Most home buyers approach a mortgage the same way they approach other financial products — they go to their existing bank, find out what they are offered, and accept or decline. This approach has a significant limitation: you are seeing one lender’s view of your borrowing capacity, structured around that lender’s specific policies, risk appetite, and credit assessment framework.
A mortgage broker sees all of them. That difference, in practice, can translate to tens of thousands of dollars in borrowing capacity, meaningfully different repayment structures, or access to products your bank simply does not offer.
Serviceability Buffers and Why They Vary
Every Australian lender is required to assess your ability to service a loan at a rate higher than the loan’s actual rate — this is the serviceability buffer, currently mandated by APRA at 3 percentage points above the loan’s rate. What many buyers do not know is that individual lenders apply additional buffers and policy overlays on top of this floor. A lender with a conservative lending policy might assess your repayments at a notional rate of 9.5 per cent. Another lender might apply the minimum and assess at 8.8 per cent. That difference, across a 30-year loan, produces meaningfully different borrowing capacity outcomes.
Policy Overlays: The Invisible Rules That Shape Approvals
Beyond the headline rate and buffer, lenders apply policy overlays that govern which borrowers they will and will not lend to. These cover employment type, income verification requirements for the self-employed, treatment of rental income, assessment of HECS debt, acceptable deposit sources, and dozens of other variables.
A buyer who works casually, earns rental income from an investment property, and carries HECS debt may find that their borrowing capacity varies by hundreds of thousands of dollars depending on which lender’s policy framework is applied. These overlays are not published in any consumer-facing document — they are known to brokers through direct relationships with lenders and daily practice.
Credit Appetite Differences Between Lenders
Lenders have different risk appetites at any given point in the credit cycle. A lender that is growing its mortgage book will assess applicants more generously than one managing its loan-to-deposit ratio conservatively. These shifts in appetite are not announced — they show up in approval rates, turnaround times, and credit assessors’ willingness to exercise discretion.
Brokers writing regular volume across multiple lenders have a feel for where the credit appetite is currently open and where it has tightened. That intelligence has direct practical value when deciding where to lodge an application — because a declined application shows up on your credit file, and multiple declines can damage your borrowing profile.
Why the Rate Headline Is Only Part of the Picture
Borrowers comparing mortgages typically compare advertised rates. Rate matters — but the assessment rate used to calculate your borrowing capacity, the treatment of your specific income profile, and the lender’s flexibility on loan structure can collectively matter more. A vendor advocate helping a buyer position an offer at a realistic price point needs confidence in the buyer’s pre-approval — and that confidence is better grounded in a broker-assessed application across multiple lenders than in a single bank’s preliminary figure.
For a clear explanation of how mortgage brokers operate compared to direct lenders, Investopedia’s overview of mortgage broker roles and responsibilities is a reliable starting point before your first broker conversation.

