27 August 2025

We need to get serious about discussing inheritance taxes

| By Oliver Jacques
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death tax photo

Any suggestion of a death tax attracts vicious scare campaigns in Australia. This meme was circulated during the 2019 federal election campaign. Photo: Facebook.

The Australia Institute (TAI) has proposed bringing back inheritance tax, leading to a predictable outcry on social media among people who’d probably never have to pay it.

TAI economist Matt Grudnoff says imposing a levy on the transfer of assets of someone who dies to their family is a fair, efficient and sensible means of raising revenue to support our ageing population.

But if the Albanese government tried to introduce it, they’d be hit with a vicious scare campaign by those who portray it as sinister and creepy by calling it a ‘death tax’.

The most effective way to make it politically palatable would be to accompany any new wealth transfer levy with an immediate reduction in income tax. That would give people a simple equation – would you rather be taxed when you’re alive or when you’re six feet under?

I know which I’d prefer.

Australians once had to pay both state and federal inheritance levies. Former Queensland premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen abolished death duties in 1978 to attract older retirees to his state. This led other states and the Fraser government to follow suit.

Since then, it’s been a taboo topic in this country, even though it’s commonplace in most other developed nations.

For some reason, Australians seem to think it’s fine for government to siphon a third of the wages off a cleaner earning $60,000 a year, but we’re outraged at the idea of a wealthy adult son losing a cent of their $100 million inheritance.

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Mr Grudnoff wants to bring back a death duty, arguing it’s a rare tax that raises revenue without discouraging productivity, while also reducing intergenerational inequality.

Another critical point to note is that most families would never have to pay it. TAI proposes imposing the levy only on those who have $5 million or more in inheritance.

Like reducing superannuation tax concessions for balances over $3 million, there’ll be a lot of fuss and misinformation to disguise the fact that it only impacts a tiny proportion of the population. Nobody will be forced to sell their house to pay the ATO when their mum dies of cancer.

But it’s the principle, opponents will yell, arguing any form of a death levy is a ‘double tax’. Retirees have already paid tax on the wealth they accumulated, so why should their children also have to give more to the government when they inherit it?

I would argue that everyone coughs up so-called double tax all through their lives. I get taxed on my income, then taxed again when I spend that taxed income (via the GST). I even get taxed on the minuscule interest I earn if I keep my already taxed income in a savings account.

Moreover, much of the wealth grown within superannuation funds is subject to minimal tax in Australia – it could be argued that ordinary workers are subsidising the inheritance received by the rich.

Critics also argue that the wealthy would come up with elaborate ways to avoid paying any death duty, through trusts and gifts to their children in their final years. But the rich are skilled at avoiding any form of tax. A death is harder to hide than assets and tougher to postpone than profits. The best way to tackle avoidance is by closing loopholes; it’s not an argument against having a particular tax. TAI suggests a gift tax would be needed to counter death duty dodging.

It’s true that Australians hate taxes and are revolted by any talk of introducing new ones. But they also love having a big public sector, strong safety net, public transport, free education, Medicare and other subsidised services.

Like it or not, intergenerational reports warn our tax base needs to expand to pay for the rising disability and caring needs of our ageing population.

Compared to other developed nations, Australia heavily taxes income and tends to under-tax things such as property, land and wealth.

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Ordinary wage earners are carrying the can for the nation at a time when they are raising their own families and paying rent or a mortgage.

That’s why an income tax cut would make a perfect sweetener to encourage people to accept the return of a death duty. It would also encourage workforce participation as we struggle to support a growing number of retirees.

The government could even put it to the vote at the next election. Do you want to pay more now, when you’re struggling with rising power bills and housing costs? Or shall we wait until you are resting in eternity before we reach into your wallet? For most, the choice would be simple.

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Mathew Zantuck12:33 pm 29 Aug 25

The problem i have with it is, the wealth i will leave behind has all ready been taxed and the money used to create it taxed.
The government need to stop spending more then they raise in taxes. Just like the average Australian has to live within there income.

What determines the government’s income?

If the average Australian is printing money, we may have a problem.

HiddenDragon11:09 pm 28 Aug 25

“Another critical point to note is that most families would never have to pay it. TAI proposes imposing the levy only on those who have $5 million or more in inheritance.”

