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Buying New in Green Square When You’re Self‑Employed or a Professional

A decision-grade guide for professionals, contractors and small business owners buying new or off‑the‑plan in Green Square, with finance, tax and risk strategies you can act on this week.

17 July 2026Updated 17 July 202613 min read

Key Takeaway

Professionals, contractors and small business owners can successfully buy new or off‑the‑plan in Green Square by aligning their income, tax and loan structures with lender expectations and project risk. Lenders usually test repayments at about 3% above the actual rate and want at least two years of self‑employed financials. The most effective move this week is to model your borrowing capacity, buffers and settlement risks with a broker who also understands tax and business cash flow.

Buying New in Green Square When You’re Self‑Employed or a Professional

Buying a new or off‑the‑plan apartment in Green Square as a professional, contractor or small business owner is absolutely doable, but the bar is higher. Lenders scrutinise your income, business debts and tax returns more harshly, and off‑the‑plan contracts add valuation and timing risk on top. The core job is to align your income story, tax position and loan structure so settlement is boring – even if your work or business has a few bumps along the way.

For self‑employed and complex‑income buyers, the key steps are: (1) prove stable, usable income on paper; (2) keep business risk away from the family home where possible; and (3) hold enough cash buffers to comfortably pass a 3% APRA serviceability buffer and weather income swings.

Self-employed professional planning a property purchase in Green Square. Professionals and business owners around Green Square need to align property plans with business cash flow.


1. Why Green Square is attractive – and riskier – for complex-income buyers

Green Square sits between the CBD, airport and key health and education precincts. That’s ideal if you’re a professional, contractor or small business owner who wants:

  • Short commute to the CBD, airport or tech / creative hubs
  • Modern, low‑maintenance living with good amenities
  • Strong rental demand from professionals and students

But for self‑employed and non‑PAYG buyers, there are extra risks:

  1. High-density, new‑build stock. Many banks are cautious about lending at high loan‑to‑value ratios (LVRs) on small, high‑rise apartments, especially if there’s lots of similar stock.
  2. Off‑the‑plan timelines. A 2–4 year gap between exchange and settlement means your income, tax position and lender policies can change in the meantime.
  3. Complex income. Contractors, consultants and business owners can look riskier on paper, even when you earn more than PAYG peers.

If your income is anything other than simple PAYG, you’ll get more value from a guide specifically written for complex‑income borrowers around Green Square. For a broader deep dive, see /insights/complex-income-self-employed-professional-borrowers-green-square.


2. How lenders really view professionals, contractors and business owners

2.1 The lender’s lens on complex income

Most Australian lenders sort you into one of three broad buckets:

  1. Professionals on PAYG (e.g. lawyers, doctors, senior managers)
  2. Contractors / consultants (ABN or PAYG with variable hours)
  3. Self‑employed / small business owners (sole traders, companies, trusts)

They then apply different rules around:

  • How many years of income they need to see
  • Whether they use your latest year, an average, or a lower figure
  • How they treat company profits, distributions and retained earnings
  • How they load (or shade) variable income such as overtime and bonuses

Most mainstream lenders want at least two full financial years of self‑employed income with lodged tax returns for a standard loan. This is especially true for small business owners (see also /insights/small-business-home-loan-basics-eligibility).

2.2 Serviceability and the 3% buffer

APRA expects lenders to test that you can afford repayments at an interest rate at least 3% higher than the actual rate.

Worked example (illustrative only):

  • Purchase price: $1,000,000 Green Square apartment
  • Deposit: 20% ($200,000) – loan $800,000
  • Actual interest rate: 6.0% p.a. variable, P&I, 30 years
  • Repayment at 6.0%: ≈ $4,798 per month
  • Assessment rate at 9.0%: ≈ $6,437 per month

Lenders test your income and living expenses against the $6,437 figure, not the $4,798 you’ll actually pay. That gap is why your buffers, tax planning and business cash flow really matter.

2.3 What makes your application weaker – even with strong income

From the accumulated knowledge across our Green Square and business‑owner guides, lenders are especially cautious if:

  • You’re within your first two years of self‑employment
  • Business working capital is being used to fund the deposit (this weakens perceived income stability and approval odds – see facts 7, 12 and 19)
  • You’ve added new business loans or personal guarantees during the build period (these are often treated as personal commitments – fact 13)
  • You’ve minimised taxable income to reduce tax, leaving a low income on paper (fact 2)

The fix: engineer your next 12–24 months of financials so your tax returns tell a lender‑friendly story, not just a tax‑efficient one.


