Professions / Accountants

Home Loans for
Accountants

Accountants understand numbers better than anyone. Here is the one that matters most: what you are actually entitled to borrow.

Why This Matters for Accountants

Professional LMI Waivers

Qualified accountants — CPAs, CAs, and CNZs — are eligible for LMI waivers under specialist professional lending policies, saving tens of thousands of dollars.

Self-Employed Accounting Professionals Accommodated

For principals and partners in accounting practices, we work with lenders who assess business income, trust distributions, and practice drawings correctly.

High Borrowing Capacity Recognised

Accounting professionals often have complex income structures that standard banks underassess. The right lender recognises the full picture.

Rate Discounts via Professional Package

Specialist lenders offer rate discounts to accounting professionals below standard market rates — these are only accessible via broker.

SMSF and Investment Structures Supported

Many accounting professionals hold property through SMSF or trust structures. We arrange SMSF lending and can work within your existing investment framework.

case study

Full Practice Income Recognised. Deal Done.

CPA, Senior Partner at boutique accounting firm

A senior accounting partner with income split between salary and trust distribution sought to purchase an investment property to add to an existing portfolio.

The Challenge

Their bank only recognised the PAYG salary component, ignoring trust distributions entirely. This reduced assessed income by over $90,000 per annum, making the investment purchase unviable.

What We Did

The OUTCOMES

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to be a CPA or CA to qualify for a professional lending policy?

Most lenders recognise CPA Australia, ICAA (Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand), and equivalent designations. Some extend policies to CIMA and IPA members. We confirm your eligibility as part of our initial assessment.

Yes, with the right lender. Trust distributions require documentation — typically two years of tax returns and trust tax statements. We identify lenders whose policy accommodates this income type.

Absolutely. Accountants are often well-placed to make strategic decisions about loan structure — offset accounts, split loans, trust ownership, SMSF borrowing. We work with you to implement the structure that best serves your position.

Existing investment properties are assessed as part of your overall portfolio. Lenders vary significantly in how they treat rental income, negative gearing, and existing debt. We match you to a lender whose policy treats your portfolio profile most favourably.

Yes. We arrange SMSF limited recourse borrowing arrangements for both residential and commercial property. This is a specialist area and we work with lenders who maintain active SMSF lending programs.

Key Takeaway

Accountants with CPA, CA or IPA membership may qualify for LMI waivers with certain lenders. Trust, company and self-employed income all require specific documentation and lender selection.

This Page Is For

PAYG accountants checking LMI waiver eligibility with CPA or CA membership

Self-employed accountants needing lenders experienced with trust or company income

Accountants with trust distributions wanting to understand income assessment

Accountant investors with complex income building a property portfolio

What To Prepare Before Speaking With Us

CPA, CA or IPA membership certificate

Most recent payslips (PAYG) or two years tax returns (self-employed)

Two years of business financial statements

BAS statements for the last four quarters

Trust deed and financials if trust income is to be included

Quick Answer

Accountants may qualify for LMI waivers with CPA, CA or IPA membership. Trust income, company income and self-employed income all require specific documentation and lender selection.

PAYG vs Self-Employed Income

Accountants in PAYG employment are assessed straightforwardly. Accountants who own a practice, operate as contractors or receive income through a trust or company face a more complex assessment.

PAYG: payslips, employment contract, tax returns

Trust income: trust deed + 2 years financials

BAS statements for GST-registered businesses

Self-employed: 2 years tax returns + financials

Company income: company financials + tax returns

Trust & Company Income

Trust distributions and company income require documentation that many lenders handle differently. The right lender can make a major difference to how much income is counted toward borrowing capacity.

2 years of trust financial statements

Consistent distribution history preferred

Accountant add-backs to taxable income

Trust deed may be required

Company financials and tax returns required

Accountant LMI Waivers

Some lenders offer LMI waiver policies for accountants holding CPA, CA or IPA membership. Eligibility depends on membership, income level, LVR and the specific lender policy.

CPA, CA or IPA membership typically required

LVR threshold varies — commonly 85–90%

Self-employed eligibility varies significantly by lender

Income minimum may apply by lender

PAYG employment generally broader eligibility

Investment Lending For Accountants

Accountants with a clear understanding of tax and structure are well-placed to build a property portfolio, but lending assessment still depends on income structure, business debts and lender policy.

Trust or company income adds complexity

Loan purpose clarity is essential for tax

Future borrowing capacity planning is important

Business liabilities affect personal capacity

Interest-only may suit some investment strategies

Frequently Asked Questions

Do accountants need 2 years of tax returns?

Self-employed accountants typically need 2 years. PAYG accountants follow standard income documentation requirements.

Some lenders accept trust distributions as income. 2 years of trust financials and consistent distribution history are typically needed.

Some lenders offer LMI waivers for CPA/CA/IPA members. Eligibility depends on membership, income, LVR and lender policy.

Lenders typically add back depreciation and some non-cash deductions to taxable income. The method varies by lender.

It can. Director fees, company debts and guarantee obligations may all affect how a lender assesses your application.

Book An Accountant Lending Review

We assess PAYG, self-employed, trust and company income alongside LMI waiver eligibility for accountants.

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

Common Mistakes Accountants Make Before Applying

Assuming all lenders recognise IPA membership for LMI waiver purposes

Applying to a lender that does not have experience with trust or company income

Not having two years of business financials ready

Not having CPA/CA/IPA membership certificate available

Not accounting for how business debts reduce personal borrowing capacity

Documents Accountants Should Prepare

CPA/CA/IPA membership certificate

Most recent payslips (PAYG)

2 years personal tax returns

2 years business financial statements

BAS statements (last 4 quarters)

Trust deed if applicable

Company ASIC extract

Business bank statements

Existing loan and liability statements

Identification documents