Using a finance broker can save you time, money and stress when applying for a business loan or overdraft. But not all brokers are created equal. Here's what to look for - and what red flags to avoid.
Why use a business finance broker?
A good finance broker brings three things you can't easily replicate by going direct to a lender:
- Access to multiple lenders - a broker with 50+ lenders can match you to the right product and provider for your specific profile. Going direct to a single lender means accepting their terms or nothing.
- Industry knowledge - brokers know which lenders are currently approving applications like yours, which are tightening credit, and how to structure an application for the best outcome.
- They handle the process - preparing documents, liaising with lenders, managing follow-up queries. For a business owner, this time saving is often worth more than the interest rate difference.
What to look for in a business finance broker
1. Australian Credit Licence (ACL)
Any broker providing credit assistance in Australia must hold an Australian Credit Licence or operate as an authorised credit representative under a licence holder. Always check this. You can verify any broker's licence on the ASIC Connect register.
OverdraftMe operates as a credit representative of Lend & Loan under ACL 511092.
2. MFAA or FBAA membership
Membership of the Mortgage & Finance Association of Australia (MFAA) or the Finance Brokers Association of Australia (FBAA) requires brokers to meet education standards, hold professional indemnity insurance, and comply with a code of conduct. It's a meaningful quality signal.
3. AFCA membership
All credit licensees and their representatives must be registered with the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA). This gives you access to free external dispute resolution if something goes wrong.
4. Lender panel size
A larger panel means more options. A broker with 5 lenders has limited ability to find a competitive deal for complex profiles. A broker with 50+ lenders can find the right match for a much wider range of situations.
5. Transparency about fees
Ask upfront: how does the broker get paid? Most business finance brokers are paid a commission by the lender - meaning the service is free to you. Some brokers charge additional broker fees on top of this. Make sure you understand the full fee structure before proceeding.
At OverdraftMe, we are paid by the lender upon settlement. There is no charge to you.
6. Specialisation
Some brokers do everything - home loans, commercial loans, car finance, business finance. Others specialise. For business overdrafts and SME loans, a specialist broker who knows the non-bank lending market deeply will typically get better outcomes than a generalist.
Questions to ask a broker before you proceed
- What is your ACL number?
- Are you MFAA or FBAA accredited?
- How many lenders are on your panel?
- How do you get paid, and is there any fee to me?
- Which lenders do you typically use for businesses like mine?
- How long does the process typically take?
Work with an accredited specialist broker
OverdraftMe - ACL 511092, MFAA member, AFCA registered. 50+ lenders on panel. Free service.
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