3. Choosing between new, off‑the‑plan and near-new – which suits you?

3.1 Three broad options in Green Square

Most professionals and business owners around Green Square are choosing between:

  • Brand‑new completed apartments
  • Off‑the‑plan (12–36 months to completion)
  • Near‑new resales (say 1–5 years old)

Each has different finance and risk implications.

3.2 Comparison: professionals vs contractors vs small business owners

Here’s how the options often stack up for different complex‑income buyers.

Buyer typeNew completed apartmentOff‑the‑plan apartmentNear‑new resale
Stable professional PAYGStrongest approval odds, quick settlementGood if career stable; need buffer for policy shiftsFlexible; shorter timeline, fewer construction risks
Contractor / consultantNeed clear history of hours/income; some shadingHigher risk of income swings before settlementOften safer; can align purchase with peak income
Small business ownerGood if 2+ years financials and solid buffersHighest risk: income, valuations, policy can moveUseful if you’re still stabilising business income

To understand the generic finance traps for Green Square new and off‑the‑plan stock, pair this article with /insights/financing-new-off-the-plan-apartment-green-square.

3.3 Worked example: off‑the‑plan vs completed

Assume:

  • Contract price: $1,050,000 off‑the‑plan apartment
  • Deposit on exchange: 10% ($105,000)
  • Build period: 2.5 years

Scenario A – you buy off‑the‑plan now:

  • You exchange with a 10% deposit
  • Over 2.5 years, your business has a flat year and one weaker year
  • Valuation at completion comes in at $1,000,000 (5% under contract)
  • Lender will do 80% LVR on valuation = $800,000 max loan
  • You now need a $250,000 total deposit/costs instead of $210,000–220,000 you expected

Scenario B – you wait 18 months and buy a completed apartment:

  • You keep renting, build business and personal buffers
  • Two strong tax years are lodged
  • You buy a completed $1,000,000 apartment later with a 20% deposit

Financially, Scenario B might feel “slower”, but your loan approval odds and stress levels can be much better – especially if your business is still maturing.


4. Income proof and documentation: what you need ready

4.1 Professionals and high-income specialists

If you’re a doctor, lawyer, consultant or other high‑income professional, lenders may:

  • Use a higher share of your bonus/overtime if it’s consistent
  • Consider future income potential in some niche programs

But they still want clear documentation:

  • Latest 2 payslips and a recent PAYG summary
  • Evidence of any guaranteed allowances
  • For side‑hustles: separate financials or at least bank statements

If you’re partly or fully self‑employed, the principles from /insights/home-loans-high-income-self-employed-professionals become critical: tidy business structures, align debts, and choose the right doc type (full‑doc vs alt‑doc).

4.2 Contractors and freelancers

Contractor income can be strong but volatile. Lenders often:

  • Average your income over 6–24 months
  • Require proof of contract terms or regular invoices
  • May shade income to allow for gaps

Common documents include:

  • 6–12 months of bank statements showing consistent income
  • Current contracts with day rates and duration
  • ATO notices of assessment for the last 1–2 years

4.3 Small business owners

For business owners, expect to provide:

  • Two years of business financial statements (P&L, balance sheet)
  • Two years of personal and business tax returns
  • Current ATO portal showing no major tax arrears
  • Details of business loans, overdrafts and leases (with personal guarantees counted as personal commitments – fact 13)

One simple, high‑impact move is to:

  • Run business income and expenses through separate accounts for at least 3–6 months before applying (fact 4)
  • Set up a regular “salary” transfer from business to personal accounts (fact 11)

Both steps make your income story more lender‑friendly.


5. Managing business and personal risk when buying new

5.1 Don’t raid business working capital for the deposit

Using business working capital as your home deposit might feel efficient, but it usually weakens your application and your resilience (facts 1, 7, 12, 19):

  • Lenders see a less liquid business as a higher risk to future income
  • Your ability to weather slow months or late invoices shrinks
  • Mortgage stress risk rises – and Roy Morgan estimates over 28% of mortgage holders are already “at risk” nationally

Better deposit strategies for business owners include:

  • Building a personal savings buffer separate from business cash
  • Using genuine savings plus tax‑efficient drawings or dividends
  • Considering family support or existing equity where appropriate

5.2 Keep loan purposes clean

Loan purpose, not the security property, drives tax deductibility (fact 8). For self‑employed Green Square buyers, that means:

  • Avoid using your home loan redraw as recurring business working capital (facts 18 and 20)
  • Use separate loan splits if you’re drawing on investment equity for business use (fact 3)
  • Consider dedicated business facilities instead of stretching 30‑year home debt to fund short‑life assets (fact 15)

This keeps your tax records cleaner and reduces the risk of your business dragging your home into trouble.

