Professions / Lawyers

Home Loans for Lawyers &
Legal Professionals

Legal professionals represent one of the most stable borrower profiles in Australia. The right lender will recognise that.

Why This Matters for Lawyers & Legal Professionals

LMI Waivers Available

Lawyers and legal professionals are eligible for LMI waivers under professional lending policies — removing a significant upfront cost.

High Borrowing Capacity

Solicitors, barristers, and partners with complex income structures including salaries, trust distributions, and partnership drawings are assessed correctly — not through a generic calculator.

Self-Employed Legal Professionals Accommodated

For barristers, sole practitioners, and partners in law firms operating through entities — we work with lenders who understand legal practice income and structure applications accordingly.

Competitive Professional Rates

Legal professionals qualify for specialist rate packages below standard variable rates — accessible through our lender panel, not through a bank branch.

Fast Pre-Approval for Time-Sensitive Transactions

Property transactions move quickly. We provide rapid pre-approvals so you can move with confidence at auction or in competitive markets.

case study

Partner Income Structured Correctly. Capacity Restored.

Senior Solicitor, Sydney CBD firm

A senior associate transitioning to salaried partnership sought to upgrade their primary residence. Their income included base salary plus a profit share component paid quarterly.

The Challenge

Two major banks declined to include the profit share component, citing variability — reducing assessed income by over $120,000 per annum and making the target purchase unachievable.

What We Did

The OUTCOMES

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Are barristers eligible for professional lending policies?

Yes. Most specialist professional lending policies include barristers — though the income assessment approach differs from salaried solicitors. Brief income, trust distributions, and chambers fees are all assessable with the right lender.

Partnership income including salary, profit share, and drawings can all be included by specialist lenders. The key is correct documentation and presentation, which is what we arrange on your behalf.

No. LMI waiver eligibility for lawyers is based on professional registration and income level — not practice area or seniority. A junior solicitor and a senior partner both qualify, subject to loan size and lender policy.

Yes. We provide conditional pre-approvals that allow you to bid with confidence. For legal professionals with clean credit and documented income, pre-approval turnaround is typically 24-48 hours.

This is a common scenario in the legal profession. We work with lenders who will consider recently self-employed applicants — in some cases from day one of operation — provided appropriate income evidence is available.

    Key Takeaway

    Some lawyers may qualify for LMI waivers with professional admission. Bonus income and partnership income can be included by lenders that assess it correctly — but consistency, history and documentation all matter.

    This Page Is For

    Employed lawyers checking LMI waiver eligibility before buying

    Partners with complex income needing lenders experienced with law firm structures

    Lawyers with bonus income wanting to know how much lenders will use

    Barristers checking eligibility under professional lending policies

    Lawyers refinancing after a promotion or income increase

    What To Prepare Before Speaking With Us

    Law Society or Bar admission certificate

    Two most recent payslips

    Two years of personal tax returns

    Employer letter confirming bonus history and structure

    Partnership financials and deed if applicable

    Quick Answer

    Some lawyers may qualify for LMI waivers with certain lenders. Bonus and partnership income can be included in serviceability by lenders that assess it properly — but consistency, history and documentation matter significantly.

    Bonus & Commission Income

    Bonus income is a significant part of many lawyers’ total compensation. Whether lenders include bonus income — and how much — depends on consistency, history and lender policy. Some lenders shade bonus income; others include it fully with sufficient documentation.

    2 years payslip and tax return history preferre

    Consistency of bonus payments across years

    Some lenders shade to 80%; others include 100%

    Employer letter confirming bonus structure

    Contractual vs discretionary bonus treatment differs

    Partnership Income

    Lawyers in partnerships receive income through profit share distributions. This is assessed similarly to self-employed income by many lenders — requiring financial statements and tax returns from the partnership.

    2 years personal tax returns

    Partnership agreement or deed

    Consistent distribution history preferred

    Partnership financial statements

    Evidence of ongoing partnership position

    Lawyer LMI Waivers

    Some lenders offer LMI waiver policies for lawyers admitted in Australian jurisdictions. Eligibility depends on admission, income, LVR and the specific lender’s professional lending policy.

    Professional admission — Law Society or Bar required

    LVR threshold varies — commonly 85–90%

    Employment type — employed vs partner vs barrister

    Income minimum may apply

    Loan size caps may apply

    Refinancing For Lawyers

    Lawyers who become partners or receive significant income increases often find that a new lender assesses their position more favourably than the lender they applied with early in their career.

    Partnership income reassessment

    Equity access for investment or renovation

    Bonus history builds over time

    Lender policy comparison for complex income

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can bonus income be used for a home loan?

    Some lenders may include bonus income if it is consistent and well-documented. Policy and shading varies by lender.

    Some lenders offer LMI waivers for admitted lawyers. Eligibility depends on admission, income, LVR and lender policy.

    Partnership income is typically assessed using 2 years of tax returns and partnership financials, similar to self-employed income.

    Some lenders may consider barristers under legal professional policies. Criteria vary.

    Not necessarily. Current income, existing equity and lender choice all affect outcomes at any career stage.

    Book A Lawyer Lending Review

    We assess bonus income, partnership income, LMI waiver eligibility and lender options for lawyers.

    General information only. Lending eligibility, LMI waiver policies, rates and approval outcomes vary by lender and are subject to assessment.

    Common Mistakes Lawyers Make Before Applying

    Applying before having two full years of bonus history documented

    Not having professional admission certificate ready at application

    Assuming employed and partner lawyers are assessed identically

    Applying to a lender without a legal professional LMI waiver policy

    Not checking how the new lender will assess any change in income type

    Documents Lawyers Should Prepare

    Law Society or Bar admission certificate

    Most recent payslips

    Tax returns (2 years)

    Employer letter confirming bonus history

    Partnership financials if applicable

    Existing loan and liability statements

    Credit card limit details

    Identification documents