Partnership Income Home Loans

Partnership income is the share of profit received by partners in a law firm, accounting practice or other professional partnership. Lenders assess it differently to PAYG income, which can affect how much you can borrow.

Quick Answer

Partnership income can be used for home loan assessment, but lenders typically require two years of tax returns, partnership financials and evidence of the income being ongoing. Assessment varies by lender.

How Lenders Assess Partnership Income

Two years of personal tax returns

Partnership financial statements — profit and loss, balance sheet

Evidence of partnership agreement or position

Tax agent letter confirming partnership position and income

Consistency of distributions — irregular income may be treated conservatively

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is partnership income treated like self-employed income?

It can be. Some lenders assess partners similarly to self-employed borrowers, requiring full financials.

Most lenders prefer two years. Some may consider shorter history with strong supporting documentation.

Personal vs Business Income For Practice Owners

PAYG income comes from an employer relationship and is straightforward to document. Partnership income comes from a share of business profits — which varies year to year, is reported differently in tax returns and requires business financials to verify.

What Lenders May Look At

2 years of personal tax returns showing partnership distributions

Partnership financial statements — profit and loss, balance sheet

Partnership agreement confirming share percentage

Consistency of distributions across assessment years

Tax agent letter confirming partnership position and income

Whether the partnership has other debts that affect serviceability

What Lenders Average Across Years

Most lenders average the last two years of partnership income. If year one was $200,000 and year two was $300,000, many lenders will use $250,000. Some lenders use the lower year conservatively. This means a lawyer with growing partnership income may be assessed at below-current levels.

Large Law Firm Partners vs Small Firm Partners

Partners at large firms with stable distributions and consistent profit shares tend to get more favourable treatment from lenders. Partners at smaller or newer firms may face more scrutiny — lenders need to assess whether the firm is profitable and the distributions are sustainable.

Common Mistakes Partners Make

Not having partnership financials ready before applying

Assuming PAYG income and partnership drawings are treated the same way

Not confirming the partnership structure with a tax agent letter

Applying to a lender without experience assessing partnership structures

Is partnership income treated like self-employed income?

Often yes. Lenders typically require business financials similar to self-employed documentation.

Lenders average — a single high year may not fully count if the other year was lower.

Review Partnership Income Options

We identify lenders suited to partnership income structures.

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

Review Partnership Income Options

We identify lenders suited to partnership income structures.

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

Related Reading

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