Most property investors have two kinds of debt sitting side by side and don't realise they're treated completely differently by the ATO.
One costs them money with no offset. The other generates a tax deduction. The difference runs into thousands of dollars a year.
Debt recycling is the strategy of converting the first kind into the second. It doesn't change how much debt you have. It changes what that debt is doing.
The concept is straightforward in principle and more nuanced in practice. Done correctly, it's a legitimate, ATO-acknowledged strategy used by thousands of Australian investors. Done incorrectly, it creates exactly the kind of blended debt arrangements the ATO has been auditing for years.
This edition covers what debt recycling is, when it makes sense, the three main approaches, and the five rules you need to follow to stay on the right side of the tax office.
Before getting into the mechanics, it's worth understanding why the separation matters.
Bucket 1: Your home loan (non-deductible debt)
This is the mortgage on your primary place of residence. The interest is not tax-deductible. Every dollar of interest is a cost with no offset. The ATO has no interest in helping you pay it off faster.
Bucket 2: Your investment loan (deductible debt)
This is debt used to produce assessable income, typically via an investment property or income-producing portfolio. The interest is tax-deductible against that income. Every dollar of interest reduces your taxable income and, depending on your tax rate, generates a partial refund from the ATO.
The distinction is entirely about purpose. The same bank, the same lender, the same dollar figure, but if the purpose of the borrowing is investment rather than personal residence, it's deductible. If it's mixed, it gets complicated.
Debt recycling works by systematically reducing Bucket 1 (non-deductible) and increasing Bucket 2 (deductible). The total debt doesn't change. The composition does.
Debt recycling is primarily a Stage 2 Growth strategy. It works when:
It does not make sense if:
- Your cashflow is tight and you need every dollar working in the offset
- You're not ready to hold investment assets long enough for the strategy to compound
- Your PPOR mortgage is already small or nearly paid off (the recycling opportunity diminishes)
Method 1: Pay down the home loan, redraw, invest
You make principal repayments on the home loan. You then redraw that exact amount and invest it in a portfolio of income-producing assets (shares, a managed fund, etc.). The redrawn amount is now used for investment purposes, making the interest on it deductible.
This works, but requires a loan structure that permits redraw. It also requires strict documentation: the redrawn funds must go directly to the investment and must not be mixed with anything else.
Method 2: Split loan structure with an offset
A cleaner approach used by many investors is to set up a split loan from the start. One account is the PPOR portion with an offset attached. The other is a dedicated investment loan account.
Any surplus income goes into the offset (reducing non-deductible interest while remaining accessible). When you have enough to invest, you draw from the investment loan account and deploy it. You never touch the PPOR split for investment purposes, and the investment split is never used for personal purposes.
Method 3: All-in on IP equity
Some investors use equity in their investment property rather than the PPOR loan. The mechanics are similar but the vehicle is different. A line of credit or loan account secured against the investment property funds additional investments. This can work well but requires the underlying IP to have sufficient equity and the cashflow to service the additional borrowing.
The ATO has been paying close attention to debt recycling structures for years. These are the rules that keep the strategy clean.
Rule 1: Purpose determines deductibility
The deductibility follows the purpose of the loan, not the security. A loan secured against your home can still be deductible if the funds are used entirely for investment. But mixing purposes in a single loan account destroys the deductibility of the whole thing.
Rule 2: No mixing
Once you establish an investment loan account, keep it completely separate from personal transactions. Never deposit income into it. Never use it for living expenses. It is an investment account and nothing else. If you commingle funds, the ATO can (and does) deny the deduction on the entire account.
Rule 3: Keep evidence
Document everything. The loan purpose, the funds flow, the investment purchase, the income produced. If you are audited, you need to show a clean paper trail from loan advance to investment asset to income.
Rule 4: Watch the offset vs redraw distinction
This is where many investors trip up. Funds held in an offset account reduce the interest charged but are still legally your money and not a loan advance. When you draw from a redraw facility, you are re-borrowing. The ATO treats these differently and has confirmed that redraw from a home loan account (as opposed to a dedicated investment split) can contaminate the deductibility if not handled correctly.
Rule 5: Avoid schemes
The ATO has applied specific provisions to arrangements that are designed primarily to avoid tax rather than to genuinely produce income. Debt recycling done correctly is not a scheme. It's a legitimate structural choice. But it needs to be grounded in genuine investment intent, not just tax minimisation.
Sarah is 39. She has a $800,000 mortgage on her PPOR, of which $600,000 remains. She earns $180,000 gross per year. Her marginal tax rate is 47% (including Medicare).
She has been directing $3,000 per month above her minimum repayments into the home loan. She has about $80,000 sitting in her offset on top of that.
Her broker structures a split loan:
- PPOR split: $600,000, with her $80,000 sitting in an attached offset
- Investment split: $200,000, interest only
She uses the $200,000 investment split to purchase a diversified portfolio of ASX-listed ETFs. Gross yield on the portfolio: approximately 4% = $8,000 per year in dividends.
The interest on the $200,000 investment split at 6.5% is $13,000 per year. That $13,000 is deductible against her income.
At her 47% tax rate, the deduction saves her approximately $6,110 per year. Combined with the $8,000 in dividend income, the investment split is generating $14,110 per year while costing $13,000 in interest. Slightly positive on a pre-tax basis, significantly positive once the deduction is included.
Separately, she continues directing surplus income into the PPOR offset. That reduces the non-deductible interest without triggering any borrowing events.
Over 15 years, if the ETF portfolio compounds at 8% and she continues to build it with reinvested dividends, the portfolio value significantly exceeds the investment loan balance. She has effectively converted non-deductible debt into a deductible investment facility that compounds over time.
This is debt recycling in its cleanest form.
Debt recycling is not a get-rich-quick arrangement. It is not a tax dodge. It does not eliminate your debt. And it is not appropriate for everyone.
What it does is use the ATO's own rules to ensure that money you are borrowing to invest is treated as deductible, rather than leaving that deductibility on the table because of how the loans are structured.
The marginal benefit is meaningful over time but not dramatic in any single year. The compounding, both of the investment portfolio and the tax savings directed back into the PPOR offset, is what makes it significant over a 10-to-15-year period.
The reason debt recycling is not more common is not that it's complicated. It's that most people don't know it's available, and those who do find the setup friction discouraging. A conversation with your broker that takes three hours and results in a loan split and a documented strategy is worth more over the long run than years of surplus cashflow sitting in a basic offset doing nothing.
The other thing I notice is that it requires a level of financial organisation that most people haven't established. Separate accounts, documented purpose, regular investment deployment. For someone running a household and a job, that structure takes some effort to set up. Once it's running, it's largely automatic. The setup cost is real. The ongoing cost is low.
If you're in Stage 2 of your portfolio journey, earning a decent income, and carrying a PPOR mortgage you intend to hold for 10+ years, the debt recycling question is worth asking properly.
If this was useful, share it with someone who's trying to figure out the same thing. And if you're not on the list yet, you can subscribe at pbco.com.au.
See you next week.
-- Alex
This article is for educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Everyone's circumstances are different. Please seek professional advice before acting on any of the strategies outlined above.
Editorial notes: