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SMSF loans when your fund already has debt

Refinance, restructure, or purchase—within LRBA rules

  • Clarity on what’s possible
  • Support with lender policy and paperwork
  • Structured to suit your fund strategy
Sydney broker support for complex SMSF lending

SMSF lending options with existing fund debt

$300K to $10M

If your SMSF already has a property loan (or other fund commitments) and you’re trying to work out the next step, you’re not alone. We speak with trustees regularly who want to refinance, improve cash flow, or buy another property—but are unsure what lenders will accept when there’s existing debt in the fund.
We help you assess your current LRBA, lender conditions, repayments, and fund position, then map out realistic options. That may include refinancing to a new lender, restructuring to improve serviceability, or confirming whether an additional purchase is feasible and compliant.
As a Sydney-based finance broker, Settled With Joe can compare options across lenders that offer SMSF lending. Policies vary significantly, especially around existing debt, rental income treatment, liquidity requirements, and documentation. Our job is to guide you through the details and support you through application to settlement with clear, practical steps.

Specialist SMSF loan support

We manage the SMSF lending process on your behalf—option comparison, policy checks, application preparation, document coordination, and settlement support. Where your fund already has debt, we focus on how lenders view risk, liquidity, income, and the structure of the existing LRBA.
We assist with:

  • SMSF property purchase loans
  • SMSF refinancing with existing LRBA
  • Debt restructuring for cash flow
  • LRBA compliance support (broker side)
  • Residential SMSF lending
  • Commercial SMSF lending
  • Rates review and lender switching
  • Documentation and settlement coordination

We aim to structure lending in a way that fits your SMSF strategy, cash flow, and lender policy. You stay focused on trustee decisions—we handle the finance process and keep you informed at each step.

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

Residential SMSF Property Loans

Residential SMSF loans are commonly used for long-term retirement investing, but lender rules can tighten when the fund already has debt. We help you understand how lenders assess your SMSF’s ability to manage repayments alongside existing obligations, including minimum liquidity requirements and the treatment of rental income.
If you’re purchasing, we’ll check the property type against lender policy (some restrict high-density, studios, serviced apartments, or specialised titles) and confirm the LRBA structure is suitable. If you already hold a residential property in the fund, we can review whether refinancing is realistic based on current valuation, loan-to-value limits, and the fund’s financials.
We’ll also guide you on the documentation lenders usually require—such as the SMSF trust deed, bare trust/custodian deed, corporate trustee details, financials, and evidence of contributions—so you can avoid preventable delays.

Commercial SMSF Property Loans

Commercial SMSF lending can be a fit where the fund invests in business premises, but it’s typically more document-heavy and policy-driven—especially if your SMSF already has a loan in place. Lenders often apply different servicing methods, stronger liquidity expectations, and tighter property acceptability rules.
We help you compare commercial SMSF loan options with a focus on: lease quality (including related-party leases where applicable), vacancy risk, property location and zoning, valuation approach, and how existing fund debt impacts overall risk. If the SMSF is buying premises used by a related business, we’ll help ensure the finance structure aligns with lender requirements and that the application narrative is clear and consistent.
Where refinancing is the goal, we can review your current facility terms and explore whether improved rates, different repayment types, or a better policy fit is achievable with another lender.

Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangements (LRBA)

SMSF property loans generally need to be set up under a Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangement (LRBA), which restricts the lender’s recourse to the specific property held in the bare trust. When your fund already has debt, getting the structure right becomes even more important because lenders will scrutinise the existing arrangements and documents.
We assist on the broker side by checking how lenders want the SMSF trustee, custodian/bare trustee, and security documents set up, and by coordinating what’s needed for the application and settlement. We also help you identify common issues that can derail approvals—such as mismatched trustee names, incorrect trust documents, or inconsistencies between contracts and lender requirements.
We’re not a law firm and don’t provide legal advice, but we work alongside your accountant and solicitor to help ensure the lending process matches lender policy and the LRBA framework so you can move forward with fewer surprises.

SMSF Refinancing & Restructuring

Refinancing an SMSF loan can be about rate reduction, changing features, or improving cash flow. If the SMSF already has debt, the key question is whether a new lender will accept the fund’s current position—loan balance, valuation, rental income, liquidity, contributions history, and the existing LRBA structure.
We help you run a practical refinance review: what your current lender is charging, what competing lenders may offer, what costs are involved (valuation, legal, discharge/establishment fees), and whether the numbers stack up over time. We also assess whether the refinance is a straight switch or if the lender will require updates to documents or a different settlement process.
If refinancing isn’t viable right now, we’ll explain why in plain terms and outline what may need to change (for example, liquidity buffers or documentation) before it becomes realistic.

Business Premises Through SMSF

Buying business premises through an SMSF can be attractive for some trustees, but lenders treat it as a higher-scrutiny scenario—especially where the fund already has an existing loan. The finance must fit lender rules, the LRBA structure, and the SMSF’s ability to maintain repayments while meeting ongoing fund obligations.
We help you understand lender expectations around: lease terms, tenant strength, property type and marketability, valuation methodology, and the SMSF’s liquidity. Where the tenant is related (for example, your trading business), lenders may require additional evidence around lease documentation and serviceability.
We’ll coordinate the lending process with your professional advisers so the application is consistent, complete, and aligned to policy. The goal is a loan structure that supports your long-term strategy without creating avoidable compliance or approval issues.

Our lending partners

Established SMSF lending network

We work with banks and specialist lenders that offer SMSF lending, including options for purchases and refinancing where the fund already has debt. This access helps us compare policies and identify which lenders are more likely to support your scenario.
Our lender relationships can provide policy insight and support informed negotiations on structure and pricing where available.
We prioritise transparency and suitability in every recommendation, so you understand the trade-offs before you proceed.

