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How Australian Businesses Can Manage Loans and Debt Recovery

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Cash-flow pressure and late-paying customers are common problems for Australian small and medium businesses. When revenue slows or invoices build up, the choices you make about borrowing and recovery can affect your financial position for years.

This guide explains how to choose the right professional support, whether you need a broker for lending, a collection agency for overdue invoices, or both. It also flags Australian regulators and rules, including ASIC, ACCC, AFCA and AFSA, so you can check advice and services against reliable standards.

Know Your Numbers First

  • Before you contact any external professional, get a clear picture of where you stand. This small step will make every conversation that follows more useful.
  • Build or update a cash-flow forecast. The business.gov.au cash-flow statement template is a simple starting point for mapping inflows, outflows and possible shortfalls over the next 12 months.
  • List your current facilities. Note limits, interest rates, covenants, expiry dates and any security or personal guarantees attached to each loan or line of credit.
  • Identify ATO obligations. Include any existing payment plans with the Australian Taxation Office.
  • Set a target outcome. Are you looking to extend a term, refinance, consolidate debt or recover outstanding invoices? Defining the goal early helps you choose the right professional.

Bank or Broker: Which Path Fits Your Borrowing?

When you need finance, you generally have two paths. You can approach a bank or lender directly, or you can work with a mortgage or finance broker.

Banks offer their own products. A broker typically has access to a panel of lenders and can help you compare options, prepare documents and coordinate the application process. For business owners who are time-poor or self-employed, where documentation can be more complex, broker support can simplify the process.

One important distinction is the statutory best interests duty introduced on 1 January 2021. It requires mortgage brokers giving credit assistance on consumer home loans to act in the borrower’s best interests. ASIC’s Regulatory Guide 273 (RG 273) explains how this duty is met, and MoneySmart outlines the obligation for borrowers. However, this duty does not automatically extend to purely commercial or business lending. If you are refinancing a director’s home as part of a business strategy, the duty may apply to the home-loan component, so confirm the scope with the broker directly.

Questions worth asking any broker before you engage include:

  • What loan types do you cover, such as home, commercial property, equipment or vehicle finance?
  • How broad is your lender panel?
  • Do you have experience with my business structure, such as a company, trust or partnership?
  • What turnaround times should I expect?
  • Can you assist with documentation for self-employed applicants?


If you are based in South East Queensland and want to understand how a broker-assisted process may work, reviewing a provider page for a
mortgage broker in Brisbane can help you compare refinancing steps, documentation expectations and service scope.

Broker Due-Diligence Checklist

Choosing a broker warrants a few checks. According to MoneySmart, you should receive a Credit Guide and clear disclosure of how the broker is paid, including any commissions, fees or both. You can also check a broker’s Australian Credit Licence or credit-representative status on ASIC’s Professional Registers.

  • Verify the broker’s licence or authorised representative number on ASIC’s registers.
  • Confirm AFCA membership.
  • Request a Credit Guide before proceeding.
  • Ask for a written explanation of commission and fee arrangements.
  • Ask for a shortlist rationale: why these lenders and not others?
  • Clarify any aggregator ties or potential conflicts of interest.
  • Confirm what the broker will and will not do, such as negotiating fee waivers, coordinating valuations or liaising with solicitors.


Stop Bad Debt Early: Internal Controls Before Escalation

Prevention is almost always cheaper than recovery. Before you escalate overdue invoices externally, tighten your internal credit controls.

  • Clear payment terms. State due dates, accepted payment methods and any late-fee policy, where lawful and contracted, on every invoice and in your terms of trade.
  • Deposits and milestones. For project-based work, collect a deposit up front and tie progress payments to agreed milestones.
  • Reminder cadence. Send a friendly reminder before the due date, a follow-up on the day payment is due, and a firmer notice at seven and 14 days overdue.
  • Payment plans. Offering a structured payment plan early can preserve the customer relationship and improve the chance of full recovery.
  • PPSR registration. For higher-risk trade credit, leased goods or retained-title arrangements, consider registering a security interest on the Personal Property Securities Register (PPSR). Administered by AFSA under the Personal Property Securities Act 2009, the PPSR is Australia’s official government noticeboard for security interests in personal property. A correct registration can help your business rank ahead of unsecured creditors if a customer defaults or becomes insolvent. Accuracy matters, so double-check the details before lodging.


When to Use a Debt Collection Agency

There comes a point where internal follow-up is no longer cost-effective. Common trigger points include invoices that are 30 to 60 days overdue with stalled communication, cases where your internal time cost now exceeds the likely recovery, or matters that require skip tracing to locate a debtor or prepare for legal escalation.

When choosing an agency, look for signs of a professional operation:

  • Written authority and a clear engagement agreement.
  • A transparent fee model, such as a percentage, flat fee or hybrid, explained before you sign.
  • A secure client portal for tracking progress and uploading documents.
  • Documented hardship and vulnerability protocols.
  • Familiarity with your industry and relevant state courts.


Victorian SMEs can review a
trusted debt collector in Melbourne to see typical services, process steps, sectors served and client-portal features as a provider-page example before deciding how to proceed.

Voluntary industry membership can also inform your due diligence. The Australian Collectors and Debt Buyers Association (ACDBA) publishes a public member directory. Membership is voluntary and complements, rather than replaces, compliance with Australian laws and the ACCC/ASIC guideline.

Compliance You Must Insist On

Any agency you engage acts on your behalf, and your business can be held responsible for its conduct. Build compliance into your contract and review it regularly.

Under the joint ACCC/ASIC Debt Collection Guideline, reasonable telephone contact times are 7:30 am to 9:00 pm on weekdays and 9:00 am to 9:00 pm on weekends, with no contact recommended on national public holidays. The guideline also recommends that collectors do not contact a debtor more than three times per week, or ten times per month, when contact is actually made. Excessive contact can amount to undue harassment.

Beyond contact rules, require your agency to identify itself accurately, avoid misleading or deceptive threats, handle privacy appropriately, and deal respectfully with any representative the debtor appoints, such as an accountant or lawyer.

If a Lending or Collection Dispute Arises

Disputes with financial firms generally follow a two-step path. Start with the firm’s internal dispute resolution (IDR) process. If the matter remains unresolved, eligible consumer and small-business financial complaints can be escalated to the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA), the main external dispute resolution body.

AFCA can make binding determinations on its member firms. When lodging a complaint, gather supporting evidence such as emails, call notes, letters of demand and written agreements. AFCA’s processes take time, and its jurisdiction has limits, so check the eligibility criteria on its website before lodging.

30-Day Action Plan

Turning this guide into action does not need to be overwhelming. Here is a simple four-week framework.

  • Week 1: Update your cash-flow forecast and loan inventory. Review and tighten credit terms on your invoicing templates.
  • Week 2: Shortlist brokers if borrowing or refinancing is a priority. Run each through the due-diligence checklist above.
  • Week 3: Lodge PPSR registrations where needed. Prepare recovery files for overdue accounts, including copies of invoices, contracts and communication records.
  • Week 4: Brief a compliant collection agency on your recovery files, or start refinance applications with your chosen broker. Set a calendar reminder to review outcomes quarterly and re-check professional arrangements annually.


Moving Forward with Confidence

Managing loans and recovering debt does not have to be reactive or stressful. With a clear financial snapshot, a short checklist for vetting professionals, and an understanding of the rules that protect both your business and your customers, most SMEs can reduce risk and resolve issues faster.

The regional examples in this article, Brisbane and Melbourne, are illustrative provider-page references, not endorsements. If your situation is complex, consider seeking independent legal or financial advice tailored to your circumstances.

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