Reviewing Investment Loans.

Investment loans should never be treated as “set and forget”. Markets move, lender policies change, and what worked for an investor five years ago may now be quietly holding them back. Reviewing investment loans isn’t just about saving interest — it’s about ensuring your lending structure still supports your portfolio, cash flow, and long-term strategy.

Poorly reviewed investment lending doesn’t usually fail loudly. It fails slowly — through reduced borrowing capacity, messy structures, and missed opportunities.

Why investment loan reviews matter more than home loan reviews

Investment lending is assessed more conservatively than owner-occupied lending. Over time, this means:

  • Rate premiums can creep higher

  • Policy settings can restrict future purchases

  • Equity access can become harder

  • Portfolio growth can stall without obvious warning signs

Regular reviews ensure your loans remain competitive and functional within the broader context of your portfolio.

What a proper investment loan review looks at

A meaningful review goes well beyond interest rate comparison. We assess:

  • Current interest rates and discount margins

  • Loan type (interest-only vs principal & interest)

  • Remaining interest-only terms

  • Fees and package costs

  • Offset and redraw usage

  • Loan structure and purpose separation

  • Current valuations and LVR positions

  • How each lender treats multiple properties

Looking at only one loan in isolation often leads to poor decisions.

Interest-only vs principal & interest over time

Many investors start with interest-only loans for cash-flow reasons. Over time, this can create challenges if:

  • Interest-only periods expire

  • Lenders tighten policy

  • Servicing buffers increase

  • Portfolio size grows

A review allows us to assess whether:

  • Interest-only terms should be extended

  • Partial principal repayment makes sense

  • Loans should be restructured across lenders

The right answer depends on your strategy, not a generic rule.

The impact of lender policy on portfolio growth

One of the most common reasons investors hit a “borrowing wall” is lender concentration.

If too many properties sit with one lender:

  • That lender’s policy becomes your limiting factor

  • Borrowing capacity can drop sharply

  • Refinancing becomes harder

We review portfolios with an eye on lender diversity, ensuring no single bank quietly caps your growth.

Valuations and equity access

Investment loan reviews often involve reassessing valuations.

Updated valuations can:

  • Unlock usable equity

  • Reduce LVRs and pricing

  • Enable restructuring or lender changes

Conversely, stale valuations can mask opportunities or hide risk. We assess when valuations are worth pursuing and which lenders are most supportive.

Structure problems that reviews often uncover

Common structural issues include:

  • Mixed-purpose loans

  • Investment debt combined with home loans

  • Cross-collateralised properties

  • Equity releases without clear separation

  • Offset misuse creating tracking problems

These issues rarely cause problems immediately — but they surface painfully when refinancing or expanding. Reviews are the time to fix them.

Refinancing vs repricing for investors

Just like home loans, not every review results in refinancing.

In some cases:

  • Repricing with an existing lender makes sense

  • Structural improvements can be done internally

In others:

  • Moving lenders improves policy flexibility

  • Breaking lender concentration unlocks growth

  • Cleaning up structure outweighs switching costs

We compare all options before recommending a path.

Cash flow vs long-term positioning

Some reviews focus on improving monthly cash flow. Others focus on positioning the portfolio for the next purchase.

These goals aren’t always aligned.

We help investors understand:

  • Short-term cash-flow impact

  • Long-term borrowing consequences

  • Trade-offs between rate, term, and flexibility

A good review balances both.

When investors should review their loans

Investment loan reviews are particularly important when:

  • Fixed or interest-only periods are expiring

  • Property values have increased

  • You’re planning another purchase

  • Lender policies have tightened

  • Cash flow is under pressure

  • Your accountant flags structure issues

Waiting too long can reduce options.

The Lumo approach to investment loan reviews

We help investors by:

  • Reviewing portfolios holistically

  • Comparing lenders for policy and pricing

  • Cleaning up structure deliberately

  • Preserving borrowing capacity

  • Aligning lending with long-term goals

Investment loans should support your strategy — not quietly limit it.

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Reviewing Commercial Loans.

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Reviewing a Home Loan.