Barossa Properties

Investment

Co Development vs Buying a Rental Property

⚠ General Information Only

This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Barossa Properties is not a licensed financial adviser. All investment decisions should be made only after obtaining independent legal, financial, and taxation advice from qualified professionals. Past project performance does not predict future results.

Two of the most common property investment paths in Australia are fundamentally different in structure, risk, return, and what they require from you. This comparison explains both honestly without a conclusion, because the right choice depends entirely on your individual circumstances.

Important: This is a general comparison for educational purposes only. It is not a recommendation to choose one structure over another. Your personal financial situation, tax position, risk tolerance, and investment timeline all affect which (if either) is appropriate. Independent financial advice is essential before making any investment decision.

Side by Side Comparison

Factor

Rental Property

Co-Development Investment

Capital required

Deposit (typically 20%+) plus acquisition costs

Agreed investment amount varies by project

What you own

Property title (land and building)

Contractual right to share in project returns

Ongoing income

Rental income (if tenanted)

None until project completes

Time horizon

Open ended hold as long as you like

Fixed project term (typically 12–36 months)

Liquidity

Can sell, but takes time and costs money

Generally illiquid for project duration

Return type

Capital growth + rental yield

Profit share or agreed return at completion

Management

Property management required

Developer manages all execution

Leverage

Bank finance typically available

Varies often equity based

Tax treatment

CGT, negative gearing, depreciation

Depends on structure seek tax advice

Key risks

Vacancy, tenant issues, market decline

Planning refusal, cost overrun, market decline, developer risk

What Rental Property Does Well

  1. Provides ongoing income (when tenanted)
  2. Offers long term capital growth potential
  3. Allows leverage through mainstream bank finance
  4. Gives tangible ownership of a physical asset
  5. Can be sold if circumstances change (though with cost and time)

What Co Development Investment Does Differently

  1. Targets higher returns over a defined, shorter time horizon
  2. Requires no ongoing management from the investor
  3. Returns are concentrated at project completion no interim cash flow
  4. Capital is illiquid for the project duration
  5. Carries development-specific risks not present in rental property

Neither Is Universally Better

A rental property in a strong market with good tenants can deliver excellent long term returns. A well executed development project can deliver strong returns over a shorter period. Both can also underperform for very different reasons.

The right structure depends on your capital position, income needs, risk appetite, time horizon, and tax circumstances all of which require professional assessment.

⚠ This is not a recommendation. Do not make an investment decision based on a general comparison article. Seek independent financial, legal, and taxation advice from qualified professionals before committing capital to any investment structure.

⚠ Important Disclaimer

This article is general information only and does not constitute financial advice, investment advice, legal advice, or taxation advice. Comparisons are general in nature and do not account for individual circumstances.

Investment in property whether rental or development involves risk including potential loss of capital. Past performance does not predict future results. Barossa Properties Pty Ltd is not a licensed financial services provider. Independent professional advice is required before making any investment decision.