated with other WA land controlled by the fund. Metro properties also attract MRIT at 0.14% above the threshold - factored into the standard assessment.
Foreign owner / absentee surcharges
4% foreign-owner surcharge on taxable land owned by foreign persons (effective 1 July 2024, Land Tax Assessment Amendment Act 2024).
Worked example
You own one Perth investment with an unimproved land value of $500,000. Taxable above threshold = $500,000 - $300,000 = $200,000. Land tax = $300 + 0.9% x $80,000 = $1,020. Plus MRIT on metro land. At a 37% marginal rate, the deduction saves $377.
Cross-check your assessment in the RevenueWA (Department of Finance) portal each year. If you have crossed the threshold for the first time, registration is your obligation - the revenue office does not chase you for it.
Western Australia stamp duty for investors
WA stamp duty rates have been stable since 2008. The 2024-25 reforms focused on first-home-buyer concessions, not investor rates. Top marginal rate is 5.15% above $725,000.
Bracket summary
Up to $120,000: 1.9%. $120,001-$150,000: $2,280 + 2.85%. $150,001-$360,000: $3,135 + 3.8%. $360,001-$725,000: $11,115 + 4.75%. Above $725,000: $28,452.50 + 5.15%.
First Home Buyer concessions (context only)
First Home Owner Rate of Duty provides full exemption up to $450,000 (PPOR), tapering to $600,000. Investors do not qualify.
Foreign acquirer surcharge
7% Foreign Buyers Duty on residential transfers to foreign persons (RevenueWA).
For dollar-specific estimates, use the upfront costs calculator - it handles WA stamp duty, LMI, and conveyancing in one pass.
Depreciation: the deduction most investors leave on the table
Depreciation deserves its own section because it is the deduction most investors either skip entirely or claim badly. Two streams - both available to WA investors under federal ATO rules.
Division 40: plant and equipment
Div 40 covers the removable assets in the property: oven, dishwasher, cooktop, hot water system, carpets, blinds, aircon, ceiling fans, smoke alarms. Each asset has an ATO-published effective life (e.g. 12 years for an oven), and depreciates over that life on a diminishing-value or prime-cost basis.
The 9 May 2017 rule. For residential property contracts dated 9 May 2017 or later, second-hand plant left by the previous owner can no longer be depreciated by you (the new buyer). Only NEW assets that YOU install yourself qualify. This was the most significant change to residential property depreciation in two decades. Properties bought before 9 May 2017 retained their existing entitlements.
Division 43: capital works
Div 43 covers the building itself - the actual construction. Three eligibility tiers based on construction contract date:
- Pre-18 July 1985: NOT eligible. No capital works deduction.
- 18 July 1985 - 15 September 1987: 4% per year over 25 years (transitional rate). Most of these windows have now expired.
- 16 September 1987 onwards: 2.5% per year over 40 years. This is the common case for any modern build.
Concrete example: a 2010 unit in WA with $200,000 of original construction cost gives you $5,000 of Div 43 deduction per year for 40 years from construction date. At a 37% marginal rate, that is $1,850 of tax saving per year - $46,250 over the remaining 25 years until 2050.
Get a quantity surveyor report
You cannot reliably claim Div 43 (or properly categorise Div 40) without a quantity surveyor (QS) depreciation schedule. A QS report typically costs $400-$700 and provides a 40-year forward schedule that drops straight into your tax return. The cost itself is deductible. If your property is less than 40 years old, the QS report almost always pays for itself many times over in the first year.
Common mistakes WA investors make
Misclassifying repairs as capital improvements (or vice versa)
The single most common error. A repair is deductible in the year incurred. An improvement enters Div 43 at 2.5% over 40 years. Mis-classifying a $5,000 repair as capital costs you the immediate deduction (potentially $1,850 in tax at 37%) and instead drips it out at $125 per year for 40 years. Get it right.
Claiming personal expenses against the property
Travel to inspect the property is no longer deductible for individual residential investors (since 1 July 2017). Personal phone calls about the property are not deductible. Meals on a trip to "look at the property" are not deductible. Restrict your claims to genuine investment expenses with paper trails.
