Investment property

Interest Only vs Principal and Interest: Tax Impact for Investors

Loan structure can significantly affect your investment property's cash flow and tax deductions. Interest-only loans maximise short-term deductions, while principal and interest builds equity faster. Here's how to weigh up the trade-offs.

100% deductible IO P&I builds equity APRA IO caps
IO vs P&I — side by side
Interest Only (IO)Principal & Interest (P&I)
Tax deductionsHigher (100% of repayment is interest)Lower (only interest portion deductible)
Monthly repaymentsLower during IO periodHigher from day one
Equity buildNone (loan balance unchanged)Steadily reduces loan
Interest rateTypically 0.2–0.5% higherLower rate
Long-term costMore total interest paidLess total interest paid
How interest deductions work

Interest on a loan used to purchase an income-producing investment property is fully tax deductible in Australia. This applies whether you use an IO or P&I loan structure. The key difference is that with IO, your entire repayment is deductible interest.

Interest only ($500k @ 6.5%)

Monthly repayment year 1:

Monthly payment: $2,708
Deductible portion: $2,708 (100%)
Annual deduction: $32,500

P&I ($500k @ 6.3%, 30yr)

Monthly repayment year 1:

Monthly payment: $3,100
Deductible portion: ~$2,625 (85%)
Annual deduction: ~$31,500
When interest only makes sense
You also have a home loan — Pay off non-deductible debt first while maximising deductible interest.
Cash flow is tight — Lower repayments free up cash for other investments or expenses.
You're negatively gearing — Higher deductions reduce your taxable income more.
Short-term hold strategy — Planning to sell within 5–10 years, equity build matters less.
When P&I makes sense
No other debt — Without a home loan, building equity in your investment makes sense.
Long-term hold — Over 20–30 years, P&I saves significantly on total interest.
Lower LVR goals — Reducing your loan balance improves your borrowing position.
Risk management — Reducing debt protects against interest rate rises or property value drops.
The IO expiry trap

Most interest-only periods last 1–5 years. When the IO period ends, your loan switches to P&I repayments over the remaining term. This can cause a significant repayment shock:

A $500k loan on 5-year IO then 25-year P&I: repayments jump from ~$2,708 to ~$3,400/month
Refinancing to a new IO period is possible but not guaranteed — lenders reassess your serviceability
APRA regulations have tightened IO lending criteria since 2017
Loan structure strategy

A common approach for investors with a home loan is to structure debt so that:

Home loan — P&I to pay off non-deductible debt as fast as possible.
Investment loan — IO to maximise deductible interest and free up cash for the home loan.
Offset account — Attached to the home loan to reduce non-deductible interest.

Important: Never mix personal and investment funds in loan accounts. Redrawing from an investment loan for personal use can compromise the tax deductibility of the interest.

FAQ
Is interest on an investment property loan tax deductible?

Yes, interest on a loan used to purchase an investment property is fully tax deductible in Australia. This applies to both interest-only and principal-and-interest loans. Only the interest portion is deductible — principal repayments are not.

Do I get a bigger tax deduction with an interest-only loan?

Yes, in the short term. With an interest-only loan your entire repayment is deductible interest, whereas with a P&I loan only the interest portion is deductible. However, IO loans typically have slightly higher interest rates, and the deduction difference narrows over time as P&I interest reduces.

How long can I have an interest-only loan in Australia?

Most lenders offer interest-only periods of up to 5 years for investment loans. After the IO period ends, the loan typically reverts to principal and interest with higher repayments over the remaining term. Some investors refinance to a new IO period.

Should I use interest only for my investment property and P&I for my home?

This is a common strategy. Since home loan interest is not tax deductible, paying it off faster with P&I saves you more. Meanwhile, keeping the investment loan on IO maximises your deductible interest. Always check with your financial adviser before structuring loans.

Where to go next


Last updated 25 May 2026 Tax year 2025-26

Data sources: ATO (ato.gov.au), Services Australia

This tool is general information only, not financial advice.

Reviewed by AusTax Tools Editorial Desk

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