- Jurisdiction
- Australia
- Review date
- 24 June 2026
- Document type
- Evidence report, not advice
- Source posture
- Current checked sources only
Abstract
This report reviews offset accounts, redraw, and loan purpose: 2026 evidence report for Australian property investors as at 24 June 2026. It uses Moneysmart offset and home-loan guidance, ATO interest-expense guidance, ATO TR 2000/2 on line of credit and redraw facilities, RBA cash-rate and lender-rate tables, and ABS lending and refinancing statistics.
As at 24 June 2026, investors should treat offset and redraw as different tools. Moneysmart describes offset as a separate account that reduces the loan balance charged interest, while ATO TR 2000/2 treats redraw as a new borrowing whose interest treatment depends on the use of the redrawn funds. The practical control is a loan-purpose file that records each split, draw, redraw, repayment, refinance, and private-use event before tax claims are prepared.
An offset account is your cash sitting beside the loan. Redraw is money you paid into the loan and later borrow again. For tax records, that difference can matter a lot.
Figures
RBA Cash Rate Target, checked 24 June 2026
Loan before offset
Cash linked to the loan
Illustrative balance after offset
Moneysmart example using a $500,000 loan and $20,000 offset balance.
Balance after private redraw
Balance still related to rental property
Used for private items in the ATO example
ATO Tyler example: $365,000 balance after redraw, $9,500 private redraw, and $355,500 rental-property portion.
Rental-property portion after redraw
Private portion after redraw
ATO Tyler example ratio after a $9,500 private redraw from an investment loan.
Dollars held in Moneysmart example
Moneysmart says under this level may not be worth the feature
Moneysmart offset example uses $20,000. Moneysmart mortgage-payoff guidance warns that a balance always under $10,000 may not justify the feature.
Moneysmart says differences can exceed this
Percentage-point difference can save thousands over time
Moneysmart says variable home-loan rate differences can exceed 2 percentage points and that a 0.5 percentage point lower rate could save thousands over time.
Potentially deductible if source facts support it
Not deductible to the private-use extent
Requires fair and reasonable apportionment
Can separate income and private portions when facts match
Exact percentages are illustrative. The legal test is source-backed in ATO TR 2000/2.
Quarterly change: +0.7%
Quarterly change: -0.5%
Quarterly change: +3.3%
Quarterly change: -0.2%
Number of refinanced commitments, internal and external, in March Quarter 2026.
Annual or monthly fee risk
Rate premium for offset-eligible loans
Redraw limits, fees, delays, or consent
Tax-purpose tracing if funds move
Checklist scoring only. Replace with the borrower loan quote and lender terms.
1. Scope and Method
This section explains the source base and the limits of the report.
This report is limited to Australian property, lending, tax, and retirement planning material checked on 24 June 2026. It states general decision rules only. It does not calculate a personal advice outcome.
Official and public sources are used for rule statements and current data. Reddit, forums, and search themes are used only to identify common questions. They are not used as proof of law, tax treatment, or market fact.
References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
| Evidence type | Use in this report | Limit | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Official guidance | Moneysmart offset and home-loan guidance, ATO interest-expense guidance, ATO TR 2000/2 on line of credit and redraw facilities, RBA cash-rate and lender-rate tables, and ABS lending and refinancing statistics | Used for rule statements, definitions, and current settings. | [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] |
| Market and statistical data | RBA, ABS, APRA, Services Australia, and state revenue pages are used where relevant. | Used as current context, not as a forecast. | [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] |
| Forum and search themes | Used to find common investor questions and confusing terms. | Not used as factual authority. |
2. Evidence Snapshot
As at 24 June 2026, investors should treat offset and redraw as different tools. Moneysmart describes offset as a separate account that reduces the loan balance charged interest, while ATO TR 2000/2 treats redraw as a new borrowing whose interest treatment depends on the use of the redrawn funds. The practical control is a loan-purpose file that records each split, draw, redraw, repayment, refinance, and private-use event before tax claims are prepared.
