Refinance

What documents do you usually need to refinance?

Use this before a refinance review so current loan, income, property and ID details are ready for the broker or lender questions.

Updated
15 June 2026
Read time
7 min read
Reviewed by
emoney broker team
Refinance document folders beside a laptop and phone in a home office

Reviewed for general guidance

Reviewed for general guidance. Reviewed by emoney broker team. Last updated 15 June 2026. Sources are listed below so borrowers can check the public references behind this general information before speaking with a broker.

Key checks before you decide

  1. Photo ID and basic personal details.
  2. Recent payslips, tax documents, business documents, or other income evidence.
  3. Current home-loan statements, repayment amount, lender name, and rate type.
  4. Credit-card limits, personal loans, car loans, buy now pay later accounts, and other debts.
  5. Property address, estimated value, and insurance or strata details where relevant.
  6. Current lender, balance, repayment, rate type, and fixed-rate end date if one applies.

Full guide

Now read the full guide

Start with the common document bundle

Refinance document requests vary by lender, borrower type, property, and loan purpose. Most reviews still start with the same core areas: identity, income, current home loan, property, living expenses, debts, assets, and the reason for refinancing.

Treat this checklist as a preparation guide, not a promise that every lender will ask for the same file. A straightforward PAYG refinance can look very different from a self-employedHome Loans / Start hereSelf-employed borrowersPrepare income evidence, business documents, and broker questions before a lender assesses the file.Open page borrower, an investment property, a debt consolidationRefinance / Review goalsConsolidate debtCompare repayment relief with long-term interest cost, behaviour risk, and lender policy before consolidating debt.Open page request, or a refinance that involves cash-out for renovations.

The goal is to give the broker enough clean information to understand the current loan and the reason for the review. Once the likely pathway is clearer, the exact lender checklist can be tightened so you are not collecting documents that do not help the decision.

A good document pack also makes the first conversation less vague. Instead of asking whether refinancing might be possible in theory, the broker can look at the actual loan, income, debts, and property details that shape the next step.

  • Photo ID and basic personal details.
  • Recent payslips, tax documents, business documents, or other income evidence.
  • Current home-loan statements, repayment amount, lender name, and rate type.
  • Credit-card limits, personal loans, car loans, buy now pay later accounts, and other debts.
  • Property address, estimated value, and insurance or strata details where relevant.

Upload the first-pass items for a broker review

A broker does not always need the full lender pack to tell you whether a refinance is worth investigating. Start with enough information to understand the current loan, income position, and goal, then confirm the exact lender checklist before lodging anything.

For Emoney, the first pass should answer three questions. What do you have now, what are you trying to change, and is there anything in your income, property, debt, or credit position that could affect lender assessment?

That first pass also helps avoid a common refinance delay: finding out too late that the requested loan amount, property value, income evidence, or debt position does not match the borrower goal. The earlier that context is visible, the easier it is to decide whether to reprice, restructure, wait, or prepare a full refinance application.

  • Current lender, balance, repayment, rate type, and fixed-rate end date if one applies.
  • Income type for each borrower, such as PAYG, self-employed, casual, commission, or rental income.
  • Reason for the review, such as repayments, fixed expiry, cash-out, debt consolidation, renovation, or investment planning.
  • Any recent change in job, business income, relationship status, credit conduct, or property plans.

Prepare income evidence by borrower type

PAYG borrowers are usually asked for different evidence than business owners or borrowers with variable income. The aim is to help the lender verify income and understand whether it is stable enough for the refinance purpose.

Income is where many refinance files split into different document paths. A salaried borrower may only need recent employment evidence, while a contractor, casual employee, commission earner, business ownerHome Loans / Start hereSelf-employed borrowersPrepare income evidence, business documents, and broker questions before a lender assesses the file.Open page , or investor may need more history and a clearer explanation of how the income is earned.

If your income recently changed, do not hide that until the lender asks. A new role, parental leave, reduced hours, stronger business year, lower business year, or changed rental income can all change the way a broker prepares the file.

  • PAYG employees may need recent payslips and sometimes bank statements or a payment summary.
  • Self-employed borrowers may need tax returns, financial statements, BAS, business bank statements, or accountant details.
  • Casual, overtime, bonus, commission, and rental income can need extra history.
  • Centrelink, child support, or other income may need specific evidence depending on lender policy.

Show expenses, debts, assets, and repayment conduct

A refinance is still assessed against your financial position. Credit limits, personal debts, living expenses, savings, offsetHome Loans / Loan decisionsOffset vs redrawCompare how offset accounts and redraw may affect interest, access to cash, and loan structure decisions.Open page balances, and repayment history can all affect whether a lender will assess the application comfortably.