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

Yes—an SMSF can refinance an existing LRBA in many situations, provided the refinance keeps the borrowing “on the same single acquirable asset” (or the same collection of identical assets, where applicable) and stays within superannuation rules. In practical terms, refinancing is often used to reduce the interest rate, change from variable to fixed, improve cash flow, or move to a lender with more suitable SMSF policies. We’ll assess the current loan, the bare trust structure, the property title/holding trustee details, and whether the proposed new loan terms align with the original LRBA and your fund’s investment strategy.
Existing fund debt doesn’t automatically rule you out, but it does change how lenders assess the deal. Most lenders focus on serviceability from SMSF income (rent, concessional/non-concessional contributions where relevant), liquidity buffers, the property type, LVR, and the fund’s financial position. They’ll also look closely at the current loan conduct (repayment history), remaining term, and whether refinancing improves the fund’s ability to meet repayments. If your SMSF feels “tight” month-to-month, we’ll look at options such as extending the loan term (where policy allows), reducing the rate, or restructuring to create a safer cash-flow buffer—without stepping outside SMSF compliance.
For an SMSF refinance with existing debt, lenders typically request more than a standard home loan. Common requirements include: the SMSF trust deed and any deeds of variation; the SMSF corporate trustee/company documents (or individual trustee details); bare trust/custodian trust deed; property contract and/or current title details; current loan statements and payout figure; lease agreement and rental statement (if tenanted); SMSF financial statements (often last 2 years) and most recent member statements; bank statements showing contributions/rent in and repayments out; and the SMSF investment strategy and minutes referencing the property and borrowing. Your accountant or administrator usually has most of this—our role is to map what you have to what the lender specifically needs, so you’re not chasing paperwork twice.
Sometimes, but it’s heavily policy- and compliance-driven. Many SMSF lenders restrict cash-out, and superannuation rules require that the borrowing remains for the same asset under the LRBA structure. Even where equity is available, the purpose must align with the SMSF’s sole purpose test and investment strategy. If you’re aiming to fund improvements, pay expenses, or strengthen liquidity, we’ll check whether the lender permits it, whether the works are “repairs vs improvements” (a key SMSF distinction), and whether the transaction can be documented cleanly. If equity release isn’t available, we’ll discuss other ways to improve the fund’s position—like rate reduction, term optimisation, or contribution planning with your adviser (where appropriate).
That’s one of the most important checks when there is existing fund debt. Common issues that can delay or derail a refinance include: bare trustee naming inconsistencies, the wrong entity on the title, missing or outdated deeds, loan documentation that doesn’t align with the LRBA, or an investment strategy/minutes that don’t clearly support the borrowing. We’ll run a structured pre-check on the trustee structure (corporate trustee vs individual trustees), holding trust, lender mortgage requirements, and property category (residential vs commercial, specialised security, etc.). If something needs fixing, we’ll tell you early so you can engage your SMSF accountant/solicitor before an application is lodged.
Lenders generally assess SMSF serviceability using the fund’s income and expenses rather than your personal PAYG income (though personal guarantees are common). Key inputs include net rental income (often shaded), super contributions, ongoing SMSF expenses, interest rate buffers, and liquidity (cash reserves). Where there is existing debt, lenders pay extra attention to: repayment history, whether the refinance meaningfully improves cash flow, and whether the fund can sustain vacancies or rate rises. If your fund’s cash buffer is thin, we’ll be upfront about it and explore realistic pathways—such as reducing LVR, adding contributions (if appropriate), or selecting a lender whose SMSF assessment fits your circumstances.
Yes—this is a common reason trustees refinance when they already have fund debt. The goal is to move to a more suitable SMSF lender policy, achieve a sharper rate, or secure a product with clearer features (fixed/variable options, offset availability where offered, acceptable lease structures for commercial property, etc.). We’ll compare the true cost of switching (discharge fees, legal documentation, valuation, settlement costs) against the savings and risk reduction. If staying put is objectively better, we’ll tell you—our recommendation is based on what improves your SMSF’s position, not just “switching for the sake of it.”
Yes. We speak with trustees every week who already have an LRBA in place and want a better outcome—usually refinancing an existing SMSF loan, managing higher repayments, fixing structural issues that block approval, or finding a lender that understands SMSF lending. We’ve helped many SMSF clients navigate existing fund debt scenarios by starting with a clear compliance-and-policy check, then matching the application to a lender whose requirements suit the property, LVR and fund cash flow. If you want, start with a quick phone call or submit your details through our free quote form—either way, we’ll tell you what’s viable and what the next steps look like.
Yes—let’s start with a phone call first (or you can submit your details via our free quote form) so we can confirm your structure, existing LRBA details, and what you’re trying to achieve. If an in-person meeting makes sense after that, we can arrange it. Settled With Joe is based in Sydney and works with SMSF trustees nationwide, including Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Canberra, Hobart, Darwin, Gold Coast, Newcastle, Central Coast, Wollongong, Geelong, Sunshine Coast, Townsville, Cairns, Toowoomba, Ballarat, Bendigo, Albury–Wodonga, Launceston, and major regional centres across Australia.
The most common issues are avoidable once they’re identified early. Typical deal-breakers include: LVR outside lender policy for SMSF borrowing; property types that lenders won’t accept (specialised or high-risk securities); inconsistent trustee/holding trustee names across the deed, title and loan documents; insufficient SMSF liquidity or weak serviceability after buffers; missing financials or incomplete SMSF records; and documentation that doesn’t clearly support the LRBA arrangement. Our process is built to surface these risks before you spend time and money on a refinance that’s unlikely to be approved.