The evidence is read conservatively. A claim is included only when it can be linked to a checked source or is clearly labelled as an illustrative modelling step.
References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
| Topic | Checked position | Model action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Offset account definition | Moneysmart describes a mortgage offset account as a transaction account linked to a home loan. The balance reduces the amount of the loan charged interest. | Model the offset account as cash beside the loan, not as a repayment of principal. | [1] |
| Offset example | Moneysmart gives an example where a $500,000 loan and $20,000 offset balance means interest is charged on $480,000. | Show loan balance, offset balance, and interest-charged balance as separate fields. | [1] |
| Daily interest calculation | Moneysmart says interest on most home loans is calculated daily and the lender subtracts the offset balance before calculating interest. | Use average daily offset balance for benefit estimates, not only the month-end balance. | [1] |
| No interest earned on offset cash | Moneysmart states that money in an offset account does not earn interest. The benefit is paying less interest on the home loan. | Compare after-tax savings-account interest with the loan-interest saving before choosing where cash sits. | [1] |
| Offset may not be worth it | Moneysmart says an offset account may not be worth it if the balance is usually low, the loan has higher fees, or the offset-eligible loan has a higher rate. | Calculate the break-even balance after annual package fees, monthly fees, and rate premiums. | [1] |
| Low-balance threshold | Moneysmart mortgage-payoff guidance says that if an offset balance is always low, for example under $10,000, paying for the feature may not be worth it. | Flag low-balance offsets for fee review before treating the feature as valuable. | [2] |
| Redraw facility mechanics | Moneysmart describes redraw as access to extra repayments made into a home loan. Access can depend on loan terms, and lenders may limit redraw, charge a fee, or delay access. | Record redraw terms as a liquidity risk, not only as a savings feature. | [2][1] |
| Offset and redraw are different tools | Moneysmart states that offset and redraw can both help save interest but work in different ways: offset is a separate account, redraw is access to extra repayments made to the loan. | Do not use one tax or liquidity assumption for both features. | [1] |
| 100 percent or partial offset | Moneysmart says borrowers should check whether the offset is 100 percent or partial, because only part of the transaction account balance may offset the loan. | Store the offset percentage in the loan feature register and do not assume a full offset. | [1] |
| Feature cost comparison | Moneysmart says borrowers should compare the cost of fees with expected interest savings, including rate differences, annual package fees, monthly fees, and access rules. | Run a feature break-even before paying for offset or redraw flexibility. | [1][2] |
| Interest deductibility depends on use | ATO interest-expense guidance says interest can be claimed where the principal amount is used to buy a rental property and the property is rented or held to produce assessable income. | Link every interest claim to the use of the borrowed money, not just the security property. | [6] |
| Private-use portion | The ATO says taxpayers cannot claim interest on the portion of a loan used for private purposes. | Split private-purpose amounts out of deductible-interest calculations. | [6] |
| Mixed private and rental account | The ATO says a loan account used for both private purposes and rental-property expenses requires accurate records so the rental-property interest can be calculated separately. | Create a mixed-purpose register before tax time, with date, amount, use, evidence, and running ratio. | [6] |
| Repayment apportionment | The ATO says taxpayers cannot only repay the private-purchase part of a mixed loan. Repayments must be apportioned across private and rental portions for the life of the loan. | Apply repayments proportionately unless a checked exception applies. | [6][9] |
