Australia’s proposed Capital Gains Tax (CGT) reforms will force many people to formally value their collections for the first time. What that process reveals about their insurance cover may be the bigger shock.
It is hanging on the dining room wall, sitting in a climate-controlled cellar, or locked in a safe.
Fine art, vintage wine, luxury watches, classic cars, and rare jewellery have long held a unique place in private wealth. Driven by passion, taste, and inheritance, these collections are highly valuable assets. Yet they are rarely treated as such. They are discussed in terms of emotion, not economics.
But a looming tax reform is about to force a harsh financial spotlight onto these quiet assets. For anyone who has accumulated valuable physical assets over the years, the question of whether those assets are adequately insured has never been more urgent.
The looming valuation trigger
The Federal Government’s latest budget has proposed a structural reset for capital gains tax (CGT). From 1 July 2027, the existing 50 per cent CGT discount will be replaced with an indexation model, alongside a new 30 per cent minimum tax on net capital gains. Crucially, the reforms extend to assets acquired before September 1985 – assets that have sat entirely outside the CGT regime for four decades. Pending legislation, the changes are expected to take effect from 1 July 2027.
For anyone who holds valuable physical assets, this is a critical moment. A formal valuation of those assets as at 1 July 2027 will be required under the transitional rules. The ATO will provide tools to assist, but for unique or illiquid assets – fine art, classic cars, rare wine – a professional valuation is the only credible approach.
However, establishing a formal tax position triggers a much broader, and potentially more dangerous, question:
If I now know exactly what this collection is worth, is it properly insured?
The documentation gap
The paperwork rarely matches the passion. Purchase receipts go missing. Valuations are years out of date. Assets are scattered across multiple properties and storage facilities.
In a rising market, this problem compounds silently. For example, the owner of an Emily Kam Kngwarreye artwork acquired in the primary market for between $8,000 and $10,000 in 1992 could now realise more than $1.19 million at auction today, following record sales for her work.
Because collections were neither being sold nor divided, the absence of updated valuations did not seem to matter. The impending CGT changes, however, are likely to bring that era of complacency to an abrupt end.
Tax value is not insurance value
When valuing these assets, people frequently make one fundamental, costly mistake: assuming all valuations are the same.
A tax valuation is concerned with market value at a specific point in time. It is designed to establish a cost base or a future capital gains position.
These two numbers can diverge wildly. An insurance valuation must account for the cost of sourcing a replacement, extreme market scarcity, auction buyer premiums, specialist freight, and restoration costs.
Using an old insurance schedule to justify a tax position is inadequate. Conversely, relying on a conservative tax valuation to set your insurance limits is financially dangerous.
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Exposing the insurance gaps
When the valuation deadline hits, it will likely expose glaring holes in the insurance arrangements of people who have quietly accumulated significant assets over the years.
Collectible assets carry entirely different risk profiles to standard household contents. A painting can be ruined by humidity; a classic car damaged in transit; a watch stolen while travelling overseas.
Yet, many collections are currently not listed on a policy at all, are buried inside generic “general contents” cover with dangerously low sub-limits, or are in breach of strict policy conditions regarding alarm monitoring and transit security.
When a major loss occurs, an insurance claim is not just about the value of the item. It is about the evidence. Insurers require proof of ownership, provenance, and compliance with security conditions. Without a well-documented register, these claims become incredibly difficult to settle.
Time to take stock
While the incoming tax changes may seem burdensome, they present a rare, positive opportunity. They are the perfect trigger for a long-overdue audit of your physical assets.
The smartest response to the new CGT rules is not panic. It is preparation.
The true risk of the Government’s budget reforms is not just paying more tax down the line. The real risk is discovering, after a fire, a flood, or a theft, that a collection of significant value was never properly documented, never accurately valued, and never adequately insured.
When the tax office inevitably asks what your collection is worth, it is time you finally knew the answer.
“An insurance valuation must account for scarcity, auction premiums, and replacement cost. A tax valuation does not. Confusing the two is one of the most common and costly mistakes we see.”
If you received a formal valuation of your art, wine, or jewellery tomorrow, would your current insurance cover match the number?
4. CGT assets and exemptions – collectables treatment. Australian Taxation Office. ato.gov.au (current) – confirms collectables acquired for more than $500 are subject to CGT
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