State-Revenue

Increased State Revenue Compliance Activity – What Property Owners Need to Know & Prepare For

Stephen Lau, Peter Bobbin, Kate Sohn ||

Recent data confirms a significant escalation in compliance activity by Revenue NSW.

Its land tax investigations increased by 83% between 2023 and 2024 – rising to 45,192 reviews and $435.9 million in additional land tax, including extra surcharge.

Our experience is that 2025 will be higher and so too will 2026 investigations.

The message is clear: enforcement activity is intensifying – you should act now.

Exemptions Under Particular Scrutiny

Revenue NSW is dedicating substantial resources to reviewing land tax exemptions, particularly where:

  • Technical requirements are not strictly satisfied; or
  • Supporting documentation is incomplete or inconsistent.

The burden of proof rests entirely with you, the taxpayer. A simple lack of quality evidence is a cause of substantial land tax liabilities.

Where exemptions (including Principal Place of Residence and Primary Production claims) are reviewed, authorities are requiring comprehensive evidence such as utility bills, phone records, insurance policies, lease documents, electoral registration and licence and official address histories. Even minor evidentiary gaps can result in exemptions being denied.

We are also seeing a conservative, process-driven approach adopted by authorities including the NSW Valuer General, with objections frequently disallowed where documentation is insufficient.

Reviews Cover Five Years

Importantly, Revenue NSW land tax reviews are common up to five prior years, meaning historic record-keeping is critical.

Many reviews commence well before a formal notice is issued.

Preparation Is Critical

A review of your records and compiling and keeping a due diligence defence package well before any enquiry is a must. Your current efforts covering the past 5 years is your insurance against an unexpected land tax claim.

How We Can Help

If you have:

  • Received a notice of review or assessment;
  • Had an exemption disallowed; or
  • Claimed an exemption and wish to ensure your position is defensible,

early advice is essential.

Coleman Greig’s Taxation & Superannuation Team has extensive experience managing land tax reviews and objections. Proactive engagement can significantly reduce exposure and improve outcomes.

Please contact us for a confidential discussion.

Disclaimer: This article is for general information purposes only and is not a substitute for legal advice. For more details, please read our full disclaimer.

Share:

Send an enquiry

Any personal information you provide is collected pursuant to our Privacy Policy.

Categories
Archives
Author

More posts

FWO Compliance Notices

FWO compliance notices are a common enforcement tool used to address workplace breaches. This article explains how they work, the risks of non-compliance, and what employers should do if they receive one.

Strata Reforms in NSW – 2026 Edition

New NSW strata reforms from 1 April 2026 introduce updated requirements for documentation, governance and transparency across strata schemes.

Business people shaking hands, finishing up a meeting.
Joint venture vs. partnership

Joint venture or partnership? We explain the differences and highlight the pros and cons of each structure.

A woman works from home. She's sitting at a desk with a Christmas tree in the background
Employment arrangements during the holiday season break

Many businesses will be preparing for a shutdown period over the upcoming holiday season break. Earlier this year, standardised shutdown provisions were inserted into the majority of modern awards. These covered how you could direct employees to take annual leave or unpaid leave during an annual shutdown

© 2026 Coleman Greig Lawyers  |  Sitemap  |  Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation. ABN 73 125 176 230