Australia's new budget was meant to cool home prices. It got a startup revolt in a day.
The pushback was fast. The walk-back was faster. By the time founders had stopped posting on LinkedIn, the budget papers had a new clause in them.
The Tax Change That Lit The Fuse
Treasurer Jim Chalmers gave the 2026-27 budget on May 12. The big move would scrap the 50% capital gains tax cut on assets bought after budget night.
In its place: a new inflation-based model with a 30% floor tax on net gains. The goal was to cool home bets and tax "real gains" rather than gains driven by rising prices.
Home buyers were the clear target. Startups got hit by mistake.
Founders often work for low pay for years. They take equity that only pays off if the firm gets bought or goes public.
Most startups also start with almost no value. That leaves nothing to "inflate off" under the new rule. The rule taxes the upside but ignores the risk that drives it.
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The 24-Hour Walk-Back
Founders filled LinkedIn with sharp pushback within a day. They drew lines to startup-friendly hubs in Singapore and the U.S.
The push worked. The government added a fresh clause to the budget papers.
That clause noted the "unique characteristics" of the tech sector. It also promised talks on how the new rules work with early-stage tax perks. Cabinet Secretary Andrew Charlton said the new model could hurt firms with little money to start with.
The timing matters too. Asia, the Middle East, and North America are all hunting for founders. They offer new tax breaks and founder visas. AI firms get the warmest red carpet of all.
Australia is moving the other way. Venture buyers have noticed.
What To Watch
The talks window is where the real fight starts. The venture group will push for clear carve-outs for staff share plans and early-stage equity. Both of those power how Aussie tech firms hire talent.
Also watch the resale catch. A "new build" home is only new once. The same logic could apply to any startup carve-out the government writes in.
If the next buyer of founder equity loses the tax break, that hits what a buyer will pay today. Even talk of new rules can shift deal prices before the rules are final.
The bigger ask: can Australia fix the home market without scaring off the next round of tech builders?
The state's own budget papers nod to one more risk. Capital is moving fast across borders right now.
A new Aussie founder in 2026 has more places to set up shop than ever before. The big U.S. hubs still pull most of the global tech cash. Asian hubs are closing the gap with cheaper rules.
A small shift in tax rules can push that next deal one way or the other. The state has weeks, not months, to get this right.
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