What Does the ATO Actually Require for a Property Valuation?
Most property owners only think about the ATO’s valuation rules when something goes wrong. An audit letter arrives, a return gets flagged, or an accountant asks for documentation that does not exist. At that point, fixing the problem costs far more than getting it right would have.
This guide explains what the ATO actually requires, in plain language, before that problem arises. If you own an investment property, run an SMSF, are managing a deceased estate, or are working through a CGT event, this is worth five minutes of your time.
| ATO Property Valuation Requirements: The Core Rule |
| For any transaction where property value affects your tax position, the ATO requires genuine market value determined by an independent, qualified valuer. The tax office does not accept agent appraisals, online estimates, or self assessed values as evidence. |
What Counts as Market Value
The ATO defines market value as the price a property would sell for between a willing but not anxious buyer and seller, dealing at arm’s length, with both parties having full knowledge of the relevant facts. In practice, that means real transaction evidence at the relevant date, not an asking price, a lending estimate, or an algorithm’s output. This standard runs through the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 and the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993.
When a Valuation Is Required
Six situations come up most often. A CGT event such as a sale, transfer, gift, or change of use, where the ATO needs market value to calculate any gain or loss. Converting your home to a rental, which triggers a CGT event at the date you start renting it out. Acquiring or disposing of property through an SMSF, which must be valued annually and at the time of any transaction. A deceased estate, where the cost base for the beneficiary is market value at the date of death. Related party transfers, between family members or into an SMSF, which must be at arm’s length value. And non arm’s length income for SMSFs, where property held below market value can trigger a 45 per cent tax on the income.
| Practical Note for Investors |
| If you converted your home to a rental years ago without a valuation at that date, it is not too late. A retrospective valuation can establish historical market value using archival sales data, and this is standard, ATO accepted practice. |
What the ATO Will and Will Not Accept
Not every valuation is treated equally. This is where many property owners get caught out.
| Valuation Type | ATO Accepted? | Why or Why Not |
| Certified Practising Valuer report | Yes | Independent, qualified, methodology based. Meets the ATO standard. |
| Real estate agent appraisal | No | Commercial opinion. Agent has an interest in the listing. |
| Online estimate | No | Algorithm based, no inspection, no legal standing. |
| Bank valuation | No, for tax | Prepared for lending risk only. Restricted use. |
| Self assessed value | No | ATO rejects self assessment for any formal tax purpose. |
CGT and SMSF: Where the Stakes Are Highest
For CGT, the most common triggers are a main residence becoming a rental, a property gifted to a family member, an inherited property, or a pre CGT asset acquired before 20 September 1985. Each of these needs market value at a specific date, not the current date.
SMSF rules are stricter again, because the consequences are more severe. A fund that fails to value property correctly, especially in a related party transaction, risks being declared non complying, which makes the entire fund balance taxable at 45 per cent. Most SMSF auditors accept a full certified valuation every three years for residential property, with simpler updates in between, but always confirm this with your auditor.
What Happens Without a Compliant Valuation
The ATO has strong data matching capability across land registries and financial institutions, and missing valuation evidence is increasingly easy for them to identify. If you are audited without a compliant report, the ATO can substitute its own value estimate, issue an amended assessment with interest, and apply penalties of 25 to 75 per cent of the shortfall where the failure looks careless or reckless.
| The Cost of Getting It Wrong vs Getting It Right |
| A certified property valuation typically costs between $350 and $900. An ATO audit resulting in an amended assessment and penalties can cost $20,000 to $100,000 or more. This is not a close call. |
Conclusion
The ATO’s valuation requirements are consistent and well documented, but they catch people out every year, almost always because a valuation was never commissioned rather than because one was disputed. Whether you are dealing with CGT, an SMSF property, or a deceased estate, the standard is the same: an independent, qualified valuer, at the correct date. Getting that right from the start is far cheaper than fixing it later.
| Get an ATO Compliant Valuation Anywhere in Australia Local Property Valuers prepares API accredited, ATO compliant reports for CGT, SMSF, and deceased estate purposes across NSW, QLD, VIC, WA, SA, and nationwide. Free quote confirmed within one business day. |
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the ATO accept a real estate agent’s appraisal?
No. Agent appraisals are commercial opinions, not independent evidence. Only a report from a Certified Practising Valuer meets the ATO’s market value standard.
How far back can a retrospective valuation go?
There is no statutory limit. Valuers regularly produce ATO accepted retrospective reports going back 20 to 30 years or more, using historical sales data.
What if the ATO disagrees with my certified valuation?
A properly prepared CPV report with clear comparable sales evidence is difficult to successfully challenge. The worst outcomes almost always involve taxpayers who had no formal valuation at all.
Is a bank valuation accepted by the ATO?
No, not for tax purposes. It is prepared for lending risk and carries a restricted use clause. A separate, purpose specific valuation is required for CGT or SMSF matters.

