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How to Get a Low Doc Home Loan With 2 Years BAS Statements

Tax returns not ready — or don't reflect your real income? BAS statements alone can be enough to buy. Here's exactly how it works.

15 April 2026 8 min read Self-Employed
2 yrs
BAS history typically required
80%
Max LVR on most BAS low doc loans
No tax
returns needed at most lenders

Tax returns are the gold standard for lenders — but they're also the document most likely to work against you if you're self-employed. Two years of legitimately lodged BAS statements can bypass the tax-return problem entirely. This guide explains which lenders accept them, how income is calculated, and what else you need to make it work.

Why BAS Statements Work as Income Evidence

BAS (Business Activity Statements) are lodged with the ATO every quarter or month. They show your gross GST-inclusive turnover — not your taxable income after deductions. That's the key difference.

If you've claimed significant deductions (depreciation, vehicle, home office, super), your tax return might show $80,000 income while your BAS shows $280,000 in turnover. A lender working from BAS can see the real activity level and apply their own income formula — which is often significantly more generous than using your declared taxable income.

Important distinction

BAS-based loans don't use your full BAS turnover as income. They apply a "gross income multiplier" — typically 50–60% of BAS turnover — as a proxy for net income. This is still often far higher than what your tax return shows.

Which Lenders Accept 2 Years BAS Only

Not every lender offers BAS-only low doc. The big four banks require full financials. The lenders below have established BAS-assessment programs:

Lender BAS Doc Type Max LVR Income Formula
Pepper Money2 yrs BAS (lodged)80%~50% of avg quarterly GST turnover × 4
Liberty Financial2 yrs BAS + accountant letter80%Accountant-declared income, BAS as support
La Trobe Financial2 yrs BAS (or bank statements)75–80%Case by case — assessor review
Resimac2 yrs BAS + 6 months bank statements80%Bank statement average cross-checked against BAS
Bluestone2 yrs BAS75%Gross BAS income × lender multiplier
Firstmac2 yrs BAS + accountant declaration80%Declared income (BAS as verification)

Rates and policies current as at April 2026. Verify current policy with lender or broker before applying.

How Income Is Calculated From BAS

Lenders don't just take your BAS turnover and use it as income. They apply a formula. The most common approaches:

Method 1: GST Turnover Multiplier

Add up total G1 (total sales) from 8 quarters of BAS. Divide by 8 to get average quarterly turnover. Multiply by 4 for annualised figure. Apply lender's net income factor (typically 40–55%).

Example: $280K annual turnover × 50% = $140K assessed income

Method 2: Accountant Declaration + BAS Verification

Your accountant writes a letter declaring your net income (e.g. $120,000). The BAS is used to verify the turnover level is plausible. The declared figure is used — not a formula.

Better result when accountant-declared income exceeds the multiplier formula

Method 3: Bank Statement Cross-Check

Some lenders require 6–12 months of business bank statements alongside BAS. They compare deposits against BAS to ensure consistency. Income is calculated from bank statement averages.

Useful when BAS understates actual cash received (e.g. timing differences)

The Core Document Requirements

A BAS-based low doc application will typically require:

BAS must be lodged — not just prepared

This is the #1 cause of low doc declines. Your BAS must be formally lodged with the ATO and show lodgement dates. A BAS that was prepared by your accountant but not yet lodged is not accepted. Check your ATO online services to confirm all periods are lodged.

What Happens If BAS Shows Inconsistent Income

Lenders want to see stable or growing turnover across the 8 quarters. There are acceptable patterns and red flag patterns:

BAS Pattern Lender View What It Means for You
Steady or growing turnover YoYStrongFull assessed income used; most lenders accessible
Seasonal variation (e.g. construction peaks)AcceptableAnnual average used; assessor notes industry cycle
Year 2 significantly higher than Year 1AcceptableMost lenders use 2-year average; some allow Year 2 only
Year 2 significantly lower than Year 1ConcernLender may use lower year or average; add explanation letter
One quarter $0 or missingProblemGap in sequence breaks the 8-quarter continuity requirement
New activity level in last 2 quartersAssessed case-by-caseMay need to wait for 2 full years at new activity level

LVR Limits and LMI on BAS Low Doc Loans

BAS low doc loans have stricter LVR limits than standard loans:

LMI on a low doc loan is significantly more expensive than on a standard loan at the same LVR. For a $700,000 purchase at 85% LVR on low doc, LMI could be $25,000–$35,000. Build this into your deposit calculation.

