An SMSF property loan Melbourne is a Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangement (LRBA) that allows your Self-Managed Super Fund to borrow money to purchase an investment property. The lender’s recourse is limited to the purchased property only –
Over 600,000 Australians now manage their own superannuation through Self-Managed Super Funds, holding more than $900 billion in total assets according to the ATO. Property investment through an SMSF has grown significantly – particularly among Melbourne business owners and high-income professionals seeking to build retirement assets in a concessional tax environment.
An SMSF property loan Melbourne sits at the exact intersection of superannuation law, ATO compliance and mortgage structuring. As a CPA Australia member and licensed mortgage broker under ACL 475676, Preeti Sidhu at Clarity Financial Solutions addresses both sides of this equation in one conversation – ensuring your SMSF property strategy is both correctly financed and fully compliant from day one.
other SMSF assets are protected. The property is held in a separate bare trust until the loan is fully repaid. SMSF lending is governed by strict ATO rules and requires specialist lenders, a CPA-qualified adviser and careful compliance structuring from the outset.
SMSF property loans in Australia must be structured as a Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangement (LRBA) to comply with the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act (SIS Act). The LRBA structure has three essential components:
Once the loan is fully repaid, legal title transfers from the bare trust to the SMSF directly. This transfer must be managed in compliance with ATO requirements to preserve the fund’s tax treatment.
The ATO enforces strict compliance requirements for SMSF property lending. Key rules that apply in 2026:
Breaching these rules can result in the ATO declaring your fund non-complying, which means losing the concessional 15% tax rate on earnings. The consequences can be severe – the fund’s entire taxable income becomes assessable at the highest marginal rate. Getting compliance right from setup is not optional.
Before applying for an SMSF property loan, your fund must meet several practical requirements that most specialist lenders assess as minimum entry criteria:
| MINIMUM SMSF BALANCE: | $200,000–$300,000 (lender-dependent) |
| DEPOSIT REQUIRED: | 30%–35% of purchase price (higher than standard investment loans) |
| LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO: | Maximum 65%–70% for residential | Maximum 70%–80% for commercial |
| TRUST DEED: | Must explicitly permit borrowing under an LRBA |
| INVESTMENT STRATEGY: | Must be documented and updated to include direct property and borrowing |
| LENDERS: | Specialist and non-bank lenders only – most major banks exited in 2015–2019 |
| INTEREST RATES: | Typically 0.5%–1.2% higher than standard investment loans |
| LEGAL/FINANCIAL ADVICE: | Mandatory for all trustees before proceeding |
SMSFs can purchase both residential and commercial investment property, but the rules and lending landscape differ significantly:
Property held inside a super fund benefits from Australia’s concessional superannuation tax rates – a significant advantage for long-term wealth building:
These tax advantages make SMSF property investment most compelling for high-income Melbourne professionals and business owners who would otherwise pay top marginal rates on investment income. As a CPA-qualified broker, Preeti Sidhu models the after-tax outcome of an SMSF property purchase alongside the lending structure – ensuring the strategy delivers its intended tax benefit, not just a loan approval.
No. Residential property purchased by an SMSF cannot be used by any member or related party—before or after retirement while the loan is active. This is known as the sole purpose test, meaning the property must exist purely to provide retirement benefits. Choosing the Right Property is critical to maintaining compliance, as any breach of this rule risks the fund being declared non-complying.
Specialist lenders typically require a minimum SMSF balance of $200,000-$300,000, ensuring sufficient liquidity for loan repayments, maintenance, insurance and compliance costs. A fund with a balance below this threshold carries significant liquidity risk.
Not using a single LRBA. The borrowing rules require a single acquirable asset - you cannot borrow to buy land and then fund construction under the same arrangement. This makes financing off-the-plan purchases or knockdown-rebuilds through an SMSF structurally complex and generally inadvisable without specialist advice.
Most major banks (CBA, Westpac, NAB, ANZ) exited the SMSF lending market between 2015 and 2019. SMSF property loans are now primarily offered through specialist and non-bank lenders. A specialist SMSF mortgage broker is essential to navigate this smaller, more complex lending market.
SMSF lending requires a bare trust structure, specialist lenders, higher deposit requirements (30–35%), stricter compliance documentation and ATO-regulated loan terms. It is significantly more complex and typically carries higher interest rates than standard investment loans due to the structural complexity and regulatory requirements.
Preeti Sidhu — CPA Australia Member | Licensed Mortgage Broker | ACL 475676 | MFAA Member
📍 303 Collins St, Melbourne VIC 3000 | 📞 0429 533 236 | 🌐 clarityfs.com.au
🔗 clarityfs.com.au/investment-property-mortgage-broker-melbourne/
This article was prepared by Preeti Sidhu, Mortgage Broker at Clarity Financial Solutions (ACL 475676). Information is general in nature and does not constitute financial advice. Always consult a licensed mortgage broker before making refinancing decisions.
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