Why the tax return alone doesn't tell the full story
A self employed home loan application built purely on the bottom line of a tax return often understates real earning capacity. Legitimate deductions — depreciation, instant asset write-offs, one-off expenses — reduce taxable income without reducing actual cash in the business. A lender that only reads the final figure misses this entirely.
This is exactly why the same set of financials can produce wildly different borrowing power outcomes depending on which lender assesses them.
The practical impact: Two self employed applicants with identical tax returns can be offered very different loan amounts purely because of how each lender's policy treats add backs and income averaging.
Business structure changes the assessment
How your business is structured materially affects how a lender reads your income.
Cash flow patterns lenders pay attention to
Beyond the headline income figure, lenders look at the shape of your earnings. A business with consistent monthly revenue is viewed differently to one with extreme seasonal spikes, even if the annual total is identical. Industries like construction, hospitality and retail often have recognised seasonal patterns — a lender familiar with your specific industry will read this correctly rather than treating it as a red flag.
What can undermine an otherwise strong application: A declining income trend across the two years on record, overdue BAS lodgements, or outstanding ATO debt without a payment plan in place. These signal risk regardless of how strong the headline income figure looks.
How your personal financial position factors in
Self employed income assessment doesn't happen in isolation. Lenders also weigh your personal credit history, existing debts, living expenses, and how long you've held your current ABN. A clean personal financial position can sometimes offset a shorter trading history, and vice versa.
Why the right lender match matters more than the paperwork
Two lenders can look at the exact same tax returns, BAS statements and bank statements and arrive at different maximum loan amounts — sometimes a significant difference. This isn't inconsistency on the lender's part; it reflects genuinely different underlying policies on how self employed income should be calculated.
Your tax return is the input. The lender's policy decides the output.
Knowing which lenders read self employed financials most favourably for your specific business structure and industry is where a broker adds real, measurable value.
See Self Employed Home Loans →Frequently asked questions
Tax returns are designed to minimise taxable income through legitimate deductions like depreciation, which reduces your reported profit but doesn't reduce your actual cash flow.
No. Policies vary significantly between lenders on which add backs are accepted, how many years are averaged, and whether alternative verification can be used.
Yes. Sole traders, partnerships, companies and trusts are all assessed differently, and company structures can involve retained earnings treated differently between lenders.
Lenders typically look at annual totals rather than month-to-month variation, but a lender familiar with seasonal industries will read fluctuations more accurately.
Yes. Outstanding tax debt is viewed as a credit risk by most lenders. A payment plan in place is generally viewed more favourably than an unmanaged balance.