A bank rejection lands hard — especially when you've spent months saving, found the right property, and planned your life around it. But here's the reality: banks decline roughly 1 in 3 home loan applications, and most of those applicants go on to get approved through a specialist lender or broker who knows exactly how to present their case.
1 in 3
Applications declined by banks
30+
Alternative lenders available
72 hrs
To understand your options
Free
Broker review of your case
Why Do Banks Decline Home Loan Applications?
Understanding exactly why you were rejected is the most important step — because the reason determines your path forward. Banks typically decline for one of these reasons:
- Serviceability failure — Your income, after the bank applies its stress-test rate (currently 3% above the actual rate), doesn't meet their minimum monthly repayment threshold. This is the most common reason.
- Insufficient deposit or LVR — Your loan-to-value ratio exceeds the bank's limit for your situation. Many banks won't go above 90% LVR without LMI, and some professions or income types trigger lower limits.
- Credit issues — Defaults, missed payments, court judgements, or a high number of credit enquiries can trigger an automatic decline.
- Employment type — Casual, contract, self-employed, and new ABN holders face stricter scrutiny. Some banks simply won't lend to certain employment types regardless of income level.
- Property issues — Small apartments (under 40–50m²), high-density postcodes, rural properties, or properties with structural issues can be rejected as security.
- Incomplete application — Missing documents, unexplained transactions, or inconsistencies between stated income and supporting evidence.
Stop Before You Apply Anywhere Else
Every home loan application leaves a credit enquiry on your file — visible to all future lenders for 5 years. Multiple enquiries in a short window signals desperation and reduces your chances with the next lender. Before applying anywhere else, speak to a broker who can identify the right lender before submitting, protecting your credit file in the process.
What to Do In the First 72 Hours After a Rejection
The worst response to a bank knockback is panic-applying to multiple lenders. The best response is methodical. Here's what to do immediately:
- Get the specific reason in writing. Banks are obligated to tell you why they declined your application. Request a written explanation and keep it. This tells your broker exactly what they're working with.
- Pull your credit report. Get a free copy from Equifax, Experian, or illion. Look for any defaults, missed payments, or enquiries you don't recognise — identity theft is more common than people think.
- Don't apply anywhere else yet. This is critical. Use our borrowing power calculator to get a sense of your capacity, but don't submit formal applications until you've spoken to a specialist.
- Contact a specialist broker. Not a bank. Not a comparison website. A broker who regularly works with declined applicants and knows which lenders assess applications differently. A free broker review takes 20 minutes and can change your outcome entirely.
How a Specialist Broker Can Reverse a Knockback
Different lenders use entirely different serviceability calculators, income assessment policies, and credit risk models. A rate that sends you over the edge at one bank may be comfortably within limits at another — using identical income and expenses.
Here's what a specialist broker does that banks don't:
- Diagnoses the real issue — not just the surface reason, but why that reason exists and whether it's fixable immediately or needs time.
- Pre-qualifies you across 30+ lenders — without submitting applications or triggering credit enquiries, identifying which lenders are likely to approve before a single form is submitted.
- Presents your application strategically — income structure, add-backs for self-employed, explanatory letters for credit events, and lender-specific documentation requirements are all tailored to maximise your chances.
- Negotiates on your behalf — some lenders have credit teams that can override automated declines when a broker presents compelling context.
Lenders Who Say Yes When Big Banks Say No
Australia's lending market extends well beyond the big four — and for applicants with complex situations, non-bank lenders are often the smarter choice. Here's how the landscape breaks down:
- Non-bank lenders (Pepper Money, Liberty Financial, La Trobe, Resimac): These lenders assess applications manually, not through rigid automated models. They're designed for self-employed borrowers, those with minor credit issues, casual workers, and other non-standard situations. Rates are slightly higher but often only marginally so — and they can be refinanced once your credit situation improves.
- Second-tier banks (Bankwest, ING, Suncorp, ME Bank): Often have more flexible servicing calculators and credit policies than the big four. Particularly useful for serviceability knockbacks where the income is genuine but doesn't fit CBA or Westpac's model.
- Mutual lenders and credit unions: Tend to take a more community-oriented approach to credit decisions. Good for borrowers with long banking histories and local connections.
Free Knockback Review
Find out why you were declined — and what comes next
Our brokers review declined applications every day. In a free 20-minute call, we'll tell you exactly what happened, whether it's fixable now, and which lenders are most likely to approve your situation.
Get My Free Knockback Review →No credit check. No new applications. Just clear answers.
