Quick Answer
NZ rental property investors can deduct: mortgage interest (100% deductible from 1 April 2025), council rates, building and landlord insurance, property management fees (typically 7–10% of rent), repairs and maintenance (not improvements), accounting and legal fees, and depreciation on chattels such as carpets, curtains, and heat pumps. Capital improvements that add value must be capitalised and depreciated over time rather than immediately deducted. Source: Inland Revenue NZ.
The Big Picture: How IRD Treats Rental Expenses
The IRD allows rental property owners to deduct expenses that are incurred in the process of earning rental income. The rule is straightforward: if the expense is directly connected to generating rent, it is generally deductible. Capital expenses — things that improve or add to the property — are not immediately deductible and must be depreciated or capitalised instead.
2026 position summary
Mortgage interest is 100% deductible (restored April 2025). Chattels are depreciable at IRD rates. All standard running costs remain deductible as they have been. The building structure itself is not depreciable. Mixed-use holiday homes use a separate apportionment formula.
Mortgage Interest: The Biggest Deduction
For most investors, mortgage interest is the single largest deductible expense — often $25,000–$50,000 per year on a typical NZ investment property. Its history has been turbulent. Here is where things stand in 2026 and how we got here.
Mortgage interest on residential rental properties was fully deductible against rental income. Standard practice for decades.
The Labour government removed interest deductibility for residential rental properties as part of a housing affordability package. Only new builds remained exempt. Existing landlords lost the ability to offset mortgage costs against rental income.
The incoming National-led coalition began phasing deductibility back in. From 1 April 2024, landlords could deduct 80% of their interest costs against rental income.
From 1 April 2025, mortgage interest is once again 100% deductible against rental income for all residential investment properties, including both existing and new build rentals. This applies to interest paid, not principal repayments.
What You Can Claim: Full Expense Checklist
These are the standard running costs the IRD allows landlords to deduct. They must be incurred while the property is available to rent — expenses for periods when the property is not on the rental market are not deductible. Keep receipts for everything.
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Mortgage interest. 100% deductible from 1 April 2025. Applies to interest on money borrowed to buy, build, or improve the rental property. Principal repayments are NOT deductible.
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Rates and ground rent. Council rates paid on the rental property are fully deductible for the periods the property is available for rent.
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Insurance premiums. Building insurance, landlord insurance, and contents insurance (if you supply furnished fittings) are all deductible. Life insurance and income protection on yourself are not.
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Property management fees. If you use a property manager (typically 7–10% of rent), their fees and any letting fees they charge are fully deductible.
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Repairs and maintenance. Restoring the property to its original condition is deductible. This includes fixing leaks, painting, replacing broken windows, servicing appliances, and routine upkeep. Work that extends the property’s life or adds value is capital — see section 4.
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Advertising and tenant finding costs. Trade Me listings, signage, and any cost to find and screen tenants are deductible in the year they occur.
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Accounting and legal fees. Fees paid to your accountant for preparing the rental income schedules and your tax return are deductible. Legal fees for drawing up or renewing tenancy agreements are deductible; legal fees for purchasing or selling the property are capital costs and are not deductible.
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Body corporate levies. If you own an apartment or unit in a body corporate, the levies charged to you are deductible. Sinking fund contributions (to a body corporate capital fund) are not immediately deductible but may be claimable when the work is completed.
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Utilities and services (if you pay them). If your tenancy agreement includes internet, water, or other utilities that you pay as the landlord, these are deductible.
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Travel costs. You can claim travel to inspect or maintain the property if the primary purpose of the trip is property-related. Visiting the rental on the way to or from a personal trip does not make the full journey deductible. Keep a logbook. The IRD scrutinises this area heavily.
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Bank fees and loan establishment costs. Annual account fees, break fees on fixed mortgages, and the amortised portion of loan establishment costs can be deductible. Lump-sum mortgage break fees are generally deductible in the year incurred.
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Depreciation on chattels. Items separate from the building structure (carpet, curtains, heat pumps, appliances, light fittings) can be depreciated annually at IRD-set rates. See section 5 for rates and common examples.
Repairs vs Capital Improvements — The Critical Distinction
This is the area where landlords most commonly get their tax return wrong. The IRD applies a three-part test: is the work a repair (restores to original condition), an improvement (enhances beyond original), or a replacement (new asset)? The distinction determines whether you can claim it immediately or must depreciate over time.
Restore it to what it was
Work that brings something back to its original working condition, without extending its useful life or improving beyond what was there before.
- Repainting existing walls (same colour, same quality)
- Replacing a broken window pane
- Fixing a leaking roof (like-for-like materials)
- Repairing a broken fence section
- Replacing carpet with similar quality carpet
- Servicing the heat pump or oven
- Fixing plumbing or electrical faults
Add to or enhance the property
Work that adds new value, extends the useful life of the property, or changes its character must be capitalised. You may be able to depreciate chattels over time, but the building value is not depreciable.