When BAS-Only Isn't Enough (and What to Add)

Some situations call for a hybrid approach — BAS as the primary document, supplemented by supporting evidence:

See your BAS-based borrowing capacity

Tell us your approximate BAS turnover — we'll calculate the assessed income lenders will use and estimate your maximum borrowing capacity.

Free, no obligation. No credit check.

Lender Strategy: Getting the Best BAS Assessment

Once you understand how BAS income is calculated, you can influence the result. Here's what experienced brokers do to maximise assessed income and minimise rate:

Strategy 1: Time Your Application to End of Q2 or Q4

Lenders look back 8 quarters. If your income has been growing, applying at the end of a strong quarter means that strong quarter is included rather than an older weaker one. Timing the application 4–6 weeks after your best recent BAS quarter maximises the trailing average.

Strategy 2: Use Accountant Declaration Where BAS Formula Undersells

If your actual take-home is higher than the BAS multiplier suggests — for example, your expenses are low relative to turnover — get your accountant to declare your income in a signed letter. Liberty, Firstmac, and some Resimac products use declared income with BAS as supporting evidence. This can add $30,000–$50,000 to assessed income.

Strategy 3: Match Lender to Your Deposit Size

At 80% LVR (20% deposit), you access the most competitive BAS low doc products. At 85% LVR you're paying LMI at elevated low doc rates — factor $20,000–$35,000 into your planning. If you're borderline on deposit, consider using a guarantor or a Family Home Guarantee to access a full doc product instead.

Strategy 4: Clean Up Business Account Timing

For lenders that cross-check BAS against bank statements: make sure your business account deposits are clean for the 6 months before application. Large round-number transfers from savings to business (that look like injections rather than income) or erratic deposit patterns raise questions. Run income through the business account cleanly in the months before applying.

Strategy 5: Don't Apply to Big 4 Banks

CBA, ANZ, Westpac, and NAB do not offer BAS-only low doc. Applying to them with BAS-only documentation will result in a decline — and that decline goes on your credit file. Only approach specialist and non-bank lenders for BAS-based applications. A broker channels your application to the right lender the first time.

Transitioning to Full Doc After 2 Years

A low doc loan is not a permanent arrangement. Most borrowers transition to a full doc loan after 1–3 years, typically at refinance, with two goals:

  • Lower rate: Full doc rates are typically 0.5–1.5% lower than low doc rates. On a $700K loan that's $3,500–$10,500 per year in interest savings.
  • Better LVR: With equity growth and a full doc refinance, you may reach 80% LVR and eliminate any ongoing low doc premium.

Plan your low doc loan as a 2–3 year bridge, not a permanent home. Once your tax returns catch up with your real income, refinance immediately.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. BAS statements only contain meaningful income data (the G1 field — total sales) if you're GST-registered. If you're below the $75,000 GST threshold and voluntarily registered, your BAS is still valid. If you've never registered for GST, you don't have BAS statements to use.
Some lenders accept annual IAS (Instalment Activity Statements) or annual BAS if you're eligible for annual lodgement (under $10M turnover businesses that pay PAYG quarterly but lodge BAS annually). However, quarterly BAS is preferred. If you currently lodge annually, speak to your accountant about switching to quarterly — this can strengthen a future loan application significantly.
That's fine — lenders expect a lag. Most BAS are lodged within 28 days of quarter end, so there will naturally be a gap. As long as you have 8 consecutive lodged BAS covering the full 2-year window, a 1–3 month gap at the "present" end is normal and expected.
Typically 0.5–1.5% higher than comparable full doc rates at the same lender. On a $600,000 loan that's $3,000–$9,000 per year. The rate premium reflects the income verification risk the lender takes on. This is why transitioning to full doc within 2–3 years is important — the rate saving on refinance is material.
This is tricky. If you changed from a sole trader ABN to a company and the company is less than 2 years old, most lenders will only count the company's history. Some specialist lenders allow combined ABN history if you can demonstrate it was the same underlying business (with an accountant letter). This is a broker-dependent scenario — there's no standard lender policy.

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