Fixed vs Variable: What Lenders Assess

Loan type affects assessment, not just pricing

Fixed and variable loans are assessed differently by lenders, even when interest rates appear similar.

Assessment differences relate to repayment assumptions, buffers, and flexibility, not preference.

This page explains how lenders assess loan type, not which option is better.

How variable loans are assessed

Variable loans are typically assessed using:

  • The actual rate plus a buffer, or
  • A minimum assessment rate

They allow for repayment variation and redraw, which lenders factor into risk.

How fixed loans are assessed

Fixed loans may still be assessed using:

  • A buffered rate above the fixed rate
  • A reversion to a higher variable rate

Short fixed periods do not remove long-term risk from the assessment.

Why loan type affects borrowing capacity

Differences arise due to:

  • Buffer application
  • Loan term assumptions
  • Repayment flexibility

In some cases, fixed loans can reduce borrowing capacity.

Fixed rates do not remove rate risk

From an assessment perspective:

  • Fixed rates are temporary
  • Repricing risk remains
  • Buffers still apply

This explains why fixed loans do not bypass serviceability rules.

How loan type fits into the assessment framework

Loan type affects:

  • Capacity
  • Risk modelling
  • Policy interpretation

It interacts with buffers and income recognition.

See: Serviceability Buffers

How to use this information

This explainer helps you understand:

  • Why loan type can affect outcomes
  • Why fixed rates don’t remove constraints
  • Why assessments differ from expectations

It does not recommend a loan type.

Related assessment explainers

  • Serviceability buffers
  • Borrowing capacity: why it caps out

Important information

General information only. No personal advice is provided.

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