5.3 Buffers: you need more than employees

During an off‑the‑plan build, employees can often get away with 3–6 months of bare‑bones living expenses as a cash buffer.

For self‑employed buyers, 6–12 months is usually safer (fact 17), plus a separate business buffer of 1–2 months of overheads (fact 9).

If that sounds impossible right now, it may be a sign to delay buying new until your business and cash flow are stronger.

For more detail on buffers and fluctuating income, see /insights/fluctuating-income-home-loan-buffer-strategy.

Mortgage broker discussing Green Square apartment finance with a small business owner. Structuring loans well can separate home and business risk for self-employed buyers.


6. Settlement and valuation risk in Green Square – and how to protect yourself

6.1 Key risks with new and off-the-plan stock

Common headaches at settlement include:

  • Valuation shortfalls – the bank values your new apartment lower than the contract price
  • Policy changes – lender rules tighten for high‑density postcodes or small apartments
  • Income changes – your business has a softer year right before settlement

These risks are amplified in high‑density areas like Green Square, particularly when multiple similar projects complete at once.

6.2 Practical protection moves

  1. Conservative contract price. Don’t stretch to the top end of your budget in a new building. Leave room for potential valuation shifts.
  2. Higher effective deposit. Aim for a 15–20% real deposit even if you think you’ll be fine at 10%.
  3. Multiple lender options. Choose a loan structure where, if your primary lender says no at settlement, there’s a viable Plan B.
  4. Staged financial check‑ins. Re‑run your borrowing capacity at least annually during the build, and again 6 months before completion.

Our sibling piece on managing valuation and settlement risk in Green Square dives deeper into specific building and lender‑policy issues.

6.3 Example: stress‑testing a Green Square settlement

Assume:

  • Contract price: $1,050,000
  • Expected LVR at settlement: 80%
  • Income: $260,000 combined (two professionals) but one is self‑employed

Stress test:

  1. Apartment values fall 5% to $997,500
  2. Lender now values at $1,000,000
  3. Maximum 80% loan = $800,000
  4. You must fund $250,000 plus costs

Next, stress‑test income:

  • Actual rate: 6%, assessment 9%
  • One partner’s drawings drop 30% for a year

Run the numbers with your broker and accountant. If the deal only works when everything goes perfectly, it’s too tight for most self‑employed or business‑owner borrowers.


7. Tax changes, negative gearing and why new builds may make sense

Federal Budget changes from 2026 onwards are tightening:

  • Negative gearing rules, especially for established properties purchased after specific dates
  • Capital gains tax and trust distribution rules for higher‑income and business owners

Current proposals generally favour new builds over established properties for future negative gearing access. That makes Green Square’s new‑build stock relatively more attractive for some investors and professional buyers.

But it also adds complexity:

  • You’ll need better record‑keeping across personal, business and trust entities
  • You can’t assume generous tax offsets will bail out a marginal property deal

Our strategic guide for investors – /insights/self-employed-business-owners-high-income-professionals-negative-gearing-cgt-strategy – walks through adapting your property plan to these rules.

For now, treat any negative gearing benefit as icing, not the cake. The core test is still: does this property and loan structure stand up on after‑tax, after‑interest numbers without heroic assumptions?


8. One‑week action plan for professionals, contractors and business owners

You’re busy. Here’s what you can realistically do this week to move forward on a new Green Square purchase without over‑committing.

Day 1–2: Numbers and risk check

  1. Clarify your budget range.

    • Roughly calculate borrowing capacity using a conservative online calculator.
    • Apply your own stress test: model repayments at +2–3% on today’s rates and a 30–50% hit to variable income (fact 16).
  2. Map your buffers.

    • Personal: how many months of bare‑bones living expenses do you have?
    • Business: how many months of core overheads can you cover?

If you’re below 3 months personal + 1 month business, treat buying off‑the‑plan as higher‑risk right now.

Day 3–4: Clean up your income story

  1. Separate business and personal cash flow.

    • Open or confirm separate business accounts.
    • Set a regular weekly or monthly transfer from business to personal accounts that matches your true drawings.
  2. Collect key documents.

    • Latest two years of tax returns (personal + business)
    • ATO portal screenshots (no hidden debts)
    • 6–12 months of bank statements

This work lines you up for a smoother application, as expanded on in /insights/mortgage-brokers-self-employed-professionals-small-business-owners.

Day 5–6: Property and project due diligence

  1. Shortlist 2–3 buildings or projects.

    • Check building size, strata history, and any known issues.
    • Ask your broker which postcodes / buildings have tighter lender policies.
  2. Run a pre‑contract finance review.

