SMSF Property — Start Here
A reference page for trustees and investors considering property through superannuation
Welcome — and How to Use This Page
Property purchased through a Self-Managed Super Fund (SMSF) is assessed under a separate and more restrictive lending framework.
While SMSF lending uses familiar terms — deposits, serviceability, security — the system applies additional structural constraints that fundamentally change:
• how risk is contained
• how flexibility is preserved
• how growth behaves over time
This page explains how the lending system treats SMSF property, why outcomes differ from personal lending, and where investors most commonly misunderstand the trade-offs.
General information only. This page explains lending assessment principles, not personal advice.
Most people:
- research structure first
- clarify compliance requirements early
- involve advisers before signing contracts
That order matters.
How This Fits Into Model Mortgages
Model Mortgages is a reference library.
It explains how lending assessment works — not whether SMSF property is appropriate.
People considering SMSF property typically use:
• Assessment explanations to understand structural constraints
• Fact sheets for lending mechanics
• Early broker involvement due to specialist rules
• Financial and legal advisers for strategy and compliance
This page focuses on how the lending system behaves.
Primary Assessment Pressure Points
For SMSF property purchases, the dominant system components are:
Entity, Debt Structuring & Tax Context
Equity & Deposit Framework
These override most other considerations.
Security risk is assessed conservatively, and serviceability is applied within the fund — not personally.
Non-Recourse Lending Architecture
SMSF loans operate under limited recourse borrowing arrangements (LRBAs).
This means:
• the lender’s security is limited to the purchased asset only
• no additional property can be used as collateral
• personal guarantees do not expand security access
• lender recovery is legally contained
Because risk cannot be diversified across other assets, SMSF lending is treated as structurally higher risk.
This architectural feature explains most SMSF lending constraints.
Higher Deposit and Liquidity Requirements
Due to the contained security position, SMSF loans typically require:
• larger deposits (commonly 20–30%)
• meaningful liquidity remaining inside the fund
• evidence of sustainable contribution capacity
Liquidity inside the SMSF is as important as the purchase price.
A property-rich but cash-poor fund will often fail assessment.
Lenders assess whether the fund can survive:
• vacancies
• rate increases
• unexpected repairs
• contribution interruptions
Buffer management is central.
Trapped Equity and Growth Constraints
A defining characteristic of SMSF property is trapped equity.
Unlike personal lending:
• equity growth cannot be easily accessed via refinancing
• cash cannot be extracted for other investments
• portfolio expansion relies on new contributions or asset sales
From a system perspective, SMSF property operates as a closed loop.
Growth improves the balance sheet — but does not restore borrowing capacity in the same way as personal lending.
This is a structural design feature, not a policy anomaly.
Use Restrictions and Asset Limitations
Superannuation law imposes strict usage rules.
For residential property:
• it cannot be lived in by members or relatives
• it cannot be rented to related parties
For commercial property:
• related-party leasing may be permitted under business real property rules
• market-rate conditions must be satisfied
These restrictions affect:
• property selection
• income assumptions
• exit strategy
• long-term flexibility
Incorrect asset selection can permanently limit future options.
Timing and Establishment Risk
SMSF purchases introduce sequencing risk that does not exist in personal purchases.
The lending system requires:
• the SMSF to be correctly established
• the bare trust to exist before contract exchange
• trustee and custodian roles to be properly documented
Errors at this stage can result in:
• double stamp duty
• failed settlements
• compliance breaches that cannot be reversed
Unlike personal purchases, these errors are not easily corrected after signing a contract.
Preparation order matters significantly.
Why SMSF Outcomes Often Surprise Investors
SMSF borrowers are frequently surprised because:
• strong personal income does not compensate for fund liquidity limits
• equity growth does not increase borrowing capacity
• refinancing flexibility is permanently restricted
• exit pathways are slower and more complex
These are structural features of the SMSF lending model — not discretionary lender behaviour.
How This Scenario Interacts With the System
For SMSF property:
• entity structure defines what is legally possible
• deposit and liquidity manage lender containment risk
• security acceptability is interpreted conservatively
• flexibility is intentionally limited
SMSF lending prioritises containment of risk over expansion of opportunity.
Common SMSF Scenarios
• Purchasing a commercial premises for a related business
• Acquiring a long-term residential investment
• Comparing SMSF ownership versus personal ownership
• Managing cash flow inside the fund
• Refinancing an existing SMSF loan
Each interacts differently with liquidity, compliance, and lender appetite.
Core SMSF Lending Topics
If you prefer to understand mechanics first:
• SMSF lending basics
• Limited recourse borrowing arrangements
• Deposit and liquidity buffers
• Commercial versus residential treatment
• Exit and refinancing constraints
Prefer to Talk It Through?
SMSF property requires coordination between:
• lending structure
• superannuation compliance
• tax advice
• long-term portfolio planning
Most trustees involve specialist guidance early.
Talk to a broker.
Model Mortgages is a reference library.
Execution and personalised advice are handled separately.
Part of the Model Mortgages Lending Framework
This page forms part of the Model Mortgages structured reference framework explaining how Australian lenders commonly assess income, expenses, assets, security risk and policy sensitivity under Australian credit policy settings.
The information provided is general educational information only. It does not constitute credit advice, financial advice, legal advice or a recommendation of any kind. It has been prepared without considering any individual's objectives, financial situation or needs, and must not be relied upon when making borrowing, investment or financial decisions. Lending policies and outcomes vary between lenders and individual circumstances.
Model Mortgages Pty Ltd operates under Australian Credit Licence 387460.
Continue exploring the framework:
→ Explore the Five Assessment Pillars
→ Browse Canonical Lending Questions
© 2026 Model Mortgages Pty Ltd | Australian Credit Licence 387460 | ABN 82 108 681 063
General educational information only. Personal credit assistance is provided only through separate authorised engagement with Model Mortgages Pty Ltd.
