• 5 min read

The structure of an investment loan can have a significant impact on borrowing capacity, cash flow, tax position and future property goals. Getting the structure right from the beginning is important.

Quick Answer

Investment loan structure involves decisions about loan type, repayment method, offset account, loan splitting and lender selection. Each decision affects cash flow, tax and future borrowing capacity differently.

Key Structural Decisions

Interest-only vs principal and interest — affects cash flow and tax

Offset account — whether to have it on the owner-occupied or investment loan

Loan splitting — separating purposes for clear record-keeping

Fixed vs variable rate — certainty vs flexibility

Lender choice — policies on rental income, IO periods and portfolio limits

Common Structural Mistakes

Mixing loan purposes — creates cross-collateralisation and record-keeping issues

Using offset against investment loan instead of owner-occupied loan

Not considering future borrowing capacity before committing to structure

Over-committing to fixed rates before reviewing refinance options

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is cross-collateralisation and why avoid it?

Cross-collateralisation links multiple properties as security for one or more loans. It can complicate future refinancing and sale of individual properties.

Generally, offset accounts are more beneficial when applied to owner-occupied loans from a tax perspective. This is worth discussing with your accountant.

Why Investment Loan Structure Matters As Much As Rate

Many investors focus on interest rate when choosing a lender for an investment loan. But structure — how the loan is set up, whether it’s split from the owner-occupied loan, what repayment type is used and which property is used as security — often has as much impact as rate.

Example: Nurse Earning $85,000

Loan purpose clarity — investment vs owner-occupied must be separate

Cross-collateralisation — linking properties reduces flexibility

Interest-only vs principal and interest — cash flow and tax implications

Offset account placement — typically more effective on owner-occupied loan

Lender exposure limits — some lenders cap portfolio lending

Future borrowing capacity — each investment loan affects next purchase

Cross-Collateralisation: A Structural Risk

Cross-collateralisation links multiple properties as security for one or more loans. While this can help with initial approval, it complicates future refinancing, partial sales and restructuring. Most experienced investors and brokers recommend keeping securities separate where possible.

Offset Accounts And Investment Loans

An offset account reduces the interest charged on the loan it’s attached to. From a tax perspective, placing offset against the owner-occupied loan (non-deductible debt) while keeping the investment loan fully drawn may be more advantageous — but this depends on individual tax position. Always consult your accountant.

Common Mistakes In Investment Loan Structure

Cross-collateralising all properties with one lender

Placing offset savings against the investment loan instead of the owner-occupied loan

Not considering how one investment loan affects capacity for the next

Choosing interest-only without understanding the long-term cost and lender policy changes

What is cross-collateralisation?

Linking multiple properties as security for one or more loans. It complicates future refinancing and sales.

Generally more effective on the owner-occupied loan from a tax perspective. Confirm with your accountant.

Review Your Investment Loan Structure

We assess structure, lender options and future capacity.

General information only. Lending eligibility, LMI waiver policies, rates and approval outcomes vary by lender and are subject to assessment.

Review Your Investment Loan Structure

We assess structure, lender options and future capacity.

General information only. Lending outcomes vary by lender and individual circumstances.

Written by: Simpli Finance Lending Team  ·  Reviewed by: [Broker Name], Mortgage Broker  ·  Last updated: June 2026