The Treasurer handed down the Albanese Government’s fifth Federal Budget on the evening of 12 May 2026. It arrived against a backdrop of global oil price shocks from the Iran conflict, persistent deficits, and gross debt tracking toward $1 trillion. No return to surplus is forecast until 2034–35.
The Budget is framed around three pillars: structural tax reform, productivity, and cost-of-living relief. For business owners, investors and individuals, the changes are significant — and some require action well before the legislation lands. Here’s the full picture, without the spin.
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⚠️ Trekk’s position
The legislation hasn’t passed yet. How it’s drafted will matter enormously for individual circumstances. Our advice: hold tight, don’t restructure anything yet, and get on our radar. Once the detail is settled, we’ll be working through this one-on-one with clients — because the right move will look different depending on your structure, income and goals. |
| Indicator | 2025–26 | 2026–27 | 2027–28 | 2028–29 | 2029–30 |
| Budget Deficit | $28.3B | $31.5B | $31.0B | $34.4B | $25.3B |
| Gross Debt | $982B | $1.05T | $1.12T | $1.20T | $1.25T |
| Net Debt | $556B | $617B | $669B | $726B | $768B |
| GDP Growth | 1.30% | 2.25% | 1.75% | 2.25% | 2.50% |
| CPI Inflation | 5.00% | 2.50% | 2.50% | 2.50% | 2.50% |
| Wage Growth (WPI) | 3.40% | 3.25% | 3.50% | 3.50% | 3.75% |
| Unemployment | 4.25% | 4.50% | 4.50% | 4.50% | 4.25% |
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RBA Note
The RBA’s independent forecasts are materially more conservative — GDP growth of 1.9% (2026), 1.3% (2027), 1.4% (2028) — and dwelling investment projections also diverge significantly from Treasury’s. |
| Metric | Figure |
| Cash Rate Target | 4.35% (3rd consecutive hike since Jan 2026) |
| CPI (Monthly) | 4.6% — well above RBA target band |
| Unemployment Rate | 4.3% (Employment growth 1.8%) |
| Avg. Residential Price | $1,074,700 |
| Wage Growth | 3.4% / Avg Weekly Earnings $1,562.40 |
| AUD/USD | US$0.71 |
| Household Debt | 177% of income |
| Household Saving Ratio | 6.90% |
| Measure | Key Detail | Effective |
| Payday Super | Employers must pay super at the same time as salary and wages. SGC redesigned with updated penalties for late/missed payments. | 01 July 2026 |
| Better Targeted Super (Div 296) | Additional 15% tax on super balances $3M–$10M (total 30%); additional 10% on balances above $10M (total 40%). Thresholds indexed to CPI annually. | FY2026–27 onwards |
| LISTO Increase | LISTO eligibility threshold raised from $37,000 to $45,000; maximum LISTO increased from $500 to $810 (reflecting 12% SG rate). | FY2027–28 onwards |
| HELP Debt Reduction | One-off 20% reduction of outstanding HELP/student loan balances. Minimum repayment threshold increased to $67,000, indexed annually. | Already applied |
| Deductions for ATO Interest Charges Denied | GIC and SIC charges are no longer deductible for income years starting on or after 1 July 2025. | From 1 July 2025 |
| Taxable Income | 2025–26 (current) | 2026–27 | 2027–28 |
| $0 – $18,200 | Nil | Nil | Nil |
| $18,201 – $45,000 | 16% | 15% | 14% |
| $45,001 – $135,000 | 30% | 30% | 30% |
| $135,001 – $190,000 | 37% | 37% | 37% |
| $190,001+ | 45% | 45% | 45% |
| Category | New Threshold (up 2.9%) |
| Singles | $28,011 (was $27,222) |
| Families | $47,238 (was $45,907) |
| Single Seniors/Pensioners | $44,268 (was $43,020) |
| Family – Seniors/Pensioners | $61,623 (was $59,886) |
| Per dependent child/student | +$4,338 (was +$4,216) |
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⚠️ Most significant change in this Budget
This is the single most significant tax change in this Budget and requires urgent client review for all investors, property owners and trust structures. |
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Legal risk — K&L Gates
Assets held pre-1 July 2027 will require valuations as at that date to split the gain between old (50% discount) and new (indexation + 30% min tax) regimes. ATO-approved methodologies will be published — but experience suggests these are rarely concessional. Particular concern for start-up equity holders and employee share scheme participants who may have low or nil cost base with no specific relief announced. |