Borrowers often focus on the current home loan rate, but lenders also look at the wider household picture. Credit-card limits, personal loans, car loans, HELP debt, buy now pay later facilities, and regular commitments can reduce borrowing capacity even when the current mortgage has always been paid on time.

Assets and savings matter because they help explain the overall position. OffsetHome Loans / Loan decisionsOffset vs redrawCompare how offset accounts and redraw may affect interest, access to cash, and loan structure decisions.Open page balances, emergency savings, shares, other properties, and genuine savings history can all help a broker understand the file before choosing which lender policies are worth checking.

  • Bank statements for transaction, savings, and offset accounts where requested.
  • Statements for credit cards, personal loans, car loans, leases, HELP debt, or other liabilities.
  • Evidence of savings, shares, other properties, or other assets where relevant.
  • Clear notes for any unusual one-off expense, missed payment, or recent change.

Have property and insurance information ready

The property is part of the lender's security review, so address details and ownership information matter. If the loan is for an investment property, rental income, tenancy details, council rates, strata, and insurance may also be requested.

A refinance is not only a borrower assessment. The lender also needs to be comfortable with the property being used as security, and the final valuation can affect loan-to-value ratioHome Loans / Loan decisionsLVR and LMI explainedUse this when a guide mentions loan-to-value ratio, lenders mortgage insurance, or low-deposit trade-offs.Open page , LMI risk, available equity, and sometimes the lender pathway itself.

For investment properties, the supporting information can be wider. Rental statements, lease details, managing agent information, strata costs, insurance, council rates, and ownership structure can all help explain how the property fits the refinance.

  • Property address and ownership details.
  • Estimated value or recent valuation information if available.
  • Rental statements or lease details for investment properties.
  • Building insurance, strata, council rates, or land tax details where requested.

Next step

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Answer a few questions so emoney can route your enquiry to the right broker conversation.Start a refinance quick check

Expect extra documents in complex situations

Some refinances need more context before a broker can choose a sensible pathway. Debt consolidationRefinance / Review goalsConsolidate debtCompare repayment relief with long-term interest cost, behaviour risk, and lender policy before consolidating debt.Open page , cash-out, separation, guarantor changes, trust structures, business income, or multiple properties can all add document steps.

Complex does not mean the review should stop. It means the purpose and evidence need to be clearer before lender selection. A debt consolidationRefinance / Review goalsConsolidate debtCompare repayment relief with long-term interest cost, behaviour risk, and lender policy before consolidating debt.Open page refinance, for example, should show the debts being paid out, the reason for consolidating, and how the new structure affects the total cost and repayment behaviour.

Separation, title changes, business structures, trusts, SMSF borrowing, and guarantor changes can involve legal, tax, or specialist advice outside the guide itself. The broker conversation should identify those issues early so the loan file is not treated like a simple rate switch.

  • Do not assume every lender will accept the same income or cash-out evidence.
  • Debt consolidation may need statements, limits, payout figures, and a clear purpose.
  • Separating borrowers may need legal, title, or payout details.
  • Trust, company, or SMSF structures need specialist checking before lender selection.

Keep documents secure and current

Bank statements, payslips, ID, and tax documents should go through the secure upload process your broker provides. If the review takes time, some documents may need refreshing before lender submission.

Refinance documentsRefinance / Before changingDocuments needed to refinancePrepare ID, income, current loan, property, debt, and expense evidence before the broker conversation.Open page contain the kind of personal information that should be handled carefully. Ask where documents should be uploaded, who can access them, and whether anything sensitive needs to be removed before it is sent.

Document currency matters as well. If the review starts early but the lender application happens later, statements, payslips, or loan details may need to be refreshed. That is normal, but it is easier when the first pack is organised and the borrower keeps track of what has already been supplied.

If a document is missing, say so early. A broker can often explain whether it is needed for the first review, whether a substitute may be acceptable, or whether the refinance should wait until the evidence is cleaner.

  • Use the secure document process provided by the broker or lender.
  • Avoid sending sensitive ID or statements through casual message threads.
  • Check whether documents are recent enough before lodging.
  • Ask which documents are needed now and which can wait until lender selection.

Calculator next step

Refinance savings calculator

Compare the current loan with a new-rate scenario and see whether switching costs may be recovered.

Best for
Deciding whether a refinance is worth a broker review before starting lender work.
What it calculates
Current repayment, new repayment, estimated switching costs, monthly difference, and rough break-even.

A broker still needs to check discharge costs, valuation, features, cashback rules, income, documents, and lender policy.

Open Refinance savings

Sources used

officialASIC MoneySmart home loansofficialASIC MoneySmart switching home loansofficialASIC MoneySmart mortgage switching calculatorofficialASIC MoneySmart using a mortgage broker
General information only

This guide is general information and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. A broker can review your circumstances before any recommendation.

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