A rejected refinance is frustrating because it usually happens after you already expected the switch to be simple.
But refinancing is not automatic. The new lender still assesses income, debts, expenses, property value, credit conduct, loan purpose, and whether the new structure makes sense.
If the refinance was rejected, the next step is diagnosis.
Common reasons a refinance is rejected
A lender may reject a refinance because:
- the loan does not service under current assessment rules
- the property valuation came in lower than expected
- the requested loan-to-value ratio is too high
- cash-out purpose is vague or not accepted
- bank statements show missed payments, overdrafts, or gambling
- income has changed since the original loan was approved
- credit card limits or personal debts are too high
- self-employed financials are outdated or inconsistent
- the borrower wants interest-only and the lender will not accept it
- the property type or location does not fit policy
The original lender may have approved you years ago, but the new lender assesses the file today.
Valuation can change the result
Many refinance plans rely on a property value estimate.
If the lender’s valuation is lower than expected, the refinance may fail because:
- the LVR becomes too high
- cash-out equity is no longer available
- LMI may apply
- the loan amount needs to be reduced
- the borrower needs to keep the current lender
This is especially relevant for cash-out refinance, debt consolidation, or investment property refinance.
Serviceability can be weaker now
Your income might be the same, but the lender’s calculator may be tougher.
Refinance borrowing capacity can be affected by:
- higher interest rates
- more dependants
- new car loans or personal loans
- higher living expenses
- credit card limits
- reduced overtime, bonus, or business income
- a change from PAYG to self-employed
That is why a refinance can be declined even if you have never missed a repayment.
Check whether the refinance was worth doing
MoneySmart says refinancing may save money, but borrowers should consider fees and costs before switching.
Before trying another lender, check:
- current loan balance
- current rate and repayment
- new rate and repayment
- discharge and application costs
- package fees
- valuation and settlement costs
- break-even period
- features gained or lost
- whether the loan term resets
If the benefit is small, repricing with the current lender may be a better first move.
When another lender may still work
Another lender may work if:
- the decline was lender-specific
- another lender accepts the income differently
- another lender gives a stronger valuation
- the cash-out purpose can be documented better
- the loan amount is adjusted
- debts are reduced first
- the application is restructured
The next lender should be chosen based on the reason for the rejection, not just the lowest advertised rate.
What to prepare before the next attempt
Prepare:
- current loan statement
- repayment history
- income documents
- credit card and loan statements
- bank statements
- property details
- estimated property value
- reason for refinance
- cash-out purpose and evidence, if relevant
If the refinance is for savings, run the refinance break-even guide. If it is for equity, read the cash-out refinance guide.
Next step
If your refinance was rejected, send your current loan balance, current rate, property value estimate, decline reason, and goal through the refinance enquiry path.
NewGen Finance Brokers can check whether another lender is realistic, whether the structure needs changing, or whether waiting is the stronger move.