NZ Bright-Line Test Calculator

Calculate whether your NZ property sale is subject to the bright-line test and estimate your income tax liability on any gain. Covers the 2-year rule (from July 2024), earlier 5-year and 10-year rules, main home exemption, and deductible costs. All figures in NZD.

$
$
Bright-Line Period
2 years
From July 2024: 2-year bright-line test (all properties)
Hold Period
1.0 years
12 months from purchase to sale
Bright-Line Status
Within period — TAX APPLIES
Sale before 2027-05-14
Estimated Tax
NZ$26,400
33.0% of NZ$80,000 taxable gain
Bright-line tax applies. Selling before 2027-05-14 means your gain of NZ$80,000 may be taxable at 33.0%. Estimated tax: NZ$26,400. Consult a tax advisor.

The bright-line period has changed multiple times. The rule that applies depends on when you PURCHASED the property, not when you sell.

Purchase DateBright-Line PeriodNotes
Before 29 March 20182 yearsOriginal bright-line, only investment properties effectively caught
29 Mar 2018 — 26 Mar 20215 yearsExtended to catch medium-term speculators; main home exempt
27 Mar 2021 — 30 Jun 202410 years (existing) / 5 years (new build)Labour government extension; aimed at long-term investors
From 1 July 20242 yearsNational government reduction — back to 2-year test for all properties
Your property: Purchased 2025-05-14 — the 2-year bright-line applies. From July 2024: 2-year bright-line test (all properties)

Bright-line gains are added to your other income and taxed at your marginal rate. The gain itself does not get taxed at multiple brackets — your entire income determines which rate applies to the full gain.

Marginal RateIncome RangeTax on NZ$80,000 Gain
10.5%income under $14,000NZ$8,400
17.5%income $14,001-$48,000NZ$14,000
30.0%income $48,001-$70,000NZ$24,000
33.0% (your rate)income $70,001-$180,000NZ$26,400
39.0%income over $180,000NZ$31,200

How to Use This NZ Bright-Line Test Calculator

Enter your property purchase date, sale date (or planned sale date), purchase price, sale price, and any deductible costs (purchase costs, capital improvements, selling costs). The calculator determines which bright-line period applies based on your purchase date and estimates your tax liability at your marginal rate.

Which Bright-Line Period Applies?

The main home exemption applies if the property was your principal residence for the majority of the ownership period. Partial exemptions apply if you also rented part of the property or it was only your main home for part of the time.

The Formula

Taxable Gain = Sale Price − Purchase Price − Allowable Deductions

Allowable Deductions:
+ Purchase costs (legal fees, valuation, LIM, building inspection)
+ Capital improvements (renovations, extensions — not maintenance)
+ Selling costs (agent commission, legal fees, marketing)

Tax = Taxable Gain × Marginal Income Tax Rate

NZ Marginal Rates (2025):
Up to $14,000 → 10.5%
$14,001–$48,000 → 17.5%
$48,001–$70,000 → 30%
$70,001–$180,000 → 33%
Over $180,000 → 39%

The bright-line gain is added to your other income for the year, which may push you into a higher marginal tax bracket for the entire gain amount. Spreading the sale across tax years is not possible — the full gain is attributed to the tax year in which settlement occurs.

Example

Rachel Selling an Investment Property in Christchurch

Rachel purchased a rental property in Christchurch in April 2022 for $620,000. She sells in October 2024 for $740,000. The 10-year rule applies (purchased before July 2024). She has $15,000 in allowable deductions.

Purchase DateApril 2022
Sale DateOctober 2024
Bright-Line Rule Applied10-year rule
Time Held2.5 years — within 10 years, taxable
Sale Price$740,000
Purchase Price$620,000
Allowable Deductions$15,000
Taxable Gain$105,000
Marginal Rate (income $95K + gain)33%
Estimated Tax Liability~$34,650

Frequently Asked Questions

The bright-line test is New Zealand's property tax rule that taxes gains on residential property sold within a set period of purchase. It is not a formal capital gains tax but operates similarly. From 1 July 2024, the period is 2 years for all properties — returning to the original 2015 rule after previous governments expanded it to 5 years (2018) and 10 years (2021). The gain is taxed as ordinary income at your marginal income tax rate, not a special capital gains rate.
Yes, your main home (principal place of residence) is generally exempt. However, if you also rented part of the property — such as a flatmate, boarder, or Airbnb — the proportion used for income purposes is not exempt. IRD applies either time or area apportionment rules. Inherited property received as part of an estate and property transferred as part of a relationship property settlement under the Property (Relationships) Act are also fully exempt.
The taxable gain is your sale price minus your purchase price, minus allowable deductions. Allowable deductions include purchase costs (legal fees, valuation, LIM, and building inspection paid at purchase), capital improvements (extensions and renovations — not maintenance or repairs), and selling costs (real estate agent commission, marketing, and legal fees paid at sale). The net gain is then taxed at your marginal income tax rate — added on top of your other income for the year.
The rule that applies depends on when you purchased the property, not when you sell. Properties purchased before 1 October 2015 have no bright-line test. Properties purchased between October 2015 and March 2018 have the 2-year rule. March 2018 to March 2021 have the 5-year rule. March 2021 to June 2024 have the 10-year rule (5 years for new builds purchased in this period). Properties purchased from 1 July 2024 onwards have the 2-year rule.
You can deduct three categories of costs: purchase costs including legal fees, valuation fee, LIM report and building inspection paid at the time of purchase; capital improvements to the property during ownership such as extensions and renovations (not maintenance or repairs); and selling costs including real estate agent commission, marketing expenses and legal fees paid at sale. Keep documentation for all costs as IRD may require evidence. Mortgage interest is generally not deductible against bright-line gains.

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