There's no legal cap on the number of investment properties you can own in Australia. But there are very real practical limits based on your borrowing capacity, lender policies, and how your portfolio is structured.
The Borrowing Capacity Constraint
Every new investment property adds to your total debt and your monthly commitments. Lenders assess serviceability across your entire portfolio — meaning each new purchase affects how much you can borrow for the next one.
As a rough guide, most salaried employees earning $150,000–$200,000 can typically service 3–5 investment properties before running into serviceability walls. Higher incomes, strong rental yields, and lower LVRs extend this further.
How Lenders Count Rental Income
Rental income helps your serviceability — but lenders don't count it at face value. Most apply a 70–80% shading factor to account for vacancies, maintenance, and property management costs.
So if a property earns $40,000 per year in rent, a lender might count only $28,000–$32,000 toward your income for serviceability purposes.
Lender Concentration Limits
Many major banks and lenders have internal caps on investment property exposure:
- Some cap total investment lending at $1–2 million per borrower
- Others limit the number of investment loans (e.g. 4–6 maximum)
- Some restrict investment lending to owner-occupied locations
These aren't advertised — a broker who works with investors knows which lenders have which restrictions.
The Multi-Lender Strategy
Experienced property investors often spread their portfolio across multiple lenders to avoid hitting one lender's concentration limits. This also reduces risk — if one lender changes policy, it doesn't affect your whole portfolio.
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How Portfolio Structure Affects Borrowing Capacity
The way you structure your loans — fixed vs variable, interest-only vs P&I, LVR per property — has a significant impact on how many properties you can ultimately buy.
For example:
- Interest-only loans have lower monthly repayments, which improves serviceability calculations for additional purchases
- Lower LVR properties reduce LMI costs and often attract better rates
- Positively geared properties contribute positive income that supports further borrowing
Using Trusts or Companies
Some investors hold properties in trusts or companies. This can provide asset protection and tax planning benefits, but it doesn't remove the borrowing capacity constraint — lenders still assess the overall debt against your income.
SMSF Property
Buying property through a self-managed super fund (SMSF) is a separate loan facility that doesn't affect your personal borrowing capacity in the same way. Some investors use this to add properties beyond their personal serviceability limit.
What Slows Portfolio Growth?
- High LVR on early properties (leaves little equity to draw from)
- Negatively geared portfolio reducing assessable income
- Personal debts (car loans, HECS, credit cards) reducing serviceability
- All lending with one lender hitting their cap
Assess your portfolio capacity today
We'll model your current position and show you how many more properties your income can support.