- New kitchen (replacing an existing functional one)
- Adding a bathroom where none existed
- Converting a garage into a bedroom
- Installing double-glazing throughout
- Building a new deck or outdoor area
- Adding a heat pump to a room that had none
- Full exterior repaint (significant upgrade in quality)
IRD scrutiny area
The repair vs capital distinction is one of the most audited areas for landlords. The IRD uses a “character test” — if the work changes the character of the property or creates something substantially new, it is capital regardless of cost. A $500 door latch is a repair; a $500 full door replacement with a higher-spec door is capital. Document your decisions and get your accountant to review any large expenditure before you claim it.
Depreciating Chattels: What You Can Claim Each Year
While the residential building itself cannot be depreciated (0% building depreciation applies in NZ), the chattels — items that are separate from the building structure — can be depreciated each year at rates set by the IRD. This creates annual tax deductions without any cash outlay.
Diminishing value vs straight-line
The IRD offers two depreciation methods. Diminishing value (DV) applies the rate to the declining book value each year — higher deductions early on. Straight-line (SL) applies an even amount each year. Most landlords use DV. The rates below are the DV rates. SL rates are approximately 75% of the DV rate.
Items costing $1,000 or less can be immediately expensed in the year purchased under the low-value asset threshold, rather than depreciated over time. This is useful for smaller appliance replacements.
Holiday Homes and Mixed-Use Properties
If your property is used for a mix of income-earning rental, private use, and periods when it is empty (available but unlet), a special apportionment formula applies. You cannot claim 100% of expenses — only the income-earning proportion. This applies most commonly to holiday homes and bach rentals.
Rented fewer than 62 days
If the property is rented for fewer than 62 days in the income year, mixed-use rules apply. You must apportion expenses between rental, private, and vacant days. Only the rental portion of expenses is deductible, and you cannot claim a loss against other income.
Rented 62 days or more
If rented for 62 or more days in the year, you still use the mixed-use formula but can potentially offset net losses against other income (subject to ring-fencing rules). More rental days means a higher proportion of expenses can be deducted.
Airbnb and short-term rentals
Short-term rental income through Airbnb or similar platforms is taxable. Depending on your situation it may also attract GST obligations if your rental income exceeds $60,000 per year. The mixed-use rules apply when you also use the property yourself. Get dedicated advice from an accountant familiar with short-term rental tax in NZ before you start renting.
Full Worked Example: Net Taxable Rental Income
This example shows how expenses reduce taxable rental income for a typical Auckland investment property. The investor earns a salary and pays income tax at 33% on the top dollar of their rental income.
In this example, the investor’s deductible expenses exceed their rental income, creating a net rental loss. That loss is deductible against their salary income, reducing their overall tax bill by $7,215. This “negative gearing” effect is common in Auckland where yields are lower but expenses — particularly interest — are high relative to rent.
Calculate your own tax positionWhat You CANNOT Claim
Understanding what is not deductible is just as important as knowing what is. Claiming non-deductible expenses is the most common source of audit adjustments for landlords.
- Principal mortgage repayments. The repayment of loan principal is never deductible. Only the interest component qualifies.
- Capital improvements to the building. Renovations, additions, and structural upgrades must be capitalised. The residential building itself cannot be depreciated, so you get no ongoing deduction for building improvements.
- Purchase price and conveyancing costs. The cost of buying the property, stamp duty equivalent (not applicable in NZ but equivalent closing costs), and legal fees for the purchase are capital costs and are not deductible.
- Private use portion of mixed-use property. If you use the property yourself, the expenses attributable to those days are not deductible. The mixed-use apportionment formula applies.
- Expenses while not available for rent. If the property sits empty because you are not actively trying to rent it (long-term vacant, under major renovation, or being held for sale), expenses during that period are not deductible.
- Your own labour. The value of time you spend on the property yourself — mowing lawns, painting, fixing things — cannot be claimed as a deduction. Only actual cash costs paid to third parties are deductible.
- Fines and penalties. Any fines paid to councils, the Tenancy Tribunal, or other authorities are not deductible. Neither are penalties or shortfall penalties imposed by the IRD.
- Building depreciation. Residential buildings have a 0% depreciation rate in NZ. You cannot claim annual depreciation on the building structure, even though the building is an asset that will eventually need work or replacement.
- Personal insurance and life insurance. Insuring yourself (income protection, life insurance) does not relate to earning rental income and is not deductible as a rental expense. Landlord insurance on the property itself is deductible.
Run the numbers on your rental property tax position
Use our free NZ property tax calculator to estimate your net taxable rental income and work out how much your deductions are worth at your marginal tax rate.