Cash-Out Refinancing in Australia: When It Makes Sense

Cash-Out Refinancing in Australia: When It Makes Sense

Refinancing

Your home has equity. The bank will let you borrow against it. Should you?

What Cash-Out Refinancing Means

You refinance your existing mortgage for more than what you owe, with the difference paid to you as cash. Common uses: renovations, debt consolidation, investment property deposits, education.

Example:

  • Current loan: $400,000
  • Home value: $700,000
  • Refinance to: $560,000 (80% LVR)
  • Cash to you: $160,000

When Cash-Out Wins

  • Renovating that adds more value than it costs (kitchen, second bathroom, structural upgrades)
  • Investment property deposit — debt becomes tax-deductible against rental income
  • Consolidating high-interest debt (credit cards at 22% to mortgage at 6%)
  • Liquidity gap during specific life event (divorce settlement, business funding)

When It’s Dangerous

  • Holiday or lifestyle spending financed at 6% over 30 years = absurd total cost
  • Investment in volatile assets (crypto, individual stocks) using leveraged home equity
  • Job uncertainty — turning your home into the bank’s collateral when income is shaky
  • Marginal serviceability — the larger loan tips you into stress

The Tax Reality

Cash-out funds are tax-deductible only if used for income-producing purposes.

  • Using for personal renovation? No deduction.
  • Using as deposit for rental property? Interest on that portion is deductible.

Tracking is critical. Mixed-purpose loans need a tax advisor to apportion.

How to Do It Right

  1. Apply with current lender first — they often match competitor rates to retain you
  2. Compare with 2–3 alternative lenders through a broker
  3. Use a clear funding purpose in the application (most banks ask)
  4. Document everything — receipts, invoices, asset purchases — for future tax questions
  5. Consider a separate split loan so the cash-out portion is tracked discretely

What Lenders Watch For

  • LVR after cash-out: Most stop at 80% to avoid LMI
  • Serviceability on the new larger amount with the stress buffer
  • Purpose validity: Some banks won’t lend cash-out for share investments
  • Property valuation: May come in lower than expected, reducing access

The Renovation Math

A $100,000 kitchen renovation might add $130,000 to the property value — net gain $30k minus 30 years of interest on $100k. Often a wash or worse, depending on rates and hold period. Run actual numbers.

💡 Pro Tip: Cash-out refinancing makes the math look easy because monthly payments stay similar. Total cost over 30 years is the number that matters.

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