| ATO Tyler redraw example | In the ATO example, Tyler redraws $9,500 from an investment loan for private items. The deductible and private components become 97.4 percent and 2.6 percent, and he must continue apportioning interest and principal repayments for the life of the loan. | Use this as the minimum example for showing how a small private redraw can create ongoing tax work. | [6] |
| ATO deposit example | In the ATO Pauline example, redraw from a personal home loan used for a rental-property deposit can support deductible interest where the funds are used to finance the rental property and the later refinancing keeps the same character. | Keep deposit evidence, settlement flow, and refinance records together before claiming. | [6] |
| ATO private funds example | In the ATO Barbara example, the part of an investment loan left in a savings account for private purposes is not deductible because that amount is not used to earn assessable income. | Do not treat unused settlement surplus or cash parked for private use as deductible borrowing. | [6] |
| TR 2000/2 scope | ATO TR 2000/2 covers interest deductibility for line of credit facilities and redraw facilities where borrowed money has been applied for both income-producing and non-income-producing purposes. | Use the ruling for purpose-tracing questions involving redraw and mixed-purpose debt. | [9] |
| Redraw as new borrowing | ATO TR 2000/2 states that redraws constitute new borrowings of funds, and that deductibility depends on whether the interest is incurred in gaining or producing assessable income. | Treat each redraw as a new purpose event with its own evidence pack. | [9] |
| Redrawn funds used for private purposes | ATO TR 2000/2 says where an original borrowing is income-producing and redrawn funds are used for non-income-producing purposes, the interest attributable to that non-income-producing use is not deductible. | Warn before holiday, car, living-cost, renovation, or personal transfers are redrawn from investment debt. | [9] |
| Redrawn funds used for investment purposes | ATO TR 2000/2 says where an original borrowing is private and redrawn funds are used wholly or partly for income-producing purposes, the interest attributable to the income-producing use is deductible to that extent. | Support debt-recycling analysis only after use of funds, account path, and evidence are clear. | [9] |
| Mixed-purpose redraw account | ATO TR 2000/2 says a redraw used for a different purpose can make the loan account a mixed-purpose account requiring ongoing fair and reasonable apportionment. | Prefer clean loan splits before redraw where the facts allow it. | [9] |
| Refinancing mixed-purpose debt | ATO TR 2000/2 accepts that a mixed-purpose debt can be refinanced into separate accounts where the new borrowings match the income-producing and non-income-producing portions. | Use split refinancing to clean future reporting only when balances and purpose evidence match. | [9] |
| Current rate context | The RBA cash-rate target was 4.35 percent at the 17 June 2026 entry, after increases in February, March, and May 2026. | Stress-test offset benefits and redraw plans against current-rate, plus 1 percentage point, and plus 2 percentage point cases. | [10] |
| Investor-rate context | RBA April 2026 lender-rate data reported new investment principal-and-interest housing loans at 6.09 percent and new investment interest-only housing loans at 6.23 percent. | Compare feature value against the actual quoted investor rate, not only headline offset access. | [11] |
| Refinancing context | ABS Lending Indicators reported 37,181 investor external refinancing commitments and 16,244 investor internal refinancing commitments in March Quarter 2026. | Treat refinancing as a live workflow for split cleanup, but include discharge, application, valuation, and documentation costs. | [12] |
3. Current Trends and Hot Topics
This section records issues that are current enough to change a buyer workflow, while avoiding forecasts.
A trend is included only when it changes a document check, cash buffer, timing assumption, or adviser question.
