|
FOCUS ON FINANCIAL OUTCOME MAY DELIVER FAIRER OUTCOME
My personal view is that a fairer approach to the whole question of deductibility of this type of expenditure would be to target the actual financial outcomes that the holiday home achieves.
If for example an owner can demonstrate that by renting the house on a night by night basis he has achieved a greater gross rental income than he would have achieved if he rented the property permanently with a standard residential tenancy arrangement, I see no reason why he should not be entitled to deduct all the costs associated with vacant days and rented days. At the end of the day he is still left paying more tax than he would have if he had let the property to a permanent tenant despite the vacant days.
If he fell short of achieving a holiday rental equivalent to a permanent tenancy it would then be appropriate to apportion the costs for the vacant days based on the ratio of actual rental earned over potential market rental.
Many holiday homes are in locations where the property values are high but there are often limited opportunities to offer the properties for permanent rental especially if they are true kiwi baches or cribs. Septic tank systems and tank water contribute to them being less than suitable as permanent rental properties.
In my experience many operators of holiday homes are able to derive more rent overall by letting the property for say $200 - $300 per night than they would if they were to permanently let it for say $350 per week.
If the government’s approach simply focused on the rent collected relative to an independent rent assessment for the property on a permanent basis a calculation like this would be far less subjective and less likely to be manipulated than any test that requires the owner to keep an honest record of their personal domestic use of the property.
|