A business overdraft is one of the most flexible finance products available to Australian small businesses - but many business owners don't fully understand how they work, or assume they won't qualify. This guide covers everything you need to know.

What is a business overdraft?

A business overdraft - also called a business line of credit - is a revolving credit facility attached to your business. Once approved, you receive a credit limit (up to $500,000) that you can draw from at any time, repay, and draw again. Unlike a traditional loan, you don't receive a lump sum - you access funds on demand and only pay interest on what you actually use.

Think of it as a financial buffer that sits behind your business bank account. When you need cash - whether for stock, wages, a supplier invoice, or an unexpected expense - you draw it down. When revenue comes in, you repay it. The limit refreshes automatically as you repay.

Key point: With a business overdraft, you only pay interest on the amount you have drawn down - not on your full approved limit. If your limit is $100,000 but you've only used $20,000, you pay interest on $20,000.

How does a business overdraft actually work?

Here's a simple example. Imagine your business has a $80,000 overdraft facility:

Repayments are typically made weekly and are automatically debited from your nominated business account. Interest is calculated daily on your drawn balance.

Business overdraft at a glance

Maximum limit$500,000
Min. trading6 months
Min. monthly turnover$6,000
Decision time1 hour
Security under $150KNone required
Broker cost$0

What can you use a business overdraft for?

Business overdrafts can be used for almost any legitimate business purpose. The most common uses include:

Who can apply for a business overdraft in Australia?

Eligibility requirements vary by lender, but the general criteria across our panel are:

For facilities above $150,000, property ownership is generally required. Under $150,000, no upfront property security is needed. See our full eligibility criteria for more detail.

Good to know: As a specialist finance broker, OverdraftMe has access to a panel of 50+ lenders with different risk appetites. Even if one lender declines your application, another may approve it. This is one of the key advantages of using a broker.

What does a business overdraft cost?

Costs for a business overdraft typically include:

There is generally no establishment or origination fee for facilities under $150,000. Full costs will be disclosed in your loan agreement before you sign anything.

Business overdraft vs business loan - which is right for you?

FeatureBusiness OverdraftBusiness Loan
How funds are receivedDraw on demand, up to limitLump sum upfront
Interest charged onAmount drawn onlyFull loan balance
RepaymentsWeekly + revolvingFixed weekly
Term2–5 years (renewable)3 months – 5 years
Best forOngoing cash flowOne-off investment

For a full comparison, see our guide: Business overdraft vs business loan - which is right for your business?

How to apply for a business overdraft through OverdraftMe

As an accredited finance broker (ACL 511092), OverdraftMe matches your business profile to the most suitable lender from our panel - at no cost to you. The process is straightforward:

  1. Use our calculator - get an indicative quote in under 2 minutes, no credit check
  2. Submit an enquiry - your name, email and phone. We do the rest.
  3. We match you - our brokers identify the best lender for your profile
  4. Get funded - decision typically within 1 hour, funds same day
JP
John Pierre Saliba
Director, OverdraftMe  |  10+ Years Finance Experience  |  BCom  |  ACL 511092
John is a specialist business finance broker with over 10 years of industry experience and a Bachelor of Business Commerce. He holds a Diploma of Finance & Mortgage Broking Management and is an MFAA and AFCA member. Full profile →
MFAA Member AFCA Member ACL 511092 BCom 10+ Years Experience

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