Business Owners & Company Directors
How lenders assess business income, ownership, and risk
INTRO
This page explains how lenders assess business owners and company directors across personal, investment, and business-related lending.
Business income is assessed differently from salary income.
Structure, stability, and risk all play a role in outcomes.
This page explains the assessment logic lenders use — and where to go next depending on what you are trying to do.
This is reference material only.
It does not provide personal advice or recommendations.
WHO THIS PAGE IS FOR
This page is commonly used by:
- Business owners
- Company directors
- Partners in trading entities
- Self-employed professionals
- Borrowers with company or trust structures
HOW LENDERS ASSESS BUSINESS OWNERS (OVERVIEW)
Lenders typically assess:
Income source
- Salary paid by the business
- Distributions
- Retained earnings
- Director drawings
Different lenders rely on different components.
Business performance
- Profit history
- Consistency and trends
- Industry risk
- Cash flow sustainability
Recent growth does not always translate into immediate borrowing capacity.
Ownership and structure
- Company vs trust vs partnership
- Guarantees and cross-liabilities
- Related entities
Structure affects both risk and future flexibility.
Personal impact
- Business debts affecting personal borrowing
- Guarantees limiting capacity
- Interaction between business and personal lending
COMMON QUESTIONS BUSINESS OWNERS ASK
Business owners commonly ask:
- How long do I need to be in business before borrowing?
- Which income figure do banks actually use?
- Why does my accountant’s number differ from the bank’s?
- Can my business help or hurt my home borrowing?
- Should I separate business and personal lending?
- How does today’s structure affect future growth?
WHAT ARE YOU TRYING TO DO RIGHT NOW?
Most business owners use one of the pages below depending on their current focus:
- Buying or refinancing a home → Home Loans — Start Here
- Investing in property → Property Investors — Start Here
- Expanding or restructuring → Reviewing an existing setup
- Financing assets or equipment → Equipment Finance
OPTIONAL: EXPLORING STRUCTURE
Some business owners explore structure to understand:
- how borrowing today affects growth later
- whether structure limits future borrowing
- how sequencing impacts outcomes
Explore possible scenarios
This is not a loan application. No documents required.
FINAL NOTE
Model Mortgages is a reference library.
It explains how lending decisions are made so outcomes can be understood in context.
Execution and personal 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.
