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Tax gold in depreciation: the first-time buyer's guide to saving thousands in today's Sydney market

As property values plateau and clearance rates soften, smart investors are turning to depreciation schedules to unlock hidden tax benefits—here's what you need to know before your next purchase.

By Sydney Property Desk · Published 29 June 2026, 10:51 pm

2 min read

In a market where inner-west homes regularly fetch $1.8–$2.2 million and Northern Beaches apartments command premium prices, first-time property investors are learning to leverage every advantage. Enter depreciation schedules: a quiet but powerful tax strategy that can recoup tens of thousands of dollars over five to ten years—money savvy buyers are no longer ignoring.

A depreciation schedule is essentially a professional assessment of how much value your investment property—building, fixtures, and fittings—loses each year. The Australian Taxation Office allows investors to claim this annual depreciation as a deduction against rental income, reducing taxable profit. For a first-time buyer in suburbs like Marrickville, Newtown, or Cremorne, this can mean an extra $2,000–$8,000 in annual tax deductions, depending on the property's age and composition.

The catch? You must obtain a formal depreciation schedule from a qualified quantity surveyor or tax depreciation specialist before claiming anything. This typically costs $400–$800—a small investment that pays dividends quickly. Properties built in the 1970s and 1980s, common across the Inner West, often yield the strongest deductions because their building components have more remaining life to depreciate.

Consider a renovated weatherboard house purchased for $1.6 million in Dulwich Hill. If the building and fit-out are assessed at $1 million (with land valued at $600,000), depreciation might allow claims of $30,000–$50,000 over the first five years. For an investor on a 37% marginal tax rate, that's $11,000–$18,500 in tax savings before interest deductions and other offsets.

The timing matters too. With clearance rates hovering around 65–72% in mid-2026 and supply remaining tight in blue-chip pockets, first-time investors who settle now could claim depreciation from their first full financial year of ownership. That's an immediate offset against rising interest costs—a lifeline as serviceability pressures mount across Sydney's premium postcodes.

One critical note: depreciation claims reduce your property's cost base for capital gains tax purposes when you eventually sell. If your Coogee apartment appreciates strongly, you'll owe tax on that gain. However, for investors focused on cashflow over capital appreciation, depreciation schedules remain a legitimate and underutilized wealth-building tool.

Before purchasing, engage a tax depreciation specialist alongside your conveyancer and accountant. The $600 upfront cost is negligible against potential five-year savings, especially in today's tighter lending environment where every tax deduction strengthens your investment case.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

Topic:#Property

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Published by The Daily Sydney

This article was produced by the The Daily Sydney editorial desk and covers property in Sydney. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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