References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
| Current issue | Observed position | Report action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Offset versus redraw tax confusion | Reddit, ATO Community, PropertyChat, and search themes repeatedly ask whether offset withdrawals and redraw withdrawals have the same tax effect. Official sources support treating them differently. | Use a plain-language decision tree: offset cash, redraw borrowing, loan purpose, account split, evidence, tax-agent review. | [1][9][6] |
| PPOR later becomes an investment property | Forum themes often involve a main residence that may later be rented. ATO guidance links deductible interest to the use of borrowed funds and private-use portions, not merely to the property securing the loan. | Keep future rental plans in the loan-structure file before making extra repayments or redrawing funds. | [6][9] |
| Debt recycling and ETF searches | Search and Reddit themes show frequent questions about redrawing home-loan funds to buy ETFs or other income-producing assets. ATO TR 2000/2 supports purpose-based analysis but does not remove record and advice risk. | Present debt recycling as an adviser workflow, not a shortcut. Require clean splits, direct funding path, income-purpose evidence, and tax review. | [9][13] |
| Offset cash used to buy investments | Forum themes often assume using offset cash to invest makes loan interest deductible. Moneysmart describes offset as cash in a transaction account, while ATO TR 2000/2 treats redraw as a new borrowing. | Separate using savings from borrowing. Do not call an offset withdrawal deductible borrowing without a separate source basis. | [1][9] |
| Mixed-purpose loans after small redraws | ATO examples show that even a $9,500 private redraw can create a ratio that must be maintained for the life of the loan. | Add a warning to any private redraw from investment debt, even when the amount seems small. | [6] |
| Split loans as a documentation tool | ATO TR 2000/2 accepts refinancing mixed-purpose debt into separate accounts where the new debts match the income and private portions. | Make loan splitting a workflow item before refinance, redraw, renovation, or investment purchase. | [9][5] |
| Feature fee fatigue | Moneysmart warns that annual package fees, monthly fees, and higher offset-eligible rates can outweigh an offset feature when the offset balance is low. | Add an offset break-even graph and require annual feature review. | [1][2] |
| Redraw is not guaranteed liquidity | Moneysmart says lenders may limit, charge for, or delay redraw access, and access depends on loan terms. | Treat redraw as conditional liquidity and keep an emergency buffer outside redraw when required. | [2] |
| Partial offset products | Moneysmart says borrowers should check whether an offset is 100 percent or partial. | Record the offset percentage because a partial offset can make the headline feature less valuable. | [1] |
| Rate comparison still matters | Moneysmart says variable home-loan rate differences can exceed 2 percentage points and that even a 0.5 percentage point lower rate could save thousands over time. | Do not let offset access hide a weak rate. Compare rate, fee, offset value, redraw rules, and refinance costs together. | [2] |
| Annual loan review | Moneysmart says interest rates and loan products change over time and a yearly review helps borrowers stay on a competitive rate. | Create a yearly loan-feature review that includes tax-purpose records, not only price. | [2] |
| Refinancing as cleanup moment | ABS March Quarter 2026 refinancing commitments show refinancing is a current market workflow. It can also be the moment to separate mixed-purpose debt if the tax facts support it. | Use refinance checklists to clean loan splits, preserve evidence, and avoid creating a new mixed-purpose problem. | [12][9][5] |
| Tax surplus and unused loan funds | The ATO Barbara example shows that part of an investment loan left in a savings account for private purposes is not deductible. | Flag settlement surplus, cash-back amounts, and unused borrowings for purpose review. | [6] |
| Deposit funding path | The ATO Pauline example shows that a deposit funded by redraw can be deductible where the funds are used to finance the rental property and the later refinancing keeps that character. | Make deposit funding path a visible step in acquisition reports. | [6] |
| High-debt investor edge case | ATO interest-expense guidance says thin capitalisation rules may affect taxpayers with combined debt deductions over $2 million in an income year and relevant overseas or foreign-resident circumstances. | Add a high-debt and cross-border flag for specialist tax review. | [6] |
4. Stress Tests
A useful report shows what can go wrong before it recommends a next step.
The stress tests below are deliberately simple. They are designed to stop a single attractive number, such as a low rate, tax deduction, or high rent estimate, from carrying the whole decision.