    • Model purchase at both 80% and 70–75% LVR.
    • Test how changes to your income or policy might hit approval.

Day 7: Decision meeting

  1. Book a 30–45 minute strategy session.
    • Ideally with one person who can see your tax, business and lending picture in one view.
    • Decide whether you’re genuinely ready to:
      • Exchange on an off‑the‑plan contract now, or
      • Target a completed or near‑new purchase in the next 6–18 months instead.

Contractor couple reviewing an off-the-plan apartment contract in Green Square. Off-the-plan buyers should stress-test valuation and income scenarios well before settlement.


FAQs

1. Is it harder for a contractor or business owner to buy in Green Square than a PAYG employee?

Yes, in most cases. Lenders apply stricter rules around income stability, documentation and business debts for contractors and business owners. You’ll likely need more paperwork, stronger buffers and a more conservative borrowing limit, but with the right preparation it’s still very achievable.

2. Should I avoid off‑the‑plan if my business is less than two years old?

Often, yes. If you’re in your first 18–24 months of self‑employment, your income track record and tax returns are still forming. Committing to a settlement 2–3 years away while your business is untested adds risk; many people in this position are better off renting or buying later once they have two solid financial years lodged.

3. Can I use my company cash as the deposit for a Green Square apartment?

You technically can, but it usually weakens both your business and your loan application. Lenders see reduced business liquidity as a threat to future income, and you lose resilience if cashflow slows. It’s generally safer to build a personal deposit and keep core working capital inside the business.

4. How big should my cash buffer be before I buy new in Green Square?

For professionals on stable PAYG income, 3–6 months of living expenses is a common target. Contractors and self‑employed buyers should aim higher – often 6–12 months of personal expenses plus a separate 1–2 months of business overheads. The right level depends on how volatile your income is and how exposed your business is to economic shocks.

5. Are new Green Square apartments still a good idea given negative gearing changes?

They can be for the right buyer, especially as new builds are generally treated more favourably than established properties under the proposed reforms. But tax benefits shouldn’t be the main reason for the purchase. Focus first on location, quality, cash flow and risk fit for your situation, then optimise for tax within that framework.


Key takeaways

  • Professionals, contractors and small business owners can buy new in Green Square, but income proof, buffers and risk management matter more than for PAYG buyers.
  • Don’t use core business working capital as your main deposit source; it weakens both your enterprise and your loan application.
  • Off‑the‑plan contracts amplify income, valuation and policy risks, so self‑employed buyers should be extra conservative on price, LVR and buffers.
  • Clean separation between business and personal finances, plus regular “salary” drawings, makes your income story far more lender‑friendly.
  • Stress‑test your plan at higher rates and lower income before committing – if the numbers only work in a perfect year, rethink the purchase or timing.

If you’d like a Green Square‑specific finance plan that joins the dots between your tax, your business and your loan, book a free 15‑minute strategy call at https://localknowledge.finance. One consultation with a CPA, tax agent and broker in one can save you multiple meetings – and help you make a confident decision this week.

General advice only.

Frequently asked questions

Is it harder for a contractor or business owner to buy in Green Square than a PAYG employee?
Yes, in most cases. Lenders use stricter criteria for contractors and business owners because income and debts are more complex and sometimes less stable. You’ll usually need more documentation, stronger savings and clearer separation between personal and business finances. With the right preparation and lender choice, though, approval is still very achievable.
Should I avoid off-the-plan if my business is less than two years old?
Often that’s the safer choice. In your first 18–24 months of self-employment your tax returns and financials are still bedding down, which makes lenders cautious. Committing to a settlement years away while your business is unproven adds extra risk. Many new owners are better off renting or buying later once they can show two solid financial years.
Can I use my company cash as the deposit for a Green Square apartment?
You can, but it’s usually not ideal. Draining working capital can make your business more fragile and can actually weaken your loan application, because lenders see lower business liquidity as a risk to your ongoing income. It’s generally better to build a personal deposit over time and only draw excess funds from the business without undermining its cash flow.
How big should my cash buffer be before I buy new in Green Square?
For stable PAYG professionals, three to six months of essential living expenses is a common target. Contractors and self-employed people should generally aim for six to twelve months of personal expenses, plus a separate one to two months of business overheads. The right level depends on how volatile your income is and how reliant your household is on the business.
Are new Green Square apartments still a good idea given negative gearing changes?
They can be, particularly because proposed negative gearing reforms tend to favour new builds over established properties. But tax benefits alone shouldn’t drive the decision. The fundamentals still matter more: location, build quality, price, cash flow and how the risk fits with your business and household position. Tax should optimise a sound strategy, not justify a marginal one.

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