| Timing of purchase | Negative gearing allowed? | Treatment |
| Held at announcement (incl. contracts not yet settled) | Yes | Grandfathered until disposal |
| Purchased between announcement & 30 June 2027 | Partially | Allowed to 30 June 2027; ring-fenced from 1 July 2027 |
| Purchased from 1 July 2027 | No | Ring-fenced from day one |
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Legal risk — K&L Gates
It is currently unclear whether carried-forward losses from established properties will eventually lapse if unable to be recouped in any given year. Losses are also ring-fenced against residential property income only — they cannot offset other investment income (e.g. interest on savings, dividends). |
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Action Required
Clients using discretionary trusts should model the interaction of the 30% trustee-level tax, the new CGT regime and reformed negative gearing rules before the 2027 restructure window opens. A company or fixed trust structure may be preferable depending on facts. |
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Legal risk — K&L Gates
No defined concept of ‘discretionary trust’ exists in current tax law — the regime will work by exclusion, potentially catching unit trusts and other non-AMIT structures. Company beneficiaries face effective double tax, targeting and eliminating ‘bucket company’ structures. Consultation still required on how excess franking credits can be used. |
Loretta operates through a company. She pays herself $100k salary; the company retains $200k profit at 25% small business rate. Total tax: $72,002.
Kurt uses a family discretionary trust with $100k salary and $200k distributed to 4 family members at $50k each. Currently total tax: $42,010. Under the 30% trust minimum tax: Kurt’s trust pays 30% on $200k regardless of distributions = total tax $86,002 — $14,000 more than the company structure. Kurt is better off operating via a company from 2028–29.
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Example
Dining Co ($1M turnover) had $50,000 profit and paid $12,500 tax in 2025–26. In 2026–27 it purchases $55,000 of equipment using the instant asset write-off, generating a $15,000 tax loss. It carries this loss back to 2025–26, generating a $3,750 cash refund ($15,000 × 25%). The combination of the permanent IAWO and the reintroduced loss carry-back delivers both an upfront deduction and an immediate cash refund. |
| Current | Post 1 July 2028 | |
| SME R&D offset — Turnover threshold | Less than $20M turnover | Less than $50M turnover |
| SME R&D premium | 18.5% refundable | 23% (refundable or non-refundable) |
| Eligibility for refund | — | Entities less than 10 years old |
| Large business Tier 1 premium | 8.50% | 13% |
| Large business Tier 2 premium | 16.5% (intensity >2%) | 21% (intensity >1.5%) |
| Eligible activities | Core and supporting R&D | Core R&D activities only |
| Minimum expenditure | $20,000 | $50,000 |
| R&D expenditure cap | $150 million | $200 million |
| Period | Vehicle Type | FBT Treatment |
| Before 1 Apr 2027 | EV ≤ $75,000 | 100% FBT exempt (0% statutory rate) — unchanged |
| 1 Apr 2027 – 1 Apr 2029 | EV $75k–LCT threshold | 25% FBT discount (15% statutory rate) |
| From 1 Apr 2029 | All eligible EVs ≤ LCT threshold | Permanent 25% FBT discount (15% statutory rate) |
| All other cars | EVs above LCT threshold | Existing 20% statutory rate — unchanged |
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Legal risk — K&L Gates
The carve-out for ‘new residential properties’ from the CGT discount removal is critical but undefined in the announcement. Substantial renovations and knock-down/rebuilds are unlikely to qualify. The boundary between ‘new build’ and ‘substantially renovated’ will be a significant compliance battleground. |
CPA Australia’s Tax Lead Jenny Wong was direct on budget night: “This is not tax reform — it’s a revenue measure that shifts more of the burden onto middle Australia under the guise of tax reform. For anyone looking to invest, grow a business or take on risk, the message is clear: the government will take at least 30 per cent, regardless of the outcome.”
