When Australian businesses cannot access finance through a major bank, they typically have two alternatives: a second-tier lender or a private lender. While both serve borrowers who fall outside mainstream bank criteria, they are fundamentally different products with different strengths, costs, and use cases. Understanding the distinction is essential for choosing the right solution.
What Is Second-Tier Lending?
Second-tier lenders are regulated, non-bank financial institutions that offer lending products similar to banks but with more flexible qualification criteria. In Australia, well-known second-tier lenders include names like Pepper Money, Liberty Financial, La Trobe Financial, and Resimac. They sit between the major banks and private lenders in terms of both pricing and flexibility.
Key characteristics of second-tier lending include:
- Regulated products — second-tier lenders hold Australian Credit Licences and operate under the National Consumer Credit Protection Act (where applicable) and other regulatory frameworks.
- Broader criteria than banks — they accept borrowers with less-than-perfect credit histories, self-employed income, or non-standard documentation.
- Competitive rates — while more expensive than major bank products, second-tier rates are significantly lower than private lending rates.
- Longer terms available — second-tier lenders offer terms from 1 to 30 years, including principal-and-interest and interest-only options.
- Structured assessment processes — applications go through formal credit assessment, serviceability testing, and approval workflows.
What Is Private Lending?
Private lenders are individuals, family offices, or specialist firms that provide short-term, secured commercial finance using their own capital or funds from private investors. Private lending operates with fewer regulatory constraints (particularly for business-purpose loans) and a very different commercial model.
Key characteristics of private lending include:
- Speed — private lenders can assess and settle loans in days rather than weeks, making them ideal for time-sensitive transactions.
- Asset-focused assessment — the primary consideration is the quality of the security and the viability of the exit strategy, rather than detailed income verification.
- Short-term facilities — typical terms range from 6 to 12 months, with interest-only repayments. These are bridging solutions, not long-term finance.
- Higher rates — rates reflect the speed, flexibility, and risk profile. At Esteb Capital, for example, first mortgage rates start from 10% for business and commercial borrowers Australia-wide.
- Direct decision-making — borrowers and brokers often deal directly with the principal or decision-maker, with no layers of bureaucracy.
Head-to-Head Comparison
Speed of Approval and Settlement
This is where the two products diverge most sharply. Second-tier lenders, while faster than banks, still require formal applications, credit assessment, income verification, and compliance checks. Expect two to six weeks from application to settlement for a standard commercial loan.
Private lenders can move in days. For straightforward, well-documented transactions, settlement within one to two weeks is achievable. When a deal has a tight deadline, private lending is often the only realistic option.
Assessment Criteria
Second-tier lenders still assess income, credit history, and serviceability. They are more flexible than banks — they may accept lower credit scores, accept alternative income documentation, or take a more nuanced view of self-employed borrowers — but there are still hurdles to clear.
Private lenders focus primarily on the security and the exit strategy. While borrower circumstances are considered, the assessment is driven by the property value, the loan-to-value ratio, and the credibility of the repayment plan. This makes private lending accessible to borrowers who cannot meet even second-tier criteria.
Interest Rates and Costs
Second-tier rates for commercial loans typically range from 6% to 10% depending on the product, LVR, and borrower profile. These are closer to bank rates and represent a cost-effective medium-term solution.
Private lending rates start higher — from 10% at Esteb Capital — reflecting the speed, flexibility, and shorter assessment process. Additionally, all legal costs are paid by the borrower in private lending, including the lender's solicitor fees. Second-tier lenders may absorb some legal costs or include them in their pricing.
Loan Terms
Second-tier lenders offer long-term facilities, often up to 30 years, with principal-and-interest or interest-only repayment options. This makes them suitable for permanent or semi-permanent financing needs.
Private loans are short-term by design — typically 6 to 12 months minimum on an interest-only basis. An exit strategy is required because the loan must be repaid within the term, not serviced indefinitely.
Loan Purpose
Second-tier lenders serve both consumer and commercial borrowers, depending on the institution and product. They can fund owner-occupied purchases, investment properties, and business purposes.
Private lenders like Esteb Capital focus exclusively on business and commercial lending. Consumer or owner-occupied residential lending is outside the scope of most private lending operations.
When to Choose Second-Tier Lending
Second-tier lending is the right choice when:
- You need a medium to long-term loan (one year or more).
- You can provide income evidence and meet modified serviceability requirements.
- Time is not critically short — you can wait two to six weeks for settlement.
- You want a lower interest rate and can accept a more structured approval process.
- The loan purpose may include consumer or owner-occupied elements.
When to Choose Private Lending
Private lending is the right choice when:
- Speed is essential — settlement is needed within days or a few weeks.
- You cannot meet second-tier income or credit criteria.
- The loan is short-term and you have a clear, documented exit strategy.
- The transaction is purely commercial or business purpose.
- You need flexibility that structured lenders cannot offer.
Using Both in Sequence
Many sophisticated borrowers use private lending and second-tier lending as complementary tools. A common strategy is to use a private loan to secure a time-sensitive acquisition, then refinance to a second-tier lender (or bank) once the urgency has passed and a longer-term facility can be arranged. This approach captures the opportunity quickly while managing interest costs over the medium term.
The Australian commercial finance market offers a spectrum of options beyond the major banks. Understanding where second-tier and private lending sit on that spectrum — and matching the right product to the right situation — is the key to making informed financing decisions for your business.