⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

SMSF mixed-use property loan broker

Finance options for SMSF properties with both residential and commercial use

  • LRBA guidance from start to settlement
  • Lender comparison for mixed-use policy fit
  • Clear steps, documents, and timeframes
Sydney broker support for SMSF property loans

SMSF mixed-use property loan support

$300K to $10M

If you’re looking at a mixed-use property inside your SMSF (for example, shop + residence, or office + caretaker unit), you’re likely balancing two things at once: what your SMSF can do under super rules, and what lenders will accept under their mixed-use policies. We help you navigate both.
We speak with clients regularly who feel stuck between “it should be possible” and “the bank keeps saying no.” As a broker, we work through the details that matter—property use split, lease structure, LRBA requirements, deposit and liquidity expectations, and the documentation lenders typically request.
We compare options across a range of lenders and explain trade-offs in plain language. Our goal is to help you understand what’s realistic, prepare an application that matches lender policy, and coordinate the process through approval and settlement with your solicitor, accountant, and other parties.

Expert SMSF property loan solutions

We manage the SMSF property loan process on your behalf. This includes lender shortlisting, policy checks, application preparation, documentation coordination, and settlement support. Our role is to help you explore suitable finance options while working to reduce avoidable delays—especially common with mixed-use properties.
We assist with:

  • Mixed-use SMSF property purchases
  • Commercial SMSF property loans
  • Residential SMSF property loans (where available)
  • Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangements (LRBAs)
  • Refinancing existing SMSF property loans
  • Loan restructuring and lender policy changes
  • SMSF business premises funding
  • Pre-assessment of property acceptability

We focus on a structure that fits lender policy and your SMSF’s ongoing obligations. While you coordinate your investment strategy with your adviser, we handle the finance process and keep the moving parts aligned.

Residential SMSF Property Loans
Commercial SMSF Property Loans
Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangements (LRBAs)
SMSF Refinancing & Restructuring
Business Premises Through SMSF

Residential SMSF Property Loans

SMSF residential lending is more limited than standard home lending, and lender policies can be strict. If your SMSF is buying a residential property (or the residential portion of a mixed-use property), the lender will usually assess the fund’s contributions, liquidity buffers, and ability to service repayments under conservative assumptions.
We help you understand what lenders typically look for: deposit expectations, minimum fund balance requirements, cash reserves after settlement, and acceptable tenancy arrangements. We also help align documents across the SMSF trustee, the bare trustee (custodian) setup, and the purchase contract so the application doesn’t stall later.
If your scenario involves mixed-use, we’ll also discuss how lenders may classify the security, whether the residential component is acceptable, and what evidence (plans, zoning, lease details) is usually required. Where residential SMSF lending isn’t feasible, we’ll explain why and outline other lender pathways that may be more realistic.

Commercial SMSF Property Loans

Commercial SMSF property loans can be a better fit for many lenders, particularly when the property is clearly commercial in nature and supported by a solid lease. If the property will be leased to an unrelated tenant, lenders typically want standard commercial lease terms and evidence the rent is at market rates.
If your business will lease the premises from your SMSF, the structure needs to be set up correctly (including documentation that supports market-value rent and arm’s-length terms). While we don’t provide legal or tax advice, we work closely with your accountant/solicitor to ensure the finance process aligns with what they’re implementing.
We help you compare lender policies on: acceptable property types, tenancy and lease requirements, valuation approach, deposit and cash buffer expectations, and how income is assessed within the fund. For mixed-use properties, we focus on how the commercial vs residential split impacts lender appetite and loan terms.

Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangements (LRBAs)

Most SMSF property lending is done through a Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangement (LRBA). In plain terms, the lender’s security is generally limited to the property held in a bare trust, and the SMSF makes loan repayments while beneficially owning the asset.
Because the LRBA structure is technical, small errors can cause delays—especially around entity names, trustee capacity, and how the contract is executed. We help coordinate the finance side so the lender requirements, your solicitor’s documentation, and the SMSF administration are consistent.
For mixed-use properties, LRBA lenders may request additional detail: floor area allocation, intended use, tenancy arrangements for each component, and evidence the property is a single acquirable asset (a key LRBA concept that your legal adviser will guide). We’ll flag the common lender documents early—trust deeds, bare trust deed, trustee company details, minutes/resolutions, financials, contributions history—so you can plan timing and avoid last-minute surprises.

SMSF Refinancing & Restructuring

If you already have an SMSF property loan, refinancing can be worth exploring when your rate is uncompetitive, your lender has tightened policy, or you want more suitable loan features. With mixed-use properties, refinancing can be more nuanced because lender appetites change over time and some lenders reassess mixed-use exposure more conservatively than they did originally.
We help you review your current loan and compare it to alternatives across the market. This includes checking whether the property is still acceptable under today’s policy, what valuation outcome may be required, and whether your fund’s current financial position supports a refinance.
Restructuring may also involve loan term adjustments, repayment type changes (where available), or consolidating facility arrangements—always within what lenders will allow for SMSF lending. We’ll outline likely costs (valuation, legal, discharge, application fees) and help coordinate the process so your SMSF’s repayments and compliance obligations remain on track during the transition.

Business Premises Through SMSF

Buying your business premises through your SMSF can be a practical strategy for some business owners, but it needs to be set up and managed correctly. If the property is used by your business, lenders usually want clear evidence of an arm’s-length lease and market rent, and they’ll assess whether the SMSF has the capacity to meet repayments alongside other fund obligations.
We assist by focusing on lender policy and finance readiness: property type and location acceptability, lease expectations, serviceability inputs, deposit requirements, and cash buffers. If the premises is mixed-use (for example, a ground-floor shop with a residence upstairs), we’ll look closely at how the use split impacts lender classification, valuation, and required documentation.
While your accountant/solicitor will advise on superannuation rules, we keep the finance process aligned with their structure so the application can move efficiently from assessment to settlement—without avoidable rework.

Our lending partners

Established SMSF property lending network

We work with major banks, specialist property lenders, and private funders that consider SMSF property scenarios, including mixed-use properties (subject to lender policy). This access allows us to support both standard and more complex SMSF lending requirements.
Our lender relationships provide policy insight and can support negotiation discussions around structure, documentation, and approval conditions.
We prioritise transparency and suitability in every recommendation, so you understand what’s possible, what’s not, and why.

Expert brokers for construction finance

Every construction project is different. Your land position, builder, income structure, credit profile, and experience all affect lender decisions. That’s why we focus on personalised advice, not generic quotes.

We provide clear guidance, realistic timeframes, and proactive support from application to completion.

