The Australian Government has officially handed down the 2026–27 Federal Budget, and this year’s announcements focus heavily on:

  • cost of living relief
  • housing affordability
  • tax reform
  • small business support
  • productivity and economic restructuring

For many Australians, this Budget will impact tax, housing, investment strategies, superannuation planning, and business decision-making over the coming years.

Here’s our simplified breakdown of the major proposed changes and what they could mean in practical terms.

Income Tax & Cost of Living

New Income Tax Cuts

The Government announced additional tax cuts for lower and middle income earners.

What’s changing?

The tax rate for incomes between $18,201 and $45,000 will reduce:

  1. from 16% to 15% from 1 July 2026
  2. then down again to 14% from 1 July 2027

Compared to now

Currently, income within this bracket is taxed at 16%.

Who benefits?

  1. employees
  2. part-time workers
  3. lower and middle income earners
  4. families managing rising household costs

What’s the objective?

The Government says the goal is to:

  • reduce cost-of-living pressure
  • ease bracket creep
  • put more money back into workers’ pockets

Estimated impact

The Government estimates workers could save:

  • up to $268 per year initially
  • up to $536 per year once fully implemented

Source:
Australian Federal Budget 2026–27

$250 Working Australians Tax Offset

What’s changing?

A new permanent tax offset of up to $250 annually for workers.

Compared to now

This offset does not currently exist.

Who benefits?

Around 13 million Australian workers are expected to qualify.

What’s the objective?

The Government says this measure is designed to:

  • help offset rising living expenses
  • provide ongoing tax relief
  • support workforce participation

Important note

This is proposed to begin from the 2027–28 financial year.

Source:
The Guardian Budget Coverage

$1,000 Instant Work-Related Deduction

What’s changing?

Employees may be able to claim a standard $1,000 deduction without detailed receipts.

Compared to now

Currently, most deductions require:

  • records
  • receipts
  • substantiation

Who benefits?

Employees claiming:

  1. uniforms
  2. tools
  3. home office costs
  4. self-education
  5. work-related expenses

What’s the objective?

The Government says this measure aims to:

  • simplify tax returns
  • reduce admin burden
  • make claiming deductions easier

Potential impact

This could significantly simplify tax time for millions of workers.

Source:
Budget Cost of Living Measures

Fuel Excise Reduction

What’s changing?

Fuel excise is temporarily reducing:

  • from 52.6 cents
  • to 20.6 cents per litre for 3 months

Compared to now

Australians currently pay the full fuel excise rate.

Who benefits?

  1. commuters
  2. tradies
  3. transport businesses
  4. regional Australians
  5. families with high travel costs

What’s the objective?

The Government says this aims to:

  • reduce immediate cost-of-living pressure
  • help households facing rising fuel costs
  • support transport-heavy industries

Source:
Federal Budget Fuel Measures

Housing & Property

Housing reform is one of the most significant areas of this year’s Budget.

What’s changing?

Negative gearing concessions may become largely limited to newly built properties for future purchases.

Compared to now

Currently, investors can generally negatively gear:

  • existing properties
  • new properties

Who benefits?

Potentially:

  1. first home buyers
  2. younger Australians
  3. renters trying to enter the market

Who may be impacted?

  • property investors
  • buyers of established investment properties
  • some high-income earners using property investment strategies

What’s the objective?

The Government says the goal is to:

  • improve housing affordability
  • increase new housing supply
  • reduce investor competition for existing homes

Important note

Existing investment properties are expected to be grandfathered.

Source:
Negative Gearing Explained

Capital Gains Tax (CGT) Changes

What’s changing?

The Government proposes replacing the current 50% CGT discount with an indexed system.

Compared to now

individuals generally receive a 50% discount on eligible assets held longer than 12 months

Who may be impacted?

  • property investors
  • share investors
  • wealth-building investors
  • higher-income earners

What’s the objective?

The Government says this aims to:

  • improve tax fairness
  • reduce wealth inequality
  • increase government revenue
  • reduce tax concessions on investment assets

Potential impact

Investors may pay more tax on capital gains over time.