| Stress test | Question answered | Conservative action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Private redraw from investment loan | What happens if an investor redraws from a rental-property loan for a car, holiday, living costs, or a private renovation? | Treat the redraw as a private-purpose borrowing to that extent and start ongoing apportionment. | [6][9] |
| Offset balance is too low | What if the offset account usually holds less than the level needed to justify package fees or a higher rate? | Remove the feature or renegotiate unless non-price benefits justify it. | [1][2] |
| Partial offset misunderstanding | What if the product offsets only part of the transaction-account balance? | Recalculate benefit using the actual offset percentage and account terms. | [1] |
| Redraw access delayed | What if the lender limits redraw, charges a fee, delays access, or requires consent? | Do not count redraw as same-day emergency cash unless the contract and lender process prove it. | [2][9] |
| PPOR conversion after extra repayments | What if a home loan is paid down by extra repayments, then later the property is rented and funds are redrawn for private use? | Separate the original property debt from later private redraw before claiming rental interest. | [6][9] |
| Offset withdrawal to invest | What if a borrower withdraws savings from offset and buys income-producing assets? | Treat it first as use of savings. Seek advice before assuming a borrowing deduction exists. | [1][9] |
| Redraw to invest through a messy path | What if redrawn funds pass through a daily spending account before reaching the investment or deposit account? | Require tracing evidence and consider a clean split and direct transfer path before action. | [9] |
| Mixed-purpose repayment optimism | What if the borrower assumes later repayments can be allocated only to the private part of a mixed-purpose loan? | Apply the ATO proportional repayment rule unless specialist advice supports a checked exception. | [6][9] |
| Refinance does not match ratios | What if a mixed-purpose refinance creates new splits that do not match the income-producing and private portions? | Do not treat the refinance as a clean split until balances, purpose, and statements reconcile. | [9] |
| Settlement surplus held for private use | What if a loan advance is larger than the settlement amount and the surplus sits in savings for private purposes? | Exclude the private-use portion from deductible interest and document the flow of funds. | [6] |
| Rate premium larger than offset benefit | What if the offset-eligible loan has a higher rate than a simpler loan without offset? | Compare total interest, feature fees, and expected offset balance before choosing. | [1][2] |
| Credit-card offset strategy fails | Moneysmart notes that using a credit card with offset cash only works if the card is repaid in full, because average credit-card interest is much higher than home-loan interest. | Exclude credit-card float benefits unless full monthly repayment behavior is proven. | [1] |
| Interest rate rises | What if the loan rate rises while offset cash is drawn down? | Stress-test a smaller offset buffer at current rate, plus 1 percentage point, and plus 2 percentage points. | [10][4] |
| Tax agent receives only annual interest total | What if the tax agent is given one interest figure without redraw, split, or private-use details? | Treat the claim as under-documented. Provide purpose register, statements, and calculation notes. | [6][9] |
| High-debt thin-capitalisation flag | What if combined debt deductions exceed $2 million and the taxpayer has relevant international or foreign-resident circumstances? | Send to specialist tax review before relying on the ordinary rental-interest workflow. | [6] |
5. Portfolio Workflow
The workflow keeps tax, debt, cash flow, and exit risk in the same file.
The same workflow should be repeated before acquisition, refinance, renovation, sale, or retirement planning. This keeps the report predictable across the full portfolio.
| Step | Do this | Evidence to keep | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Create a loan-purpose register | Record loan split, date, amount, source account, destination account, purpose, property, income use, private use, and evidence. | Keep statements, settlement records, contracts, and adviser notes by loan split. | [6][9] |
| Separate offset from redraw | Record offset balances as cash and redraw events as new borrowing events. | Use different ledger columns for offset deposits, loan repayments, and redraws. | [1][9] |
| Check feature terms | Confirm whether offset is full or partial, whether fees apply, whether the loan rate is higher, and whether redraw has limits or delays. | Store the credit contract, product schedule, and current fee schedule. | [1][2] |
| Run offset break-even | Compare expected average daily offset balance with annual package fees, monthly account fees, and any rate premium. | Keep a one-page calculation showing annual benefit and cost. | [1] |