The report doesn’t exactly say that – it implies it by recommending an annual 2% wealth tax on the “very wealthy” and then argues for an inheritance tax on the “very wealthy” but without specifying whether the same definition would apply for the purpose of inheritance taxes. The methodology for guesstimating the revenue take from the proposed inheritance tax further muddies the waters on this point.

Equally ambiguously, the report complains about housing having become a tax haven, without making clear whether that is a reference only to investment properties, or whether it also includes the principal place of residence.

Given the extent to which outfits such as the Australia Institute obsess about the CGT exempt status of the PPOR and also the need for a “broad based land tax” (if only we had a buck for every time we’ve heard that parrot chorus), it’s hard not to think that the PPOR would very much be a target – and that is where boilerplate efforts like this report fall down because they provoke well-founded suspicions among many voters.

A government which wanted to do something worthwhile about unmerited inequality in Australia would need a more rigorous and defensible starting point than this report.

Such a government would also, as others have pointed out, need to get much more serious about making all levels of government more efficient and explain why we would want to follow the taxing policies of other countries which have higher tax takes and much higher debt ratios – e.g. France, which is looking increasingly ungovernable because of entrenched disagreement over how to fix a broken budget.

Reality Check10:04 pm 28 Aug 25

Thieves in grey suits. Snouts in troughs.

Reality Check9:56 pm 28 Aug 25

We have the worst government ever with their worst taxes and burecrats ever.

Harrisson Brampton8:26 pm 28 Aug 25

As an average income boomer who has diligently saved, worked extra jobs, learnt how to invest & never pissed money away on lifestyle , it is my right to leave money to my kids without our wasteful politicians picking from my pockets – again ! Increasing taxes is incredibly lazy & the voting public deserve better long term solutions to the ills of our country, which were created by the political & bureaucratic class of fools. Inheritance taxes are just pure envy. Using the criteria of suggesting taxes that only affect a small portion of the population, then apply it to politicians & academic economists – after all it will only affect few people. We need better ideas than boomer bashing & tax increases on the truely productive members of society. Think again Matt

With so much inheritance, the argument of cross-generation inequality goes out of the window….

Just because inheritance or death taxes are commonplace in other countries doesn’t mean it should be brought back in here. We don’t have to follow other countries like lemmings going over the proverbial cliff. It’s also very unfair and the current government is already talking about more ways to get more money out of us while we are alive e.g. increasing GST (a proposal) and people who have more than $3M in their superannuation are threatened with loss of concessions, DESPITE the fact that they have done well to save for retirement. Isn’t that what we’re supposed to be doing anyway?

As usual, the boomer brigade come out in force, pitch forks at the ready, to flood the zone with hysteria.

Whether it’s the introduction of death tax or a super tax or another kind, the key point is boomers need to pay their way. The system is stacked in their favour and we need to level the field.

Their classic retort that they’ve paid tax in the past and therefore do not need to pay anymore is insulting. They paid taxes in return for services. Their kids went to public schools, got treated in hospital, when they called the cops, a constable dutifully rocked up and they drove on sealed roads with working street lights. That was their contribution to society. But now because they are over 60, they think they can opt out? Can the cleaner do the same?

If you earn money, irrespective of how you earned it, you should pay tax.

A rant from someone who has probably never worked a day in their life

Bit of a self-entitled rant lunarboogie, don’t you think?

As one of those boomers, let me clarify a few things. I grew up in a 2-bedroom weatherboard home, that had it’s verandahs enclosed with fibro, as mum and dad had more kids. There was no insulation in the roof or walls.

Yes, we went to the local public school, There was no money for private schools. Mum and dad had private health insurance, because Medicare didn’t exist!

My wife had exactly the same upbringing. No one in our generation had the view that society owed them a thing.

Even as “privileged” boomers, neither myself nor my wife went to University, we’ve never been overseas and we only own one car – it’s 26 years old.

My wife and I have never earnt “average” incomes. We were always below.
We are in our mid-sixties and don’t have subscriptions, like Netflix or Spotify.

We have held Private Health despite many people earning substantially more than us, using the taxpayer funded, public system.

