
The default path to wealth is changing
A lot of Australians are suddenly questioning a wealth-building path they assumed would always work.
For a long time, investment property has been one of the default paths to building wealth in Australia.
Buy a property.
Negative gear it.
Hold it long term.
Let capital growth do the work.
And for many people, that approach has worked well.
But after this week’s changes around negative gearing and capital gains tax, I think a lot of people are now quietly reassessing things.
Not necessarily because property no longer has a role.
But because many are starting to ask broader questions around strategy, flexibility, and what wealth creation should look like going forward.
And in some ways, I think that’s healthy.
Because uncertainty has a way of forcing people to step back and think more intentionally.
Not just:
“What should I invest in?”
But:
“What am I actually trying to achieve?”
“What level of flexibility do I want?”
“How dependent do I want to be on one strategy or one asset class?”
Good financial planning was never about building a strategy that only works under one set of rules.
Because rules, governments, tax systems, and markets will always change over time.
The goal is to build something resilient enough to adapt as the environment changes around you.
That’s why I think periods like this can actually be valuable.
They encourage people to stop following default paths automatically and start thinking more intentionally about the kind of financial future they want to build.
