WRITTEN BY Mabel Lim

Three significant changes from this week’s Federal Budget will affect how Australians hold and transfer wealth. Here’s what you need to know.
From 1 July 2027, the 50% CGT discount will be replaced by an inflation-based (CPI-indexed) discount. The cost base will be indexed by CPI, so tax will apply only to the inflation-adjusted gain — not the full nominal gain.
Existing assets are grandfathered to that date, meaning:
Notably, there are no changes to the main residence exemption or the four small business CGT concessions.
Practically, expect a significant volume of asset sales and property revaluations as the 2027 transition date approaches.
Negative gearing on residential investment properties is abolished for properties acquired after Budget night, with one exception: new builds remain eligible.
Existing investment properties are fully grandfathered.
In short: if you are considering purchasing an established investment property, the ability to offset financial losses against your income is no longer available.
From 1 July 2028, a minimum 30% tax will apply to family discretionary trust (FDT) income, payable by the trustee — modelled on the company franking system.
Key points:
FDTs may still offer utility for income streaming within families in the 30–45% bracket, though the economics of maintaining one — particularly where corporate beneficiaries have been used — will need to be carefully reassessed.
For clients currently holding significant assets in family discretionary trusts, the interaction of these changes warrants prompt and careful review.
These are complex changes with significant estate planning implications. If you would like to understand how they apply to your circumstances, feel free to reach out to our Estates and Estate Planning team here: https://ballawyers.com.au/personal/wills-estates/.