

Australia is weighing a capital gains tax overhaul that would scrap the long‑standing 50% discount on assets held more than a year and replace it with an inflation‑indexed system, a shift that could materially raise tax bills for crypto and stock investors if it takes effect from the 2027–28 tax year.
Summary
Australia’s government is weighing a capital gains tax overhaul that would scrap the long‑standing 50% discount on assets held more than a year and replace it with an inflation‑indexed system, a move that could materially raise the tax bill on cryptocurrency and stock investors. Under the proposal outlined in a consultation paper reported by FinanceFeeds, individuals would no longer simply halve their taxable gain after 12 months; instead, they would adjust their cost base for inflation and pay CGT on the full “real” gain, with the changes penciled in to apply from the 2027–28 tax year.
Australia’s current CGT regime, introduced in 1999, gives individuals a 50% discount on capital gains when they hold an asset — including crypto, equities and investment property — for more than one year, meaning only half the gain is added to taxable income. The new proposal would remove that blunt discount and instead allow taxpayers to uplift their original purchase price by cumulative inflation, then tax the entire inflation‑adjusted gain at their marginal rate, a structure that Treasury argues is fairer because it targets “real” rather than nominal gains.
In practice, that change bites hardest in low‑inflation environments and during strong bull markets. FinanceFeeds notes that with inflation currently running well below the double‑digit spikes seen earlier in the decade, indexation will erase only a small portion of the nominal gain, leaving most of it taxable — in many cases producing a higher bill than today’s 50% haircut. In scenarios where an asset triples or quadruples in price over several years while inflation ticks along at 2%–3%, the new formula could effectively double the CGT owed relative to the existing regime, especially for higher‑bracket taxpayers.
The consultation paper explicitly includes cryptocurrencies among the assets covered by the reform, alongside shares, managed funds and investment properties, and makes no mention of carve‑outs for digital assets. Because crypto portfolios often experience large price swings over relatively short periods, the removal of a time‑based 50% discount directly undermines the “HODL to reduce tax” logic that has underpinned many Australian retail strategies since the last cycle, replacing it with a system where the tax outcome depends more on inflation and realized timing than on simply crossing the 12‑month mark.
FinanceFeeds highlights that this would “significantly increase the tax burden on unrealized gains during periods of high appreciation,” particularly for volatile assets like Bitcoin and long‑tail tokens where a few years of outperformance can produce huge nominal gains that far outstrip inflation. The effect is to weaken the structural incentive for long‑term holding and potentially nudge some investors toward shorter‑term trading or offshore tax planning, even as regulators elsewhere push for longer holding periods to reduce speculation.
The proposal is still at the discussion stage and will likely face heavy resistance from investor groups, industry associations and parts of the financial sector. Critics are already framing the move as a stealth tax grab that sacrifices capital formation and risk‑taking in the name of “fairness,” while supporters argue that taxing only real gains is more equitable and removes distortions that favor capital over wages. For crypto in particular, the debate crystallizes a broader tension: governments want to treat digital assets like any other investment for tax purposes, but the combination of high volatility and an inflation‑indexed CGT regime could make Australia one of the tougher major jurisdictions for long‑term HODLers if the reform goes through as sketched.