Forgetting to apportion when the property converts use
If the property was your principal place of residence (PPOR) for part of the year and an investment for the rest, you can only deduct expenses for the period it was income-producing. The most common case: you move out mid-year and start renting it. Apportion every expense by the number of days the property was available for rent vs days you lived there.
Missing land tax registration
In WA, crossing the land tax threshold creates an obligation on YOU to register with the revenue office, not the other way around. People with multiple WA properties cross the threshold (because holdings are aggregated) and only find out years later when they get a back-assessment with interest and penalties.
Claiming stamp duty as a deduction
Stamp duty is a capital cost, not a holding cost. It goes into the cost base for CGT purposes (reducing your future capital gain) - it is not deductible against rental income now. Treat it correctly from day one.
EOFY checklist for a WA investor
Twelve things to do before 30 June so the EOFY rental schedule writes itself rather than turning into a forensic exercise.
- Pull all council rates, water, and WA land tax notices for the income year. Confirm the assessment date (not the payment date) sits inside the FY.
- Confirm building insurance, landlord insurance, and (if applicable) public liability premiums. Use the gross premium including any embedded levy.
- Pull body corporate / strata statements for the year. Identify any special levies separately from admin/sinking fund contributions.
- Reconcile your interest-only or P&I loan statements. Note any redraws for personal use - exclude that portion from the interest deduction.
- Categorise repairs vs improvements. Anything ambiguous: flag for accountant review before lodgement.
- Update your quantity surveyor schedule if you have installed any new Div 40 assets during the year (carpets, blinds, aircon, hot water unit).
- Confirm property management statements reconcile to the bank account. Include leasing fees, re-letting fees and advertising as deductions.
- Pull your WA land tax assessment notice. Confirm the unimproved land value matches your records.
- If the property was a PPOR for part of the year, calculate the apportionment percentage (days income-producing / days in the FY).
- Confirm depreciation deductions match the QS schedule for this FY, pro-rated by days held if you bought or sold during the year.
- Gather any accountant fees, tax software subscriptions, and professional advice invoices from the year - all deductible.
- Hand the categorised pack to your tax agent. The cleaner your pack, the less you spend in billable hours.
Vestly does most of this categorisation automatically across your portfolio. Track every expense once and the EOFY pack writes itself.
Western Australia property tax: frequently asked questions
Is the WA Emergency Services Levy deductible?
Yes. The Emergency Services Levy is billed via your council rates notice (or directly by DFES for some properties) and is deductible as part of the cost of holding the investment.
How is the Metropolitan Region Improvement Tax (MRIT) treated for income tax?
MRIT is rolled into your land tax assessment if your property sits within the metropolitan region. For income tax purposes it is part of land tax - fully deductible in the year incurred.
I am a foreign resident buying in WA. What am I up for?
Two surcharges. Upfront: 7% Foreign Buyers Duty (on top of normal stamp duty). Ongoing: 4% foreign-owner land tax surcharge (since 1 July 2024). The 4% is deductible against rental income; the 7% is a capital cost.
Has WA stamp duty changed recently?
The investor schedule has been stable since 2008. The 2024-25 budget tweaked first-home-buyer thresholds but did not touch investor rates. Don't trust online "WA stamp duty 2026" articles that suggest otherwise unless they cite RevenueWA directly.
When does WA land tax fall due?
Assessment date is 30 June. Notices arrive in October-November. You can pay in full or via three equal instalments.
Are real estate agent inspection fees deductible?
Yes. Initial advertising costs to find a tenant and ongoing property management fees are deductible. One-off costs to source the property (buyer's agent fee for the original purchase) are capital, not income.
Investing in other states?
Each state has its own land tax thresholds, stamp duty brackets, and surcharge rules. Use the right guide for the state your property is in.
Catch every WA deduction, automatically
Investors who track loosely typically leave thousands on the table each year. Vestly categorises every WA rates notice, land tax assessment, body corporate fee, repair and depreciation entry against the ATO rental schedule, ready to hand to your accountant.
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General information current as of May 2026. Tax rules change frequently. Not financial or legal advice. Consult a registered tax agent or your state revenue office for advice on your situation.