We have scrimped and saved, and yes, we are comfortable. 😊. No, we don’t own any investment properties.

I do accept that being a cleaner, puts you in a tight financial situation. There are many jobs in society that are underpaid/undervalued. This however doesn’t mean that others should not be entitled to what they have earnt or saved or that those who have been frugal, should have their savings socialised by the government.

What it does mean is that, you do need to manage your finances carefully (and I say that with respect), and be always looking for opportunities to improve your circumstances.

I wish you all the best.

Capital Retro11:04 am 29 Aug 25

Great words of wisdom, Colin.

Colin Wood: 👍 👍 👍

That’s nothing, Colin Wood. I use’t live in shoebox in middle of freeway.

If your financial circumstances are as you claim, then how would taxing very high wealth affect you other than social benefit? Private health insurance is subsidised, in case you had not noticed. If you earned a below average wage, needing to be frugal, when and how do you imagine your earnings will be “socialised”? Our earnings and wealth are already taxed multiple times. Relevant questions are efficiency and balance. You especially appear to lack the latter.

As I noted early, I do not think inheritance taxes the best solution. See also chewy14’s comments on that.

How about making rich unions pay tax. Yeah, right

The article performs a common ruse: “it only impacts a tiny proportion of the population” as if that makes it fair/right/good policy. If it’s unfair it doesn’t matter how few or how many are affected, it’s just unfair (and bad policy). While, death taxes are attractive (tax the rich !), there is a lot of complication in the detail. Experience overseas should be examined more closely – e.g. families who are asset rich but cash poor can be forced to sell, perhaps in a depressed market. Result can be a transfer of assets to those with the cash (also rich !) at bargain prices. Sometimes, governments establish organisations or trusts to buy at a fair price (e.g. the UK National Trust ?). Why not just reduce income tax and super loopholes ?

Tom Worthington4:38 pm 28 Aug 25

The UK has an inheritance tax of 40% which sounds a lot. But it only applies above about AU$700,000 and only when you don’t give the money to your spouse, or a charity. A palatable approach for Australia might be to double the threshold to $1.4M and lower the rate to 15% (same as for super).

Another leftist agenda.

People work all lives for the benefit of themselves and their family, and the Australia Institue reckons the their kid’s inheritance is for the taking!

We already have a form of Death Duties. It’s called Superannuation.
If you leave your Super to your Independent Adult children, it’s taxed at 15%, plus Medicare, so 17%.

My view is that I have earnt my money. Government can keep their greedy hands off it, and I’ll vote against and campaign actively against any party that wants to “steals” my kid’s inheritance.

Stop trying to discover more ways to fleece us, and start spending our taxes wisely!!!!

This tax is far left.
The far left is anti-private property and would do away with it completely, if it could.
At the end the abolition of private property is the end of bodily autonomy.
And nobody makes a horror show of that quite like the far left does – which holds the world record for the number of people killed.
I therefore wouldn’t go encouraging it, but would look for other solutions.
Especially in a time when bodily autonomy is already threadbare, given that we’re now in the era of COVID hysteria.
Look at every infraction against private property as a stepping stone towards the Left’s ultimate goal, and then you might think more about its actions.

And in further support of the assertion that the Left hates private property, look no further than how it uses private property as a means for only destroying that very thing: e.g. women can have abortions, young people can ‘re-assign’ their sex, increasingly anyone partake in a voluntary assisted killing and people generally see their body as an amusement park.

And while some will see this as support for private property/bodily autonomy, I’d say it’s no more supportive of it than a wrecking ball – if, that is, we can see private property as more sophisticated than “it’s mine and I’ll destroy it if I want.”

Constructive private property is what we want in this country, not the destructive kind or the destruction of it al together.

Always put Labor and the Greens last when you vote, noting that their mailbox pamphlets make for good kitty litter

Only 10% of people responding to the poll support the idea.

That’s about the greens vote.

The biggest problem is govt is wasteful. And get rid f all the fringe rubbish it funds, especially climate, stop giving our natural resources away for free , and the money issues will fix themselves.

And another thought – as AI moves forward, only complicated jobs like sparkies and plumbers will be safe – a lot of white collar jobs will go too – so the govt will have to hand out a UBI, which will bankrupt the country and crash our currency, so there is no easy fix.

