Personal Finance Tips — 2026-05-13
Australia's 2026 federal budget landed this week with sweeping changes that will reshape wealth strategies for investors — including a new 30% minimum tax floor on capital gains and the removal of negative gearing for established properties. Meanwhile, fresh advice for college graduates offers timely guidance on navigating student loans and early investing, and updated rankings of budgeting apps highlight today's top tools for taking control of your money.
Personal Finance Tips — 2026-05-13
Key Highlights
🇦🇺 Australia's 2026 Budget: Nine Wealth-Strategy Changes You Need to Know
The 2026 Australian federal budget dropped major policy shifts that investors cannot ignore. A new 30% minimum tax floor now applies to capital gains and trust distributions — a seismic shift for high-income investors who previously relied on discounted CGT rates. On top of that, negative gearing has been removed for established properties, fundamentally altering the calculus for property investors.
For ASX investors specifically, the Motley Fool identified three key investing changes from the budget night that will affect share portfolios, super contributions, and trust structures going into the new financial year.

🎓 Personal Finance Advice for the Class of 2026
If you or someone you know just graduated, this week's coverage from WSFLTV offers timely tips from author Beth Kobliner covering student loans, housing, health care, and investing — the four pillars every new grad must tackle. Key takeaway: set up automatic loan payments immediately to avoid missed deadlines, and start a Roth IRA even in a low-income year when tax rates are minimal.

📱 Best Budgeting Apps: YNAB, Monarch Money, and More
Two fresh roundups this week confirm that YNAB (You Need a Budget) and Monarch Money remain the gold standard for people who want more than basic expense tracking. NerdWallet notes Monarch Money is "often cited as a good replacement for users of the now-defunct Mint app." For those who prefer simplicity, Quicken Simplifi and PocketGuard are the closest heirs to what Mint offered.
Deep Dive
Understanding Australia's New Capital Gains Tax Floor — And Why It Matters Even If You're Not Australian
Australia's decision to impose a 30% minimum tax rate on capital gains signals a global trend: governments under fiscal pressure are quietly tightening the screws on investment income. For Australian investors, the practical impact is immediate — any strategy that relied on the 50% CGT discount to bring effective rates below 30% must be rebuilt.
What changed:
- Previously, assets held more than 12 months qualified for a 50% CGT discount, meaning top-bracket taxpayers paid roughly 22–24% on gains.
- The new 30% floor eliminates that advantage for high earners.
- Trust distributions of capital gains now face the same floor, closing a popular tax-minimisation route.
Negative gearing removal for established properties means investors can no longer offset rental losses on existing homes against other income. New builds remain eligible, which could shift capital toward construction — a deliberate housing-supply incentive.
What to review right now (Australian investors):
- Check whether any property or share portfolio strategies assumed a sub-30% CGT rate.
- Review trust distribution structures with your accountant.
- Consider whether new-build property makes more sense than existing stock under the new rules.
Even if you're outside Australia, this is a reminder to audit your own country's tax rules annually — they change more often than most people realise, and the cost of being caught unprepared is high.
This Week's Action
Open (or fund) a Roth IRA before the calendar year ticks further.
With tax season freshly behind most people and the 2025 contribution window now closed, the 2026 contribution clock is running. The Roth IRA annual contribution limit for 2026 is $7,000 (or $8,000 if you're 50+). The earlier in the year you contribute, the more compounding time your money gets.
How to do it in 15 minutes:
- Log into your brokerage (Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, or similar).
- Navigate to "Open an Account" → select Roth IRA.
- Transfer as little as $100 to get started — you can add more throughout the year.
- Invest in a low-cost total-market index fund (e.g., VTI or FSKAX).
If you already have a Roth IRA and haven't contributed yet this year, set up a recurring monthly transfer today. Even $200/month adds up to $2,400 by year-end — tax-free growth, compounding for decades.
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