NZ
NZ Tax Tools

NZ Rental Income Tax Calculator

Calculate tax on your residential rental property income with ring-fencing, itemized deductions, interest deductibility, and rental yield.

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Rental Income Tax Calculator
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Mortgage interest deductibility for 2025-26: 100%

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Ring-fenced rental losses from previous years that can offset this year's rental profit.

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Enter your rental details above to see your tax breakdown.

Rental Income Tax in New Zealand

Rental income in New Zealand is taxed at your marginal income tax rate. Your rental income is added to your other income, and the incremental tax is what you owe on your rental profits.

Key deductions include operating expenses (rates, insurance, repairs, property management) and mortgage interest. Interest deductibility was reduced for residential property from 2021 but has been fully restored to 100% from 2025-26 (80% for 2024-25). New builds with a Code Compliance Certificate issued after 27 March 2020 are exempt from the limitation.

Since the 2019-20 tax year, residential rental losses are ring-fenced — they cannot offset your other income (salary, business income, etc.). Losses carry forward to reduce future rental income only.

Depreciation is not allowed on residential rental buildings in New Zealand (removed in 2011).

Marginal tax rate on rental profit (2026-27)

Rental profit is added on top of your salary and taxed at your marginal rate — New Zealand has no tax-free threshold, so tax applies from the first dollar.

Taxable income Rate
$0 – $15,600 10.5%
$15,601 – $53,500 17.5%
$53,501 – $78,100 30%
$78,101 – $180,000 33%
$180,001+ 39%

Worked examples (2026-27)

Profitable rental

$31,200 rent, $8,200 expenses, $14,000 interest (100% deductible), $80,000 salary. Net rental profit $9,000; tax on it $2,970; after-tax cash flow $6,030. Gross yield 4.2%.

Loss — ring-fenced

$26,400 rent, $9,000 expenses, $20,000 interest, $70,000 salary. Deductions exceed rent by $2,600 — that loss is ring-fenced (no tax refund against salary) and carries forward to offset future rental income only.

What you can and can't deduct

Deductible Not deductible
Council rates & water rates Depreciation on the building (removed 2011)
Landlord insurance Capital improvements (add to cost base)
Property management fees Mortgage principal repayments
Repairs & maintenance (not improvements) Your own labour
Mortgage interest (100% from 2025-26) Losses against salary (ring-fenced)

Frequently asked questions

What is ring-fencing of rental losses?

Since the 2019-20 tax year, residential rental deductions that exceed rental income cannot be used to offset your other income (e.g. salary or business income). Instead, the loss is carried forward and can only be offset against future residential rental income. This applies to all residential rental properties.

Can I deduct mortgage interest on my rental property?

Yes. From the 2025-26 tax year, 100% of mortgage interest on residential rental properties is deductible. For 2024-25, 80% is deductible. New builds (Code Compliance Certificate issued after 27 March 2020) get 100% deductibility regardless of tax year.

What expenses can I claim on rental income?

Allowable deductions include council rates, landlord insurance, property management fees, repairs and maintenance, body corporate fees, advertising for tenants, and mortgage interest (subject to deductibility rules). You cannot claim depreciation on residential buildings.

What qualifies as a 'new build' for interest deduction purposes?

A property is a new build if its Code Compliance Certificate (CCC) was issued on or after 27 March 2020, or if it was acquired from a developer who received the CCC on or after that date. New builds receive 100% interest deductibility regardless of the tax year.

How do I calculate rental yield?

Gross rental yield is annual rent divided by property value (e.g. $30,000 rent ÷ $750,000 value = 4%). Net rental yield subtracts expenses from the rent first. Enter your property value in the calculator to see both figures.

How are carried-forward rental losses applied?

Ring-fenced losses from prior years are applied against your net rental income in the current year. If your current year rental income is $15,000 and you have $10,000 in carried-forward losses, only $5,000 is taxable. Any unused losses continue to carry forward.

Sources

Ring-fencing rules from IRD — Residential Rental Income. Interest limitation rules from IRD — Interest Limitation. Tax rates from IRD.

Related Calculators

Last updated April 2026. Rates sourced from IRD.