Should I put each commercial property in a separate company?
Yes, this is generally recommended. It allows you to wind up the company and distribute capital gains tax-free upon sale, and also isolates risk between different properties.
Disclaimer: This article is intended as a general guide in plain English. It does not constitute tax or investment advice. Every investor’s situation is unique, please consult your accountant before taking action. For tailored advice, specific to your needs, please contact us at [email protected].
To keep things simple, some details have been generalised and technical points left out. None of this is financial advice. I'm an accountant, not a financial advisor so I'm only stating facts about tax, not advising you about how to invest your money.
Many Kiwi investors start their property journey in the residential market, but the move into commercial property offers an alternative opportunity with different tax-rules, structure options and planning requirements.
If you’re about to purchase your first commercial investment property, understanding the tax landscape and structuring considerations from day one can make a major difference. Below we walk through key issues: ownership structure (including the “one company per property” idea), how to treat remuneration (director fees vs dividends), and other useful tax points.
I touched on the difference between residential and commercial investment property in New Zealand in last week's article, which you can read here: Navigating Investor Tax in New Zealand: What Kiwi Investors Should Know in 2026.
In short, commercial property doesn’t carry the same political stigma as residential rental properties so there are tax efficiencies that commercial property owners enjoy that residential property owners don't. This includes:
Commercial property offers a simpler tax regime from certain stand-points and more predictability from a political viewpoint, but it still requires careful structure and compliance.
The rest of this article dives into what you need to think through before you buy your first commercial asset.
Before buying a commercial property, you'll need to consider what entity type is best to hold it. Should it be held personally, in a partnership, trust, or a company? Most people choose a company, and, more specifically a separate company for each commercial property.
Why use a company structure at all?
Why one company per property?
You decide to create a company to buy a commercial property. The property increases in value, and you sell it for a capital gain. You'd be forgiven for thinking that New Zealand doesn't have a broad-based capital gains regime, so time to cash in and forget about tax, right?
The issue is that the capital gain & cash belongs to the company, not you personally. So, how are you personally going to be able to spend the money?
If you just transfer the money across to your bank account, you've created an interest free loan, which is a fringe benefit and runs into fringe benefit tax issues.
There is a solution here: company capital gains are allowed to be distributed tax free to shareholders on the wind-up of the company.
So, if you have one property in one company, you can wind-up that company when the property is sold and you won't have an issue.
If you own multiple properties in one company and you sell one, the capital gain is essentially trapped in the company until the company is completely clear of all assets and liabilities, and can be wound up.
Not only that but having a single property company allows you to better ring-fence risk (tenants, leases, liabilities).
Good structure from the outset reduces headaches later if you want to sell, re-organise, refinance, or bring in new investors, without having to sell the building as a whole.
If you hold your commercial property investment through a company, particularly one in which you are a director/shareholder, you’ll probably wonder how to pay yourself: director’s fees, dividends, or a mix. Here are the key considerations:
Director’s fees
Dividends
Some other additional points worth bearing in mind when buying your first commercial property:
GST considerations:
Depreciation and new assets deduction:
Interest deductibility / financing structure:
What are your intentions?
Before purchasing, think about what your intentions are. If you buy a commercial property with the intention of reselling, even if it's 50 years down the track, then the capital gain on sale will be taxable.
Will you bring in other shareholders/investors? Will you use this property as security to buy a different property?
Ensure your ownership company has clean separation of asset, liabilities, accounting records so that when you decide to sell the company or the property you avoid messy tax or legal risks.
Buying a commercial property in New Zealand is a compelling proposition for investors, and the tax regime is more investor-friendly than many residential investment options. However, that doesn’t mean tax planning can be ignored. Key takeaways:
If you’re about to purchase your first commercial property, we recommend you:
At Step Ahead Accounting, we specialise in investment taxation, helping investors nationwide make smarter, more compliant decisions.
Based in Dunedin, New Zealand, we offer free online consultations no matter where you’re based.
Take you first Step to get Ahead and click here to get a free instant estimate.
Yes, this is generally recommended. It allows you to wind up the company and distribute capital gains tax-free upon sale, and also isolates risk between different properties.
Generally no, unless you bought the property with the intention of selling it for a profit. However, getting the cash gain out of a company to you personally can trigger tax issues if not structured correctly (e.g., via a company wind-up).