Wong warned that the heavier tax regime on capital investments and business structures risks discouraging investment, productivity and entrepreneurship.
CA ANZ tax leader Susan Franks: “For years, short-term, year-to-year thresholds have created confusion for businesses and advisers, undermining investment planning and adding unnecessary complexity. Locking in a stable, long-term setting is exactly the kind of practical reform we’ve been advocating for.”
CA ANZ estimates the permanent write-off will save small businesses an estimated 376,000 hours per year in compliance and around $32 million per year in compliance costs.
| Measure | First Announced | Status |
| Division 7A deemed dividend rule amendments | Budget 2016–17 | Unresolved — consultation paper 2018 |
| Corporate tax residency reforms | Budget 2020–21 | Unresolved |
| Individual tax residency reforms | Budget 2021–22 | Unresolved — consultation paper 2023 |
| Proposed updates to Part IVA | Budget 2023–24 | Deferred in Budget 2024–25 |
| Proposed MIT regime amendments | Mar-25 | Unresolved — proposed from 13 March 2025 |
| Multinational royalty penalty regime | Budget 2024–25 | Unresolved — proposed from 1 July 2026 |
| FBT car parking benefits consultation | Mar-22 | Unresolved |
| SMSF residency requirement relaxation | Budget 2020–21 | Deferred in Budget 2022–23 |
| # | Action | Who | Urgency |
| 1 | Review all property acquisitions — established vs new build distinction now critical for CGT and negative gearing treatment | Property investors | IMMEDIATE |
| 2 | Consider bringing forward property sales before 1 July 2027 to access 50% CGT discount on existing gains | All investors with CGT assets | HIGH |
| 3 | Model discretionary trust vs company vs fixed trust structure under the new 30% minimum tax | Trust clients | HIGH — before 2027 rollover window |
| 4 | Review EV novated lease arrangements — vehicles >$75k will lose full FBT exemption from 1 April 2027 | Employers / salary packagers | HIGH |
| 5 | Claim $1,000 standard work-related expense deduction on 2026–27 returns (no receipts required) | All PAYG earners | FY27 return |
| 6 | Review PHI for clients aged 65+ ahead of April 2027 rebate changes | Over-65 PHI holders | MEDIUM |
| 7 | Leverage loss carry-back for eligible companies reporting a loss in FY27 or FY28 | Companies <$1B turnover | FY27/FY28 |
| 8 | Register and plan R&D claims ahead of 2028 rule changes — confirm eligibility under new thresholds | R&D claimants | MEDIUM |
The legislation hasn’t passed yet, and the detail matters enormously. Key measures like the discretionary trust minimum tax, the CGT indexation rules and the negative gearing ring-fencing all contain significant open questions that will only be resolved when draft legislation emerges for consultation.
Our position is pragmatic: now is the time to understand what’s proposed, model your own situation, and get your questions ready. It’s not the time to restructure anything.
Once the legislation settles, we’ll be working through this with clients individually — because the right strategy will look different depending on your structure, income and goals. The 3-year rollover relief window opening 1 July 2027 gives discretionary trust clients meaningful time to plan, but that window only works if you’re prepared before it opens.
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Ready to talk it through?
If you’d like to get ahead of this or just want to understand what it means for your specific situation — reach out to your Trekk advisor. We’re already working through the detail and will be in contact as the legislation develops. |
Disclaimer: This summary has been prepared by Trekk Advisory for general information purposes only. It is based on Budget documentation and professional commentary current at 12 May 2026. It does not constitute financial, tax or legal advice. Clients should seek specific advice tailored to their circumstances before acting on any measures contained in this summary. Legislative details remain subject to parliamentary process and may change. Sources: budget.gov.au; NTAA Federal Budget Handout 2026–27; The Tax Institute Federal Budget 2026–27 Report; Taxbanter/KnowledgeShop 2026–27 Federal Budget Report & Timeline; AICD Economic Weekly & Director Sentiment Index; Accountants Daily; CA ANZ & CPA Australia post-budget commentary; K&L Gates Australian Tax Alert; RBA Key Economic Indicators Snapshot 7 May 2026; Budget Papers 1, 2 & 4.