Source:
CGT Reform Coverage

First Home Buyer Focus

What’s changing?

The Budget strongly prioritises housing affordability initiatives and structural reforms.

Compared to now

Housing affordability remains one of Australia’s biggest economic pressures.

Who benefits?

  1. first home buyers
  2. younger Australians
  3. renters trying to enter the property market

What’s the objective?

The Government says the reforms aim to:

  • improve access to housing
  • reduce affordability pressure
  • support long-term home ownership

Treasury estimate

Treasury estimates these reforms could help an additional 75,000 Australians buy homes over the next decade.

Source:
Housing Reform Overview

Small Business

Permanent $20,000 Instant Asset Write-Off

What’s changing?

The Government plans to make the $20,000 instant asset write-off permanent.

Compared to now

Previously, this measure was temporary and repeatedly extended.

Who benefits?

Eligible small businesses purchasing:

  1. equipment
  2. technology
  3. tools
  4. office assets
  5. vehicles under the threshold

What’s the objective?

The Government says this aims to:

  • encourage business investment
  • improve productivity
  • support small business cash flow

Source:
Small Business Measures

Small Business Loss Carry Back

What’s changing?

Eligible businesses may again be able to offset current year losses against previous profits.

Compared to now

This measure had previously ended.

Who benefits?

Businesses experiencing:

  1. downturns
  2. expansion phases
  3. fluctuating profitability
  4. large investment periods

What’s the objective?

The Government says this aims to:

  • improve business resilience
  • support cash flow
  • help businesses recover faster

Source:
Budget Economic Measures

Red Tape Reduction

What’s changing?

The Government plans reforms aimed at reducing business compliance costs by around $10 billion annually.

Compared to now

Many businesses currently face:

  • increasing compliance obligations
  • complex approvals
  • administrative pressure

Who benefits?

  1. small business owners
  2. growing businesses
  3. regulated industries

What’s the objective?

The Government says this aims to:

  • improve productivity
  • reduce compliance burden
  • encourage business growth

Source:
ABC Budget Coverage

Health & NDIS

Medicare Levy Threshold Increase

What’s changing?

The Medicare levy thresholds are increasing.

Compared to now

Currently, more low-income Australians may pay part or all of the levy.

Who benefits?

  1. pensioners
  2. lower income earners
  3. lower income families

What’s the objective?

The Government says this aims to:

  • reduce pressure on lower income households
  • improve affordability during rising living costs

Source:
Budget Health Measures

NDIS Spending Tightening

What’s changing?

The Government plans to slow NDIS spending growth significantly.

Compared to now

NDIS costs have been increasing rapidly year-on-year.

Who may be impacted?

  1. NDIS participants
  2. providers
  3. allied health businesses
  4. disability support organisations

What’s the objective?

The Government says this aims to:

  • improve long-term sustainability of the scheme
  • reduce budget pressure
  • strengthen assessment processes

Potential impact

The sector may experience:

  • tighter eligibility reviews
  • increased compliance
  • funding pressure

Source:
NDIS Budget Changes

Trusts & Investment Structures

Proposed Trust Tax Changes

What’s changing?

The Government proposes introducing minimum tax rules for some discretionary trusts.

Compared to now

Currently, discretionary trusts provide flexibility around income distribution.

Who may be impacted?

  1. family trusts
  2. investment groups
  3. higher-income earners
  4. some business structures

What’s the objective?

The Government says this aims to:

  • reduce perceived tax minimisation
  • improve fairness in the tax system
  • increase government revenue

Important note

Detailed legislation has not yet been released.

Source:
Trust Tax Reform Discussion

Final Thoughts

This year’s Federal Budget is heavily focused on reshaping Australia’s tax and housing landscape.

For some Australians, the changes may provide welcome relief.

For others, particularly investors and higher-income earners, the proposed reforms may create uncertainty and trigger future planning discussions.

Importantly:

  • many measures are still proposed only
  • legislation has not yet passed
  • details may change significantly

As always, it’s important not to make major financial decisions based solely on Budget announcements until legislation is finalised and professional advice is obtained.

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