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Finance Investment, Property Real Estate

Rate hikes and tax reforms make solo holiday home ownership unworkable, but fractional co-ownership offers Australians a smarter path in

Copay 3 mins read
Key Facts:
  • Two seismic shifts in nine days - the RBA lifted the cash rate to 4.35% on 5 May (its third consecutive 2026 hike), and the Federal Budget on 12 May capped negative gearing to new builds and replaced the 50% CGT discount with a minimum 30% tax on gains.
  • The solo holiday home spreadsheet no longer works - the combined effect of higher borrowing costs and tighter tax treatment has made 100% solo ownership of a premium lifestyle property financially difficult to justify for most high-income households.
  • Australia is the world's second most desirable holiday home market - a 2025 Compare the Market study of 50 countries ranked Australia second globally, with the Gold Coast the single most searched second-home destination on earth.
  • Coastal prices remain out of reach - median prices in coastal Queensland and northern New South Wales exceed $1.5 million, before three consecutive rate hikes compressed borrowing capacity further.
  • Fractional entry from approximately $175,000 - Copay's managed unit trust model allows buyers to purchase a deeded equity share (not a right-to-use) in properties valued between $1.4M and $2M, with full participation in capital appreciation.
  • Holiday homes sit empty more than 35 weeks per year - co-ownership structures of four to eight households replace dormant secondary dwellings with actively used ones, supporting consistent visitor spending in coastal and regional economies.
  • Regional markets are outperforming capital cities - making professionally managed co-ownership a compelling case not just for personal finance, but for the broader economic health of the communities these homes sit in.
  • Copay's model institutionalises the friends-and-family syndicate - bringing legal guardrails, equity security and professional management to a structure Australians have used informally for decades, at the exact moment the financial environment demands it.

In the space of nine days this month, two structural forces converged to permanently alter the economics of solo holiday home ownership. On 5 May, the Reserve Bank of Australia lifted the official cash rate to 4.35 per cent - its third consecutive hike in 2026, erasing every relief cut made last year. On 12 May, Treasurer Jim Chalmers delivered the most consequential property tax reforms in decades: negative gearing limited to new builds from 1 July 2027, and the 50 per cent capital gains tax discount replaced with a minimum 30 per cent tax on gains.

For buyers who had been doing the numbers on a standalone holiday home, the spreadsheet just stopped working.

"Australians haven't lost their appetite for lifestyle property," said Himanshu Arora, Founder of Brisbane-based proptech Copay. "What's changed is their appetite for carrying 100 per cent of the debt, the holding costs, and now the tax exposure - for an asset that sits empty 40 weeks a year. They want the lifestyle. They don't want the waste."

The Aspiration Gap Keeps Widening

The timing is particularly sharp because demand for Australian holiday property has never been stronger or more globally recognised. A 2025 Compare the Market study of 50 countries ranked Australia second in the world for holiday home appeal, with the Gold Coast ranked the single most searched destination for second-home buyers globally. Melbourne, Adelaide, and Perth also placed in the global top ten.

But the same markets generating that international interest have pushed median prices well beyond $1.5 million in coastal Queensland and northern New South Wales - and that was before three rate hikes compressed borrowing capacity further. The gap between where Australians want to own and what they can afford to borrow has become a chasm.

Fractional co-ownership closes that gap without closing the door on ownership itself.

A Smarter Structure for a Changed Environment

Through Copay's managed unit trust model, buyers purchase a deeded equity share - not a right-to-use - in a premium holiday home, with entry from approximately $175,000 for a one-eighth share in properties typically valued between $1.4 million and $2 million. Co-owners participate in long-term capital appreciation. Copay handles all management, maintenance, scheduling, and governance.

"We are witnessing the institutionalisation of the classic friends-and-family property syndicate," Arora said, "but with the legal guardrails, equity security, and professional management that the modern financial environment demands. Fractional co-ownership is not a workaround. It is the natural evolution of how Australians will access lifestyle property from here."

Property Waste Is Also on the Table

The model speaks directly to a second conversation running hot in 2026: the under-utilisation of regional housing stock.

The majority of Australian holiday homes sit vacant for more than 35 weeks per year. A co-ownership structure of four to eight households replaces a dormant secondary dwelling with an actively used one - supporting consistent visitor spending in coastal and regional economies without the commercial conversion pressures of short-stay platforms.

As regional property markets continue to outperform capital cities, the case for a professionally managed co-ownership model is not just personal finance. It is good economics for the communities these homes sit in.


About us:

Copay is an Australian fractional property ownership platform enabling buyers to co-own premium holiday homes through a managed unit trust structure. Copay handles acquisition, legal structuring, property management, scheduling, and co-owner governance - making lifestyle property ownership accessible and built for the way Australians actually live today.


Contact details:

Himanshu Arora - [email protected]

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