Loan review
Home loan review guide: check whether your loan still fits
A guide to reviewing your current home loan after rate changes, income changes, fixed-rate expiry, renovations, or new property goals.

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
- Your rate or repayment has changed.
- Your fixed, interest-only, or introductory period is ending.
- Your income, expenses, job, family, or property plans have changed.
- You have not compared the loan since lender offers or your goals changed.
- Current interest rate, comparison rate, and monthly repayment.
- Package, annual, discharge, valuation, and application fees.
Full guide
Now read the full guide
Checklist
Start with the reason for the review
A review works best when it answers a real borrower question. You might want to reduce repayment pressure, check whether your rate is still competitive, prepare for a fixed-rate expiryRefinance / Review goalsFixed rate endingReview revert rates, timing, break-cost issues, split loans, and refinance options before the fixed period ends.Open page , use equityRefinance / Review goalsUse equity carefullyCheck usable equity, borrowing capacity, purpose, risk, and lender policy before increasing debt.Open page , renovate, invest, consolidate debtRefinance / Review goalsConsolidate debtCompare repayment relief with long-term interest cost, behaviour risk, and lender policy before consolidating debt.Open page , or confirm whether the current loan still fits.
A home loan reviewRefinance / Before changingAnnual loan reviewUse an annual review to check rate, fees, loan purpose, offset use, equity, and changed borrower goals.Open page is not the same as a refinance application. It is a checkpoint that looks at the loan you already have, the next thing you are trying to do, and whether the current setup still supports that plan.
That makes it a strong Emoney pathway for both new enquiries and existing clients. The review can be useful even when the answer is to stay put for now, because the borrower leaves with a clearer view of timing, documents, and the next trigger to watch.
- Your rate or repayment has changed.
- Your fixed, interest-only, or introductory period is ending.
- Your income, expenses, job, family, or property plans have changed.
- You have not compared the loan since lender offers or your goals changed.
Checklist
Review more than the rate
A useful review starts with the rate, but it should not stop there. The repayment amount, comparison rate, fees, offset or redrawHome Loans / Loan decisionsOffset vs redrawCompare how offset accounts and redraw may affect interest, access to cash, and loan structure decisions.Open page use, fixed or variableHome Loans / Loan decisionsFixed vs variable loansCompare rate certainty, flexibility, break-cost risk, offset access, and repayment changes.Open page split, remaining loan term, and likely switch costs all affect whether a change deserves a closer look.
Rate is easy to compare, but loan fit has more parts. A loan with a slightly sharper rate may be less useful if it removes an offset accountHome Loans / Loan decisionsOffset vs redrawCompare how offset accounts and redraw may affect interest, access to cash, and loan structure decisions.Open page you rely on, adds fees you do not need, or changes repayment flexibility in a way that conflicts with your plans.
The review should also ask whether you are paying for features that are not being used. Some borrowers need a feature-rich structure. Others may be carrying package fees, split structures, or account features that no longer match how they actually manage the loan.
- Current interest rate, comparison rate, and monthly repayment.
- Package, annual, discharge, valuation, and application fees.
- Offset, redraw, extra repayment, and split-loan features.
- How long you expect to keep the property or loan structure.
Guide
Look for signs the structure no longer fits
A loan can stop fitting even when the repayment is still manageable. The offsetHome Loans / Loan decisionsOffset vs redrawCompare how offset accounts and redraw may affect interest, access to cash, and loan structure decisions.Open page may be underused, the loan term may be drifting, the fixed split may no longer suit your plans, or a feature-rich loan may be costing more than it is worth.
The warning signs are often quiet. You might have built more equity, changed jobs, started a business, had children, paid down debts, taken on new debts, or started thinking about a renovation or investment property. Any of those changes can make an old loan structure feel slightly out of date.
A review gives those changes a place to be tested before they become urgent. It is easier to compare options while the loan is under control than when a fixed period has already rolled over, repayments feel tight, or a property decision is happening quickly.
- You are paying for features you rarely use.
- You want more certainty, more flexibility, or a different split.
- You have built equity and want to understand your options.
- You want the loan paid down faster, but the structure is not helping.
Broker note
Review first, refinance second
The review should not jump straight to switching lenders. Sometimes the practical next step is repricing with the current lender, changing the existing structure, preparing documents, or waiting until a fixed period, income change, or property plan is clearer.
This is the main difference between a broker review and a rate-chasing exercise. The first question is not, 'Which new lender can I move to?' It is, 'What problem are we solving, and can the current setup be improved before a new application is needed?'