How Different Issues Affect Your Options
| Rejection Reason | Typical Fix | Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Serviceability | Switch to a lender with a more favourable servicing calculator | 2–4 weeks |
| LVR too high | Non-bank lender, LMI waiver, or guarantor | 2–6 weeks |
| Credit default | Specialist lender + time to demonstrate improved behaviour | 3–12 months |
| Self-employed income | Specialist self-employed or low doc lender | 2–4 weeks |
| Property type | Find a lender with broader acceptable security | 1–3 weeks |
| Too many enquiries | Wait 3–6 months, then apply through broker to one lender only | 3–6 months |
Get the full recovery plan — specific to your situation
See the step-by-step process for getting approved after a knockback, the biggest mistakes to avoid after rejection, and exactly which lenders suit which situations.
Or
Step-by-Step: Getting Approved After a Bank Knockback
- Get the written reason for decline — then read it carefully. Lenders are required to provide a reason. "Doesn't meet credit policy" is not a sufficient answer — push for specifics. Serviceability, credit file, income assessment, and property type all have different solutions.
- Freeze all new credit applications. No credit cards, no personal loans, no car finance, no new applications of any kind while you're preparing your home loan strategy. Every enquiry counts.
- Pull your credit report and review it line by line. Get free reports from Equifax, Experian, and illion (they each hold slightly different data). Look for defaults you weren't aware of, enquiries you didn't authorise, or accounts listed as overdue that you've since paid.
- Dispute any errors on your credit file immediately. Credit reporting errors are more common than most people realise. A default listed in error, or a paid default still showing as unpaid, can be disputed and corrected within 30 days. This alone can turn a decline into an approval.
- Engage a specialist broker — not a bank, not a comparison site. A broker who regularly works with knocked-back applications knows which lenders have the most flexible policies for your specific issue. They pre-qualify you before submitting anything formal, protecting your credit file.
- Let your broker prepare a complete, single submission. Once the right lender is identified, your broker should prepare a full application with all documents, explanatory letters where needed, and a presentation that addresses any potential lender concerns proactively. One strong submission beats three weak ones.
Common Mistakes Borrowers Make After a Rejection
- Applying to multiple lenders immediately. The instinct to try everywhere is understandable but damaging. Each application adds an enquiry. Five enquiries in 30 days is a red flag for every lender who sees your file.
- Not asking for the specific reason. "We couldn't approve your application" is useless information. You need to know exactly what failed — serviceability? A default from 4 years ago? An undisclosed credit card? Each has a different fix.
- Going back to the same bank with minor changes. If a lender has declined you, their credit policy rarely changes quickly. A different lender is almost always more productive than re-applying to the same one.
- Ignoring credit file errors. Approximately 1 in 5 credit files contain an error. A paid-off debt still listed as overdue, or a default that belongs to a different person with a similar name, can cause a decline that has nothing to do with your actual financial behaviour.
- Waiting too long without a plan. A knockback with no action plan means the property you wanted sells to someone else, your savings lose value to inflation, and your confidence erodes. Get clear on your path forward within 72 hours — even if that path involves a 6-month wait, knowing the plan is better than uncertainty.
Frequently Asked Questions
The rejection itself doesn't appear on your credit file — but the credit enquiry from the application does. Every lender enquiry is recorded and visible for 5 years. Multiple enquiries in a short period signal risk. This is why it's critical to stop applying to lenders directly after a rejection and work with a broker who can identify the right lender before submitting.
You can, but you shouldn't — not without understanding and addressing the root issue first. Applying to multiple lenders back-to-back clusters credit enquiries on your file and signals increasing risk to every lender who sees it. Wait until you have a clear strategy, then apply to a single, carefully chosen lender through a broker.
Non-bank lenders like Pepper Money, Liberty Financial, La Trobe Financial, and Resimac regularly approve applications the big four decline. They assess applications holistically rather than through rigid scoring models, making them more flexible for self-employed borrowers, those with minor credit issues, or non-standard income structures.
It depends on the reason. A serviceability issue handled by switching to a different lender's calculator can result in approval within 2–4 weeks. A credit default may require 3–12 months of demonstrated improvement before a strong application can be submitted. Your broker will give you a realistic timeframe once they've reviewed your specific situation.
Yes — this is exactly where specialist brokers earn their value. A good broker diagnoses the exact reason for the rejection, identifies which lenders are most likely to view your application favourably, and prepares a submission that presents your situation in the best light. Many of our clients at Mortgagefy were previously rejected by their bank before we helped them get approved.
Free 20-Minute Review
Don't let one bank's "no" be the end of your story
Tell us what happened. We'll tell you exactly where you stand, what needs to change, and which lenders are most likely to say yes.
Related Articles
Ready to talk to a broker?
Get a straight answer about your borrowing power — no credit check, no obligation. Our Sydney mortgage broker team is available Mon–Sat 9am–7pm.
