Using Equity to Invest.

Using equity to invest is a common strategy, but it’s also one of the easiest ways to create long-term problems if the lending isn’t structured correctly. Equity can be a powerful tool when used deliberately. When it’s rushed or poorly set up, it can compromise tax clarity, restrict future borrowing, and increase risk in ways people don’t fully appreciate until years later.

Our role as brokers is not to tell you what to invest in — that’s not our lane. Our role is to ensure that if you decide to invest, the lending is structured cleanly, responsibly, and in a way that preserves flexibility.

What it actually means to “use equity”

Using equity means borrowing against the value of an existing property to fund another purpose. That purpose might be:

  • Purchasing an investment property

  • Investing in shares or managed funds

  • Providing capital to a business

  • Funding a joint venture or opportunity

From a lender’s perspective, this is simply new debt secured by property. Even though the property already exists, the bank still assesses it like any other loan — valuation, servicing, risk, and policy all apply.

Equity is not automatically accessible just because your property has increased in value. It only becomes usable when the lender agrees to advance additional funds.

How lenders assess equity lending

Equity releases are assessed using the same core criteria as any new loan:

  • Current property valuation

  • Loan-to-value ratio (LVR)

  • Your income and living expenses

  • Existing debts and commitments

  • The stated purpose of the funds

  • Lender policy at the time

Even with substantial equity, servicing still matters. A strong balance sheet does not override weak cash flow.

Usable equity and LVR limits

Most lenders are comfortable lending up to 80% of a property’s value without lender’s mortgage insurance, assuming servicing supports it. Some scenarios allow higher LVRs, but these are more restrictive and lender-specific.

A simplified example:

  • Property value: $1,000,000

  • 80% of value: $800,000

  • Current loan balance: $620,000

  • Potential usable equity: $180,000 (before servicing checks)

The final amount available will always depend on the lender’s valuation and your borrowing capacity.

Why structure matters more than the investment itself

The most common mistakes we see with equity investing are structural, not strategic.

Examples include:

  • Mixing equity funds into an existing home loan

  • Using redraw or offset without clear purpose tracking

  • Combining multiple investment purposes into one loan

  • Creating cross-collateralised structures that are hard to unwind

These issues don’t usually cause problems immediately — they surface later when you try to refinance, invest again, or unwind a position.

Purpose separation is non-negotiable

When equity is used for a new purpose, it should almost always be structured as a separate loan split.

This achieves:

  • Clear traceability of funds

  • Cleaner records for accountants

  • Easier refinancing or restructuring later

  • Better control over repayments and balances

While we don’t provide tax advice, clean purpose separation makes it significantly easier to maintain clarity around interest deductibility, which should always be confirmed with your accountant.

Using equity for non-property investments

Some clients use equity to invest outside property — for example, into shares or managed funds.

From a lending perspective:

  • The bank still treats this as secured property lending

  • The investment itself may be higher risk than property

  • Repayments must still be serviced regardless of performance

Because of this, we spend time ensuring:

  • Repayments are comfortable under conservative assumptions

  • Buffer capacity remains

  • Structures don’t rely on optimistic outcomes

This is about sustainability, not short-term opportunity.

Managing risk when investing with equity

Equity magnifies outcomes — both positive and negative.

Key risk considerations include:

  • Interest rate changes

  • Market volatility of the investment

  • Liquidity (how easily the investment can be sold)

  • Your ability to service debt if income changes

We help you model repayment impact and ensure the structure leaves room to absorb shocks without forcing rushed decisions.

Equity investing and future borrowing capacity

Every equity release affects your future borrowing capacity.

If you plan to:

  • Buy another property

  • Upgrade your home

  • Start or expand a business

  • Refinance or restructure

…then today’s equity decision needs to be made with that in mind.

Sometimes the “maximum available” equity is not the right amount to use. Retaining buffer capacity often matters more than deploying every dollar.

Common mistakes we help clients avoid

Some of the most common issues include:

  • Using equity without clear purpose documentation

  • Over-leveraging based on short-term confidence

  • Ignoring repayment impact under higher rates

  • Creating structures that are expensive to unwind

  • Not considering how equity use affects future plans

These are all avoidable with deliberate planning.

The Lumo approach to equity investing

We help clients use equity responsibly by:

  • Assessing usable equity and servicing honestly

  • Comparing lenders for policy, pricing, and flexibility

  • Structuring clean, separate loan splits

  • Preserving buffers and future options

  • Keeping documentation clear and lender-ready

Equity can be a powerful tool — but only when it’s used with structure, discipline, and a long-term view.

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Using Equity for Business.

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Using Equity for Renovations.