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Foreign resident capital gains tax changes: A new tax wedge in regulated infrastructure weighted average cost of capital

Proposed Commonwealth Capital Gains Tax (CGT) changes would place a new 30% tax on nominal capital gains for foreign corporate shareholders in regulated utilities that primarily engage in fixed infrastructure investment. These reforms should prompt regulators and industry to consider the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) implications for regulated infrastructure with material foreign ownership. The issue is relevant to assets regulated by the Australian Energy Regulator, state and territory regulators and Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, including electricity, gas, telecoms, rail, water and ports.

  • July 2026
  • 4 minute read
  • Sector: Telecoms, Energy, Water

The Commonwealth's proposed foreign resident CGT reforms could have important implications for regulated infrastructure businesses with material foreign ownership.

What has changed?

The Bill introduced on 2 July 2026 broadens the definition of Australian real property for foreign resident CGT purposes. The expanded definition captures land rights, licences, contractual rights relating to land and infrastructure fixed to land, including assets such as toll roads, ports, pipelines and data centres.

For foreign corporate investors this changes the Australian tax treatment of disposing of shares in many regulated infrastructure businesses, increasing the effective tax rate on nominal capital gains from 0% to 30%.

The Explanatory Memorandum estimates these reforms will raise approximately $2.275 billion between 2026–27 and 2030–31.

Why infrastructure is particularly exposed

Regulated infrastructure businesses derive much of their value from fixed assets, statutory access rights, easements and operating licences.

The reforms were prompted in part by litigation involving ElectraNet, where existing legislation meant certain infrastructure interests were not treated as Taxable Australian Real Property. The new legislation is intended to bring these assets within the Australian CGT regime.

Why this matters for regulatory WACC

Regulated returns are intended to provide investors with a reasonable opportunity to recover efficient financing costs. Introducing a shareholder-level exit tax reduces expected after-tax equity returns for affected foreign investors.

If allowed returns remain unchanged, the reforms create a tax wedge that could reduce incentives for reinvestment while also lowering asset values by reducing the pool of potential purchasers.

Why current regulatory methods may not capture the effect

Current Australian regulatory WACC approaches benchmark market returns, gearing, beta, debt costs and the risk-free rate. They generally do not include an allowance for foreign shareholder capital gains tax applying specifically to regulated infrastructure.

Similarly, gamma addresses the value of imputation credits rather than capital gains taxation applying to foreign shareholders.

Given the range of regulatory approaches currently used across Australia, there is no established consensus regarding how this shareholder-level tax change should be reflected in regulated revenue determinations.

Potential investor distortions

The reforms create different tax outcomes depending on whether investor returns are realised through capital gains or dividends. Because treaty-reduced withholding tax on unfranked dividends may be materially lower than the new CGT rate, the reforms may influence payout policy, asset pricing and investment decisions.

Conclusion

CEPA can help you to understand the implications of this tax change for the determination of regulated revenue, especially where foreign investment is needed for network expansion and transition investment.



Sources and notes
1 Explanatory Memorandum, Treasury Laws Amendment (Strengthening Accountability for Tax Adviser Misconduct and Other Measures) Bill 2026 (Cth) page 42, available here. 2 Explanatory Memorandum, Treasury Laws Amendment (Strengthening Accountability for Tax Adviser Misconduct and Other Measures) Bill 2026 (Cth) page 2, available here. 3 Commonwealth of Australia, Budget 2024-25: Budget Paper No 2, Budget Measures - Part 1: Receipt Measures (Budget Paper, 14 May 2024), page 18, available here 4 We note that foreign corporations may be required to pay a tax on capital gains on foreign assets in their home country.

To find out more, please contact our experts listed below.

Ella Pybus
Director Australia
Benjamin Osenius-Eite
Managing Consultant Australia
Shivana Thiru Moorthy
Managing Consultant Australia