Commercial property finance in Sydney can move quickly once a contract, refinance deadline, or expansion opportunity appears. The risk is that the borrower starts with a lender quote before the file is ready for credit.
This checklist is designed for business owners, investors, and professionals who want the commercial property finance conversation to be sharper before an application is lodged.
The direct answer
Before applying for commercial property finance, confirm the transaction purpose, borrower entity, deposit or equity position, property type, valuation assumptions, lease or income evidence, repayment buffer, and document pack. A broker can help compare lender-fit pathways, but approval and pricing remain subject to lender assessment.
1. Confirm the transaction type
Commercial property finance is not one scenario. Lenders may assess a purchase, refinance, cash-out, equity release, owner-occupied premises loan, investment property loan, or mixed business/property facility differently.
Write down:
- Are you buying, refinancing, or releasing equity?
- Is the property owner-occupied or leased to another business?
- Is the borrower an individual, company, trust, or SMSF?
- Is there a business loan need connected to the property?
- What deadline matters: contract, refinance expiry, settlement, fit-out, or tenant change?
The transaction type drives the lender list.
2. Stress-test the valuation
Commercial valuations can change the whole structure. A lower valuation may reduce maximum lending, change pricing, require more equity, or trigger different conditions.
Before credit submission, discuss:
- expected valuation range
- comparable sales or lease evidence
- property condition
- zoning/use
- vacancy risk
- specialist-use issues
- fallback plan if LVR is lower than expected
The best file is not the most optimistic file. It is the file with a realistic Plan B.
3. Build the lease and income story
If rental income supports the facility, lenders will usually care about lease quality.
Prepare:
- lease agreement
- rent schedule
- tenant profile
- vacancy history if available
- outgoings and who pays them
- arrears or incentives
- expiry and option dates
For owner-occupied premises, the business income story becomes central. You may need financials, BAS, bank statements, tax records, or management accounts.
4. Check borrower and guarantor structure
Commercial lending often involves companies, trusts, directors, guarantors, related entities, or SMSFs. The lender needs to know who is borrowing, who owns the property, who operates the business, and who supports the debt.
Map this before applying:
- borrower entity
- property owner
- operating entity
- directors/trustees
- guarantors
- related-party lease arrangements
- existing secured debts
A messy structure does not always kill a deal, but unexplained complexity slows it down.
5. Separate rate from structure
A lower rate is not always the better commercial facility. Compare:
- loan term
- amortisation period
- interest-only availability
- covenants
- annual review requirements
- valuation/legal costs
- redraw/offset/flexibility if available
- refinance restrictions
- ability to fund future growth
For commercial borrowers, flexibility can be as important as the margin.
6. Prepare the documents before credit asks
A clean commercial property file usually includes:
- financial statements and tax returns
- BAS or management accounts where relevant
- lease documents or rental evidence
- contract of sale or refinance statements
- asset/liability position
- entity/trust/company documents
- existing loan statements
- property details and insurance where relevant
- explanation of loan purpose and exit/refinance strategy if needed
If the documents are not ready, the application may still be possible, but the timeline becomes less predictable.
7. Decide what outcome matters most
Before comparing lenders, rank your priorities:
- settlement certainty
- lowest all-in cost
- cash-flow flexibility
- maximum leverage
- speed
- ability to expand/refinance later
Not every lender can optimise all six. A good broker conversation makes the trade-off visible.
Where NewGen fits
NewGen helps borrowers turn the commercial property scenario into a lender-ready conversation: what the loan is for, what evidence supports it, where policy friction may appear, and which pathways are worth comparing.
If the scenario includes operating cash flow, review business loans as well as commercial loans. If the property sits inside an SMSF, see SMSF loans and involve your professional advisers early.
FAQs
How early should I speak with a broker?
Before signing finance-dependent deadlines where possible. Early review gives time to check valuation risk, documents, and lender appetite.
Is commercial property finance harder than a home loan?
It is usually more document-heavy and scenario-specific. Property type, lease profile, business financials, valuation and structure all matter.
Can NewGen help with commercial refinance?
Yes, NewGen can review refinance pathways, but suitability depends on the current loan, property value, business income, security and lender policy.
Does a broker guarantee commercial approval?
No. A broker can help package and compare options, but approval is always subject to lender assessment.
Next step
Bring the property details, borrower structure, rent or business income evidence, current debts, and your deadline. Start an enquiry or book a call before credit pressure builds.