Frequently Asked Questions

An SMSF mixed‑use property loan is typically structured as an SMSF limited recourse borrowing arrangement (LRBA) used to buy a property with both residential and commercial components (for example, a shop with a residence above, or a warehouse with a small caretaker dwelling). Mixed‑use matters because lenders, valuers and your SMSF auditor will look closely at how the property is used, how income is generated, and whether the arrangement stays within superannuation rules. We help you map the property’s use, tenancy setup, lease terms and lending policy before you commit, so you don’t find out late that the deal can’t be funded in an SMSF.
Possibly, but it has to be handled carefully. If a related party (including your business) is involved, the SMSF must avoid prohibited arrangements and satisfy the sole purpose test. Where it’s permitted (commonly for business real property used wholly and exclusively in a business), the tenancy and rent generally need to be on arm’s‑length terms and supported by market evidence. Mixed‑use adds complexity because residential use can change what’s allowed and what lenders will accept. We’ll talk you through the practical lending and compliance checkpoints so your accountant, adviser and auditor can be comfortable with the setup.
Lenders usually assess mixed‑use based on the property’s predominant use and the proportion of income or floor area attributable to residential vs commercial. Some lenders treat a property as commercial the moment there’s a meaningful commercial component; others require the commercial portion to be under a certain threshold. Valuation methodology, zoning, separate access, separate meters, and whether there are multiple tenancies can all affect credit assessment. Because policies vary, we’ll match your property’s attributes to lender appetite early (before you sign a contract), and flag any features that commonly cause declines or reduced borrowing capacity.
Deposit requirements depend on the lender’s SMSF policy and how they classify the property (commercial vs mixed vs specialised). In practice, SMSF borrowing for any non‑standard asset class often requires a larger deposit than a plain residential investment, and mixed‑use can sit in that higher‑scrutiny category. We won’t quote a number without verifying your property type, location, lease profile, SMSF financials and the lender’s current policy. Instead, we’ll give you a realistic deposit range once we’ve reviewed the contract, zoning and a valuer‑style snapshot of the asset.
Most SMSF mixed‑use LRBA applications require: your SMSF trust deed (and any updates), corporate trustee documents (ASIC extracts), the SMSF’s latest financials and tax return (or evidence of fund establishment and member balances if new), bank statements, member ID, contract of sale, and evidence supporting rental income (lease agreements, rental appraisals, or draft leases). Lenders also commonly require a bare trust (custodian trust) deed and trustee minutes/resolutions. Mixed‑use properties can trigger extra valuation questions about tenancy, zoning, and income split. We’ll provide a checklist tailored to your fund’s structure and the specific property so you’re not chasing paperwork twice.
With an LRBA, the property is typically held in a separate holding trust (often called a bare trust/custodian trust) with a custodian trustee, while your SMSF receives the beneficial interest and makes loan repayments. The “limited recourse” part means the lender’s security is generally limited to that asset (subject to the loan terms). Mixed‑use doesn’t change the core LRBA structure, but it can change how the lender views risk, valuation, and enforceability of leases. We coordinate with your solicitor and accountant so the entity names, trustee details and documents align with lender requirements and SMSF compliance expectations.
The most common issues we see are: the property being classified as “specialised” or outside policy (certain zoning or layouts), unclear split between residential/commercial use, problematic tenancy arrangements (especially related‑party occupancy without clear arm’s‑length terms), valuation coming in below purchase price, lease terms that don’t support servicing, SMSF documentation not matching (trustee names, deed issues, missing minutes), and insufficient liquidity in the fund after settlement (lenders often want to see buffers). Our job is to identify these risks up front and structure the application so the lender can say “yes” quickly, with fewer conditions.
Yes — and it’s smart to be cautious. An SMSF mixed‑use purchase can raise questions around the sole purpose test, in‑house assets, related‑party dealings and whether any use creates a present‑day benefit for members. We’re finance brokers, so we don’t give legal or tax advice, but we work closely with your accountant/financial adviser/solicitor to ensure the lending structure and the property’s intended use are consistent with lender expectations and the compliance framework your advisers set. If something looks high‑risk (for example, unclear private use or a related‑party tenancy that isn’t properly documented), we’ll flag it early so you can get the right advice before you commit.
Yes. We speak with Australians each week who are trying to fund mixed‑use purchases inside an SMSF — often business owners looking at a shop/office with a residential component, or investors considering properties that don’t fit “standard” SMSF lending boxes. We’ve helped many clients through the practical hurdles: lender policy differences, valuation and lease questions, LRBA setup timing, and presenting the application so it’s assessable. If you want a straight answer on whether your specific property is financeable in an SMSF, we’ll review the basics first and tell you what’s realistic before you spend money on contracts and reports.
Yes — but the fastest first step is a phone chat or submitting your details via our free quote form so we can confirm the property type, SMSF structure and lender options before anyone books time. Our team operates around Australia and works with clients in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Canberra, Hobart and Darwin, as well as regional centres nationwide. If an in‑person meeting makes sense after the initial review, we’ll organise it in the most practical way for you.