If refinancing does look worthwhile, the review has already done useful work. It has clarified the goal, checked the likely costs, identified the documents, and narrowed the lender questions that need to be answered.
- Ask whether the current lender can reprice the loan.
- Compare staying with the cost and time involved in switching.
- Check whether a structure change would solve the problem.
- Only compare refinance pathways once the goal and constraints are clear.
Watch out
Compare the cost of each pathway
Staying, repricing, restructuring, and refinancing can all have different costs and trade-offs. A review should compare fees, switch costs, features, loan term, LMIHome 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 risk, timing, and document requirements before a borrower relies on a headline rate.
There is no free pathway just because no fee is obvious. Staying with the same lender can have an opportunity cost if the rate is no longer competitive. Switching lenders can have direct costs and time costs. Restructuring can solve one problem while creating another.
The loan term deserves special attention. Resetting a loan back to a longer term can make monthly repayments look easier, but the borrower should understand how that affects total interest and whether they plan to keep paying at a higher amount.
- A new lender may still require valuation and full document assessment.
- Lender's mortgage insurance can reduce the benefit if equity is low.
- A longer loan term can hide costs behind a lower repayment.
- Fixed loans can need break-cost checks before any early change.
Next step
Want a broker to check this against your situation?
Answer a few questions so emoney can route your enquiry to the right broker conversation.Book a home loan health checkExample
Use calculators as a first pass
A repayment or refinance calculator can show whether the numbers are worth investigating, but it cannot confirm lender approval, valuation, policy fit, or whether a longer loan term is masking the real cost.
Calculators are useful because they turn a vague concern into a comparison. They can show repayment difference, switching cost payback, and how sensitive the loan is to rate changes.
They should not be treated as a final answer. A broker still needs to check the borrower profile, property, lender policy, document evidence, and whether the scenario matches the reason for the review.
- Use a repayment calculator to test rate and repayment changes.
- Use a refinance savings calculator to compare costs and payback time.
- Ask a broker to check lender policy before relying on the result.
Broker note
Prepare the broker conversation
A broker conversation is more useful when you bring the current loan details and one clear question first. The broker can then check whether the issue is rate, structure, lender fit, documents, serviceability, or timing.
You do not need to solve the loan before booking the review. Bring the current lender, balance, rate type, repayment, fixed or interest-onlyHome Loans / Loan decisionsPrincipal and interest vs interest-onlyUnderstand repayment-type trade-offs before choosing an interest-only or principal-and-interest structure.Open page expiry dates, rough property value, and any changes in income or household circumstances.
Then state the question plainly. It might be, 'Can this loan be repriced?' or 'Would refinancing still make sense after costs?' or 'Does this structure fit the next two years?' A clear question helps the broker avoid turning the review into a generic product comparison.
- Can my current lender reprice this loan?
- Would refinancing still help after costs?
- Does my structure fit my next two years?
- What documents would you need to compare options properly?
Guide
Set a review rhythm
A regular review helps stop the loan from drifting away from the borrower's goals. Annual reviews are useful for many borrowers, but fixed-rate expiryRefinance / Review goalsFixed rate endingReview revert rates, timing, break-cost issues, split loans, and refinance options before the fixed period ends.Open page , interest-onlyHome Loans / Loan decisionsPrincipal and interest vs interest-onlyUnderstand repayment-type trade-offs before choosing an interest-only or principal-and-interest structure.Open page expiry, major income changes, renovation plans, or repayment pressure can bring the review forward.
The point of a rhythm is not to refinance every year. It is to make sure the loan is still being checked against the borrower's life, lender pricing, loan features, and future plans.
A simple habit can work well: review at least once a year, then review earlier when a trigger appears. Fixed expiry, rate movement, income change, new debt, renovation planning, investment planning, separation, or repayment stress are all reasons to bring the review forward.
- Check the loan at least when the rate type, repayment, or goal changes.
- Review earlier if you are planning to buy, renovate, invest, or consolidate debt.
- Keep lender statements and key documents easy to find.
- Use the review to decide the next step, not to rush an application.
Calculator next step
Home loan repayment calculator
Test whether a loan amount, rate, term, and repayment type feel workable before taking the numbers further.
- Best for
- Checking repayment comfort across purchase, refinance, or rate-change scenarios.
- What it calculates
- Weekly, fortnightly, or monthly repayments from loan amount, rate, term, frequency, and repayment type.
A broker still needs to check fees, comparison rates, offset or redraw settings, loan structure, and policy fit.
Open RepaymentsSources used
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.