Its not like you can make 50% of your population vanish in 5 years, or something like that…..

“The best way to tackle avoidance is by closing loopholes; TAI suggests a gift tax would be needed to counter death duty dodging.”

OK kids, here’s your pocket money, less gift tax to stop you dodging death duty. And you know how the Bank of Mum and Dad was planning to help you get into a house? Well we now have to pay gift tax on the home deposit we had been saving to give you. All because back in 2025 we were stupid enough to think an inheritance tax was a good idea. You know, live off those who saved, rather than spent.

Jeffrey Peters12:50 pm 28 Aug 25

Probate is already a significant death tax that is installed now. No more grubby money for labor. If that grub party wants more money then stop spending on social black holes stop softening society to gain control of them.

Carlos Cobelas12:47 pm 28 Aug 25

BS, mate.
Do you really think they would lower other taxes such as our already excessively high personal income tax rates to compensate for a new inheritance tax. It would just be another extra tax. Get lost. My parents paid plenty of taxes and worked very hard all their lives

Good on them. How about you, or are you trying to guard your inheritance?

Perhaps you propose taxing people without wealth or income?

Capital Retro12:12 pm 28 Aug 25

Generally, the family home is largest asset that transfers into a deceased estate and the beneficiary/s of the will receive it tax free. Usually, probate tax will take a slice of that.

No so with superannuation however which is usually the second largest asset. If left to a spouse it is tax free but once it goes to children and others it is taxable at 15% + 2% Medicare levy so there is already a death tax in place.

Old people who choose to stay in their home end of life time and receive the equivalent care they would get at a aged care facility have to pay around $100K a year for at least two years and this usually wipes out their super benefits.

If that’s not already an old age or pre-death tax than I don’t know what is.

Still, this is something from TAI who have already made disingenuous claims about concessions to baby-boomers and the fossil-fuel industries so what do you expect?

What TAI call “concessions” the rest of us call the tax system. Every time they use the word you’d swear they think the government owns everything.

They’re so ignorant they reckon the diesel fuel rebate is a “concession”.

Btw their “Chief political analyst” appears to have departed.

These lefty mobs don’t seem to be able to retain staff very well.

Using your super for superannuation purposes is not a death tax. Hoarding it for inheritance is rightly taxable, which is what taxing the 0.5% of super assets over $3M on their profits is about, small as the effect is.

What a shock, the hard left proposing more tax on higher income earners, who already pay the lions share of income tax.

But there’s two bizarre comment included here. Firstly someone on $60,000 pays $8,688 in tax – 15%, not “a third”.

Secondly how on earth are “ordinary workers subsidising the inheritance received by the rich” ? It’s a nonsensical statement.

“What a shock, the hard left proposing more tax on higher income earners, who already pay the lions share of income tax.”

It isn’t a tax on high income earners, perhaps understand the proposal being put forward first.

“Secondly how on earth are “ordinary workers subsidising the inheritance received by the rich” ? It’s a nonsensical statement.”

Ditto.

The comment mentioned higher income earners, and it certainly will impact them far more than lower ones.

Are you familiar with progressive taxation and the concept of how higher incomes lead to higher wealth ?

Pengold,
Not sure doubling down on your original ignorant comment makes it better.

If you want to be “familiar” with something, try the actual proposal which has nothing to do with taxing income, from high earners or anyone else.

Your comments just make it harder for sensible right wingers to make the argument against the proposal, which is inherently bad.

It’s not a dumb idea because we shouldn’t be changing the tax mix away from income taxes, its a dumb idea because it would be so easy to avoid.

And the author even recognises that by saying that we would need to introduce even more taxes (ie. Make the tax system more complex) to prevent that occurring. That is not a good thing, when we should be simplifying the system.

There are far more efficient ways to tax wealth or shift the tax mix without bringing in inheritance taxes.

All very well to consider an immediate reduction in income tax, where would that leave those of us who are no longer working. Where would that leave us? Re tax generally, we do expect a lot from our government; the answer is increased taxes during our working life. We have paid higher taxes in the past. Being a low taxing nation is not as desirable as it sounds.

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