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Painter Home Loan Australia: Real Lending for Painting Trade

Mortgagefy Broker Team · Published · Last reviewed

Sole trader painter, painting business owner, subcontract to builders — Mortgagefy knows lenders who handle painting trade income properly.

Who this guide is for

Australian painters on ABN — sole traders, small business owners, subcontractors — wanting home loans that recognise painting trade income.

  • Sole trader painters with residential and commercial client bases
  • Subcontracted painters working construction or renovation sites
  • Small painting companies with employees
  • South Asian painters needing cultural language support

The real challenge

Painter ABN income shares challenges with other trades — variable monthly billing, equipment expenses, and tax returns that understate true financial capacity. Major banks default to conservative assessments.

Specialist lenders handle painter trade income with 2+ years of BAS and tax returns.

How Mortgagefy helps

Mortgagefy works with lenders comfortable with painting trade income. We document trading consistency and identify lenders flexible with painter ABN structures.

Free advice.

How it works — 4 simple steps

1

Free painter chat

20-minute call about your structure, BAS, income and target home.

2

Compare lender options

We identify lenders that maximise painter ABN borrowing.

3

Application package

We compile your tax returns, BAS, business statements and supporting documents.

4

Settle your home

Approval through to settlement with ongoing support.

Frequently asked questions

I'm sole trader painter. Will banks lend?

Yes — through specialist lenders with 2 years of BAS and tax returns. Painter ABN income is treated similarly to other trade businesses.

My income varies a lot month to month. Will lenders accept that?

Yes — lenders use annual income from BAS and tax returns, smoothing monthly variation.

I subcontract for builders. How is that assessed?

Subcontract income is treated as trade ABN income. Lenders typically want 12+ months on a contract or 2+ years of subcontracting history.

How much can I borrow as a painter on $90K net?

For a painter on $90K net (after expenses) with 20% deposit, $580K–$720K borrowing is commonly achievable.

How much deposit will I need?

15–20% typical with specialist lenders. 10% with LMI possible for stronger applicants.

Get a painter home loan assessment

Free 20-minute call about your real options as a painter.

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What lenders actually check on a painter application

Painters get hit with the same rules as other ABN trades — but the income pattern is unusually seasonal. Most lenders apply a "lower of the last two years" rule, which works against painters who've had one strong year and one quieter one. The right lender will average across both, or use BAS-based assessment instead of just tax returns.

If you employ subcontractors or carry your own scaffolding and equipment, your taxable income often understates the cash position of the business. Specialist lenders add back depreciation, vehicle costs, equipment finance and home-office deductions — typically lifting assessable income by 15–30% and meaningfully changing your borrowing capacity.

Most painter applications run cleaner with 12 months of BAS plus 6 months of business bank statements rather than the full 2-year tax return path. We model both before lodging so you see which lender gives the strongest position.

Three common painter loan scenarios

Solo painter, 3-year ABN

$95K declared, $40K add-backs. Specialist lender accepts both years, lifts assessable income to $135K. Borrowing capacity moves from ~$580K to ~$820K.

Painter with subcontractors

Company structure, $180K turnover, $75K personal income. We use BAS-based low doc, lifting capacity above the standard tax-return-only path.

15-month ABN painter

Under 2 years' trading. Most banks decline outright. We use a specialist lender accepting 12 months BAS — settlement in 5 weeks.

More questions painters ask

Do my equipment finance repayments count against my borrowing capacity?

Yes — they are existing commitments and reduce serviceability. But specialist lenders sometimes treat business equipment finance separately from personal liabilities, especially when the equipment is essential to revenue.

Can I get approved if my last quarter was a slow one?

Yes. Painters have seasonal cycles — a slow quarter isn't unusual and lenders that understand the trade work with averaged 12-month cash flow rather than penalising one weak month. We pre-discuss the quarter pattern with the lender's BDM before lodging.

Will lenders count cash work?

Only if it appears in your business bank statements or BAS. Cash income that isn't deposited and declared can't be used. We work with what's evidenced and find the lender that maximises capacity from your real banked turnover.

Related guides for self-employed tradies

Mortgagefy

Sydney mortgage broker — Specialist in self-employed and unconventional income loans

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