| Pre-redraw checklist | Before any redraw, document whether funds will be used for rental property, another income-producing asset, private use, or mixed use. | Do not redraw until the purpose and transfer path are written down. | [9] |
| Clean transfer path | Send redrawn funds directly to the income-producing asset, deposit, settlement, or dedicated investment account where possible. | Avoid passing funds through everyday spending accounts without a clear record. | [9][6] |
| Mixed-purpose ratio update | When a private or mixed redraw occurs, calculate the deductible and private portions and update the ratio after repayments. | Maintain the ratio for the life of the loan unless a checked exception applies. | [6][9] |
| Refinance split review | Before refinancing, compare current mixed-purpose portions with proposed new split amounts. | Use the refinance to separate debt only when new split balances match the source evidence. | [9][5] |
| PPOR to investment review | Before a home becomes a rental property, reconstruct loan history, offset history, extra repayments, redraws, and private-use periods. | Give the tax agent a conversion file before first rental-year return. | [6][9] |
| Deposit funding file | For an investment-property deposit funded by redraw, keep pre-approval, redraw statement, deposit receipt, settlement statement, and refinance notes. | Tie each dollar to the rental acquisition or exclude it. | [6] |
| Tax handover pack | Prepare annual interest totals, split statements, redraw notes, repayment apportionment, and private-use exclusions. | Do not rely on a lender interest summary alone where the loan has mixed-purpose activity. | [6][9] |
| Annual feature review | Review rates, feature fees, offset balances, redraw access, and loan purpose once each year. | Use Moneysmart rate-comparison prompts and current lender quotes. | [2][3] |
| Adviser escalation | Escalate debt recycling, related-party lending, cross-collateralised loans, trust loans, SMSF loans, and high-debt cases. | Record advice scope and avoid presenting a general report as a ruling. | [9][13] |
6. Limits and Claim Map
The report supports analysis, not personal financial, tax, legal, or credit advice.
The safest reading is cautious. Use this report to structure questions, identify missing evidence, and prepare adviser conversations. Do not treat it as an approval, forecast, valuation, or tax ruling.
References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
| Claim | Evidence used | Status | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Offset and redraw should not be treated as the same tool. | Moneysmart describes offset as a separate linked transaction account. ATO TR 2000/2 treats redraw as new borrowing. | Supported. | [1][9] |
| Loan security does not decide interest deductibility by itself. | ATO guidance and TR 2000/2 focus on the use of borrowed funds and private-use portions. | Supported. | [6][9] |
| A private redraw from investment debt can create an ongoing mixed-purpose loan. | ATO interest-expense guidance and TR 2000/2 both require apportionment where funds are used for income-producing and private purposes. | Supported. | [6][9] |
| Repayments cannot simply be allocated to the private portion of a mixed loan. | The ATO says repayments must be apportioned across both rental and private portions for the length of the loan. | Supported. | [6][9] |
| Clean splits can reduce future record burden when the source facts reconcile. | ATO TR 2000/2 accepts refinancing mixed-purpose debt into two separate accounts matching income and non-income portions. | Supported with limits. | [9] |
| A low offset balance can make an offset feature poor value. | Moneysmart says low balances, higher fees, and higher offset-eligible rates can outweigh the feature. | Supported. | [1][2] |
| Redraw should not be treated as guaranteed emergency cash. | Moneysmart says redraw access can be limited, delayed, charged for, and governed by loan terms. | Supported. | [2] |
| Forum and Reddit themes are useful for topic discovery but not factual authority. | The report uses official sources for rule statements and forum themes only to identify recurring investor confusion. | Supported by method. | |
| This report cannot decide a personal tax outcome. | ATO examples show outcomes depend on facts, purpose, account flow, property use, and records. | Supported as a limitation. | [6][9] |
References
- [1] Moneysmart: Mortgage offset accounts Checked 24 June 2026
- [2] Moneysmart: Pay off your mortgage faster Checked 24 June 2026
- [3] Moneysmart: Choosing a home loan Checked 24 June 2026
- [4] Moneysmart: Mortgage calculator Checked 24 June 2026
- [5] Moneysmart: Switching home loans Checked 24 June 2026
- [6] ATO: Interest expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [7] ATO: How to claim rental expenses Checked 24 June 2026
- [8] ATO: Rental properties guide 2025 Checked 24 June 2026
- [9] ATO: TR 2000/2, line of credit and redraw facilities Checked 24 June 2026
- [10] RBA: Cash Rate Target Checked 24 June 2026
- [11] RBA: Lenders Interest Rates Checked 24 June 2026
- [12] ABS: Lending Indicators, March Quarter 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
- [13] ASIC: Responsible lending Checked 24 June 2026